Fight Night on the Ninth Floor

The air on the ninth floor of the Hadley Quantum Institute was heavy with ozone, static, and secrets. Jonas Cataldo wiped his palms on his cargo pants, staring through the reinforced glass into the humming core of the entanglement chamber. The facility’s heart beat in blue and silver pulses, each one promising a future free from distance, delays, or privacy. He wondered if anyone would ever use this tech for good.

Jonas had been working overtime—voluntarily, he told himself—ever since he found out about the Ghost Protocol. The higher-ups were using entangled qubits to ghost people: swapping prisoner records with innocent citizens, erasing debts for some and doubling fines for others. The only way to fix it was from inside, and nobody on the outside would believe him anyway.

Story illustration

He needed an ally. Someone who understood that justice wasn’t just about equations or code. He’d found her by accident during a lunch break in the grim little rec room—the only place in the building that felt halfway human.

Rhea Havelock was supposed to be calibrating the particle injectors that afternoon. Instead, she was hunched over her Nintendo Switch, thumbs flying as Magneto squared off against Ryu on the tiny screen. "You know you can parry that Hyper Beam if you time it right?" Jonas offered.

She didn’t look up. "If I wanted advice, I’d have asked YouTube. But you can try me after this round. Winner stays on."

He grinned despite himself. A crowd of two was still a crowd in this place.

---

After Rhea’s fifth win—Jonas suspected she let him take two out of pity—he noticed her copy of Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics poking out from her battered canvas tote. There was a comic tucked in beside it, glossy cover bent but not broken.

"You preorder?" he asked.

She shrugged, sheepish now that the game had lost its shield of anonymity. "Yeah. I always wanted this growing up. We never had enough quarters for all-night arcade runs." Her voice dipped quieter than the server fans down the hall. "I like that you can play online now. Makes me feel like there’s a world outside these walls. Like someone’s watching my back—even if it’s just Chun-Li doing bicycle kicks from three thousand miles away."

That night, after Rhea’s shift ended and Jonas clocked out at midnight, they played matches online together—a hush in their voices so they wouldn’t wake the guards slumped outside Security Bay 2B. The rollback netcode made even their trash Wi-Fi feel smooth as butter; when Jonas fumbled a combo and Rhea swooped in with a counter-super, he heard real laughter for the first time in weeks.

Between rounds, they swapped stories—about old cabinets that ate your allowance; about how sometimes you needed to hit pause (thank God for quick-save) when things got overwhelming; about why some victories only felt real when someone else was there to witness them.

It was then Jonas told her about Ghost Protocol.

Rhea absorbed it all with a slow blink—like he’d just pulled off an infinite combo he shouldn’t have known existed—and nodded once. "Let’s hit their high score," she said quietly.

---

Justice needed proof, not just suspicion or rumors whispered over half-eaten sandwiches. With her access to injector logs and his knack for finding digital backdoors, they spent two weeks gathering what they needed: time-stamped logs, before-and-after snapshots of altered records (Jonas showed her how to quick-save every step), even security footage rerouted through a dummy training mode server so nobody upstairs would notice extra traffic at midnight.

On Friday—the kind where rain hammered windows like angry fists—they met again in the rec room under flickering fluorescent lights. Jonas slid Rhea her Switch back across the table, loaded up with everything they’d collected.

She grinned and booted up Marvel vs. Capcom instead of opening the files right away.

“Win or lose,” she said quietly as their avatars squared off onscreen, “we go down fighting.”

By Sunday night, their evidence was transmitted worldwide: to watchdog groups in Geneva, legal teams in D.C., even backdoor servers Rhea knew from old fighting forums (“Old-timers always have good connections,” she winked). The fallout was swift—two execs arrested before dawn Monday; project suspended pending review; and for Jonas and Rhea…

Well, justice wasn’t always fair. They lost their jobs but kept each other on friend lists—and sometimes that mattered more than any headline.

In the end, Jonas realized something funny: sometimes you needed all seven arcade classics to remind yourself why you picked up a fight in the first place—and that no one wins alone.

🛍 Product Featured in This Story

Product image

Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics - Nintendo Switch

$26.49

View on Amazon

We may earn a small commission if you purchase through our link.

This site may contain affiliate links to Amazon products. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.