He crouched, fingers hovering above the bloom without touching. Wherever it had come from, the rose carried intent. There were tiny, deliberate blemishes on the petal margins—clipped in a pattern that resembled morse, a stubborn human code embedded in nature. He squinted, letting the memory of training stitch pattern to meaning: not random, not decorative. Communication disguised as horticulture. Perfect.
Outside, the night had the damp quickness of a city that never entirely sleeps. He walked with the certainty of someone who had given away a piece of himself and expected to live. The rose’s absence made space where it had been—an emptiness that, oddly, felt like relief. He had delivered not only a message but the possibility of reclaiming a past that belonged to someone else now. agent 17 red rose
Agent 17 walked through the greenhouse as if moving through a cathedral. Sunlight pooled on the glazed tiles, warming the air until it smelled faintly of earth and something sweeter—promises, perhaps, or old stories. Around him, rows of roses stood like sentinels: buds clustered tight as secrets, petals unfurling in spirals that caught the light and kept it. One bush in particular drew his steps: a red rose, impossibly deep as a spilled coin, perched on a stem scarred by thorns. He crouched, fingers hovering above the bloom without