The morning after my first night in the lounge, I woke to the sound of rain tapping against the window. The room I had been given was larger than anything I had ever slept in before, with dark wooden floors and silk sheets that felt like water against my skin. But luxury didn’t erase years of suffering. I still felt like an outsider in my own life, an imposter wearing someone else’s skin.
A knock at the door snapped me out of my thoughts. “Come in,” I said, sitting up. “Did you sleep?” she asked. I hesitated before nodding. “A little.” She smirked, clearly not believing me. “Get up. Today, your training begins.” I pulled the blanket around my shoulders. “Training for what?” Selene tilted her head. “For survival, Winnie. You want power? You need to earn it.” I exhaled slowly, then forced myself out of bed. Selene gestured toward the tray. “Eat first. You’ll need the energy.” I hesitated before picking up a slice of fruit, chewing slowly. My body had long since learned to survive on scraps, so the taste of something fresh, something sweet, felt foreign. Selene watched me in silence for a moment before speaking again. “There are two types of people in this world,” she said. “Those who are controlled and those who do the controlling. Which one do you want to be?” I swallowed hard. “The second.” “Good.” She pushed away from the wall and crossed the room, her heels clicking against the floor. “Then let’s get started.” Selene led me through the corridors of the building, past rooms I had yet to explore. We stopped in front of a large door. She pushed it open and gestured for me to enter. Inside, the walls were lined with mirrors. A long table sat in the center of the room, covered with jewelry, silk gloves, cigarettes in elegant holders, and other accessories I didn’t recognize. Selene walked to the table and picked up a pearl necklace, running her fingers over it. “What do you see when you look in the mirror?” I turned my gaze to my own reflection. My skin was pale, my eyes sunken from years of exhaustion. The red dress I had worn the night before still clung to my body, but I no longer felt like the girl who had stepped into it. “I don’t know,” I admitted. Selene set the necklace down and met my eyes in the mirror. “I see potential.” She sighed. “Sit down.” I obeyed, taking a seat in front of the mirror. Selene picked up a tube of lipstick and twisted it open, revealing a deep shade of crimson. “Lipstick is more than just makeup,” she said, leaning down to apply it to my lips. “It’s a weapon. A signal. A declaration.” I remained still as she painted my lips, the color standing out starkly against my skin. She stepped back. “There. Now look at yourself.” I did. And for the first time in a long time, I didn’t see a broken girl. I saw something else—someone else. A woman who was learning how to play the game. The next few days blurred together in a whirlwind of lessons. Selene taught me how to walk, how to carry myself, how to speak in a way that made people listen. “It’s not about what you say,” she explained. “It’s about how you say it.” She drilled me on body language, on the subtle cues that revealed more than words ever could. She taught me how to read people, how to spot weaknesses, how to slip into a conversation and turn it in my favor without them even realizing it. “This world is about power,” she said one evening, as we sat in the lounge watching the men and women interact. “And power isn’t given. It’s taken.” I absorbed everything she said, storing it away like a weapon I would one day use. But beneath it all, a question lingered. Why me? Why had Damien brought me here? Why had Selene chosen to train me? What did they want in return? I knew better than to believe in kindness without cost. One evening, Damien summoned me to his office. The space was darker than the rest of the building, the air thick with the scent of whiskey and something richer—like old books and leather. He sat behind a large desk, his expression unreadable. “Sit,” he said. I did. He poured a glass of whiskey and slid it across the desk toward me. I didn’t touch it. “You’ve been learning quickly,” he said, watching me. I nodded. “Selene is a good teacher.” A smirk touched his lips. “She is.” There was a pause. Then, finally, he leaned forward. “Do you know why you’re here, Winnie?” I swallowed. “Because you brought me here.” “That’s not an answer.” I hesitated before speaking. “I don’t know.” Damien studied me for a long moment before exhaling. “You remind me of someone.” That caught me off guard. “Who?” His jaw tightened slightly. “Someone I lost.” A flicker of something unreadable passed through his eyes before it disappeared. I didn’t know what to say. He picked up his glass and took a slow sip of whiskey. “I don’t believe in fate, but I do believe in opportunity. You’ve been given one. Don’t waste it.” His words were a warning. A reminder that whatever protection I had here wasn’t free. I straightened my posture. “I won’t.” He studied me for a moment before nodding. “Good.” Then, just like that, the conversation was over. I left his office with more questions than answers. But one thing was becoming clear—whatever game I had been pulled into, I wasn’t just a player. I was a piece on the board. And I needed to figure out who was moving me before it was too late.The ride to the outskirts of the city was quieter than before. The neon lights of the city faded into the distance as we drove through winding, empty streets that seemed to stretch endlessly. Every turn, every passing shadow felt like a reminder that we were getting closer to something that neither of us were fully prepared for. I glanced over at Carter, his expression stoic, his eyes focused on the road ahead. It wasn’t like him to be so silent, to shut me out like this. But I understood. The pressure of what we were about to do weighed heavily on us both. We couldn’t ignore the consequences anymore, the line we were about to cross. The building we were heading to was a dilapidated structure, a remnant of the city’s forgotten past. Its crumbling walls and shattered windows made it look like a place where even the sun had given up. But it was exactly the kind of place Marcus would hide in—a place that would give him the advantage, where he could see everyone coming but remain unseen
The air in the safe house felt different now, thicker, almost suffocating with the weight of what we were about to face. Isabella moved through the room with calculated precision, her every movement a reminder that she was a master of manipulation. It wasn’t hard to see she was always thinking two steps ahead, weaving webs of her own design. I didn’t trust her, but Carter did. And that was all that mattered right now. I watched him, his back to me as he paced the room, his hand rubbing his jaw as if trying to force clarity into the chaos of his mind. I could feel the tension radiating off him, the strain of everything he’d been carrying—the weight of decisions made, of battles fought and lost. But there was more to it than that. There was a darkness in his eyes, a part of him that had become hardened, distant. I wanted to reach out to him, to bridge that gap, but the words caught in my throat. Everything was changing, and I couldn’t quite keep up with it. Isabella’s voice cut throu
The drive to the safe house was eerily silent. The cityscape outside the car window blurred into a mix of shadows and faint lights as we moved through the dark streets, our tires humming on the slick pavement. My thoughts were a tangled mess, and every turn we took seemed to lead us deeper into the unknown. But it wasn’t just the mission weighing on me—it was Carter. His tension was palpable, a quiet storm simmering beneath the surface, and I couldn’t help but feel like I was standing on the edge of something far bigger than either of us. We had made a deal with Isabella, but I didn’t trust her. No part of me believed that she had our best interests at heart. She was playing her own game, just like everyone else in this mess. Yet, as much as I wanted to resist, I knew we didn’t have any other choice. Not if we wanted to find Marcus and take him down for good. Carter’s jaw was clenched, his grip on the steering wheel tight. His silence was deafening, but I knew better than to push hi
The air inside Isabella’s hideout was heavy with the scent of stale tobacco and something sharp, like the metallic tang of sweat and fear. As Carter and I stood there, waiting for her response, the tension was unbearable. The flicker of uncertainty in the air grew thicker with every passing second. Isabella’s eyes locked onto Carter’s, her gaze unwavering as if she were trying to decipher every emotion he had carefully hidden. The past between them wasn’t something I was eager to understand, but it was clear that whatever it was, it ran deep. “I didn’t expect to see you again,” Isabella said, the words sliding from her lips with an edge that almost felt like a challenge. “What happened to you, Carter? The stoic, silent type who never relied on anyone? You’ve changed.” Carter’s jaw clenched, his fingers flexing at his sides. “People change.” The bitterness in his voice cut through the space between us, and I couldn’t help but notice how stiff he had become, how guarded he was in he
The night after Langford’s departure felt like a break in the storm. The rain had finally subsided, leaving the world outside quiet and still. But inside, the tension was palpable. Carter and I had made our choice, but the road ahead was more uncertain than ever. What now? How could we rebuild what had been shattered? How could we find our way when every ally we had was either a shadow or a threat? We had lost Langford. A man who, despite everything, had been our biggest ally. He had given us the chance to take down Damien, and for a while, we had thought him on our side. But the truth had shattered that illusion. What else had he been hiding? How much more of this world had we been blind to? The questions circled in my mind as I stood in the quiet of the cabin, staring out the window at the city lights in the distance. The rain had left everything wet and glistening, but the city had an eerie calm to it now, as if it, too, was waiting for something. I heard Carter’s footsteps behi
The tension between us was palpable as we made our way back to the cabin, the rain still lashing against the windows. Carter’s hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly that his knuckles were white. I could feel his anger, his confusion, pulsing through the car like an electric current, but neither of us spoke. What Samuels had said kept playing over and over in my head: Langford’s just as much a part of this as Damien was. It didn’t make sense. Langford had been our ally, our partner in all of this. He’d been the one who gave us the chance to take down Damien, who pulled strings to get us out of tight spots. But now, after everything, we were being told that he wasn’t who we thought he was. I could feel my heart sinking with every passing mile. The world I had known, the one I thought I understood, was beginning to crumble, piece by piece. We pulled up to the cabin, the headlights cutting through the rain and the darkness. Carter killed the engine, and for a long moment, neither