Private.24.07.04.barbie.rous.and.renata.fox.gon...
Project GON, according to the leaked documents Renata had secured, was a prototype nanotech weapon capable of rewriting genetic code on a massive scale. In the wrong hands, it could be used to create bio‑engineered diseases, or to rewrite the DNA of a population to make them subservient. The world needed someone to keep that technology from ever seeing the light of day. The night of the party, rain hammered against the glass façade of the Gorgon. The building’s lobby pulsed with a red carpet, a line of flashing cameras, and a host of bodies dressed in designer suits and gowns. I slipped in through the service entrance, badge in hand, and made my way to the private elevator. The doors slid open with a soft sigh, revealing a narrow shaft that led straight to the 24th floor.
The night stretched on, the rain finally easing into a mist. I walked back to my office, the city’s neon now a softer hue. I placed the chip into a locked drawer, its surface cold against my palm. I didn’t know what the future held for Project GON, but I knew one thing: the world would always need a private eye to keep the shadows from swallowing the light.
Inside was a small silver disk, no bigger than a thumbnail, etched with the word “GON.” My pulse quickened. I slipped it into my pocket, closed the briefcase, and turned to face Barbie. Private.24.07.04.Barbie.Rous.And.Renata.Fox.Gon...
She glanced at me, eyes softening. “Barbie Rous… you know, she’s not the only one with a past. We all have a name we hide behind.”
“I’m not a stranger,” I replied, sliding a thin, black card from my pocket. “I’m the man Renata hired.” Project GON, according to the leaked documents Renata
I glanced at the clock. 5:37 a.m. The city was still a hollow echo of sirens and distant trains. I tossed the coffee, reached for my battered .38, and slid the worn leather notebook onto the desk. It was time to see what the universe— or perhaps just a very determined woman—had decided to throw at me. The Gorgon’s glass façade reflected the rain like a shattered mirror. I slipped through the revolving doors, the security badge I’d borrowed from an old contact flashing green. The elevator chimed, the doors opening onto a hallway that smelled faintly of perfume and cheap whiskey.
“You’re late,” she said, her voice a blend of honey and steel. The night of the party, rain hammered against
I was nursing a lukewarm cup of coffee when the envelope slipped through the slot. No return address, just a thick, glossy card stamped with a single pink silhouette of a high‑heeled shoe. Inside was a single line of typewritten paper, the ink smudged as though someone had been writing with a trembling hand: I stared at the words, the date already past. My mind did the quick arithmetic: three weeks. The Gorgon Building, a relic of the 1960s art‑deco era, now a glass‑capped skyscraper that housed a maze of corporate lofts, illegal back‑rooms, and the occasional celebrity hideaway. The 24th floor was the topmost—home to the “Sky Lounge”, a private club where the city’s elite came to forget the world below.