The screen split. Sophia on the left. On the right, a live feed of Mara’s own office door. The knob was turning.
The voice was Sophia Smith’s. Mara had memorized her file: age 34, former temp at three different defense subcontractors, disappeared eighteen months ago. Presumed dead. But here she was, alive in a 720p window, her face finally tilting into the light.
The door opened.
It was just a file name. Only-Secretaries.14.07.22.Sophia.Smith.XXX.720p.mp4.
Detective Mara Vance stared at the string of text on her screen, the cursor blinking beside it like a judgmental heartbeat. The file sat on a encrypted USB drive, one of fifty-two she’d pulled from a wall safe behind a rotting painting of a clown. The clown was the least unsettling thing in the room.
“Only secretaries know where the bodies are.”
Soft. Breathless.
The whispers stopped. The lamp died. And in the sudden dark of her office, Mara heard someone type one last key.
Delete.
Mara double-clicked.
“They don’t steal trade secrets,” Sophia whispered, her fingers still moving, still typing phantom letters. “They steal secretaries. We remember the passwords. The coffee orders. The way the CEO flinches when a certain name comes up. We’re the real archives.”
Mara’s hand moved to her radio, then stopped. Because the video was changing. The timestamp in the corner— 14.07.22 —wasn’t a date. It was counting down. 14 hours, 7 minutes, 22 seconds remained until something.
Only-Secretaries.00.00.01.Sophia.Smith.FINAL.
A desk. Oak, late ’90s. A banker’s lamp with a green shade. And fingers—long, manicured, typing on a keyboard just out of frame. The sound was wrong. Not clacks. Whispers. Each keystroke produced a soft, breathy syllable.
Mara reached for her gun, but the file name was already rewriting itself on the screen, pixels bleeding into new letters: