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Chapter 36

Author: Ivy Vane
last update publish date: 2026-03-17 10:08:32

Minah woke to light that hurt.

Not blinding. Just present. Too present.

Her eyes fluttered open and immediately closed again as pain surged behind them, thick and crushing. Her head felt heavy, as if gravity had doubled overnight. She tried to shift and a sharp ache spread through her shoulder, her ribs, her jaw.

A sound escaped her before she could stop it.

“Easy,” someone said softly.

The voice wasn’t his.

That realization came first. Not relief. Just clarity.

She forced her eyes open
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  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 36

    Minah woke to light that hurt. Not blinding. Just present. Too present. Her eyes fluttered open and immediately closed again as pain surged behind them, thick and crushing. Her head felt heavy, as if gravity had doubled overnight. She tried to shift and a sharp ache spread through her shoulder, her ribs, her jaw. A sound escaped her before she could stop it. “Easy,” someone said softly. The voice wasn’t his. That realization came first. Not relief. Just clarity. She forced her eyes open again, slower this time. White ceiling. Fluorescent lights. The steady, mechanical sound of a monitor somewhere to her left. Hospital. The word settled into place with surprising calm. Memory followed. Too fast. The lamp. The shadow. The sound of glass breaking. Her breath caught painfully and her heart began to race, each beat echoing in her skull. She tried to lift her hand instinctively, to cover her face, and hissed when pain shot through her arm. “Minah,” the voice said again, closer

  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 35

    The first thing to disappear was convenience. Coffee noticed it when his driver took a wrong turn and the detour didn’t open like it should have. Gates that usually lifted hesitated. A private elevator stalled for three seconds too long before correcting. Small things. The kind most men ignored. Antonio’s people did not ignore patterns. Across the city, systems adjusted quietly. Shell companies froze accounts under compliance reviews that hadn’t existed the night before. A marina denied clearance for a vessel that had never been questioned. A private airstrip delayed refueling on the basis of paperwork that suddenly mattered. No one said Antonio’s name. They didn’t need to. Men who worked in shadows understood the language of friction. When movement slowed, when options narrowed without explanation, it meant someone more powerful had entered the equation. Coffee’s observer felt it first. The man assigned to watch Minah from a distance realized his phone had stopped syncing pro

  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 34

    Antonio arrived at the hospital without announcing himself. No sirens. No spectacle. Just quiet authority moving through automatic doors as if the building had learned to recognize him. His men stayed back where he told them to. This was not a moment for intimidation. This was personal. The smell hit him first. Antiseptic and metal and something underneath it he didn’t want to name. He nodded once at the doctor who approached him, already holding a chart, eyes cautious. “She’s alive,” the man said quickly. Antonio didn’t respond. He waited. “Head trauma. Concussion. Lacerations. Extensive bruising. She’ll recover, but—” “But,” Antonio repeated softly. The doctor hesitated. “She was beaten badly.” Antonio closed his eyes for exactly one breath. He had honored her boundary. Pulled his perimeter back. Trusted her strength. Trusted his restraint. Seven minutes. That number had lodged into him like shrapnel. “Can I see her,” Antonio asked. The question was not a request. The

  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 33

    Coffee didn’t run. He moved. There was a difference, and it mattered. He left the building through the service exit, jacket already adjusted, hands steady as he stepped into the night. The city accepted him easily, traffic flowing, lights blinking obediently. He merged into it like he belonged there because he did. He always had. His phone buzzed once. Then twice. He ignored it. The mistake men made when things went wrong was reacting too quickly, letting emotion make decisions that should be strategic. Coffee had never survived by panicking. Anger sharpened him. Minah had forced this. That was the truth he held onto as he drove, knuckles loose around the steering wheel, jaw tight but controlled. She had pushed him. Ignored him. Let another man step into a space that had once been his. Consequences followed actions. That was logic, not cruelty. She should have answered. She should have listened. “She always did before,” he muttered. The city lights streaked past as he took

  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 32

    The ambulance doors slammed shut with a sound that felt final. Minah flinched as the vehicle lurched forward, the motion sending pain rippling through her body in sharp, unforgiving waves. The ceiling lights above her blurred into white streaks, too bright, too close. Every vibration of the road traveled straight through her bones. “Minah,” a voice said, firm but calm. “Stay with me.” She tried to turn her head and immediately regretted it. Pain bloomed behind her eyes, thick and suffocating, stealing her breath. A groan slipped out before she could stop it. “I know,” the paramedic said quickly. “I know. Don’t move your head.” Hands pressed gently but securely at her temples, holding her still. The smell of antiseptic filled her nose, sharp and grounding, clashing violently with the lingering memory of cologne and broken glass. Her body shook uncontrollably. She couldn’t stop it. Shock, someone said. She caught the word like a lifeline as it floated above her, detached from me

  • The Cost Of Surrender    Chapter 31

    Antonio was reviewing ledgers when the phone rang. Not his personal line. Not the one reserved for business heads or foreign ministers. The emergency channel. He looked at it for half a second longer than necessary. Antonio answered without speaking. Static. Breathing. Then a voice he trusted enough to kill for. “Sir,” the man said. Not shaken. Tight. “We have a situation.” Antonio set the glass down carefully. Too carefully. “Say it.” A pause. The kind that existed only when someone was deciding how much truth a man could survive at once. “Dr. Williams has been attacked.” The world narrowed. Antonio didn’t move. Didn’t blink. The room stayed the same, but something fundamental shifted inside it, like gravity had been altered. “Alive,” Antonio said. It wasn’t a question. “Yes,” the voice answered immediately. “But she’s hurt. Badly.” The word lodged under his ribs. Antonio closed his eyes once. “Location.” “Her apartment. We arrived late. He was gone by the time per

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