It was a smoking gun. And Viktor had handed it to the wrong person, one unlock at a time.
The fluorescent hum of the server room was the only lullaby Viktor knew. For three years, he’d been a ghost in the machine—a senior technician at a massive "iDevice repair" depot in Kraków. Officially, he replaced screens and batteries. Unofficially, he was the guy who got called when an iPhone arrived in a near-death state: logic board fried, water-damaged, or locked to an iCloud account that no one could remember the password for.
Not a tool, really. A suite. A set of Python scripts he’d cobbled together over late nights, using leaked baseband exploits, a hacked version of the checkm8 bootrom vulnerability, and a custom proxy that tricked Apple’s activation servers into thinking a different serial number was asking for a ticket. He called it XTools iCloud Unlock —but it wasn’t for sale. It was his moral scalpel. xtools icloud unlock
Most of those were innocent. A grandmother’s iPad. A construction worker’s backup phone. But some… some weren’t. Viktor had learned to read the weight of a device. A stolen iPhone had a certain stillness to it, like a held breath.
Viktor’s blood turned to slush.
That night, Viktor sat in a cold holding cell and thought about the smiling face on the activation lock screen. Dmitri Volkov. Not dead. Just hiding. And Alena—the "desperate widow"—was probably already on a plane with those photos, using them to triangulate his safehouse.
Until the morning a device arrived that broke him. It was a smoking gun
But the man in the grey coat just pulled out a pair of handcuffs and said, "You’re not in trouble for unlocking the phone. You’re in trouble for not knowing whose lock you were picking. Every tool is a weapon if you don’t see the hand holding it."