Zhenlan suggested a movie night.
I looked up from my phone—some article about supply chain disruptions that was already outdated by several apocalypses—and watched him standing in the doorway with that particular expression he got when he was trying to be casual about something that wasn't casual at all.
"A movie," I repeated, arching an eyebrow.
"Yes."
He moved into the room, his movements still carrying that slight stiffness that suggested the aches hadn't fully faded. None of them had. Chenghai had been rotating his shoulder periodically all afternoon, and Wei Lingyun had spent most of the past few hours lying on the other couch with his eyes closed. Even Jain Yuche, who usually maintained perfect composure, had been moving more carefully than usual. "We could all use a distraction."
I considered pointing out that distractions were how people died in situations like this, but honestly, they weren't wrong.
The house was secure.
The immediate threats were handled—or at least, the ones we were willing to acknowledge were handled. And sitting around in tense silence while everyone pretended not to notice that one of us could manifest fire from his hands wasn't particularly productive either.
"Fine," I agreed with a shrug.
Zhenlan's expression shifted slightly and a weak smile appeared on his face.
He moved to the media cabinet and started browsing through the collection, his fingers trailing across spines and cases with the kind of focus that suggested he was taking this more seriously than the situation warranted.
The others filtered in gradually. Chenghai first, carrying a bottle of water and settling into the armchair with the sight line to both doors. Then Yuche, who claimed the other end of the couch I was on with enough distance to be polite but close enough to be part of the group. Lingyun came last, still moving slowly, and dropped onto the remaining couch with a quiet exhale.
"What are we watching?" Yuche asked.
Zhenlan held up a case. "Infernal Affairs."
I recognized it—it was a popular move from Xianggang, a crime thriller with undercover cops, and triad politics. It was the kind of film that was all about loyalty and betrayal and the blurred lines between law and criminality.
It was definitely thematically appropriate, given our current situation. Also deeply ironic, considering at least two of the men in this room had backgrounds that probably involved some version of what was on screen.
"That works," Chenghai agreed with a shrug.
Zhenlan loaded the disc, and the opening credits started rolling. I reached for the bag of dried mango slices I'd opened earlier—mine, not communal, a distinction I maintained even in moments like this—and settled deeper into the couch cushions.
The film opened with the setup: two moles, one in the police force, one in the triad, both trying to identify each other while maintaining their covers. The tension built slowly, methodically, through careful observation and paranoia.
"This is already unrealistic," Jain Yuche grumbled about fifteen minutes in.
I glanced at him. "How so?"
"The police mole." He gestured at the screen where the undercover officer was meeting with his handler in a movie theater. "He's too obvious. The way he moves, the way he talks—anyone paying attention would notice he doesn't fit."
"Maybe they're not paying attention," Lingyun pointed out, his voice still rough.
"In a triad organization?" Yuche's tone was skeptical even as he scoffed. "They're paying attention. That's how they survive."
Chenghai made a noncommittal sound. "Depends on the organization. Some are more paranoid than others."
On screen, a fight scene erupted—rooftop chase, hand-to-hand combat, the kind of choreographed violence that looked impressive but didn't quite match reality.
"That wouldn't work," Lingyun sighed with a shake of his head, his eyes tracking the movements. "The angle's wrong. You can't generate enough force from that position."
"It's a movie," Zhenlan reminded everyone mildly, even though I could see the soft smile on his face.
"It's still wrong." Lingyun shifted slightly, wincing. "And that kick would've broken his ankle."
I ate another mango slice and watched the scene play out. He wasn't wrong—the choreography was designed for visual impact, not practical application.
But that was the point.
Movies weren't about reality.
They were about the story reality was supposed to tell.
The film continued. Betrayals stacked on betrayals. Loyalties tested and broken. The two moles circling each other, getting closer, the tension building toward inevitable confrontation.
"What would you do?" I asked.
The question hung in the air for a moment. On screen, the police mole was making a decision about whether to blow his cover to save a colleague.
"In his position?" Yuche's gaze moved from the screen to me, his expression thoughtful. "I'd have extracted myself long before it reached this point. The risk-reward ratio is completely skewed."
"That's not an option in his situation," Chenghai reminded him. "He's committed. Extraction means abandoning the operation and probably getting killed by both sides."
"Then the operation was flawed from the start." Yuche leaned back, his arms crossing. "You don't put someone in a position where the only exit is death."
"Sometimes that's the job," Chenghai replied quietly.
There was a beat of silence. On screen, the mole made his choice—stayed in position, let the colleague die, maintained his cover. The camera lingered on his face, showing the cost of that decision.
"He's going to break," I said.
Zhenlan glanced at me. "What makes you say that?"
"He's already breaking. Look at his eyes." I gestured at the screen with a mango slice. "He's not compartmentalizing anymore. He's feeling it. That's the beginning of the end."
Yuche studied the screen for a moment, then nodded slowly. "You're right. He's lost the detachment. Once that's gone, the cover becomes unsustainable."
"Detachment," Lingyun repeated, his tone carrying something that might have been amusement. "Is that what we're calling it?"
"It's what keeps you alive," I snorted.
The film moved into its second act. The triad mole was having his own crisis—caught between the organization he'd infiltrated and the police force he actually served, watching people die because of information he'd provided, starting to question which side he was really on.
"That's the real problem," Chenghai said, his voice cutting through the dialogue on screen. "Identity confusion. Once you start questioning which role is real, you've already lost."
"Maybe both roles are real," Zhenlan said. "Maybe that's the point."
"Then you're not a mole anymore. You're just confused." Chenghai's tone was matter-of-fact. "And confused people make mistakes."
I reached for another mango slice and considered that. He wasn't wrong—clarity was survival. Knowing exactly who you were and what you wanted made decisions simpler, actions cleaner. Doubt was the thing that got people killed.
But doubt was also what made people human.
On screen, the two moles finally identified each other. The confrontation played out in a parking garage—tense, quiet, both of them knowing that only one of them was walking away.
"The police mole should've shot first," Yuche said. "He had the advantage."
"He hesitated," I said.
"Exactly. And hesitation—"
"—gets you killed," Lingyun finished. "We know."
But the police mole didn't die. Not yet.
The scene shifted, the tension building toward the inevitable conclusion, and I found myself actually engaged in the film now, watching the way the narrative was structured, the way each choice led to the next, the way the characters were trapped by their own decisions.
"What would you have done differently?" I asked, directing the question at no one in particular.
Chenghai answered first. "Never taken the assignment. The parameters were impossible from the start."
"Established a better exit strategy," Yuche added. "Multiple contingencies. Never rely on a single point of extraction."
"Maintained better operational security," Zhenlan said. "The handler meetings were too frequent, too predictable."
Lingyun was quiet for a moment, then said, "I would've picked a side earlier. Committed fully. The middle ground is what killed them both."
I considered their answers—tactical, strategic, pragmatic. All of them focused on the mechanics of survival, the logistics of the operation. None of them addressing the actual core of the film, which wasn't about tactics at all.
It was about the cost of living a lie.
"The problem isn't the strategy," I said after a moment. "It's that they both believed they could maintain two identities indefinitely. That's not sustainable. Eventually, you have to choose which one is real and accept that the other one is dead."
The room went quiet. On screen, the final confrontation was playing out—betrayal, gunfire, the inevitable tragedy of two men who'd both been trying to do the right thing and ended up destroying each other in the process.
"And which one would you choose?" Yuche asked, his tone carefully neutral.
I ate the last mango slice and folded the empty bag with precise movements. "Whichever one keeps me alive."
Chenghai made a sound that might have been approval while Zhenlan's expression was unreadable. Lingyun had his eyes closed again, but I could tell he was still listening.
The film continued. The ending was inevitable now—tragic, brutal, exactly what the setup had promised.
I watched the final scenes play out with the same detached interest I'd had at the beginning, but something had shifted in the room. The conversation had moved from casual commentary to something more real, more revealing.
We were all playing roles. All maintaining covers. All pretending that what had happened over the past few days was manageable, explainable, something we could rationalize and move past.
But we couldn't. Not really.
The fire had happened. The cure had failed. The world outside was still full of bodies and questions the government didn't have answers for.
And sitting here watching a movie about lies and loyalty and the cost of survival wasn't going to change any of that.
But for now, for this moment, it was enough.
The credits started rolling. No one moved to turn it off.
"That was darker than I expected," Lingyun said finally.
"It's a tragedy," Zhenlan said. "They usually are."
"Should we watch something else?" Chenghai asked, his tone suggesting he didn't particularly care either way.
I reached for a new bag of snacks—wasabi peas this time—and settled back into the couch. "I'm fine with whatever."
The conversation drifted into debate about what to watch next, voices overlapping, opinions offered and dismissed, the kind of casual back-and-forth that felt almost normal.
Almost.
Outside, the bodies were still there. The questions were still unanswered. The future was still uncertain.
But inside, for now, we had this.
And I kind of liked that.
