LOGINThe warehouse on the outskirts of Brooklyn smelled like rust and abandoned dreams. Daveson checked the address three times before entering, his hand instinctively going to the knife strapped to his ankle. Raymond Drake had given him the contact, but that didn't mean he trusted this meeting.
A figure emerged from the shadows. Tall, unremarkable features, the kind of face that would disappear from memory five minutes after you looked away. Professional.
"You're Daveson." It wasn't a question.
"And you're Vincent Corso."
Vincent's expression didn't change. "Raymond says you need a performance. Something convincing but controlled."
"That's right." Daveson pulled out a folder, spreading photographs and documents across a rusted metal table. "Lissa Heyden. December 15th. Her 45th birthday party at the family estate. Three hundred guests, high security, media presence."
Vincent studied the materials with clinical detachment. "You want me to kill her?"
"No. I want you to try to kill her and fail."
Now Vincent's eyebrow raised slightly. "Interesting. What's the play?"
"You breach security at 10 PM, right when the main celebration starts. Maximum visibility, maximum chaos. You get into the main ballroom, weapon drawn, make it clear you're targeting Lissa Heyden specifically." Daveson tapped one of the photos. "I'll be positioned here, part of her personal security detail. When you make your move, I take you down before you can fire a shot."
"And then?"
"You run. Security will be focused on protecting the guests and securing the principal. In the confusion, you slip out through the service entrance on the east side. I'll make sure that exit route is clear."
Vincent was quiet for a long moment, studying the estate layout. "This is elaborate. Most people who want to be heroes just tackle a drunk. Why go to all this trouble?"
"Because it needs to be real. Needs to be a genuine threat that I neutralize. Lissa Heyden doesn't trust easily. Neither does her son. If I'm going to get inside their inner circle, if I'm going to have access to everything, I need to be the man who saved their lives."
"What's your endgame?"
"That's not your concern."
Vincent's cold eyes met his. "It is when you're asking me to put my neck on the line. Lissa Heyden is connected. Powerful. If this goes wrong, if she figures out it was staged, we both end up in pieces."
"It won't go wrong. I've been working security for them for two months. I know their protocols, their weaknesses, their blind spots. I can make this work."
"Two months." Vincent's tone was skeptical. "That's not much time to earn trust."
"It's enough to prove competence. But I need this to push me over the edge. To make me invaluable." Daveson pulled out an envelope, thick with cash. "Fifty thousand. Twenty-five now, twenty-five after it's done."
Vincent didn't reach for the money immediately. "I want to be clear about something. I'm not actually shooting anyone. I'm not catching charges for attempted murder because your plan goes sideways."
"Blanks. You'll have blanks in the weapon."
"And if someone else shoots me? If their security gets trigger-happy?"
"They won't. Lissa doesn't want bloodshed at her party. Her head of security has strict orders: neutralize threats with minimal violence when possible. Besides, you'll be running before they can get a clean shot."
Vincent finally reached for the envelope, counting the bills with practiced efficiency. "You've thought this through."
"I've thought about nothing else for six years."
Something flickered in Vincent's expression. Almost like recognition. "This is personal for you."
"Yes."
"Then you're already compromised. Personal vendettas make people sloppy."
"I'm not sloppy. I'm careful. I'm patient. And I'm going to see this through."
Vincent pocketed the money. "Fine. I'll do it. But understand this: once it's done, we never met.
"Agreed."
"And if you double-cross me, if you try to set me up to take a real fall, I'll make sure everyone knows this was your plan. I'll burn you on my way down."
Daveson held his gaze steadily. "I'm not interested in burning you. I just want my shot at the Heydens."
"Fair enough." Vincent gathered up the photos and documents. "I'll study these. Memorize the layout. December 15th, 10 PM. Don't be late, hero."
Working for Leonard Heyden was nothing like Daveson had expected.
He'd researched the man extensively. Twenty-six years old, vice president of operations, Columbia MBA, being groomed to eventually take over the company. The business magazines painted him as brilliant but demanding, innovative but ruthless. They called him "Lissa's perfect heir."
What they didn't mention was how cold he was.
Leonard moved through the Heyden estate like winter personified. His violet eyes were beautiful but empty of warmth, assessing everyone and everything with calculating precision. He never raised his voice, never showed anger, but somehow that made him more intimidating than any amount of shouting could have achieved.
He was particularly harsh with the staff.
"This coffee is lukewarm," Leonard said one morning, setting down his cup with controlled deliberation. The housekeeper who had brought it flinched. "I shouldn't have to explain that when I ask for coffee, I expect it to be hot. Are you capable of understanding that simple instruction?"
"Yes, sir. I'm sorry, sir. I'll bring a fresh cup immediately."
"Don't bother. I've lost my appetite." Leonard's tone was flat, dismissive. "Just ensure it doesn't happen again."
He treated his assistants the same way. Daveson watched him reduce a young intern to tears over a minor scheduling error, his voice never rising above a calm, measured tone that somehow made every word cut deeper.
"I don't tolerate incompetence," Leonard told Daveson during one of their security briefings. "If you can't perform your duties to the highest standard, you'll be replaced. Is that clear?"
"Crystal clear, sir."
Leonard's eyes narrowed slightly. "You don't call me 'sir' the way the others do. Why is that?"
Daveson kept his expression neutral. "I show respect through competence, not excessive formality."
For a moment, Leonard just stared at him. Then something that might have been approval flickered across his face. "Interesting approach. Let's see if your competence matches your confidence."
It was a test, Daveson realized. Everything with Leonard was a test.
He rose to every challenge. When Leonard wanted security assessments, Daveson delivered comprehensive reports that identified weaknesses Leonard's regular team had missed. When Leonard traveled to business meetings, Daveson anticipated threats before they materialized. When Leonard demanded perfection, Daveson gave him nothing less.
But there was no warmth. No friendliness. Leonard treated him the same way he treated everyone else: as a tool to be used, evaluated, and discarded if found wanting.
Perfect. That made this easier. Daveson didn't need Leonard to like him. He just needed Leonard to trust his competence. To rely on him. To make him indispensable.
Lissa Heyden was a different challenge entirely.
Where Leonard was cold, Lissa was charming. She smiled easily, remembered names, asked personal questions that made people feel seen. It was all performance, Daveson knew, but it was a masterful one.
"Roarke, isn't it?" she said one afternoon, encountering him in the hallway. "How are you settling in?"
"Very well, Mrs. Heyden. Thank you for asking."
"I'm glad to hear it. Marco speaks highly of you. Says you have excellent instincts." Her blue eyes were sharp despite the warmth of her smile. "Tell me, what do you think of our security protocols?"
It was another test. Daveson could feel it. "They're comprehensive. Professional. But there are always improvements that could be made."
"Such as?"
"The east service entrance. It's monitored, but the camera angle leaves a blind spot near the door itself. Someone who knew what they were doing could exploit that."
Lissa's smile widened. "Very observant. I'll have that addressed." She paused. "You're different from our usual security personnel. Most of them just nod and agree with everything. You actually think."
"I take my responsibilities seriously, ma'am."
"Good. I value people who can think independently. People who see problems before they become crises." She studied him for another moment. "Keep up the good work, Roarke. I have a feeling you're going to go far in this organization."
Every word from her mouth made Daveson's blood boil. This woman, this monster who had destroyed his father, was standing here complimenting him, completely unaware that he was the reckoning she'd been running from for six years.
He smiled back. Professional. Respectful. "Thank you, Mrs. Heyden. I won't let you down."
"Leonard, there were three people in this kitchen. If I go to the hospital for 'food poisoning' and I'm the only one sick…""So we'll say you have a sensitive stomach," Leonard interrupted. "Or allergies. Or anything else that explains why only you're affected. Daveson, you're twelve weeks pregnant and you can't keep anything down. That's not sustainable."Daveson's eyes filled with tears. "I'm scared.""I know," Leonard said softly, taking his hands. "But we're going to Dr. Chen. Right now. I'll drive you myself…""You can't," Daveson interrupted. "Your mother. She's already suspicious. If you personally drive me to a doctor after I was sick in front of staff, it'll look...""Like I care about my employee's wellbeing," Leonard finished. "Which I do. Which anyone would.""Leonard…""Or I'll send Victoria," Leonard conceded. "Would that be better? She can take you, stay with you, bring you back. No one will think twice about my fiancée being kind to staff."Daveson nodded weakly. "Okay
"And I appreciate the loyalty behind that impulse. But Mother, I'm trying to build a life that's not based on violence and fear.""How noble," Lissa said coldly. "And how naive. Leonard, you're about to become a father. That means making hard choices. Doing things you'd rather not do to protect your child.""I know," Leonard said quietly. "But I'd rather teach my child to find solutions that don't involve hurting people."Lissa stood, moving to her window. For a long moment, she was silent."Your forty-eight hours still stand," she said finally. "Morrison may be dealt with, but the core situation remains. In two days, we'll discuss my terms for helping you manage the pregnancy and everything that comes after.""And if we don't agree to your terms?" Daveson asked.Lissa turned to look at him, her expression unreadable. "Then you're on your own. No protection, no resources, no help. Just you, Leonard, and a baby the whole world will want to study like a science experiment. Is that reall
Morrison laughed. "You want me to give up leverage worth millions for a corporate job?""We want you to trade a one-time payout for long-term stability," Daveson interjected. "You said yourself you're leaving the country. This way you leave with a legitimate career instead of looking over your shoulder for the rest of your life.""Plus," Leonard added, "if you sell that information, you burn every bridge you have. No one will hire you after you've proven you're willing to violate client confidentiality. This job offer expires the moment you sell to anyone else."Morrison was quiet, his expression calculating. Leonard could see him running the numbers, weighing options."Show me the contract," Morrison said finally.Leonard's phone buzzed. A text from Victoria: Contract attached. It's ready.He forwarded it to Morrison's number. "Check your email."Morrison pulled out his phone, opening the document. His eyes scanned the pages, and Leonard watched his expression shift from skepticism t
"You want to do what?" Daveson stared at Leonard like he'd lost his mind."Pay Morrison," Leonard repeated. "But not with money."They stood in the hallway, Morrison's thirty-minute deadline ticking away like a bomb. Through the drawing room door, Leonard could hear his mother making phone calls, probably arranging her "solution" to the Morrison problem."Explain," Daveson said."Morrison wants money because he thinks the information is valuable," Leonard said rapidly. "But what if we make it worthless? What if we give him something he wants more?""Like what?""A job," Leonard said. "A very lucrative, very quiet job that pays better than any blackmail scheme. Morrison's a mercenary. He doesn't care about us personally. He cares about profit. So we offer him more profit as our ally than he'd get as our enemy."Daveson shook his head. "You want to hire the man who's blackmailing us?""I want to neutralize him," Leonard corrected. "Victoria's family has security contracts all over the w
He left without another word, the door closing with an expensive click behind him.The three of them sat in silence, staring at the business card Morrison had left behind."We can't pay him," Daveson said finally. "Even if we do, there's no guarantee he won't just make copies and sell them anyway. Blackmailers always come back.""Agreed," Lissa said. "Which means we need to find another solution."Leonard looked at his mother warily. "What kind of solution?""The kind that ensures Mr. Morrison never sells that information to anyone." Lissa pulled out her phone. "I have contacts who specialize in making problems disappear.""You're talking about…" Leonard stopped, not quite able to say it."I'm talking about protecting my family," Lissa said coldly. "Morrison has made himself a threat. I'm eliminating that threat.""By having him killed?" Daveson's voice was incredulous. "You're talking about murder like it's a business decision.""Everything is a business decision," Lissa said. "And M
Inside the drawing room, Leonard felt like he couldn't breathe.Morrison sat across from him, that damned folder on the table between them, containing God knew what evidence of their relationship. Of the pregnancy. Of everything they'd been desperately trying to hide."You're making a mistake," Lissa said to Morrison, her voice deadly calm. "I hired you. You work for me. This information belongs to me.""I gathered it while working for you," Morrison corrected. "But ownership is debatable. And frankly, Mrs. Heyden, I've received offers that make your original payment look like pocket change.""From who?" Leonard demanded."That's confidential," Morrison said. "Client privilege. But I can tell you they're very interested in the medical aspect of the situation. Apparently unprecedented medical phenomena are worth quite a lot to certain research institutions."Daveson's hand moved unconsciously to his stomach. Leonard saw it, saw Morrison notice it, saw his mother's eyes track the gestur
When Daveson returned to Leonard's office, Marcus had just cracked the encryption.Leonard was staring at the screen, his face a carefully blank mask, but Daveson could see the tremor in his hands."I found him," Leonard said quietly. "My father. He's been in Mercy Medical Group for six years. Cata
The next morning, Leonard was all business.He'd left a message for Daveson before dawn: Pick me up at 6 AM sharp. We're going to the office early. I need to access the company servers before my mother arrives.Daveson was waiting with the Mercedes when Leonard emerged from the estate, already dres
Leonard didn't come to Daveson's quarters that night. Nor the night after.Daveson told himself it was for the best. That the clarity of distance was necessary, that whatever had happened in the library was a momentary lapse in judgment born of stress and desire. Leonard was his target. The son of
The first week as Leonard's driver was an exercise in patience.Leonard spoke perhaps ten words to him total. He would emerge from the estate at precisely seven AM, slide into the back of the black Mercedes without acknowledging Daveson's presence, and immediately pull out his phone or laptop. Duri







