Mag-log inThe fourth-floor walk-up felt like a goddamn mountain tonight. Lina’s boots dragged over the cracked linoleum, every muscle in her neck screaming.
She was fumbling for her keys when 4A creaked open. A chain rattled, and Mrs. Romano’s wrinkled face poked out, looking like a worried tortoise."Lina? That you?" the old woman hissed.
"It's me, Mrs. Romano. Go back to sleep."
"Sleep? In this morgue?" Mrs. Romano unhooked the chain and stepped out, her eyes darting toward the stairs. She grabbed Lina’s sleeve with a claw-like hand. "You got trouble, kid? Because two suits were hanging around your door an hour ago."
Lina’s stomach did a slow, sickening roll. "Suits? You sure they weren't delivery guys?"
"Delivery guys don't wear five-hundred-dollar shoes and look at a deadbolt like they're hungry," the old woman spat. "Big guys. Didn't say a word. Just stood there, staring at your door. One was checking the fire escape, real quiet-like. They didn't use the elevator. They don't want to be on the super’s grainy-ass tapes."
Lina felt the sweat turn cold on her spine. Dominic’s boys. They weren't just sending messages anymore; they were measuring the windows.
"Did they see you?" Lina asked, her voice tight.
"I’m seventy-eight, honey, not dead. I watched 'em through the hole. When I coughed, they vanished down the stairs like ghosts." She squeezed Lina’s arm. "You owe money? You in with the wrong crowd? Because those weren't cops."
Lina sat on the floor, her back against the bed, staring at the door.
She reached under the bed and hauled out a heavy, dust-caked plastic bin. Thorne’s Files. Elias Thorne had been a paranoid packrat of municipal sins before he "dropped dead" last summer.
She dug past moldy tax returns until she felt it: a leather-bound ledger with a hollowed-out spine. Inside wasn’t just a key; it was a death warrant. A heavy brass key with a laurel wreath and the letters LH. And a scrap of a manifest, dated twelve years ago. The ship: The Leviathan.
She hit a speed dial on her burner.
"Rossi, I’m hanging up," Bailey barked. "I can’t be seen talking to a ghost."
"Bailey, shut up. I found Thorne’s 'inheritance.' I’ve got a vault key for Nova Imperial. Initials LH."
The line went quiet. Only the sound of Bailey’s heavy, nicotine-stained breathing. "Leonard Howard," he whispered. "The Moretti’s Chief Financial Officer. That’s not a bank key, Rossi. That’s the key to the family's skeletons. Everything they couldn't digitize is in that box."
"And the Leviathan?" Lina pressed, squinting at the blood-red ink on the scrap. "Pier 7. Twelve years ago. November."
"Jesus," a new voice cut in—Noah, the only hacker in the city who didn't sleep. "The Leviathan is the ship where the old man Moretti caught a 'stray crane' to the skull. Official word was an accident. The streets said Dominic cleared the throne."
"The manifest has a signature," Lina said, her heart hammering against her ribs. "A big, jagged 'V'."
"Victor Russos," Bailey finished, his voice trembling. "If Dominic was cutting deals with their biggest rival the night his father died... Marco will burn this city to the ground to kill his brother. You aren't holding a story, kid. You're holding a nuke."
"Then let’s start the countdown," Lina said. She reached into the floorboard and pulled out a compact 9mm. It felt heavy and oily in her hand.
"Rossi, don't," Bailey pleaded. "Flush it. Run. If you go to that bank, Hugo’s guys will have you in a dumpster before you hit the lobby."
"Tell Noah to loop the street cams on 4th and Main. Ten minutes," Lina commanded.
"You’re going to get murdered," Noah muttered, but the sound of frantic typing started.
"I’m going to work," Lina said. She hung up.
She checked the peephole. Still empty. But a fresh cigarette butt lay on the floor outside—a little gift from the men in the suits. They were letting her know they were close enough to smell her.
Lina didn't pray. She just checked the safety on the 9mm, tucked the key into her boot, and blew out the candle. It was time to see if she could survive her own lead.
"It's just work, Mrs. Romano. A story." Lina tried to sound brave, but it came out hollow. "Do me a favor. If they come back, don't peek. Just lock the door and turn the TV up loud. If you hear anything... call the precinct. Tell 'em there’s a break-in."
"The cops don't come for us, Lina. You know that." The old woman looked at her with a pity that hurt worse than the fear. "Watch yourself. Men like that... they don't go away."
Lina waited for the click of the neighbor's lock. Then she faced 4B. The twenty feet of hallway felt like a gauntlet.
She knelt. The tiny sliver of tape she’d stuck to the bottom of the door was still there. Intact. They hadn't gone in. They were just letting her know they could.
She slid the key in, stepped into the dark, and locked everything—deadbolt, chain, the works. The metal-on-metal sound echoed in the empty room. She didn't turn on the lights. She just stood there in the dark, breathing in the smell of her own fear.
They knew where she lived. The game wasn't in the newsroom anymore. It was in her bedroom.
The desk lamp buzzed—a cheap, vibrating hum that grated on Lina’s nerves. She smoothed the manifest with a shaking hand.
She grabbed the burner and hit dial.
"Rossi, it’s four AM," Sophia rasped. "My heart can't take this."
"Wake up, Soph. I’ve got the ghost of Pier 7. A manifest from the night the old man died. Signed by Victor Russos."
The line went dead for a second. "Russos? The rival mob boss? Why the hell would he sign for a Moretti shipment on the night their patriarch had his 'accident'?"
"Because it wasn't an accident. It was a trade," Lina said, her voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "Dominic or Marco—someone sold their father for a seat on the throne. This is the rot at the foundation, Soph. If the family finds out the 'business expansion' was built on the old man's blood, the Morettis will be hunting each other by breakfast."
"You’re holding a suicide note, Lina. Burn it. Now."
"I've also got a brass key. Leonard Howard's personal override. It’s the skeleton key to their offshore laundry." Lina paced the warped floorboards, her boots thudding. "But half a manifest won't get past a judge. I need the rest of it."
"And where would Thorne hide the other half? The man was a paranoid freak."
"Think. Where did he spend thirty years? Before he became a ghost?"
"No," Sophia groaned. "Lina, don't say it. You're barred from the building. Security has your photo taped to the desk."
"The old archives," Lina said, her jaw setting. "Thorne was the record-keeper at the Herald for three decades. He didn't trust digital. He trusted ink and paper, buried under three floors of concrete."
"It’s a fortress now, Rossi. Perla upgraded the locks after the merger. You need a keycard and a goddamn miracle to get past the night shift."
"Then I'll give 'em a miracle," Lina said, a sharp, cold resolve cutting through her exhaustion. "I’m going back in, Soph."
"You’re going to get caught. Or killed."
"Just keep your phone on. I’m going off the grid."
Lina ended the call. The silence of the shoebox apartment returned, heavier than before. She checked the 9mm, tucked the brass key into her boot, and looked at the 'V' one last time. The hunt was moving back to where it all started.
Their leader didn't look back. He shrugged, turned, and walked out into the rain. His eleven men followed, their shapes folding into the fog.Taro pressed his spine flat against the splintering wood, eyes wild. "They're leaving. They're breaking the line.""They're mutinying!" Yosuke ripped his empty magazine out and slammed a fresh one home. "The Chairman ordered this raid. They can't just walk!""The Chairman's an old man reading spreadsheets in a glass tower," a voice said in Taro's earpiece, level, almost bored.Taro's chest went cold. "Kato. Your boys are breaking formation. They're leaving us exposed. Get them back inside.""They're doing exactly what they were told." Kato's voice carried no weight at all, no urgency, nothing Taro could push against. "They're leaving you in the dirt."A bullet tore through Taro's shoulder pad before he could answer. "You're selling out Ichiro.""We answer to Shinjiro now, Taro. Not the old man." Something in Kato's tone almost passed for amuseme
Trent sat in his parked sedan across from the precinct, a cheap digital recorder pressed against the phone's receiver. Four days of unanswered calls to Wallace had used up whatever patience he'd started with. Through the foggy windshield, the building's windows were mostly dark except for the duty desk on the ground floor.It had taken him most of an afternoon to get here — a procurement filing nobody but a city clerk had read in years, a name buried on the fourth page of a maintenance bid that had no business being there: Meridian Holdings, the same name he'd later match against a routing code on a Sentinel Cement customs log a contact had let him glance at for ninety seconds and no longer. He didn't have the whole picture. He had enough pieces of it to sound like he did, which, for what he was about to try, would have to be sufficient.He dialed the precinct's main line and pitched his voice low, flat, official-sounding in a way that had worked on smaller departments before."This i
Water dripped from the cracked ceiling, splashing into the dark subway tunnel.Kenji leaned against a rusted train car, flicking a silver lighter open and shut.Headlights cut the dark. A black SUV rolled over the muddy tracks and killed the engine. Shinjiro stepped out in tactical gear, Kato right behind him with a duffel bag.Shinjiro marched straight to his uncle. "The old man gave the green light. He wants Dominic Moretti dead.""What's the play?" Kenji snapped the lighter shut."Midnight, flat out, at Pier 4," Shinjiro said. "Ichiro bought out the whole dock tonight. He wants a bloodbath.""He wants a free pass, kid." Kenji's eyes narrowed. "But we aren't fighting his war."Shinjiro reached into his vest, pulled out a folded sheet of paper, and slammed it against the train car. A list of names."The Chairman doesn't trust anyone," Shinjiro growled, tapping the top. "The old bastard planted eyes inside my own Vanguard crew."Kenji stepped closer. "Who's leaking?""Taro's running t
The mahogany desk felt cold under his palms. Director Gabe stared at his monitor, blue light reflecting off his glasses, scrolling through the station surveillance logs. Agent Wallace's activity profile showed a three-hour gap from last night — unauthorized terminal access deep in the mainframe, unexplained.Gabe leaned closer. He clicked over to Moss's field reports. Nothing. Total silence — not a single violent engagement, not one tactical encounter logged.He tapped his pen hard against the wood. "They're running their own goddamn game," he muttered.He snatched the desk phone, slamming his thumb into the intercom. "Send Wallace in. Right now. Stop blinking and get him through that door."A minute later, Wallace stepped into the office, hands deep in his coat pockets. Gabe sat back, tracking the agent's rigid posture."You've been poking around places you don't belong, Wallace. Three hours logged into the secure database yesterday. What the hell were you looking for?"Wallace shift
The rain had stopped by the time Wallace reached the 24-hour fitness center on the edge of the financial district. The neon sign above the entrance buzzed weakly, half its letters burned out. He pushed through the glass doors, dripping onto the rubber mat, and the night clerk behind the counter barely looked up from his phone."Forgot my key fob," Wallace muttered, flashing a membership card he'd had for three years and used maybe six times. The clerk waved him through without a word.The locker room smelled of bleach and old sweat. Empty at this hour — just the hum of a vending machine and a single shower dripping somewhere behind the tile wall. Wallace walked past the rows of lockers, counting under his breath, until he reached the last one in the back corner, half-hidden behind a stack of folded towels nobody had picked up in days.He'd rented this locker eight months ago under a fake name, paid cash every renewal. Nobody at the bureau knew it existed. Nobody at the bureau knew Wal
Sophia slammed her fingers onto the mechanical keys, the clattering filling the basement. The blue light from the monitors washed over her face.Lina leaned over the table, dragging a marker across a freshly printed spreadsheet."Vance wasn't lying," Lina muttered, staring at the numbers. "The routing numbers match the Panama shell entities perfectly. He wanted to keep his teeth.""I'm into the financial mainline now," Sophia said, hitting the enter key. Green numbers cascaded down the left screen.Lina pulled a steel chair forward and sat down. "Where's the money crashing, Soph? Track the final buyouts. Don't let the trail go cold."Sophia highlighted a dense block of data. "Ninety percent is landing in the corporate accounts for Sentinel Cement. Old man Ichiro is dumping everything he's got into locking down the concrete supply. He's buying the whole market.""And the other ten?" Lina stared at the glass. "There's a gap right here in the ledger. Isolate it. Now."Sophia switched to
The Judge flipped through the scanned ledgers,Kenji’s attorney leaned against the podium, a slow smirk returning to his lips. "It’s a neat story, Your Honor. Truly. But let's look at what the state actually has. A single, crumpled piece of paper with a red smudge. No live witness. No verification.
The secure line clicked. Adam Leo jammed the receiver against his ear."Boss, we have a massive problem," the voice panicked through the static. "Dr. Thorne just cracked the Cayman files. He’s got the whole offshore setup."Leo lowered the phone. The plastic hit the mahogany. It was over. The Tokyo
Across town, Moss didn't bother knocking. She threw her weight into the glass door, slamming it open as she marched into the Internal Affairs corner office.Deputy Chief Adam Leo sat behind his mahogany desk, spinning a silver pen as he adjusted his tie. He didn't look up.Moss stepped up and slamm
Dominic hustled through the damp service tunnel, wearing a grease-stained maintenance uniform and following the old map Alexei had shoved into his hands.The low rumble of gunfire vibrated through the ceiling. Upstairs, Hugo was turning the fourth-floor corridor into a warzone.Dominic hauled himse







