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Six months later
The first thing Adrian Vale noticed was the smell. Metal. Oil. Something damp and old, like a place no one cared to clean because no one was supposed to be here long enough to complain. Her wrists were bound behind her, circulation tight but not cut off. Plastic restraints. Cheap, but intentional. The hood over her head muffled sound without suffocating her, the fabric pulled low enough to disorient but not panic. That told her everything she needed to know. This wasn’t sloppy. This wasn’t impulsive. This was planned. Adrian forced her breathing to slow. In through her nose. Out through her mouth. Counted silently. One. Two. Three. Panic would only give them what they wanted. She shifted slightly, just enough to test her balance. Concrete floor. Cold. Her shoulder throbbed where she’d been shoved down, but nothing felt broken. They needed her alive. That was both a comfort and a threat. Voices murmured somewhere nearby. Male. Unhurried. Casual in a way that made her stomach tighten. “She worth all this trouble?” one of them asked. A second voice laughed. “You seen the number attached to her name?” A pause. Then, lower, closer. “They’ll pay.” Reward. The word landed heavier than the restraints. Adrian’s jaw tightened beneath the hood. She kept her head lowered, posture slack, exactly as they expected. Fear was useful. Fear made people careless. Footsteps approached. Someone crouched in front of her, close enough that she could feel the warmth of his body through the fabric. “You’re quieter than I thought you’d be,” he said. “CEO types usually scream.” Adrian swallowed deliberately. Let silence stretch. When she spoke, her voice was soft. Controlled. Not defiant. “I’m thinking.” The man snorted. “About what?” “About how confident you sound,” she replied. “For someone who doesn’t know who he’s dealing with.” That earned her a sharp grip on her arm. Fingers digging in, testing pain. “You don’t get to talk like that,” he warned. Adrian inhaled slowly through her nose, letting the fear surface just enough to feel real. “Then don’t stand so close.” The grip loosened. That was the second mistake. Men like this didn’t understand restraint. They mistook stillness for surrender. Silence for submission. Another voice cut in. Older. Calmer. “Enough. She’s not here for conversation.” “She’s here for delivery,” the first man said. “And for that price, I’d like to know what she looks like under—” “No.” The word cracked like a whip. Adrian filed that away. One of them was in charge. One of them was impatient. One of them would be careless. Opportunity always wore a face. The hood was yanked upward just enough for light to burn behind her eyes. Adrian blinked once, slow, measured. She didn’t look around. Didn’t give them the satisfaction. “Look at her,” the impatient one said. “Doesn’t even look scared.” Adrian lifted her gaze then, letting them see her eyes for the first time. She didn’t glare. She didn’t plead. She met his stare calmly, like this was a negotiation she hadn’t agreed to but fully intended to win. “I am scared,” she said quietly. “I’m just not stupid.” That made him laugh. Nervous. Sharp. “She thinks she’s different.” “I am,” Adrian replied. “And if you’ve been listening closely, you already know why.” Silence followed. Somewhere above them, a door creaked. Footsteps echoed. Someone paced. Adrian shifted again, subtly angling her body. She let her shoulders slump. Let her breathing hitch. Fear was a language. She spoke it fluently. “I don’t want trouble,” she said. “I want to go home.” The impatient one scoffed. “That ain’t happening.” “But this doesn’t have to get messy,” she continued, voice barely above a whisper. “You don’t need all of us here. You don’t need witnesses. You just need me alive.” The man crouched again. Too close. Curious now. “You talk like you know the rules.” “I do,” Adrian said. “And I know how men like you think you’re in control right up until you’re not.” He grabbed her chin, forcing her face upward. “Careful.” Adrian let her lips part. Let her voice soften. “You’re the one holding the knife,” she murmured. “I’m just reminding you that people like me don’t get taken without consequences.” Something flickered in his eyes. Doubt. Ego. Interest. That was all she needed. When the explosion came, it wasn’t loud. It was efficient. The door burst inward. Shouts followed. Chaos. The crack of something heavy hitting flesh. Someone screamed. Adrian twisted hard, snapping the weakened restraint against the concrete edge she’d been testing for minutes. Plastic split. She rolled to her knees as bodies hit the floor around her. The hood was ripped away. Light flooded in. Micah froze when he saw her. For half a second, the room held its breath. Adrian stood, wrists free, breathing steady. Her hair was loose now, her blazer gone, dirt streaking her palms. She looked at the men on the ground without flinching. “They talked too much,” she said calmly. Micah’s jaw tightened. “Did they touch you?” “No,” Adrian replied. “They underestimated me.” He exhaled sharply, relief and rage colliding in his eyes. Behind him, someone groaned. Adrian turned toward the sound, expression unreadable. “Make sure they don’t do this to anyone else,” she said. Micah nodded once. Later, much later, people would argue about what really happened in that room. Who moved first. Who crossed the line. Who deserved what followed. What no one would ever question again was this: Adrian Vale did not survive because she was lucky. She survived because she understood proximity was never permission. And someone had forgotten that first.Adrian noticed the feeling before she noticed anything else. It wasn’t fear. It wasn’t panic. It was awareness — the same instinct that told her when a meeting was about to turn, when a deal was about to sour, when someone across the table was withholding information. She felt it as she stepped out of her building. The air was ordinary. The street busy enough to feel anonymous. Nothing looked out of place. Still, something tightened low in her chest, a quiet insistence she couldn’t ignore. She slowed her steps without realizing it. Her phone was in her hand, keys threaded between her fingers, posture relaxed by habit. Years of navigating public spaces had taught her how to look unbothered even when she was anything but. She scanned reflections instead of faces — car windows, storefront glass, the dark surface of a parked SUV. Movement registered, but nothing lingered long enough to confirm her suspicion. You’re imagining it, she told herself. But the feeling didn’t fade. Adri
Celeste didn’t believe in surprises. She believed in variables. Surprises implied chaos. Variables implied control — or at least the illusion of it. She preferred to know what could shift, even if she couldn’t yet predict how. That was why the name Marcus lingered in her thoughts longer than it should have. She’d heard it in passing. Not recently. Not directly. Just enough to remember it belonged to someone who existed on the edges of Adrian’s world — a figure from a life Adrian rarely spoke about. Celeste sat at her desk, fingers steepled, gaze unfocused as she replayed the day’s interactions. Elliot’s questions. Adrian’s restraint. The faint tightening in the air she’d felt walking through the lobby. Something had entered the equation. Celeste didn’t like unknowns. She opened her laptop and pulled up information she hadn’t looked at in years. Nothing explicit. Nothing damning. Just fragments. Associations. Overlaps. Patterns. Marcus didn’t fit neatly into Adrian’s curre
Elliot noticed the car before he noticed the man. It was idling too long. Not illegally. Not suspicious enough to warrant attention on its own. Just… lingering. The kind of presence most people filtered out without thinking twice. Elliot didn’t. He slowed his pace slightly as he exited the building, phone pressed to his ear though the call had ended moments ago. Adrian had already left. That should have eased the tension sitting between his shoulders. It didn’t. The man leaned against the hood, posture loose, eyes hidden behind dark lenses. He wasn’t looking at Elliot. He wasn’t looking at anyone in particular. He was waiting. Elliot felt it immediately — the instinctive tightening that came when something didn’t belong but hadn’t broken any rules yet. Their gazes met. Just for a second. That was all it took. The man didn’t flinch. Didn’t look away too quickly. Didn’t stare long enough to challenge him either. It was controlled. Measured. Like someone used to being observed
Marcus hadn’t planned on seeing Adrian that day. He told himself that as he leaned against the hood of his car across the street from the building she worked in, sunglasses shielding his eyes more out of habit than necessity. The truth was simpler — he always knew where she was. Not because he followed her obsessively, but because certain people stayed anchored in your awareness whether you meant them to or not. Adrian was one of those people. He checked his phone, scrolling through messages from people who expected things from him. Brothers. Associates. Names that came with obligations he couldn’t ignore even if he wanted to. Family wasn’t something you chose. It was something that pulled at you whether you liked it or not. “Still out here?” a voice asked. Marcus glanced up as Leon approached, lighting a cigarette. Leon had been around long enough to know when not to ask questions. “For now,” Marcus replied. Leon followed his gaze toward the building. “That her?” Marcus didn’
Adrian noticed it first in the smallest ways. The way conversations seemed to pause when she entered a room. Not stop — just hesitate. As if people were recalibrating, choosing their words more carefully than usual. It wasn’t fear. It wasn’t even discomfort. It was awareness. She didn’t mention it to anyone. There was nothing concrete to point to, and Adrian didn’t believe in reacting to instincts without structure. Still, she logged the feeling away, the same way she did everything else that mattered. For later. Her day unfolded as expected. Meetings stacked neatly into one another, decisions made quickly, efficiently. She was praised for her focus, her clarity. No one would have guessed that part of her attention was elsewhere, quietly scanning for inconsistencies. During a mid-morning briefing, Celeste slipped into the seat beside her without comment. Adrian registered the presence automatically — familiar, expected — then realized she hadn’t known Celeste would be there. “Y
Celeste Ashford believed most people misunderstood intention. They thought intention had to be sharp. Obvious. Loud enough to defend itself. In her experience, the most effective intentions were quiet ones — the kind that looked like care, loyalty, presence. She preferred those. Celeste sat at her kitchen island, phone resting beside her coffee, untouched for several minutes. Adrian’s reply replayed in her mind, not the words themselves, but the space around them. The pause before responding. The restraint. Just a long week. Celeste smiled faintly. Everyone was tired lately. That was normal. What mattered was who noticed, and who stepped in when others pulled back. She took a sip of her coffee and opened her laptop, scanning her calendar for the day. Meetings she didn’t technically need to attend. Conversations she could excuse herself into. All harmless. All reasonable. Access didn’t need to be requested when it felt earned. Celeste prided herself on that. She had







