The morning sun had barely begun to stretch across the sky when the door in the Keller residence quietly clicked open.
Miles stepped out of his room, dressed in his usual athletic gear—black joggers, a fitted long-sleeve, and running shoes already tied. The air was crisp and still, a perfect moment for his daily run. As he entered the living room, expecting the usual silence of early dawn, he stopped in his tracks.
Daniel was standing there.
Not in a wheelchair. Not leaning on a cane.
Standing. Pacing slowly, steadily, across the room, with Elena close by, her hands gently hovering near just in case. But her face told the whole story—she wasn't worried anymore. She was proud.
Daniel turned, noticing Miles. "Good morning, son."
Miles's brow rose in pleasant surprise. "Good morning... I see you recovering fast, father."
Elena beamed at him. "He insisted on getting up this morning. Said he was tired of sitting."
Miles offered a small, proud smile and gave Daniel a nod of approval. "That's good. Keep it steady, though. No need to push too fast."
Daniel chuckled softly. "What about you? Out for a run again?"
Miles grabbed a towel off the couch and slung it around his neck. "Yeah. Just habit at this point."
Elena crossed the room, holding a white envelope in her hand. "Before you go—this came yesterday evening. Looks like an invitation. Are you going somewhere?"
Miles took the envelope and glanced at the elegant wax seal. He opened it with practiced ease and scanned the contents.
"Oh. Right. Uncle Victor must've sent this," Miles said, holding up the invitation. "It's for a charity event tonight. He asked me to go with Celina."
"A charity event?" Elena asked as she came to stand beside him. "What kind?"
"One of those high-profile gatherings," Miles explained. "All the big names in the city are expected to attend. Fundraising, socializing, donations for development causes. Uncle said it's focused on youth this year, so it's a good opportunity to make some connections."
Daniel nodded approvingly. "Sounds important. You'll do fine."
Elena looked thoughtful for a moment. "By the way... how's Celina doing? You should invite her for dinner again sometime. Last time she had to leave early."
Miles smirked slightly. "How about this weekend? I'll invite her. And... maybe one more surprise guest we talked about."
Elena's face lit up instantly. "Really? Are you serious?"
He gave her a knowing look. "I think Hope and Asher would love it."
Daniel raised an eyebrow, looking between the two of them. "Okay, now I feel left out. What are you two scheming?"
Elena just smiled, trying not to give anything away. "Oh, just wait. It'll be worth it."
Daniel sighed, mock-defeated. "Fine. I'll wait."
The room filled with soft laughter. For once, there was no tension, no shadows of the past. Just a peaceful morning, shared between a healing family—one rebuilt piece by piece.
The morning breeze carried a calm chill as Miles jogged down the tree-lined path of the park, his steps light, steady, and methodical.
He nodded at familiar faces—an elderly couple on their morning walk, a few other joggers who always arrived at this hour. Some offered polite waves; others a respectful glance. Miles didn't draw attention to himself, but there was something about his quiet presence that people instinctively acknowledged.
He reached the usual stretch of open ground and stopped to stretch. Arms flexed behind his back. Rotating his shoulders. Breathing in slowly.
His phone buzzed in his pocket.
He wiped a light sheen of sweat from his brow, pulled it out casually—then froze as he read the screen.
"Encrypted File Received – Subject: Lab Analysis Report"
He tapped the screen. The file opened.
The words inside pulled all warmth from his blood.
"Compound QTR-RM: Confirmed Delivery Method – Injectable.
Trigger Mechanism – High-frequency acoustic pulse (inaudible to humans). Symptoms – Delayed onset.
Coma. Organ failure. Zero detectable residues post-mortem."
Miles's eyes narrowed, heart now beating not from exercise—but from rage.
"This… this isn't just a drug…" he muttered. "It's a weapon…"
He immediately dialed Monica.
She picked up instantly. "Yes, boss?"
Miles's voice was sharp but measured. "How sure are we?"
Monica didn't hesitate. "One hundred and one percent, boss. We ran triple verification. It's real."
She continued grimly, "The drug is a synthetic compound—odorless, tasteless, completely untraceable. It can sit dormant in the bloodstream for weeks. The moment a specific frequency is played—just one burst—it activates. coma. organ failure. Death. No signs left behind. Autopsies won't show a thing."
Miles's jaw clenched. He turned away from the joggers, stepping into the shade of an old tree, isolating himself.
"A perfect assassination tool..." he said under his breath.
Monica's voice carried a hint of fear. "Yes, boss. And if someone starts using this publicly... no one's safe. We don't even know how many people already have it in their system."
Miles's silence hung heavy for a moment.
Then he spoke.
"Put the lab on red alert. No one take this drug out without my authorization."
"Got it."
"Increase their funding allowance. Tenfold. Right now."
"Consider it done."
"We need a cure—an antidote, a blocker, anything. And we need it fast. Prioritize this above everything else."
"I'll have a team on it within the hour," Monica confirmed.
Miles looked up at the sky—clear, peaceful, ignorant of the silent storm that had just begun brewing.
"I want full surveillance on all past cases related to unexplained comas. Medical archives, military reports, even urban legends. Anything with overlapping symptoms. Trace the pattern."
"Yes, boss."
He ended the call.
The phone lowered from his ear slowly, but his mind was moving a mile a minute. Whoever designed this… wasn't just a criminal. They were a phantom, crafting chaos in silence.
And now, it was personal.
Miles looked at his phone one last time—his reflection staring back from the dark screen, calm and deadly.
"Let's see who wants to play God…""I'll show them who they're really dealing with."
He turned, jogged back toward the path, and disappeared into the morning crowd.
.....
Flashback – Five Years Ago
Location: Eastern Forest – Edge of the BorderlandsMission: Escort Classified Asset – Name: Ralf AllenUnit: Graveyard OperativesOperative-in-Charge: Ghost (Age 16)
The air was thick with pine and gunpowder.The last body had barely hit the ground when Ghost's voice crackled through the comms.
"Kill confirmed. Threat eliminated."
His boots barely made a sound as he stepped over the fallen mercenaries. The sun dipped behind the dense canopy of trees, bleeding orange into the sky like a slow-burning fire.
Behind him, a man in his late 40s struggled to keep pace—Ralf Allen, the escort subject. Dust clung to his boots, and fatigue lined his face, but his eyes were sharp. He wasn't a soldier, but he had seen enough of life to know when death walked beside him.
He looked at the boy ahead—black tactical gear, a rifle slung casually over his back, knives sheathed on both thighs.A boy who looked too calm after killing five men. Too still. Too quiet.
Eventually, they found a ridge near a clearing. A good vantage point, natural shelter. Ghost scanned it for threats, then nodded.
"We're camping here tonight."
Ralf didn't argue.
Night fell.
The forest whispered its secrets—crickets, the rustle of leaves, the soft howl of a distant wolf.
Ralf unzipped his tent and stepped out quietly, only to find the boy sitting alone on a flat rock. His back to the tree. His eyes wide open, unmoving. Like a statue that never rested.
"You haven't slept?" Ralf asked.
Ghost didn't even blink. "Not allowed to. Someone has to stay alert."
Ralf shook his head. "Where are you from, son?"
A pause. Then a quiet, firm reply."We are not allowed to say anything personal, sir."
He nodded toward the tent."You should take a rest."
Ralf chuckled, crouching down near the firepit he had built."Look at me becoming the old man, and you're the one acting like a hardened vet."
"Duty comes first," Ghost said, still unmoving.
Something about the boy's voice made Ralf's chest tighten. Not robotic. Not lifeless.Just deeply... alone.
"I'll make tea," Ralf said softly.
He brewed it using dried herbs he carried in a pouch. A scent of wild mint and dried rosewood lifted into the night air.
"Here. Try this." He handed over a tin cup.
Miles sniffed it. Sipped. Then gave a small, surprised nod."It's good."
Ralf smiled. "My son—Ryan—he says the same thing. He's about your age. Bit spoiled though. More interested in luxury watches and supercars than sunsets and campfires."
Miles said nothing. Just took another sip.
Then he asked, "You have a family… Why risk your life coming here? Remote forest. Unknown enemies. Villagers you barely know?"
Ralf's eyes softened.
"Because they are my family."
Miles looked up.
Ralf continued, voice low and nostalgic."Years ago, my father—fed up with the city and the greed—escaped to this forest. Met a woman here. She healed him. Became my mother.""These villagers… they're part of that story. My father's story. Mine too."
Silence returned for a moment.
Then, Ralf asked gently, "What about you? Why work like this? You're just a boy…"
Miles stared into the fire.The glow danced in his eyes—but there was no warmth.
"Because this is all I know. Graveyard is my home. They raised me. Taught me to fight. To kill. They're my brothers. My only family."
Ralf frowned."Doesn't mean it's all you have to be."
He leaned forward."Come with me. One day, walk away. I'll take you in. You don't have to carry this alone."
Miles looked at him, expression unreadable.
"I am the ghost of Graveyard, sir. Wherever I go, the reapers follow."
Ralf exhaled slowly."You don't talk like a teenage boy."
The two sat in silence again, letting the fire burn low.
By dawn, the mission was complete.
The path ahead would take them to a safehouse—and from there, Ralf would vanish back into the world. But the memory of that night, of the tea, of that broken boy wrapped in iron... would stay with him.