The city of Oakhaven at 2:00 AM was swallowed by a dense fog, but in the central district, the sky glowed with a lethal shade of orange. Piercing sirens shattered the silence. An ancient building—the city’s central archives—was being devoured by an inferno.

Vu stepped off Fire Truck No. 09. A veteran firefighter with cold eyes and faint burn scars tracing his arms, he felt a weight on his shoulders heavier than usual tonight. Beside him stood Colonel Miller, the Fire Chief—a man of absolute power and a rugged, weathered face—watching the scene with an unusual sense of urgency.
Miller pulled Vu into a dark corner behind a water tanker, his voice raspy and hurried: “Listen to me, Vu. This isn’t an ordinary fire. In Room 402 on the 4th floor, there is a wall safe containing a file labeled ‘Albinism.’ Your mission isn’t to put out the fire. You get in there and ensure that file turns to ash before the federal investigators arrive. Understood?”
Vu gripped his axe tightly, his voice dropping low: “Those are public records. If I burn them, thousands of pieces of evidence regarding corruption cases will vanish.”
Miller glared, his gloved hand tightening around Vu’s collar: “Don’t play the moral card with me! Have you forgotten who has looked after you for the last ten years? If that file falls into the hands of the police, I, you, and this entire city will fall. Burn it, and you’ll have a Chief’s seat by next month. That’s an order!”
Vu said nothing. He adjusted his oxygen mask, pulled the tank onto his shoulders, and plunged straight into the sea of fire.
The heat inside was monstrous. The sound of cracking wood, shattering glass, and the roar of the flames licked against his suit as if trying to melt his skin. Vu didn’t follow the standard rescue route. He sprinted through collapsing corridors and scaled the stairs to the 4th floor with the precision of a machine.
Room 402.
The safe was exactly where Miller said it would be. Vu used his axe to breach the outer casing. Inside was a thick stack of documents—lists of high-ranking officials, bank accounts, and Miller’s own signature on international money laundering schemes. Vu looked at the papers, then at the fire creeping up the walls. He pulled a small device from his pocket, scanned every page in under thirty seconds, and then hurled the physical file into the core of the blaze.
When Vu emerged, his gear was scorched black and smoke billowed from his shoulders. Miller was waiting at the emergency exit, his eyes gleaming with relief when he saw Vu’s nod.
“Well done, son,” Miller patted Vu’s shoulder, a triumphant smirk appearing on his aging face. “We’re safe now. Let me call it in—report the building as a total loss.”
Miller turned to walk away, but suddenly, a sharp click echoed. His wrist felt heavy. Cold steel handcuffs had snapped him to the railing of the fire truck.
Miller froze, turning back to look at Vu in shock: “What the hell are you doing? Have you lost your mind?”
Vu slowly pulled off his oxygen mask, revealing a face that was terrifyingly calm. He was no longer the firefighter who followed orders blindly. He pulled a black leather badge from inside his protective gear, bearing the emblem of the Central Anti-Corruption Bureau.
“Undercover Agent 407, Operation ‘White Ash.’ You’re under arrest, Miller,” Vu said, his voice like ice.
Miller laughed hysterically, his face contorted with rage: “You think you’ve won? The records are burned! Without evidence, you have nothing!”
Vu pulled out the small device from earlier and pressed a button. Sharp images of every page flickered onto a tiny holographic screen. “You forgot I’m an expert at ‘scene processing.’ I burned the paper to make you reveal yourself, but the digital data was transmitted directly to the Justice Department’s servers the moment I stood in that room. This fire wasn’t meant to hide your crimes—it was meant to light them up.”
At that moment, a fleet of police cars swarmed the scene, blue and red lights swirling. Miller collapsed, the flames of the burning building reflecting in his lifeless eyes.
Vu stood watching the building crumble. He was a firefighter; his job was to extinguish fires. And today, he had finally put out a “fire” that had been smoldering through the city’s integrity for decades.
Dawn began to break on the horizon, painting the cruel mounds of white ash in a new light.
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