ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð
ââð°ð¯ð°ð¹ ðŽð¹ð¿. ð³ðºðŸð»ðŽð¿ð¬ð· ð»ðððððð ððððð {ðððð}â 6:45ð»ðžââ The air is corroded with the smell of antiseptic, and the rhythmic beep of hearts monitor from different rooms. On the private floor, her voice was heard, silk-wrapped steel. âYou think silence is loyalty. But to likes of Brain box, loyalty is just a tombstone waiting for one's nameâ She paces slowly, voice laced with careful precision. Still, no answer. She leans forward slightly, trying to pierce through that unshakable calm. It has been the case for over thirty minutes since she arrived. Grinch wasn't bulging. His kind of silence was making her sweat, despite her years of experience. She exhales, and her voice softensânot from care, but from manipulation. This is where she plants the quest. âLet me help you file the report. Attempted murder. Yes, and I'm sure it isn't a slap on the wristâeven in your world. Itâs cleaner than betrayal, isnât it?â GRINCH didn't look at her. Eyes glued on the ceiling, as he lay hooked to an IV drip. His armâs bandaged, skin slightly bruised and grayish under the light. Breanna took another sharp breath, almost meditative. His stillness was dominant. Alert. Calculatingâa true consigliere, stoic even on a hospital bed. âTell me Grinch... how does it feelâknowing you were just a shield? Collateralâ she began again . âThat's bad, whenever the king feels threatened⊠he sacrifices the knight, and you still call it loyalty?â. Grinchâs eyes flick to her, just for a second. Not enough to give ground. Just enough to remind her heâs listening. She immediately switched her tone, softer now. Calculated. âYou're not a soldier, Grinch. You're the mind. The spineâthe pillar of Brain box, but loyalty's only as good as the man you're bleeding for.â Breanna moves more closer, her boots clicking like a metronome counting down something inevitable. âTell me all I need to know. Let me do what you wonât. Or hellâletâs file it clean, your loyalty isn't vested on. Iâve seen the look in your eyes, Grinch.â âYouâre just waiting for a reason to stop, and here I amâasking you to form an allyâ. She studies his face and steps back, watching for the flickerâjust a twitch. Grinchâs eyes donât move, but his jaw tightens. She caught it. She made to move in with the next blow, but he flipped her entire argument on its head, and hit her with a rhetorical question. His voice was a deep, gravelled baritone that slices through the air like a blade. âTell me, detectiveâŠWhen did loyalty start sounding like weakness to people like you?â Breanna freezes, caught off-guard not by the questionâbut the timing. It was a strategistâs reply. Measured. Threatening without even raising its voice A long silence follows. The kind that eats pride. His gaze all the while pinning her in place, cold and regal. Slowly he finally turns his head, speaking with a slow fire. âIf your own badge ordered a hit on you... won't you still be wearing it?â Breanna straightens, jaw tight. She opens her mouth, then closes it. That was no rhetorical jab. That was a mirror slammed in front of her face. One she didnât expect from a man on painkillers and an IV drip. Grinch turns his head back to the ceiling, closing his eyes again. As if her presence no longer demands attention. On a second thought, he hits her with another face-slapping blow, that lands with absolute finality, âLoyalty isnât blindness. Itâs choosing not to seeâŠbecause you trust that person enough to lead youâ Breanna tilts her head slightly, then smirksâjust a twitch of her lips. Impressed. Irritated. Intrigue. âI know all that Grinch.â Breanna stated in a persuasive tone. âBut bear it in mind, you donât have to die for a man who already decided how to bury youâTo Brain box... you are just a vault. A shield. And whenever he feels unsafe, he will use you as his human bullet proofâ There was a long silence between them. The IV drip clicking for a while, until Grinch lets out an exhalation. âI was never a shield, but if being a human bulletproof is what it takes to keep Brain Box alive. Then I'm up for itâ Breanna's face tightens, her brow archingâequal parts impressed and challenged. She came in thinking he was bleedingâvulnerable. But thereâs nothing fragile about the man on the bed. She steps back slowly, saying nothing in response. Because thereâs nothing left to say that wonât bounce off that wall of granite resolve. Crouching right by the posterior of his bed, she picked her blazer, seeing herself out. And Grinch? He closes his eyes againâcalm, loyal, and untouched. The door hisses shut behind her, and she storms down the corridor with unfinished war in her spine. As she turns, just at the corner of the corridor, she nearly collides with ANTONIO, just arriving. Dressed in a tailored black coat, collar raised, hands in pocketsâshoes silent on the polished floor. His presence is wolf-like: elegant, dangerous, composed. Their eyes locked mid-step. A full second passes. Neither moves. He just stood with an effortless calmness, but eyed her like a smudge on a white wallâsharp like a blade mid-draw. âFunny timing.â Breanna broke the silence. âIsnât itâHope you are done?â He asked in a flat tone. He doesnât need to ask what she was doing in the Private ward. He knows. They both do. âNot really,â Breanna replied with a quiet smirk. âOhâthat's badâ his face lit up with smile, thin. Deadly. âI will take it from hereâ. Breanna steps slightly to the side, enough for him to passâbut not without a lingering pause. A silent warning rests on her brow, and her voice dropsâlow and cutting. âI'm curious Brain box, was that a warning shot or a message?â âDepends on who's listening.â He replied flatly. Striding toward her, with one finger raised in a mock farewell. âMrs Stewart? You are standing on my wayâ Breanna flashed another stare at him. Then she brushes past him, shoulder grazing his coatânot out of aggression, but to remind him, sheâs not afraid of ghosts in silk suits, nor the new him. He watches her go for a moment, then finally pushes open the door to Grinchâs room. Stepping inside, he closes the door gently. Grinch inhaled sharply, bracing his resolve for the confrontation he knew that was going to happen. âWhat does she want?â Blade asked in a low and casual tone. Grinch doesnât speak for a beat. Then, without turningâ âSame thing everyone wants when they smell a weak line. A confession.â âAnd?â Blade smirked, moving closer, his footsteps deliberate. He stops at the foot of the bed, gaze resting on his Consigliere. âAnd what did you tell her?â Grinch lifted his head now. Slowly. Eyes razor-sharp despite the weakness in his body. âShe asked a lot of thingsâso I told her what she needed to hear.â Antonio says nothing. No reaction. His breathing composedâeyes still fixed on Grinch, calculating his countenance. The long, heavy silence stretches. Then he slowly moves closer, his voice dippingâlike someone checking if the spine they cracked still holds. âSo thatâs what this is?â He smiled faintly. âWhat did she offer you in returnâprotection?â Grinch studies Antonio's calm exterior, jaw ticking once. The tension between them is thickâbut beneath it, was that dangerous bond only men like them understand, loyalty that bleeds, but doesnât break. â¿Y por qué estás tan curious de escucharlo? {And why are you so curious to hear it?}â Grinch's voice was rough with pain, but heavy with intent. âTrade your blood for words? You're gonna start asking questions too?â Antonio queried. He nods onceâsilent, respectful. âGo aheadâbring your questionsâ With precision, he steps toward the nightstand by the bed, his shadow swallowing the light momentarily. âNoââ Grinch countered. âJust oneâI have only one questionâ.ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð âNoââ Grinch countered. âJust oneâI have only one questionâ. âOkayâ Blade grinned. âWhere the hell were you last night, and what happened out thereâŠBefore you came back and tried to put a hole in my ribs?â. Antonioâs smile fades, he looks away for a moment. Then Grinch continued. âWhy did you suddenly start aiming at your shadow, calling it the enemy?â âYouâre not my enemy.â Antonio growled like a wounded lion. âMoreover, youâre still breathing.â âOnly because I didnât shoot back.â Grinch countered flatly. âWhole truth is that, youâre starting to treat me like trashâ Antonio finally lowers his gazeâjust for a beat. Shame and regret. âYou shouldâve stayed out of it, when I asked you toâ Grinchâs eyes hold steadâconcern and brutal loyalty. âYou shouldâve just let me in.â âYou left with a restraining order, and came back with murder in your eyesâŠSo tell meâwhat did you see out there?â Antonio looks away
ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð ââð°ð¯ð°ð¹ ðŽð¹ð¿. ð³ðºðŸð»ðŽð¿ð¬ð· ð»ðððððð ððððð {ðððð}â 6:45ð»ðžââ The air is corroded with the smell of antiseptic, and the rhythmic beep of hearts monitor from different rooms. On the private floor, her voice was heard, silk-wrapped steel. âYou think silence is loyalty. But to likes of Brain box, loyalty is just a tombstone waiting for one's nameâ She paces slowly, voice laced with careful precision. Still, no answer. She leans forward slightly, trying to pierce through that unshakable calm. It has been the case for over thirty minutes since she arrived. Grinch wasn't bulging. His kind of silence was making her sweat, despite her years of experience. She exhales, and her voice softensânot from care, but from manipulation. This is where she plants the quest. â
ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð Breannaâs fingers stop mid-stir, the spoon clinking once against the mug. She didn't jump in to force the full story out, instead she had her back to them, but her ears were sharper now. âNo way. Grinch Hernández ? Mr Huntâs right hand man?â The second staff cut in. Disbelief. âSwear on my badgeâmy cousinâs a medic at Edenâhe said Mr Hunt wheeled him in, like a gutted deer, bleeding out all over those white tiles and barely breathing.â The first man snarled, buttressing his claim. The second agent gives a low whistle âShit... If Grinch is bleeding out in a backroom, what does that say about Huntâs inner circleâthat guy is the core of their strength?â âExactly. Itâs weird, though. No copsâor official complaint of hit, no ambulance nor press. Just Antonioâs private suits, with silencers tucked under their coats.â The first man expressed his point. âGrinchâs too protected for this to be street-levelâ The second agent shook his
ðžðððð'ð ð¹ððððððâââ âSophia, this isnât an actual raid,â Breanna said coolly, arms crossed, âItâs a calculated misdirectionâa sting.â Sophia stares at the red pin on La Sirenaâs map, and tilts her head with quiet skepticism. âNoâItâs a gamble. A media circus waiting to happen.â Breanna didnât look at her immediately. Instead, she clicks to the next slideâ a surveillance photo of two powerful arms runners, entering the hotel from a rear service alley. Sophia stepped forward, lowering her voice. âIsn't that Victor Loa and Cesar MatéâOrganised Crimeâs most-wanted mercenaries?â. âGood thing you knowâ Breanna flexed, she walked past her to grab a folder from the table, tossing it open. âTheyâre not in New Mexico for blackjack. These two are ghosts. Arms dealersâAntonioâs protecting them by taking them through the private rear door.â âThat's obviously a huge leap of logicâ Sophia breathed out, her mind in disarray. âYou get itâIf th
ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð âI'm sorry Missâno verification, no entry.â The voice cut in, in a clipped manner. âHey Mister. I've been here beforeâI just came to speak to Mr Hunt. Heâs not expecting me, I knowâit's just personal.â âAlso,â Junior added, stepping forward. He placed the bucket of shells reverently at his feet, like a ceremonial offering. Straightening, he lifted his chin with childish dignity. âWe brought him a present. Thatâs gotta be worth something.â Nevena squinted her eyes in disbelief, and nudged him aside gently. âLookâweâre not threats. I'm just a tourist, and he's a local.â she added, her voice threading between hope and fear. There was silence.A long beat. The kind that could smother one's confidence. âDoes it mean we are sealed out?â Junior grumbled with a weary glance. âI had my doubts from the onsetâ Nevena replied, her voice barely perceptible. âTheir lossâlosersâ Junior leaned toward the glass, making a scornf
ðžðððð'ð ð¹ðððððð âââð³ððð'ð ð·ðððâŠ.ð°ðððððððð ð³ððð 7:38AMâââ A yellow taxi rumbled to a halt, just before the curve of a wide pristine road, flanked by towering hedges trimmed into ruthless perfection. âWhy are we stopping?â Nevena squinted outâat the road. The driver, a wiry local in his mid-fifties, shifted the car into neutral and cleared his throat. âSeñorita, no puedo ir más allá,â he said, jerking his chin toward the road ahead. "Propiedad privada." âWaitâwhat?â Nevena blinked, her brows knitting. âPrivate property,â he repeated, slower this time, but still in Spanish. From the back seat, Junior piped upâglancing past the windshield. The road stretched in perfect symmetryâlined with palm hedges and sculpted trees. The asphalt was dark and smooth like it had never known a pothole. Nevena looked out again. The road looked normal. No fence. No guards. Just silence and manicured hedgesâlike a painting. âItâs fin