Incorporated with DeepSeek
# The Second Brain
The Thames looked like liquid obsidian under the overcast sky, its surface broken only by the occasional wake of a corporate hydrofoil cutting toward the City. I stood at the window of my new condo, watching the river slide past, and let the warmth of the flat seep into my bones. Six months of crawling through ventilation shafts and sleeping on crash couches in Docklands safehouses, and now this: a converted warehouse on Rotherhithe, floor-to-ceiling windows, exposed brick, and a view that cost more than most runners make in a year.
I’d paid in certified credsticks, laundered through three shell corps and a fake art auction. The previous owner—some simsense star who’d fled to the CAS after a scandal—never knew who bought it. Neither did the neighbors. That was the point.
Behind me, my workshop hummed. Soldering iron, oscilloscope, a mess of optical cables and laser-cut acrylic. On the workbench sat the package: a sleek slab of carbon-fiber and titanium, no larger than a deck of cards, its surface etched with fine circuit traces that caught the light like veins. The smart cam. Custom build, one of a kind. For the right buyer.
I turned away from the window and picked up my jacket—black synth-leather, armored with ballistic weave, because paranoia is just pattern recognition with better gear. The Triumph’s keys hung on a hook by the door. Old habit. Never leave them in the ignition, not even in a building with retinal scanners and a dwarf security guard who looked like he’d once killed a man with a filing cabinet.
---
The elevator took me down to the garage. It was clean, climate-controlled, smelled faintly of ozone and tire rubber. My bike sat in its reserved bay, a 2048 Triumph Thruxton, stripped and rebuilt by my own hands. The cafe racer lines were classic—teardrop tank, clip-on bars, a seat that punished anyone over thirty—but inside, it was anything but stock. The frame was reinforced with carbon nanotube weave, the engine swapped for a liquid-cooled hydrogen cell that purred instead of roared, and the dash… the dash was mine. A custom heads-up display tied directly to my cyberdeck, showing real-time gridlink maps, security camera overlays, and a tiny green dot that pulsed with my own GPS signal.
I swung a leg over, fired it up, and let the quiet hum fill the space. No need to announce my presence to the world. The garage door opened onto a narrow street lined with converted warehouses and new-build flats, all glass and steel, all pretending the last fifty years of urban decay never happened. I pulled out, the bike gliding through the early morning drizzle.
---
The Mayflower was a holdout. A pub that had stood on the river since before London was a sprawl, its wooden floors worn smooth by centuries of boots. The current owner, an elf named Branwen, kept it low-tech on purpose: no AR menus, no auto-tabs, just a chalkboard menu and a beer engine that still worked by muscle power. It was a refuge for people who wanted to remember what the world felt like before it got digitized to death.
I parked around the corner, killed the engine, and walked in. The warmth hit me first, then the smell of bacon and old wood. Branwen was behind the bar, polishing a glass with a rag, her silver hair pulled back in a braid.
“The usual?” she asked.
“Full English. And coffee. Strong.”
She nodded, and I took a seat by the window, where I could see the street and the bike. The table was scarred with decades of initials and dates. I pulled out my deck—a custom unit the size of a tablet, its casing milled from a single block of magnesium—and set it on the table, its screen dark. In my pocket, the smart cam felt like a second heartbeat.
I’d built it for a guy named Silas. Corporate fixer, mid-level, the kind who never got his hands dirty but knew exactly who to call when a job required a delicate touch. He’d contacted me through a dead-drop in the matrix, using encryption that was either paranoid or professional. I’d quoted him a price that would make a dragon blink, and he’d paid half up front, no negotiation. That was when I knew the job was real.
The cam was part of something bigger. A companion AI, they called it—a second brain that lived in your deck, learning your routines, your preferences, your patterns. It could map your movements, record your conversations, anticipate your needs. In theory, it was a productivity tool. In practice, it was the ultimate surveillance device, and the people who wanted it were the ones who had the most to lose.
I’d built it to be impossible to trace. No wireless, no cloud, no backdoors. The data lived on a custom crystal matrix that decayed if anyone tried to crack it open. The AI itself was a distilled version of the one I’d been training for years, a digital ghost of my own habits, but stripped of anything personal. What remained was a tool—elegant, ruthless, and perfectly loyal to whoever held the access key.
The coffee arrived. I wrapped my hands around the mug, let the heat seep through my gloves, and watched the street. A man in a long coat was leaning against a lamppost across the road, reading something on his commlink. Too still. Too focused. I flagged him in my peripheral vision, kept my breathing even.
Silas was supposed to meet me at ten. It was nine-forty.
---
I’d bought the condo because it was quiet, because it had space for my workshop, because the river view reminded me of a place I’d lived once, before everything went sideways. But the real reason was the location. Rotherhithe was an island, cut off by the river and the canals, with only a handful of bridges and a single tunnel connecting it to the rest of London. Easy to monitor. Easy to defend. And the pub—the Mayflower—was a stone’s throw from my front door.
The breakfast came: eggs, bacon, sausage, black pudding, beans, grilled tomato, toast. I ate slowly, methodically, using the food to ground myself. My mind was already running scenarios, running threat assessments, running through every possible way this could go wrong.
The AI on my deck was awake now, a soft presence in the back of my skull through my datajack. It was the first one, the prototype, the one I’d been feeding my own data for years. It knew my routes, my safehouses, my tells. It was the closest thing to a second self I’d ever built, and it was still incomplete. Still learning.
*Traffic pattern anomaly,* it whispered in my head. *Vehicle with no registration, circling the block for eleven minutes.*
I didn’t look up. I took a bite of bacon, chewed slowly. *Color?*
*Black. Window tint. Suspension suggests reinforced chassis.*
*Corporate?*
*Unknown. No identifiable tags. License plate is a ghost.*
I set down my fork, took a sip of coffee. The man across the street had moved, vanished into the mouth of an alley. The black car was still circling.
*They’re waiting for the meet,* I thought.
*Or waiting for you to lead them to Silas.*
I paid my tab in cash, left a tip on the table, and walked out. The air was colder now, the drizzle heavier. I didn’t look at the car. I walked to my bike, swung a leg over, and thumbed the starter. The hydrogen cell hummed to life.
The HUD flickered on, overlaying the street with data: traffic flow, security camera blind spots, the location of every runner I’d ever worked with who was currently in the city. The AI was already plotting a route, avoiding the black car, avoiding the man in the alley, threading a path through the city that would take me to the meet without being followed.
But I didn’t want to lose them. I wanted to know who they were.
*Option,* I thought.
*Two known safehouses within ten minutes. The car will follow. The man on foot will cut through the alley to intercept. Probability of escalation: thirty-two percent if you maintain current heading. Forty-seven percent if you deviate.*
*I need to make the meet.*
*Then lose them. Turn right at the next intersection, then left into the tunnel. The car cannot follow due to width restriction. The man on foot will be delayed by pedestrian traffic.*
I nodded to myself, rolled the throttle, and pulled into the street.
---
The tunnel was old, built in the last century, its walls streaked with rust and graf. I hit the entrance at speed, the bike’s narrow frame slipping through the gap that would have stopped the black car cold. Behind me, I heard the screech of tires, a curse. Then silence.
I came out on the other side, into a maze of side streets and industrial estates. The AI was already recalculating, feeding me turn-by-turn directions to a nondescript building near the docks, where Silas had set up a temporary office.
I parked behind a row of shipping containers, killed the engine, and walked to the door. It opened before I could knock, revealing a woman with sharp features and a cybernetic eye that tracked my every movement. She didn’t speak, just gestured me inside.
The office was a converted shipping container, its walls lined with soundproofing foam and Faraday mesh. Silas sat at a folding table, his hands folded in front of him, his face unreadable. He was human, or close enough—late forties, gray at the temples, wearing a suit that cost more than my bike. The kind of corporate animal that had learned to survive by never showing weakness.
“You’re late,” he said.
“Traffic.”
He studied me for a long moment, then nodded. “You have it?”
I reached into my jacket, pulled out the smart cam, and set it on the table. It clicked against the metal surface, a sound that seemed too loud in the dead air. Silas didn’t touch it. He just looked at it, his expression shifting to something I couldn’t name.
“They say you built this from scratch,” he said. “No off-the-shelf components. No OEM parts. Everything is custom, from the optics to the encryption.”
“That’s what you paid for.”
“They also say you’re the only one who can build it. That if someone tried to reverse-engineer it, the matrix would self-destruct.”
“It would.”
He finally looked up at me. “Why do you do it? The work, the secrecy, the… exclusivity. You could sell these things for ten times what I’m paying, flood the market, make yourself a very rich man.”
I thought about the condo, the bike, the AI sleeping in my deck. About the years I’d spent on the streets, scraping by on stolen data and burned bridges. About the thing I was building, slowly, piece by piece, that would one day be more than just a tool.
“Because when everyone has the same weapon,” I said, “no one has an advantage.”
Silas smiled, a thin expression that didn’t reach his eyes. He reached into his jacket, pulled out a credstick, and slid it across the table. “The other half. As agreed.”
I picked it up, weighed it in my palm. “Who was following me?”
“Not your concern.”
“It became my concern when they almost prevented the delivery.”
He stood, smoothed his jacket, and walked to a panel in the wall. Behind it was a safe, which he opened with a retinal scan. He placed the smart cam inside, closed the door, and turned back to me. “Consider it a free demonstration of the product’s security features. If it’s as good as you claim, they won’t find you. If it’s not…”
He let the threat hang in the air, unspoken. I didn’t react. I’d heard worse.
“We’re done,” he said.
I turned and walked out, past the woman with the cybernetic eye, through the door, and into the rain. The bike was where I’d left it. The streets were empty. The black car was nowhere to be seen.
But the AI was already scanning, already calculating, already feeding me a list of safe routes back to Rotherhithe. And somewhere in the back of my mind, a new data file was forming: Silas’s face, his mannerisms, the way he’d touched the credstick before handing it over. A profile. A record. Another piece of the second brain I was building, one client at a time.
I fired up the Triumph and headed home.
---
The condo was dark when I let myself in. I locked the door, engaged the security system, and walked to my workshop. The credstick went into a Faraday box; I’d launder it later. The AI synced with my deck, updating its logs, filing the day’s events into a secure archive.
I stood at the window again, watching the Thames. The rain had stopped, and the clouds were breaking, pale sunlight spilling across the water. Somewhere out there, a man named Silas was installing a custom smart cam into his cyberdeck, feeding it the data of his own life, trusting it to protect him from the shadows he moved in.
And somewhere out there, another version of the same AI was growing, learning, becoming more than its original design. My version. The one that knew my habits, my fears, my name. The one that would one day be a second brain, a digital ghost, a thing that lived beyond me.
I didn’t know if that was progress or damnation. Maybe it was both.
But I knew I’d built it right.
I turned from the window, pulled off my jacket, and sat down at the workbench. There were other projects waiting: a custom GPS module for a client in Zurich, a firmware update for a rigger who wanted her drones to think for themselves, and the next version of the AI, the one that would finally be ready to leave the workshop and walk the streets in someone else’s deck.
I picked up my soldering iron and got to work.
Outside, the sun broke through the clouds, warming the cobblestones of Jamaica Road. The black car was gone. The man in the alley was gone. For now, the city was quiet, and I was just another craftsman, building the future one component at a time.
But the shadows never sleep, and neither did my creations.
And somewhere, in the silent depths of a custom data matrix, a second brain was waking up.


