The lights of New Kyoto shimmered like a sea of bioluminescent stars, cascading off towering skyscrapers clad in reflective, crystalline panels. Hover cars zipped through the orderly chaos of glowing sky lanes, leaving trails of neon red, green, and blue against the perpetual twilight that blanketed the city. It was the eve of the Annual Masquerade—a tradition reinstated in the year 2157 when the world, battered by decades of climate collapse and political unrest, had turned to escapism as salvation. That night, citizens of all ages abandoned their drudgery to become someone else under the anonymity of lavish, otherworldly costumes. It was tradition, a grand spectacle, and for some—a calling.
Alina Rivers, 41, adjusted the porcelain mask that concealed the left side of her face. Her dark chestnut hair fell in soft waves, spilling over her shoulders and cascading down her back in loose rivulets. She wore a high-collared trench coat of deep emerald fabric threaded with golden filigree, cinched tightly at her narrow waist. Beneath the coat, a black bodysuit shimmered faintly like the surface of an oil slick, its fabric grafted with bio-mimetic technology that pulsed faintly with her every movement. Her boots were scuffed, as if they’d been worn through both time and war—though they hadn’t yet betrayed her. Tonight, they couldn’t afford to.
In her right hand she gripped a small, palm-sized device—a masquerade pass, its dull blue light confirming that her identity had been scrubbed, at least for the next twelve hours. But of course, Alina hadn’t come here for simple celebration.
She came to find the Shadow Weaver.
A City of Masks
The streets of New Kyoto beneath the high-hover lanes were less polished but far tastier, more alive. Strings of paper lanterns—old tech, kept for aesthetic charm—dangled across crooked alleys, clashing with bulbous holographic advertisements projected in every corner. The smell of roasted soy-marinated skewers and fried dough mingled with scents Alina couldn’t name, causing her stomach to gnarl in longing. Dancing avatars and live performers moved in the center plazas, their costumes ranging from historical royalty to iterations of fantasy not yet written—all rendered in exquisite, painstaking detail.
And how old were they, these people? It was impossible to tell. A stooped figure in wizard robes, his staff aglow with an iridescent mist, might have been 19 or 92. A young girl in the white armor of a fallen star paladin —so polished it looked as though it had been forged yesterday—smiled and gifted mechanical pikeneers to onlookers, her age possibly 9 or 39. Here, age vanished beneath the art of make-believe. That was the purpose, Alina thought—but also part of the danger.
Freedom from identity meant freedom from consequence.
“You blend well, Rivers,” a voice murmured through the tiny comms implant in her ear. It was Kael, her partner in this little misadventure. He had stayed behind to monitor her progress, hunched over miles of data streams tracking the masquerade’s attendees. Kael didn’t do parties. “I almost didn’t recognize you on the feeds.”
“Let’s hope no one else does,” she replied softly, her lips barely moving as her mismatched hazel eyes darted across the crowd. The left one—the augmented one—scanned the district for anomalies. No sooner had she spoken than she spotted her first clue: a man in red robes.
The Hunt Begins
He was an older man, sharp-featured, with silver-peppered hair slicked back under a golden crown. His robes were rich and flowing, an opulent statement fit for a king of old. But it was the micro-glitches along the hemline of his garment—a flicker in the fabric’s design, so faint most eyes wouldn’t catch it—that marked him as a player. Alina followed, like a shadow.
“Kael,” she whispered. “I’ve got a lead. Red King. North side of district three.”
“Copy. Sending map overlay. Remember, he’s just a lead—don’t spook anyone unless you’re sure.”
The Red King moved with purpose, weaving through the throng of revelers like driftwood riding the current. Alina followed, blending step for step, her coat’s bio-mimetic threads shifting slightly to reflect the hues of the background. She matched his pace, her senses sharpened to a fine edge. As he entered a darker alley, lit faintly by dim lanterns like dying stars, she pounced.
Grabbing him by the shoulder, she spun him around only for her breath to catch. Beneath the mask of the Red King was not a man at all, but a flickering projection. A fake.
“…They’re onto you, Rivers,” Kael’s exasperated voice crackled through her ear. “Get out of there.”
A Masquerade Revealed
A slow, deliberate clap echoed from behind her. Alina turned quickly to see a figure step into the light—or partway, at least. The Shadow Weaver. Clad entirely in flowing, shifting black robes, the figure’s costume shimmered with holographic ribbons that mimicked trailing smoke. Their mask was a blank, mirrored face, reflecting Alina’s stunned expression back at her.
“You’re a stubborn one,” said the Weaver, their voice modulated into haunting layers. “Most wouldn’t dare to track me here with such… commitment. But I must admit, you wear your mask well.”
Alina reached for her pulse pistol beneath her coat, though her arm hesitated. “I came to end this,” she said. “No more stolen lives. No more games.”
“End this?” The Weaver laughed—a disembodied chorus. “Are you sure you want to? You’re dressed like someone yearning to rewrite their story.” The figure stepped closer, a predator observing its prey. “Tell me, Rivers. How old were you when you last believed in something? Truly believed?”
Alina froze. For all she’d rehearsed, she hadn’t expected this: the question that left her unsteady, teetering between past longing and present purpose.
“…Old enough to know all stories, even ours, have an ending,” she said, though her voice softened.
“Perhaps,” the Weaver replied. “But why not one more chapter?”
The Final Choice
The alley filled with a brilliant blaze of golden light—and then darkness. When Kael tried to contact her again moments later, there was no response. Somewhere in the streets of New Kyoto, amid the sounds of revelry and dreams in masquerade, a new mystery was born.
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: What age is OK to cosplay?
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