The rain hammered down, a liquid veil pouring over the neon-lit alleyways of Neo-Kyoto. The sprawling city shimmered in hues of electric blue, magenta, and emerald green, its towers piercing the clouds above. Waves of holographic ads projected glimmering faces of celebrities and political leaders into the night sky, promising everything from enhanced memory chips to eternal life. But none of them were real. And Jun knew the truth about appearances better than anyone.
Jun stood under the faint flicker of a streetlamp, water dripping from the hem of their black hooded cape. Beneath the hood, their face shifted—subtly at first—a cheekbone lifting, lips growing fuller, the curve of their jaw sharpening, softening, becoming someone entirely new. Within seconds, Jun’s face was a flawless replica of one of the holographs above—a politician smiling charismatically as he promised reform. But Jun’s expression didn’t match the charisma, only cold detachment. They pulled their hood back over their head and shoved their gloves—worn leather smeared with grime—into their jacket pockets. The city didn’t care if you were clean, only if you were useful. Jun just had to hope they could stay invisible long enough to finish their job.
The street around them was alive with movement: a cyborg vendor frying noodles on the curb, a woman with glowing tattoos scrolling through the air, street samurai in chrome armor clinking as they walked. Jun tried not to stand out, but their clothes betrayed them—a shabby amalgamation of fabrics: patched tactical pants tucked into scuffed combat boots, and that hooded cape, which had seen better days. They weren’t invisibility stylish—not in a world where looking spectacular was currency. But Jun knew that even the most perfect looks could be hollow underneath. After all, Jun wasn’t really Jun, not tonight.
The client was late. Jun hated this part—the waiting. The anonymity was necessary in their line of work: blending in, shapeshifting. People paid obscene sums for Jun to mimic their enemies, ex-lovers, or even deceased relatives. For the right price, Jun could turn your fantasy—or nightmare—into reality. It wasn’t legal by any stretch, but in Neo-Kyoto, laws were more of a suggestion for the rich and resourceful. And Jun… well, they were resourceful by necessity, not wealth.
A sharp beep in their earpiece disrupted their thoughts.
“Corner of Kaizen and Lotus,” the voice crackled. Garbled, generic, no distinguishing features.
“Got it,” Jun muttered, heading toward the intersection without hesitation. The streets were slick from rain, the glowing lines on the sidewalks pulsing gently under their boots. At the corner, a sleek matte-black car was waiting. The tinted window rolled down just enough to reveal a woman’s cautious eyes—ice blue and calculating. Her hair was a flawless cascade of white-blonde waves, skin porcelain under pinpricks of bioluminescent makeup tracing her brow bone. She wore a tailored suit of metallic fabric that seemed to ripple with the slightly fluctuating colors of an aurora. She was money—indisputably so.
“You’re Jun.” It wasn’t a question. Her voice was like glass—smooth, but ready to cut.
“I am tonight,” Jun replied sharply. The woman handed over a slim, silver data chip between two manicured fingers.
“The details are there. Payment upon completion. No witnesses.”
Jun arched a brow. “Any preferences for the face?”
The woman hesitated, then smirked. “They’re expecting someone dead. Can you do it?”
An eerie silence hung in the air as Jun glanced at the chip and slid it into a hidden port on their wrist terminal. The download took four seconds. They scanned the data—target details, location, contingencies. And then, the face: black hair, olive skin, a faint scar across the nose.
“Yeah,” Jun said, their lips curling faintly. “They’ll believe it’s him.”
It took five minutes to reconstruct the new face. The mirror in the dingy bathroom of a ramen joint reflected features that weren’t Jun’s own. Their eyes—now a deep brown instead of hazel—stared back, haunted and foreign. Even the scar stretched across the bridge of their nose as though it had always been there. Jun always felt disoriented during the first few minutes after a transformation, like wearing a mask so tight it fused to their skin, making them forget who they were underneath. They rolled up their sleeves, revealing muscular forearms covered in faded ink—part of the persona. Part of him. The man they’d become: Hideo Tanaka, a revolutionary—or rather, the ashes of one.
Hideo had been assassinated three years ago, and tonight, Jun was tasked with bringing his ghost back to life.
The target was waiting in a private penthouse at the top of the Shinjitsu Tower, a skyscraper that spiraled up so high it disappeared into the clouds. Getting in wasn’t hard; the chip had provided Jun with the security codes and access routes. Within minutes, Jun was inside, the feeling of deception coursing through every inch of their skin. They moved silently, the penthouse eerily still except for the hum of a kinetic chandelier. The interior was opulent: glass walls revealing the glittering city below, furniture dripping with luxury, and a scent of ozone and ozone lingering in the air as though the storm had crept indoors.
And there he was, the man Jun was hired to greet. An industrialist-turned-criminal mastermind, his face plastered across countless screens, pretending to be a savior. He sat in a high-backed chair, a glass of luminescent wine in hand. His smirk vanished when he saw Jun.
“Hideo?” he whispered, voice trembling. “Impossible… You’re dead.”
Jun didn’t respond right away. They let the illusion do its work, every movement calculated—the tilt of their head, the faint glint in their eye, the way their shoulders hunched as though carrying unseen burdens.
“You sold us out,” Jun hissed in Hideo’s voice. It wasn’t just mimicry; Jun could feel it—the betrayal, the righteous fury. It seeped up from the role, almost consuming them.
“Wait! Please! I… I didn’t mean to—”
“It’s too late,” Jun growled. “You made your choice.”
For a moment, Jun almost believed they were Hideo, resurrected to exact revenge. Almost.
As Jun raised the weapon—a sleek energy dagger designed to leave no trace—a flicker of hesitation crossed their face. This wasn’t like the usual jobs. It wasn’t some petty revenge or heist. This was something more sinister. They’d been hired to impersonate a hero, to use the weight of Hideo’s legacy to strike terror into this man before snuffing him out. Would the world be better without him? Maybe. But Jun had been used before, and the scars of all those jobs lingered beneath their shifting skin.
“What are you waiting for?” The man’s voice cracked, sweat beading on his temple.
Jun could hear the echo of their client’s instructions in their mind: “No witnesses.” But something about the scene felt… wrong. Instead of delivering the final blow, they leaned closer and whispered into the man’s ear.
“Run.”
When the industrialist bolted for the elevator, Jun slipped out the way they’d come in, disappearing into the night. The storm had waned, but the city remained restless, a maze of lights and shadows. The face of Hideo Tanaka dissolved from Jun’s features as they walked away, leaving only the ghost of a man behind. Somewhere deep inside, Jun felt the weight of this choice sink in like a stone.
It wasn’t over—not yet. Jun would have to face the wrath of their client eventually. But for tonight, they let the rain wash away the lie. For once, they weren’t just a face. They were human.
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: Can you cosplay as anyone?
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