As the real-world tower collapsed in flames (a "freak power surge," the news would say), Kaito held Lin's hand in the smoky alley. Above them, two digital dragons spiraled into the dawn sky—one made of shackles, the other of wings.

In the neon-drenched sprawl of Neo-Osaka, the air wasn't just thick with humidity and street-food smoke—it was thick with data. Every cough, every credit swipe, every whispered secret was siphoned, packaged, and sold. The people called it the "Gloom." And at the heart of the Gloom sat —a fortress of mirrored glass and humming spires shaped like a coiled dragon, its servers breathing the collective memory of the city.

The founder had trapped his own daughter in the cloud. She'd been screaming for two decades.

He didn't delete her. He couldn't.

One night, Kaito found something. Not a file, but a wound —a raw, screaming hole in the server architecture. Inside wasn't data. It was a voice. A child's voice, repeating a date and coordinates.

"RYUUCLOUD," Kaito said, watching the winged one vanish, "is finally a place to dream."

Instead, Lin did something no one had ever tried: she forked the entire RYUUCLOUD system. One branch remained the corporate beast, hollow and blind. The other branch became a —a private, endless garden where the girl's consciousness could grow, learn, and finally sleep without nightmares.

Kaito was a "ghost diver," a data scavenger who swam in the forgotten streams of the cloud. He didn't steal secrets; he stole absence . A deleted wedding video. A corporation's erased bankruptcy. A politician's wiped alibi. He sold these digital ghosts to the highest bidder.

And somewhere in the quiet code, a girl who had never been born laughed for the first time.

His partner, Lin, was the opposite: a "scale polisher," a coder who worked for RYUUCLOUD, ensuring the dragon's scales never tarnished. They were sisters by bond, not blood, and they lived in the dragon's shadow—Kaito picking at its discarded scales, Lin keeping them gleaming.