The drums looped. And then the ghost played.

That last part wasn’t just a feature. It was a promise.

The Piano Roll Ghost track was now duplicated. Then triplicated. Each new track had a different MIDI clip. One was labeled “Voice 1 – Hello.” Another: “Voice 2 – I was here.” A third: “Render me.”

Leo called it his “ghost drive.” A scratched, black-and-orange USB stick that held only one thing: a cracked, portable version of Cubase 5. No installer, no registry keys, no dongle. Just a folder you clicked, and the old DAW rose from the dead.

The GUI was frozen in time—that late-2000s gray-and-blue gradient, the blocky channel strips, the vintage HALion One player. It loaded instantly. No ASIO driver? No problem. He routed it to the Windows DirectX sound, plugged in the $5 earbuds from the gas station, and dragged a dusty loop from the factory library onto the arranger.

He never found another copy of Cubase 5 Portable. The forum was gone. The Mega links were dust. But every now and then, on a quiet night shift, the label printer would hum to life and spit out a single sheet of thermal paper.

He pressed play.

Leo pulled the USB drive out.

No trace.

The screen went black. The printer stopped. The security feed died. For three seconds, the print shop was a tomb.

Then he saw the MIDI track labeled “Piano Roll Ghost.”

A simple four-bar drum loop. Kick, snare, hat. It sounded like 2009.