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THE SHADOW AGREEMENT
THE SHADOW AGREEMENT
Author: Hop-Grip
Chapter One – The Ghost Walks In
Author: Hop-Grip
last update2025-08-11 00:47:15

The sun hadn’t yet risen when the steel doors of the FBI’s Cyber Division creaked open, It was too early for visitors. Too early for threats. And much too early for legends to come walking in from the dead.

Agent Ayla Trent had been nursing her third cup of coffee when the internal alert pinged her console, Unscheduled breach at main entrance. Subject unarmed. Demanding immediate surrender.

She barely glanced up. The security system flagged dozens of false positives every week, drunks, conspiracy theorists, failed YouTubers who believed the FBI owed them secrets. Most ended in a warning. A few in cuffs.

This one would’ve gone the same way Until the facial recognition software returned a hit.

Subject match: Raymond Cassian – DECEASED.

The mug slipped from her hand and shattered across the floor, The name didn’t just ring a bell. It set off alarms.

Raymond Cassian was a myth. The kind of story old agents whispered to scare rookies straight. A man who’d existed in the folds of history, toppling regimes, erasing lives, rewriting missions before they were even issued. Government ghost. Deep black operative. War criminal. Genius. Dead. Officially.

But the man in the lobby, hands raised calmly above his head, didn’t look very dead, His eyes, cold gray like concrete under stormlight, locked on the camera. No fear. No doubt. As if he had already planned this entire moment down to the angle of his shadow.

Ayla was frozen in place, heart hammering in her ribs. Behind her, footsteps pounded as a dozen agents swept toward the command room.

“Secure the floor,” barked Director Langford. “Get him into isolation. No contact until I give the green light.”

Ayla stared at the screen, her voice barely audible. “He asked for me.”

Langford stopped. “What?”

“Cassian. He told security he’d only speak to one person. Said my name. First and last. Spelled it out.”

Langford’s face twisted into a scowl. “You ever had contact with him?”

“No. I’ve only read case files. He shouldn’t even know I exist.”

The director studied her with suspicion, but she knew what he was thinking. There was no logical reason Raymond Cassian, former master of shadows, wanted by seventeen governments, would request a rookie agent fresh off cybercrimes duty. It made no sense. And that’s exactly why it terrified them.

Holding Cell 4A was built for monsters. Reinforced steel, magnetic locks, ten-inch bulletproof glass. But the man inside looked… ordinary.

Tall, yes. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in a dark coat and gloves that suggested military precision. But not threatening. Not overtly. He sat calmly at the metal table, hands folded, eyes half-lidded in boredom.

He didn’t look up when Ayla stepped inside. “You’re younger than I expected,” he said.

His voice was quiet, but carried an eerie weight. Like it didn’t need to be loud to be dangerous, Ayla sat across from him, doing her best to appear unfazed. “You have five minutes. Then the room fills with people you don’t want to meet.”

Cassian finally looked at her. The weight of that stare hit like a wave. He didn’t scan her, he assessed her. As if measuring her soul.

“I’ll take four minutes, if you don’t mind. Efficiency matters.”

“You said you had something.”

He nodded. “I have names. Proof. Leverage. Enough to topple governments and rewrite history books. And I’m offering it all.”

Her heart skipped. “Why?”

“Because the people I used to work for have gone rogue. They’re using the same tools I helped build, networks, misinformation, blackmail, to manufacture chaos on a global scale. I can’t stop them alone. But I can expose them.”

Ayla kept her tone flat. “And you want immunity, protection, and luxury for your trouble.”

Cassian smiled faintly. “Luxury’s overrated. But yes, immunity, autonomy, and a handler I can trust.”

She crossed her arms. “And you think that’s me?”

“I know it’s you.”

“Why?”

He leaned forward. “Because you’re clean. They haven’t gotten to you yet. You still believe in systems. In truth. That makes you… useful.”

“I’m not your pawn.”

“No,” he said, tone unreadable. “You’re my partner. For now.”

Three hours later, Ayla was in a war room filled with top brass, Director Langford was pacing, furious. “We can’t seriously consider this. He’s manipulating us.”

“Sir,” Ayla said, “he gave us a name. One name.”

She slid the file across the table. Inside: Senator Julian Roarke, the face of economic reform and global peace talks. But attached was a hidden ledger, offshore accounts, bribery trails, assassination contracts, enough to bury him alive.

“He said the files would self-destruct in twenty-four hours unless we act. He even showed us the trigger protocol.”

Langford scowled. “It’s a game.”

“And we’re already playing,” she said.

The room went quiet, Cassian had laid the first piece. Now they had to choose: follow the trail… or bury it and hope no one else dug deeper, Ayla didn’t need time to decide. She already knew.

That night, back in her apartment, Ayla stared at the wall of monitors she had built from spare parts and long nights.

Cassian had handed her a key. A USB drive marked only with one word: AGREEMENT, Plugging it in triggered no files. No code. Just a single blinking cursor and a text window, A message appeared.

“The first name was a gift. The next will cost you. – R”

Below it, a question appeared: Do you consent to continue?

Ayla hesitated, This wasn’t justice anymore. It wasn’t even about law, It was a shadow agreement. Her finger hovered over the keyboard. Then she typed: YES.

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