To an average internet user, it looked like a poorly labeled pirated video file from a shady torrent site. But Silas knew better. He recognized the specific arrangement of the random-looking capital letters at the front. It was a cipher he himself had designed for the government decades ago, a protocol thought to be decommissioned and forgotten.

Hidden beneath the layers of a fake, low-quality sitcom episode was a massive, encrypted database. It contained the real-time GPS coordinates, active aliases, and bank account numbers of every deep-cover intelligence operative currently deployed by the United States.

The "S01E134" wasn't a season and episode number. It was a timestamp and a payload identifier. It meant this was the 134th leak this year alone. Someone had been broadcasting the nation's most classified secrets in plain sight, disguised as illegal movie downloads on public file-sharing networks. Millions of people had downloaded these files, unknowingly acting as nodes in a massive, distributed network of stolen data.

He didn't have much time. He grabbed a portable solid-state drive, initiated a wipe of his entire server, and grabbed his coat. As he stepped out into the pouring rain, the sound of car doors slamming echoed from the end of the street. The download was complete. The real game had just begun.