MasukThe air in the private terminal carried a sterile chill, sharp with recycled oxygen and quiet urgency.Elara adjusted the sleeve of her jacket as she stepped off the jet, her boots striking the polished floor with a soft, deliberate rhythm. The transition from the chaos of the safehouse to the controlled stillness of international transit felt almost surreal.Dominic was beside her, as always, close enough to reach, far enough to move freely.Austria.Quiet.Contained.Exactly the kind of place a man like Kessler would use to disappear.“Transport’s clean,” Dominic murmured, his voice low as his eyes scanned the surroundings. “No immediate tails.”Elara nodded, though her instincts were already working beneath the surface, dissecting every movement, every face in the terminal.“No immediate tails doesn’t mean no surveillance,” she replied.A faint flicker of approval crossed Dominic’s expression.“Agreed.”They moved in sync through the terminal, blending into the steady flow of trave
The safehouse no longer felt like a place to rest.It had become a launch point.Elara zipped up her jacket slowly, the sound sharp in the quiet room. The moment Dominic had identified Austria as their most probable lead, something inside her had shifted, like a switch flipping from recovery back to survival.No more stillness.No more pretending the world would give them time.Kessler was moving.Which meant they had to move faster.She reached for her holster, adjusting it carefully along her waist. The familiar weight of her weapon settled against her side, grounding her in a way nothing else could. Around her, the room was coming alive with quiet, purposeful motion.Dominic worked with the same precision she had come to expect from him.Every movement deliberate.Every action efficient.But there was something else there now, something subtle beneath the surface. A softness that hadn’t existed before. Or maybe it had… and she was only just noticing it now.“You’re tightening that
Morning had fully settled over the city, but the warmth it brought did little to ease the tension inside the safehouse.Elara stood by the window, arms folded loosely across her chest, watching the streets below. The fog from earlier had lifted, revealing a clearer view of the river and the slow movement of traffic beginning to build along the distant roads.Everything looked normal.Too normal.Behind her, the faint hum of Dominic’s tablet filled the quiet room. He had been going through data for the past hour, cross-referencing movement logs, scanning intercepted signals, digging through the remnants of Kessler’s shattered network.But there was a problem.There was nothing.And that, more than anything, was what unsettled them both.“Elara.”His voice broke through her thoughts.She turned slightly. “You found something?”Dominic didn’t answer immediately.He was leaning over the table, one hand braced against the surface, the other scrolling through layers of encrypted data. His e
The first light of day spilled through the tall, dusty windows of the safehouse, painting the room in soft shades of gold and gray.Elara stirred, eyelids heavy but warmth pressed against her side, anchoring her to the bed, or rather, to the couch where she and Dominic had collapsed hours earlier. The night had been long, intense, and, though she hadn’t fully allowed herself to think it until now, transformative.Her fingers brushed against his chest, still steady and warm beneath the thin blanket. A quiet smile tugged at her lips. For the first time in weeks, she had felt unshakably close to someone who didn’t just fight alongside her, but understood every unspoken fear and every adrenaline-fueled heartbeat.Dominic shifted slightly, murmuring something she couldn’t quite decipher. His arm circled her waist instinctively, pulling her just a little closer. She let herself relax, inhaling the faint scent of him, still tinged with the day-old smoke and gunpowder from the terminal missio
The safehouse held its breath. No alarms, no distant sirens, just the low thrum of the city filtering through cracked windows and the ragged rhythm of their breathing.Elara collapsed onto the sagging couch, blanket clutched around her like armor. Every bruise throbbed in time with her pulse: ribs tender, shoulder locked tight from the earlier collision with steel. She felt filthy, spent, alive in a way that hurt.Dominic moved through the small space with deliberate economy, stacking gear, wiping blood from a knife blade, glancing at the tablet one last time. His shirt clung to his back, damp with sweat that hadn’t quite dried. He hadn’t looked away from her for longer than a few seconds all evening.“You’re still awake,” he said, voice gravel-rough.She lifted her eyes. He stood framed by the window, late dusk painting him in bruised purples and fading golds.“Can’t sleep,” she answered. “Body won’t let me.”He crossed the room in four quiet steps and sank onto the couch beside her,
The safehouse had grown quieter as the day stretched into afternoon.The early morning tension had slowly faded, replaced by a heavy stillness that settled into every corner of the old building. Sunlight filtered through the dusty windows, painting soft patterns across the wooden floor.Outside, the city had fully awakened.Traffic hummed faintly in the distance, and somewhere nearby a construction crew had begun their daily work. The occasional metallic clang echoed across the warehouse district, reminding Elara that the world beyond these walls was moving forward.But inside the safehouse, time seemed slower.Elara sat on the worn couch near the far wall, her boots resting on the edge of the low table. A thin blanket had been thrown over her shoulders, though the room itself wasn’t particularly cold.She wasn’t really watching the television in front of her.The muted screen showed footage from different parts of the world, police vehicles surrounding warehouses, reporters standing
The safehouse lights dimmed automatically as the system shifted into night mode. Outside, the city’s distant glow flickered through the reinforced glass, painting faint patterns across the floor.For the first time in hours, there were no alarms.No warnings.No shadows moving across the monitors.
The safehouse had fallen into one of those deceptive silences, the kind that feels like the hush right before a storm breaks. The ventilation system whispered overhead, monitors glowed with their steady, indifferent blue, and outside the reinforced walls Dominion City kept its restless pulse.Kessl
The city outside was quiet, deceptively quiet. Every shadow felt heavier, every muted sound magnified in the stillness of the safehouse. Dominic and I moved with the precision born of months of surviving Kessler’s manipulations, but there was a tension now that went beyond operational necessity.We
The safehouse felt smaller tonight, the air thicker, warmer. The low drone of security systems buzzed like a distant heartbeat beneath everything else.I collapsed onto the old leather couch, spine finally allowed to curve, muscles releasing their iron grip. Dominic stayed standing, always the sent







