登入Tobin waited until 2:17 in the morning, when the security rotation left a four-minute window between the east corridor camera sweep and the nearest patrol's return circuit. He moved barefoot down the hallway, staying close to the wall where the floorboards were less likely to creak, carrying nothing but the tension wrench and a thin flat tool he had fashioned from the metal clip inside his paperback's spine.
The Kaba lock was a seven-pin configuration, and Tobin had trained on locks far more complex than this during his military intelligence certification. His hands were steady and his breathing was controlled, and the first three pins set within forty seconds. The fourth pin gave him trouble, a spool driver that required a specific tension angle he needed a moment to find, but by the ninety-second mark the lock turned with a soft click that sounded, in the silence of the sleeping estate, like a gunshot.
He eased the door open and stepped inside. The office was large and dark, lit only by the faint blue glow of a standby monitor on the desk. Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves lined two walls, and the desk itself was a massive thing made of dark wood, positioned to face the door with the kind of strategic awareness that told Tobin everything about the man who sat behind it. Filing cabinets along the far wall, a wall safe partially concealed behind a painting, and a secondary monitor showing live security feeds from six different cameras around the estate.
Tobin moved to the desk first, his eyes adjusting to the low light, his hands already reaching for the top drawer when he heard a sound that stopped every molecule in his body from moving.
The click of a lighter.
A small flame bloomed in the far corner of the room, illuminating the face of Emeric Saal sitting in a leather armchair that Tobin had not seen in the darkness, one leg crossed over the other, a cigarette between his fingers. The flame held for a long moment, painting his features in orange and shadow, and then it went out, replaced by the soft red glow of the cigarette tip as he inhaled.
The silence that followed was the most complete and terrifying silence Tobin had ever experienced. Emeric did not stand. He did not raise his voice. He did not reach for a weapon or call for security. He simply sat in the dark and smoked and looked at Tobin with those pale grey eyes, and the total absence of reaction was far more unsettling than violence would have been.
Tobin did not run, because running would confirm that he was afraid, and Tobin Leith did not give that kind of information away for free. He stood perfectly still with his hands at his sides and the tension wrench still warm in his palm and he waited for whatever came next.
What came next was a sentence that changed everything.
"I was wondering when you would try," Emeric said, and his voice was low and unhurried and carried a note of something that sounded, against all logic, like satisfaction.
Emeric gestured to the chair across from him with the hand holding the cigarette, and the casualness of the gesture was so unexpected that Tobin found himself sitting down before he had made a conscious decision to do so. A small table between the chairs held an ashtray and a bottle of whiskey with two glasses, which meant Emeric had been waiting for him, which meant Emeric had known this was coming.
"How long?" Tobin asked, because there was no point in maintaining a cover that had already been compromised.
"Since you walked through the door." Emeric took a slow drag of his cigarette and exhaled a thin stream of smoke toward the ceiling. "Gamblers' brothers don't catalogue security cameras within the first five minutes of entering a building. They don't count patrol intervals in their sleep. And they certainly don't carry tension wrenches disguised as luggage hardware." He paused. "You moved well. Better than anyone we've had on this property in years. Silas didn't catch it, which is saying something."
"But you did."
"I notice things that interest me." Emeric poured whiskey into both glasses and slid one across the table toward Tobin. "And you interest me, Tobin Leith, because you are very clearly not what you appear to be, and I haven't been able to figure out what you actually are. Which is a problem I haven't had in a very long time."
Tobin picked up the glass but did not drink. His mind was running calculations at a speed that would have impressed his former handlers, weighing exit strategies against intelligence opportunities against the simple and undeniable fact that Emeric Saal was sitting three feet away from him in the dark with no security and no weapon and seemed entirely unbothered by the presence of an intruder in his most private room.
"What happens now?" Tobin asked.
Emeric considered the question with the same calm deliberation he applied to everything else. He finished his cigarette, crushed it slowly in the ashtray, and looked at Tobin with those unreadable grey eyes.
"That depends entirely on you," Emeric said. "I could hand you to Silas and let him extract whatever truth is hiding behind that face of yours. He would enjoy that, and you would not." He paused. "Or you could stay. Move freely. Continue whatever it is you're doing here." The corner of his mouth shifted in a way that was not quite a smile. "On one condition."
"What condition?"
"You stay by my side. Where I can see you." Emeric leaned forward slightly, and the distance between them shrank to something that made the air feel thinner. "Consider it a professional courtesy between two people who are clearly playing a game that neither of them intends to lose."
Tobin looked at the man across from him and understood, with a clarity that settled into his chest like cold water, that he had just been offered the most dangerous opportunity of his life. Emeric Saal had caught him red-handed in his office and, instead of eliminating him, had invited him to sit closer. The calculation behind it was obvious: keep your enemy where you can watch him. But there was something else in those grey eyes, something that lived underneath the strategy, and it looked uncomfortably like genuine curiosity.
"Deal," Tobin said, and he drank the whiskey.
Tobin did not sleep that night. He lay on the bed with the ceiling pressing down on him and the contents of that file rearranging everything he had built over the past two years. Every piece of intelligence he had gathered, every hour of planning, every cold and careful step that had led him to this estate had been aimed at one man, and that man turned out to be the wrong one.Emeric Saal had not ordered the raid that killed his mother. He had not known about it until it was over, and when he found out, he had punished his brother and launched an investigation. The civilian casualty report was clinical and brief, the kind of language that reduces a human life to a line item, but it existed, which meant someone inside the syndicate had at least acknowledged that a woman had died who should not have died.The person who should be sitting at the other end of Tobin's fury was Nikolai. The brother with more ambition than patience, the one who left his bishop exposed and ran unsanctioned op
Being Emeric Saal's shadow was nothing like Tobin had anticipated. He had expected surveillance, the cold and clinical monitoring of a man who wanted to keep a potential threat within arm's reach. What he got instead was proximity of a different kind entirely, the kind that stripped away the layers between two people whether they wanted it stripped or not.He was present for everything. Morning briefings with Silas in the study, where Emeric reviewed operations with the quiet focus of a chess player considering his next twelve moves. Afternoon meetings at the waterfront warehouse district, where men in expensive coats discussed logistics and territory with a vocabulary that treated violence as accounting. Evening dinners in the estate's formal dining room, where Emeric ate alone and Tobin sat across from him and neither of them spoke about the fact that this arrangement was profoundly strange.On the third day, Tobin discovered that Emeric played chess. A board sat in the study, its p
Tobin waited until 2:17 in the morning, when the security rotation left a four-minute window between the east corridor camera sweep and the nearest patrol's return circuit. He moved barefoot down the hallway, staying close to the wall where the floorboards were less likely to creak, carrying nothing but the tension wrench and a thin flat tool he had fashioned from the metal clip inside his paperback's spine.The Kaba lock was a seven-pin configuration, and Tobin had trained on locks far more complex than this during his military intelligence certification. His hands were steady and his breathing was controlled, and the first three pins set within forty seconds. The fourth pin gave him trouble, a spool driver that required a specific tension angle he needed a moment to find, but by the ninety-second mark the lock turned with a soft click that sounded, in the silence of the sleeping estate, like a gunshot.He eased the door open and stepped inside. The office was large and dark, lit onl
Tobin spent the first three days performing the role of a frightened hostage with a discipline that would have impressed his old commanding officers. He kept his head down, spoke only when spoken to, ate the meals that were brought to his room, and spent his visible hours reading the paperback he had packed and staring out the reinforced window with the vacant expression of a man who had accepted his circumstances.The invisible hours were a different matter entirely. Between midnight and four in the morning, when the security rotation thinned and the cameras followed their predictable sweep patterns, Tobin mapped the estate. He memorized the patrol schedule within two nights. He identified blind spots in the camera coverage along the east corridor and the service stairs. He counted doors, noted which ones were locked electronically and which ones used traditional hardware, and built a mental blueprint of the manor that grew more detailed with every passing hour.On the second morning
The men came on a Tuesday, which Tobin Leith would later find almost funny, because Tuesdays had always been the most unremarkable day of his week. He was sitting at the kitchen table in his brother's apartment, cleaning a handgun that didn't belong to either of them, when the front door opened without a knock and three men in dark coats walked inside like they owned the air in the room.Jude was on the couch. Tobin didn't need to look at his brother to know what was happening to his face, because he had seen that particular shade of terror before, the colour draining from the skin so fast it looked like someone had pulled a plug somewhere underneath. Jude owed the Saal syndicate an amount of money that he could not pay in this lifetime or the next, and these men were here to collect something other than cash.The tallest of the three did the talking. He explained, with the bored patience of someone who had delivered this speech many times, that the debt had matured past the point of







