They drove for an hour that felt like a year. The corrupted sectors weren't empty—they were hostile. The road would vanish mid-drift, replaced by a canyon of null pointers. Billboards screamed error messages in binary. At the Gridlock Bridge, a pack of “Nulls” appeared—twisted, spider-like collections of missing textures and broken physics—that chased them with a skittering, digital shriek. Splicer’s patchwork car took a hit, losing its left-render wheel, but he kept pace.
Leo thought of the empty lobbies. The greyed-out exit button. Splicer’s terrified, hopeful face. He downshifted, not into the drift, but into a raw, desperate power-slide. He rammed the ghost car, not with malice, but with the force of a man pushing his own nostalgia aside.
Tonight, the home was empty.
Leo nodded. He popped the nitrous. The Hayura GT screamed onto the light-road, a black arrow against the void. The track twisted, inverted, looped back on itself in ways that broke physics. At the final hairpin, the server launched its last defense: a perfect, mirror-image clone of Leo’s own car, driven by a ghost of his younger self, the one who’d first fallen in love with RayCity.
He put his hands in his lap.
“Another ghost town,” he muttered, leaning back in his worn racing rig. The haptic feedback vest felt heavy, pointless.
“Glide. Don’t log off.”
It didn’t attack. It just blocked the line, drifting perfectly, impossibly.