The warehouse was silent but for the low crackle of fire and the distant hum of city noise filtering through rusted metal.
Ethan sat chained to the ceiling beam, arms aching, body sore, every muscle alive with pain and dull hunger. His mouth was dry. His stomach had stopped growling hours ago—now it just ached, hollow and bitter. It had been more than a full day since he’d eaten, and the wolf in him was beginning to stir—not in defiance, but desperation.
His nose twitched involuntarily.
Food.
There was something cooking on a dented, scorched metal pan placed atop a fire pit made of cinder blocks. Something seared and spiced. The scent of it slid into his awareness like a whisper he couldn’t ignore—meat and onions and the faint, maddening sweetness of tomato paste and cumin.
Anna crouched by the flames, her forarm resting on her knee, the other flipping the pan’s contents with a knife that didn’t belong in a kitchen. She hadn’t said a word since their last exchange.
And that was worse.
The longer she stayed quiet, the more his thoughts screamed.
He forced himself to look away from the food, to breathe through his mouth, to clamp down on the feral hunger snarling inside his ribcage. It wasn't just the lack of food. It was the silver still curling in his bloodstream like smoke. It had weakened him, burned him from the inside, just enough to keep him grounded. Human.
Barely.
She glanced over her shoulder. “You have until nightfall.”
Her voice was calm. Her whole demenour potrayed calm...Deceptively so.
“To give me Kellerman’s location. Phone number. Security setup. Travel schedule. I want it all. If I don’t have it by then…” she shrugged lightly, “I assume you’re not ready to deal.”
He blinked slowly. “And what then? Another beating? You put me down like a dog?”
Anna didn’t rise to the bait.
“No,” she said simply. “I move on. And you stay here. someone will pick up up soon enough”.
She returned to the fire, scooping the sizzling food into a battered tin plate. She didn’t offer him any.
He didn’t ask.
Instead, he leaned his head back against the cold metal beam and exhaled.
The lawyer inside him—the predator in court, the chess master who could unravel testimony like thread—he was quiet now. Not gone, just… stunned. Injured. Like a lion with a bullet in its spine.
He understood his position. He always did. That was his gift. The rational voice.
And rationally?
He was screwed.
The video alone had destroyed everything. Even if she never released it, the threat was real. And it wasn’t just about public shame. It wasn’t about his career or the fact that his reputation would burn like paper. No.
It was about survival.
If even one of his clients saw that footage—one of the real ones, the ones he kept off official books—they wouldn’t come after him with lawsuits.
They’d come with guns. Or blades. Or silver.
Ethan Cross had built his legacy defending people too powerful to fail and too dangerous to displease. If word got out that he wasn’t entirely human… if it was discovered he could be controlled…
He’d become a liability.
A hunted one.
His mind swam through the possibilities. Running wasn’t an option. Not anymore. The city he knew, the power he’d mastered—it was all a trap now. Every name in his phone, every deal he’d cut, every skeleton he’d helped shove into a polished closet... would now be clawing their way back out with teeth.
But giving Kellerman up wasn’t simple either.
Kellerman wasn’t just another client. He was plugged into something bigger. Pharma money. Government ties. Half of the Board of Health practically worshiped him. And beneath the glossy surface? The man had connections darker than the sewers under the city.
Rats didn’t like daylight.
They devoured those who exposed them.
He shifted on the concrete floor, the chains clinking faintly as he pulled his knees up and rested his forehead against them.
If he gave Anna what she wanted… it wasn’t just betrayal. It was suicide.
But if he didn’t… she’d bury him slowly.
Anna finished eating. Licked the edge of her knife clean—not out of cruelty, but ritual.
“You were stalling in your head,” she said without turning.
“I was thinking.”
“You always were better at that than feeling.”
He smiled grimly. “Feelings are what got people killed in my line of work.”
She rose and walked toward him, crossing the room with a predator’s stillness.
“You defended Kellerman because you believed the case was flawed? Or because the check cleared?”
He didn’t answer.
She crouched, inches from his face.
“You didn’t care those kids died. You didn’t even flinch in court when the mother passed out during cross.”
He remembered. Of course he did.
She had screamed something about God and monsters.
And he’d adjusted his cufflink.
Anna stared at him like she was willing him to flinch. To break. To confess.
“You think this is about vengeance,” she said. “It’s not. This is about plague control. You’re not the plague, Ethan. But you are one hell of a carrier.”
“You’re wasting your time,” he muttered.
“You said the same thing in court once. You told a jury they were wasting time chasing ghosts. That human error wasn’t criminal.”
She stood again.
“This time, the ghost is real. And I’m giving you one shot to atone before the hunt widens.”
He looked up at her. “What are you planning?”
Her smile was small and humorless.
“I’m going to take them down, one by one. Not with claws. Not at first. I want the world to see them for what they are. I want a trail of receipts and corruption and cowardice so long they can’t bury it under charity galas or blood money.”
“And then?”
She shrugged.
“Then I burn the rest.”
Ethan’s throat was tight. Whether from hunger or fear, he didn’t know.
Nightfall.
That was the cut-off.
If he gave her what she wanted, he’d make enemies he couldn’t outrun.
If he didn’t… he’d already made the one enemy who had nothing left to lose.
The fire crackled.
His stomach growled—audibly this time.
She heard it. Looked over. Considered something. Then turned away again.
He closed his eyes.
One name.
One location.
And the war would begin.
Ethan Cross had been many things.
But this… this was the moment that would decide whether he became a footnote in someone else’s story…
Or rewrote his own.
The dashboard had gone still.No new pings. No new chatter.Just a void of activity that felt… wrong. The kind of silence that didn’t comfort—it prowled. Like the air itself was crouched, waiting to spring. It pressed in on the walls, thick, suffocating, until even the faintest electronic hum seemed deafening. The room was dim, save for the ghostly glow of multiple monitors casting fractured light over the walls. The only sound was the hum of the processors and the occasional tap of keys as Ethan rechecked logs he already knew were empty. The air felt heavier, charged with an electricity neither of them could name—like a storm building behind glass. The glow painted Ethan’s face in alternating planes of blue and white, shadows cutting harsh angles beneath his eyes, making him look half-machine, half-specter. Cables curled like vines across the floor. Half-drunk mugs of coffee cooled on the side table. Papers—maps, dossiers, schematics—were scattered in a loose perimeter around the
The moment the cartel came into play, the rules changed.Ethan leaned over the large glass table in the center of his study, fingers spread across the surface like he was mapping out a war campaign.Shadows from the city skyline fractured across the table’s reflective surface, splicing his hands into broken shards of strategy. The study itself was quiet, insulated from the thrum of the metropolis, but Anna could feel the hum of danger in the air as tangibly as static before a lightning strike.Anna stood at the window behind him, watching the sunrise claw its way up the city skyline like a warning flare.The light wasn’t soft—it was jagged, slicing between the high-rises, painting the glass in violent streaks of crimson. A day being born, not peacefully, but like a scar reopening."We don’t handle them like Kellerman," Ethan said finally.Anna didn’t turn around. "Because they’re more dangerous?""Because they’re more adaptable." He straightened and faced her.For a fleeting moment, t
It started with a whisper.Not the dramatic kind—the sharp beep of a security breach or the blare of an emergency siren. No, this was a soft chime from Ethan’s phone. Subtle. Insidious. The kind of sound that didn't announce disaster—it suggested it.He glanced at the screen.Then he went still.Anna noticed it immediately. She’d been re-buttoning her coat, preparing to leave the restaurant. But his stillness cut through the morning buzz like a scalpel."What is it?" she asked.Ethan slowly rotated the screen toward her.Zurich: Red-Level Alert. Audit Triggered – Holdings under Review.He didn’t say anything. He didn’t need to.Then his phone vibrated again. But this time, it wasn’t the Caymans.Anonymous leak published. Title: "Inside Kellerman’s Pharma Fortress: The Human Cost of a Billion-Dollar Empire."Anna’s brows rose. "The reporter?"Ethan gave a single nod. “He ran it early.”She exhaled, the sound halfway between a laugh and a curse. “So much for a gentle rollout.”“No. This
It started with silence. Not the kind they’d grown accustomed to in the war room of his office, but a vacuum that settled in once the file was uploaded and the domino had been tipped.Nothing happened at first. No explosion. No alarm. No screaming emails or panicked phone calls.Just... silence."That’s it?" Anna asked, crossing her arms as she stared at the monitor."That’s the trigger," Ethan said, leaning back in his chair. "Now we wait."She glanced at the time. 10:02 a.m. Her muscles ached. Her stomach reminded her it hadn’t been fed properly in three days. And her brain—God, her brain—felt like it had been flayed raw."We should get some air," Ethan muttered.She turned to him slowly. "Excuse me?""Air. You remember that? The stuff outside?"Anna blinked, and for the first time in nearly three weeks, she realized just how long she’d been locked in the echo chamber of his world. Three weeks since she chained him in a warehouse. Three weeks of unrelenting obsession.She didn’t ans
It began with a schedule.Ethan Cross didn’t make to-do lists. He built battle plans.Each morning—if you could call 4:00 a.m. morning—he rose from the stiff leather couch in his office’s side room, brewed black coffee, and pulled up three separate encrypted databases. Passwords, ciphers, biometric logins. All muscle memory now.He would sit behind his desk, back straight, sleeves rolled up, hair increasingly unkempt. Every keystroke was a scalpel. Every file opened was a vein he had to dissect. He was no longer defending. He was hunting.Anna matched him hour for hour.She’d take the bed—he insisted—but rarely used it. When she wasn’t passed out in the corner chair, a law book half open on her chest, she was pacing the office barefoot, her mind always two pages ahead. She never interrupted, never hovered. Just read, wrote, and occasionally left notes in the margins of his work.Ethan hated how much he came to rely on her eyes.It became routine. Wake. Coffee. Pastries. Brief nod. The
By the time they left the warehouse, Ethan had made his decision.Cooperate. Survive. Reclaim power from inside the trap—bit by bit. She wanted results? He’d deliver. Not for her. For himself. Because the only way out was through.They didn’t speak on the drive back into the city. Anna drove a beat-up sedan that smelled like engine oil and old coffee. Ethan’s wrists ached. His stomach was still tight from that pathetic excuse of a breakfast sandwich. But his mind had already started to whir, sharpening like a blade on stone.When they arrived, she expected an office.What she got was a fortress.Ethan stepped into the building’s underground garage like a man returning to his castle. He used a thumbprint and retina scan to access a private elevator. No button panel inside. It just moved.The doors opened on the 9th floor—not marked. No placards. No receptionist. Just a corridor of matte black stone and recessed lighting. Cold. Silent.Anna followed, her instincts screaming. There were