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Quinn pushed open her apartment door, Jax right behind her. His hands were already on her hips, pulling her close as the door clicked shut. She kicked off her shoes and turned, lips crashing into his.
They stumbled toward the bedroom, her shirt hit the floor first, then his and fell onto the bed, her on top.
"Fuck me," she whispered, voice rough from the day's grind. Being a detective isn't easy, let alone a homicide detective.
Jax gripped her from behind, guiding her down. She sank onto him, inch by inch, moaning as he filled her. "Don't worry, detective Hale... I'll fuck all the stress out of you."
She rode him hard, hips rolling, breasts bouncing. His hands roamed her body, thumbs brushing her nipples. Her phone buzzed on the nightstand, but she ignored it, chasing the heat building inside.
It rang again, vibrating louder. Jax thrusts deeper, smirking. "Someone wants you bad." Quinn leaned forward, kissing him to shut him up. The third ring cut through, insistent.
Jax's hands spread her cheeks, fingers teasing her as he pounded deeper. She gasped, grinding down, her clit rubbing against him. The pleasure crested, her body shaking as she climaxed.
The phone rang again. She knew it was important.
She reached for it, screen lighting up with her boss's name. "Hale," she answered. "Quinn, we got a body downtown. Get your ass here now." The line clicked dead.
With a quiet sigh, she grabbed her jacket from the back of the chair and pushed herself up. "Get out", she commanded Jax.
"What? After all that-", Jax replied, but Quinn cut him off mid sentence: "Do I look like I give a fuck? Get out."
He got dressed and left in seconds, as Quinn got into her car.
The drive across the city felt longer than usual. The roads were mostly empty, the kind of late-night quiet that made everything feel distant and unreal.
By the time she reached the Blackwood estate, the silence had been replaced with flashing red and blue lights cutting through the darkness. The property itself was impossible to miss. Tall gates, wide driveway, the kind of place built to be noticed.
Quinn stepped out of the car and paused for a moment, taking it in. It didn’t feel like a home.
An officer standing near the entrance straightened slightly when he saw her approach.
“Hale,” he said, giving her a short nod. “Didn’t think you’d make it this fast.”
“I had to, you called me a billion times” Quinn replied, ducking under the tape without slowing. “What do we have?”
“Owner’s inside, Victor Blackwood. Staff found him about an hour ago. No signs of forced entry.”
Quinn glanced toward the house again, her eyes narrowing slightly as she took in the structure, the lighting, the stillness.
“They always say that,” she muttered.
The officer didn’t argue.
Inside, the air felt different. Not colder, just… wrong. The kind of silence that made even small sounds feel louder than they should be. Her footsteps echoed faintly against the marble floor as she followed the officer down a long hallway lined with expensive artwork she didn’t bother looking at twice.
“Anyone else inside?” she asked.
“Staff,” the officer said. Then after a small pause, “And one other guy.”
Quinn slowed slightly. “What other guy?”
“Says he’s consulting.”
She glanced at him. “Consulting what?”
The officer gave a small, uncertain shrug.
That wasn’t an answer she liked.
By the time they reached the study, Quinn was already on edge, though she wouldn’t have said why. The door stood partially open, a thin slice of light spilling into the hallway.
She pushed it open without hesitation.
The room looked exactly like she expected. Dark wood, expensive furniture, everything arranged with deliberate precision. It would have looked almost perfect if not for the man behind the desk.
Victor Blackwood sat slumped in his chair, his body angled slightly to one side, his expression frozen somewhere between surprise and something worse. His eyes were open, unfocused, as if whatever he had seen in his final moments had caught him off guard.
Quinn stepped closer, her attention narrowing as she took in the details.
No blood or visible wounds. The crime was too clean and organized.
Her gaze moved slowly across the desk. A glass sat near his hand, half-finished. Papers were stacked neatly, a pen placed carefully beside them. Nothing out of place, which in itself felt wrong.
“There’s a note,” the officer said, handing it to Quinn.
She took it, her eyes scanning quickly before something made her pause.
A small heart had been drawn in dark ink, almost carefully attached to the corner was a white rose, fresh, untouched.
For a second, the room around her faded, the noise, the movement, all of it slipping into the background as something cold settled in her chest.
"This looks just like the rose that grows in my city..." she murmured to herself. It felt like the note wasn’t written for the victim, it was written for her to notice it.
She leaned in slightly, studying the position of the victim's hands, the angle of his body.
And then she felt it, that quiet, familiar shift in awareness. The sense that she wasn’t alone in the room. Quinn straightened slowly, turning her head. That was when she saw him.
He stood near the window, partially in shadow, like he had been there long before she arrived and saw no reason to move. He wasn’t dressed like law enforcement. He was simply watching.
Their eyes met.
Quinn held his gaze for a second longer than necessary before breaking it, turning back toward the desk.
“You’re not with the police,” she said, her tone flat but controlled.
“No,” he replied.
“Then you shouldn’t be here.”
“Probably not,” he said.
Quinn studied him more carefully this time, taking in the details she had ignored at first glance. The way he stood, relaxed but aware. The lack of tension in his posture. The fact that he looked completely out of place and yet entirely comfortable.
She turned fully toward him now. “Start explaining,” she said. “Before I have someone remove you.”
For a moment, he just looked at her, like he was considering how much to say.
Then, finally, “Damian.” He said it like it was enough for Quinn to figure out who he was.
In one smooth motion, she reached for her gun and drew it, the movement precise and practiced as she lifted it and aimed straight at him, the faint light catching along the metal as the room seemed to still around them.
“Wrong answer.”
Her voice was calm, but there was no room for negotiation in it. The gun remained steady, pointed directly at his head.
Rhea had just finished speaking, her words still hanging in the space between them, heavy and impossible to ignore.“They all went to the same school,” she said, her gaze steady on Quinn. “Same senior batch. And we were right there, just a few years behind.”Quinn leaned back slightly, her fingers resting against the edge of the table as she processed it, her expression controlled but her mind already moving too fast. “That doesn’t explain why they’re being targeted now,” she said, her tone calm but sharper than before. “Plenty of people went to that school.”Rhea gave a faint, knowing smile. “Not like them.”Damian shifted beside Quinn, clearly trying to keep up with a history he wasn’t part of, his eyes moving between the two women. “Okay, I’m going to need more than that,” he said, running a hand through his already messy hair. “Because right now it just sounds like coincidence with extra steps.”“It’s not coincidence,” a voice cut in.All three of them turned.A man stood a few fe
"The cases are from my hometown..." Quinn said to the team in disbelief.It sat at the back of her mind even as the team dispersed, even as Mark started issuing instructions and Aisha returned to her lab, even as Damian tried, unsuccessfully, to act like everything was normal. It wasn’t, nothing about this was normal anymore.Quinn stepped out into the hallway, the noise of the office fading slightly as she pulled her phone out, staring at the contact list for a moment longer than necessary before scrolling down.She hadn’t called in years. Her thumb hovered for half a second, then she pressed dial.Rhea picked up on the third ring.“Well,” her voice came through, light but sharp in a way Quinn remembered too well, “this is unexpected. Should I be worried or offended?”Quinn leaned against the wall, closing her eyes briefly. “Still dramatic, I see.”“Only when people disappear for years and suddenly call me like nothing happened,” Rhea replied. “So which one is it? Crisis or guilt?”“
By the time the board started making sense, the room already felt different, heavier somehow, like the case had finally shifted from scattered pieces into something intentional, something that had been waiting for them to catch up.Quinn stood in front of it, arms crossed, her gaze moving slowly across the victims, their photos pinned side by side with timelines and notes bleeding into one another. At first glance, it still looked like chaos, three different men from three different cities with no obvious overlap, but the longer she looked, the more that absence itself began to feel like the pattern.“There’s something we’re not seeing,” she said, her voice calm but edged with focus.Damian, who had been pacing behind her for the last ten minutes, stopped mid-step, his attention snapping back to the board as if the thought had been circling in his head already.“No,” he said, shaking his head slightly as he stepped closer, “not something we’re not seeing. Something we’re not looking f
"Quinn, wait, this is crazy. We just met-" His words spilled out, muffled against her mouth as his tongue darted in eagerly, kiss turning messy and deep.She grabbed his shirt, calm fingers steady, silencing him with firmer pressure. His hands roamed her back haphazardly, breath hitching. 'God, you taste, OH crap, the doors!' The ding echoed; lobby lights spilled in.Quinn broke away, eyes locked on his, cool command in her gaze. "Come with me." She tugged his hand, leading him out.At her door, keys turned smoothly. She backed him against the wall, kissing him deeply, hands stripping his shirt with precise tugs. "Oh wow, you're very... hyper." He gasped as she pushed him to the bed, shedding clothes in a frantic trail, his pants kicked off awkwardly, hers folded aside.Straddling him, she moved with deliberate rolls, drawing him inside her heat. Damian moved messily, hands clutching her thighs. "Am I- oh fuck, yes, you like that? I'll... move deeper." His rhythm jerked fervent, words
“Who really are you, Damian?” she murmured under her breath.By the time Quinn stepped out of the estate, the night had settled into a heavy, unmoving quiet. The kind that made everything feel slower, thicker, like the world itself was holding its breath. Her phone buzzed just as she reached her car. She didn’t need to check.“Hale. Office now.”The line went dead.Quinn exhaled slowly, staring at the screen for half a second before slipping it back into her pocket. No explanation, no delay. Just another order from her boss, Mark.“You’re still here.” She didn’t turn as she said it, but she could hear him shift behind her.“Yeah,” Damian admitted. “I wasn’t sure if I should leave or… stay or… yeah.”Quinn finally looked at him, unimpressed. “What do you want?”He hesitated, which already told her more than enough. Then, like he’d decided to just jump and deal with the fall later, “A job.”She blinked once. "You’re serious?”“I helped you,” he said quickly, stepping forward, words pick
Quinn didn’t lower the gun.For a moment, the room seemed to close in around them, the quiet stretching just enough to make every sound feel sharper than it should have been. He raised his hands slowly.“Okay, that feels excessive. I get why you did it, I do, but still... can you lower the gun before I faint?”, Damian said in a panicked voice.Quinn didn’t react. “You’re in a crime scene.”“I noticed,” he replied, a little too fast. “Hard to miss, really. Dead body, tense atmosphere, you pointing a gun at me. Whole thing is very clear. HAHA.”Quinn took a step closer, her grip steady, her expression unreadable as she studied him more carefully now. He wasn’t as composed as she had first thought. “Let’s try this again,” she said. “Why are you here?”He let out a short breath, almost a laugh, but there was an edge to it. “I told you, my name is Damian. I heard about the case and got curious.”“That’s not enough.” Quinn replied.“I know, I know,” he said quickly, nodding like he was tr







