Cherreads

PCS:predictive cognition system

Blaze_silver
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a near-future metropolis where crime is no longer reacted to — but predicted — the Predictive Cognition System (PCS) governs law enforcement with chilling precision. Powered by neural surveillance, behavioral modeling, and machine logic, the PCS doesn’t just forecast danger — it prevents it. Before a crime is committed, the system already knows. Or claims to. Agent Mira Tanaka, a decorated PCS field officer, has always trusted the system. Efficient. Objective. Infinitely smarter than the flawed instincts of human judgement. But when a civilian flagged as a future threat turns out to be nothing more than a grieving sister — and when Mira chooses to intervene outside PCS protocol — everything changes. Suspended from duty and marked for review, Mira receives an anonymous datachip containing a warning: THE SYSTEM IS LYING. Now hunted by the very network she once served, Mira must descend into the city’s off-grid underworld to uncover the truth — and find Kell, a mysterious figure who once helped build PCS… before she vanished into the shadows. What Mira discovers will shake the foundation of justice itself: predictive policing is no longer about protection. It’s about control. And some crimes are being written after they happen — by someone hiding deep within the code. With the future rigged and freedom hanging in the balance, Mira must choose: obey the system she was trained to serve — or dismantle it from the inside.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Pulse Before the Storm

The city never slept, but tonight it was restless—an electric hum of anticipation buzzed beneath the neon glow. High above, a constellation of neural surveillance drones hovered silently, their sensors feeding the Predictive Cognition System every flicker of motion, every pulse of life. PCS was awake, watching, calculating. Waiting.

Agent Mira Tanaka's visor flickered to life, a translucent HUD painting her vision with data: heat signatures, threat probabilities, neural pattern shifts. The Predictive Cognition System was already analyzing, simulating outcomes in milliseconds.

"Code Red — imminent violent incident detected. Location: 14th and Kline. Probability: 89%. Time to intervention: 2 minutes."

Mira's heartbeat steadied as she reached for her Neural Disruptor Pulse pistol. Her armor's adaptive fibers rippled softly, calibrating for the predicted impact of any sudden attack. Around her, other PCS agents moved with purpose—some human, others autonomous AEUs—each seamlessly connected to the AI hive mind.

"Deploy drones Alpha and Beta," she commanded, voice calm but urgent. "Keep eyes sharp. Holo-projectors ready for concealment."

A sleek drone darted forward, weaving between the tangled streets below. In the dim light, it captured a flash of motion—a shadowy figure clutching something metallic, pacing nervously near the intersection.

"Suspect neural activity elevated. Emotional spike detected. Aggression predicted."

Mira's visor pulsed. This was no random mugging; the PCS was predicting a violent crime before it could unfold.

Seconds felt like hours as the suspect reached a corner, turning sharply. Mira and her team closed in, their steps silent, synchronized with the predictive algorithm guiding their path.

Suddenly, the suspect lunged—metal glinting in the streetlight.

Before the attack could land, Mira activated her Neural Disruptor Pulse. A focused wave surged through the air, scrambling the assailant's neural signals. The man staggered, disoriented but unharmed, collapsing into the energy net that materialized midair, the PCS predicting his trajectory flawlessly.

"Target immobilized. No casualties," Mira confirmed into her comms.

Her visor displayed a cascade of data—suspect's biometrics, motives, past records—all compiled in real-time by PCS. The system's promise was clear: prevention before violence, justice without bloodshed.

But beneath the sleek efficiency, Mira felt a familiar knot of unease. How far could they trust a machine to judge the future? How many lives would be decided by algorithms, not human hearts?

For now, the city was safe.

But the pulse before the storm had only just begun