Agent 17 Red Rose

Walking through the city, Agent 17 became a pattern: a man with purpose and an accessory to match. The rose’s color caught the light and the eyes of a woman on the tram, and their gaze met—fleeting, searching—and broke. For a moment he saw a universe where the rose was only beauty and nothing else. He folded the thought away. He had learned to protect his interior life behind gestures and measured silence.

In the days that followed, Agent 17 continued his work. The red rose remained a discreet landmark in his memory: a study in how human beings anchor meaning to objects, how an everyday thing can hold strategy and tenderness in equal measure. Occasionally, he returned to the greenhouse that had birthed that particular bloom, not because he needed the rose but because the ritual steadied him. Amid pots and pruning hooks, he could imagine a life in which roses were only roses—no codes, no corners, no danger—only the small satisfied ache of a bloom opening under your hands. agent 17 red rose

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. Walking through the city, Agent 17 became a