FAZER LOGINEva woke slowly.Not with panic.Not with that heavy, suffocating fog that had followed every other time she’d been forced into unconsciousness.But naturally.Her eyes fluttered open, adjusting to the dim light filtering through the curtains.For a moment, she didn’t move.Didn’t breathe too deeply.Didn’t react.Because something felt… different.Her body wasn’t weighed down.Her limbs weren’t sluggish.Her head didn’t throb with that dull, drug-induced haze she had come to recognize too well.She blinked again.Focused.Clear.Fully awake.And that—That realization made her heart skip.Slowly, cautiously, she pushed herself up against the headboard.No dizziness.No weakness.Nothing.Her breath caught slightly.He hadn’t drugged her.Not this time.The thought settled in her mind like a spark.Small.But powerful.Why?Had he forgotten?No.Adrian didn’t forget things.He was too calculated.Too precise.Too deliberate.Which meant—This was intentional.And if it was intentional
Lydia’s fingers trembled as she pulled her phone from her bag.Daniel.She tapped his name immediately and raised the phone to her ear, her heart pounding so loudly it almost drowned out the ringing tone.One ring.Two.Three.Then...The call dropped.“No…” she whispered, staring at the screen.She tried again.This time, it didn’t even ring.Not reachable.A cold wave of unease swept through her chest.Why wasn’t his phone going through?Her mind raced instantly to worst-case scenarios.Had something happened to him too?Or...Was he simply not answering?Her grip tightened around the phone.She didn’t like either possibility.Not one bit.For a second, she stood frozen, the old woman’s words echoing loudly in her mind.He took her.The others.Find her before it’s too late.Her chest tightened painfully.Eva.Her sister could be in danger.Real danger.And yet...Another thought crept in.Unwanted.Uninvited.But persistent.If Eva had truly been taken…Then Daniel would fight for
The house felt too quiet again.But this time—It wasn’t just the absence of Eva that filled the silence.It was something else.Something heavier.Something neither Daniel nor Lydia could pretend didn’t exist anymore.Lydia stood near the doorway, her fingers gripping the strap of her bag tightly.She hadn’t fully stepped outside the living room.But not leaving would only mean...Staying.Letting what happened last night linger just a little longer.And she couldn’t afford that.Not now.Not ever.Daniel stood a few feet away from her, near the couch, his posture tense, his eyes fixed on the floor.Neither of them had spoken for almost a full minute.The silence stretched.Uncomfortable.Loaded.Finally—“I think I should go,” Lydia said.Her voice was soft.But firm.Daniel looked up immediately.“What?”She exhaled slowly.“I should leave,” she repeated, this time more clearly.His brows pulled together.“Lydia—”“What happened last night…” she started, then stopped, swallowing ha
The silence between them didn’t feel like silence anymore.It felt like something shifting.Something fragile… breaking.Adrian didn’t rush her.That was the most dangerous part.He didn’t grab.Didn’t demand.Didn’t force.He simply stayed close—his presence steady, his gaze locked onto hers with quiet intensity.“I know you feel it too,” he said softly.Eva’s breath trembled.She should have pulled away.She should have said something.Anything.But her mind felt like it was moving through water—slow, heavy, clouded by everything that had happened.The fear.The isolation.The confusion.And beneath all of it—Something darker.Something she didn’t want to admit still existed.“You’re tired of fighting it,” Adrian continued, his voice low, coaxing. “Tired of pretending it wasn’t real.”Her lips parted slightly.“I… shouldn’t be here,” she whispered.But the words lacked strength.Conviction.Even she could hear it.Adrian stepped closer.Close enough that she could feel the warmth o
The patrol car moved steadily through the late morning traffic, the city stretching out around it in a blur of movement and noise.Inside, however, the atmosphere was quiet.Not relaxed.Not casual.But thoughtful.Observant.Officer David kept his eyes on the road, one hand resting lightly on the steering wheel while the other tapped faintly against it—a habit he had whenever something didn’t sit right with him.Beside him, Officer Kareem leaned back in his seat, arms crossed, staring out the window.For a long moment, neither of them spoke.Then—“That didn’t feel right,” Kareem said finally.David let out a quiet breath.“No,” he agreed. “It didn’t.”Another pause.Kareem turned his head slightly, glancing at his partner.“You noticed it too?”David gave a small nod.“Everything.&
Daniel opened the door expecting anything but the police.For a split second, he just stood there, his hand still resting on the handle as his eyes met the two uniformed officers on his doorstep.The same officers from the station.Officer David.Officer Kareem.Something in his chest tightened.“Mr. Mitchell,” Officer Daniels greeted calmly.Daniel blinked once, then stepped aside.“Officers… good morning. Please—come in.”They entered without hesitation, their presence immediately shifting the atmosphere inside the house.What had already been heavy now felt… watched.Measured.Daniel closed the door behind them.“Is everything okay?” he asked, trying to keep his tone steady.The officers exchanged a brief glance before David spoke.“We followed up on the lead you gave us,” he said. “Adrian Cole.”Daniel’s jaw tightened slightly.“And?”“We visited him at t
The place Daniel chose wasn’t on any map worth noticing.It was an old private lounge tucked behind a shuttered cigar shop on the outskirts of the city, very discreet, the kind of place men came to when they wanted answers without witnesses. No windows. No music. Just low amber lighting and thick l
Adrian didn’t rush it. He didn’t claim her with hunger or urgency.That was what unsettled Eva the most.Instead, he lifted a hand slowly, almost reverently, and brushed his thumb along her cheek, wiping away the tear she hadn’t realized had fallen.“You’re shaking,” he murmured.“I’m terrified,” s
The next day, Eva met Lydia at the same café they always met.Eva arrived early.She sat stiffly in the booth by the window, both hands wrapped around a mug she hadn’t touched. The steam curled upward, fogging the glass slightly, blurring the street outside. Her reflection stared back at her, eyes
Eva shouldn’t have gone.She knew that the moment she pulled into the underground parking lot beneath Adrian’s apartment building. But fear had a way of pushing her into dangerous places.And right now, she was afraid of him.His threats.His obsession.She rode the elevator up alone, her reflecti







