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The alley reeked of rain-soaked concrete and something coppery underneath it — blood, maybe, or just rust bleeding from a drainpipe. A single neon sign buzzed somewhere above, washing the narrow passage in sickly red light. Shadows pooled between the buildings like ink, thick enough to swallow a person whole.
He didn't even hear them approach. One second the alley was empty silence, the next there was a blade pressed flat against the side of his throat, cold as the rain still clinging to his collar. "You have ten seconds," the voice said, low and almost bored, as if holding a knife to someone's neck was a Tuesday inconvenience. "Want to say something?" He didn't move. Couldn't, really, not with steel kissing his pulse point. The seconds stretched out, syrupy and unbearable. Then, without warning, the pressure of the blade eased not gone, just lifted enough to let him breathe and the figure leaned in close. A slow inhale, deliberate, almost intimate. "You smell nice," they murmured, amused. That was the last straw. He shoved away, stumbling back against the wet brick, putting whatever distance the cramped alley allowed between himself and the stranger. "Asshole," he spat, chest heaving. "Your time is u—" His phone rang, the sound slicing through the tension like a second blade. He fumbled it out of his pocket, hands not quite steady, and answered without checking the caller. "Hello," he said, then frowned. "What do you mean this isn't the right person? ...Damn it." He lowered the phone, murmuring something bitter under his breath. The stranger in the shadows watched this unfold with quiet interest, head tilted slightly, knife still loose in their grip. "Your luck saved you today," they finally said, and there was something almost like respect in the words. With a flick of the wrist, the blade vanished, and the hand that had pinned him moments ago released its hold entirely. He was free. But freedom, it turned out, came with a price. Before he could fully step back, fingers closed around the back of his neck not violent this time, but possessive, deliberate. The stranger pulled him close enough that their breath ghosted against his hair. "We will meet again, love," they whispered, and pressed their lips briefly to the crown of his head, as if sealing a promise neither of them had agreed to. He froze, every nerve screaming conflicting things at once — fear, fury, something else he refused to name. "I won't mind killing you right now," he said, voice flat, dangerous in its own quiet way. It wasn't a threat born of panic. It was a statement of fact, delivered the way some men ordered coffee. The stranger only laughed softly, unbothered, already stepping back into the dark as though night itself had reached out to reclaim them. A new sound broke the moment — footsteps, heavy and fast, and a voice barking a single word into the alley: "Boss." Whatever spell had settled over the two of them shattered instantly. The stranger melted backward into the shadows without another word, gone as if they'd never been there at all. He didn't wait to see where they went. He turned and ran, escaping into the wet maze of the city streets, pulse hammering long after the alley had disappeared behind him. It was well past nightfall by the time he allowed himself to stop running, and even then, his mind hadn't caught up with his feet. He didn't remember consciously choosing the route. He simply walked until the cracked pavement gave way to a long gravel drive, and the drive gave way to towering iron gates, and beyond them rose a mansion that looked as though it had been carved out of midnight itself. He stood there a moment, breath fogging in front of him, and a strange, bitter realization settled into his chest. This brat finally knows where his home is. The thought wasn't even his or maybe it was, twisted into someone else's voice in his head, mocking and fond all at once. He shook it off and pushed through the gates. Inside, the mansion swallowed sound the way the alley had swallowed light. Black marble floors stretched beneath an arched ceiling, a chandelier hanging high overhead like a frozen explosion of candlelight. Heavy curtains framed tall windows, and twin couches sat positioned before an unlit fireplace, dark and waiting, like the whole room was holding its breath. A young man stood near the hearth — sharp-dressed, dark-haired, the kind of handsome that came with an edge to it. Elison Floris. He looked up as the door opened, opened his mouth to speak. "Damn it," he muttered first, almost to himself, frustration flickering across his face. "I wasn't able to see his face." Before anyone could ask what he meant, motion cut through the room — fast, deliberate. A knife sailed through the air toward him without warning, gleaming once under the chandelier's light before closing the distance. Elison's eyes went wide as he registered the threat half a second too late. "What th—" The sentence broke off, swallowed by the chaos of the moment, the night refusing, even here, even now, to offer either of them a single quiet breath. Whatever or whoever had followed him from that alley clearly wasn't finished yet.The abandoned factory groaned under its own weight, rusted staircases zigzagging up through the dark like the skeleton of something long dead. Heinz Floris stepped carefully over the debris scattered across the floor, phone pressed to his ear, voice clipped and businesslike even here, in the middle of nowhere."We have arri—" he started, before the call cut him off mid-sentence, forcing him to finish the conversation with a series of short, irritated replies instead.Beside him, Mateo Stellar took one look at what waited for them deeper in the building and exhaled slowly. "My goodness..."There, in the center of the ruined space, a man sat slumped in an old electric chair, wires coiled around his limbs and torso like something out of a nightmare, his body utterly still.Mateo crouched beside him, checking for any sign of life, though the answer was already obvious before he even finished. "He's dead," he confirmed grimly.Heinz pulled on a pair of gloves without being asked, his earli
The office was, as always, aggressively elegant—dark wood, towering bookshelves, chandeliers that dripped candlelight across leather furniture nobody ever seemed to actually sit in. Elison Floris stood near the window with his phone in hand, unbothered by the grandeur around him, mid-sneeze."Achuu~""Are you sure you didn't catch a cold?" Azhael asked, not even glancing up from his own drink.Elison waved a dismissive hand, nodding instead toward the matter at hand. "Did you find anything about him?"Azhael sighed, long and put-upon. "No. You told us nothing except that he smells nice.""He really doe—"The door burst open before Elison could finish defending his single, deeply unhelpful data point."ELISON!" The voice cut through the room like a blade, loud enough to rattle the chandelier overhead."*Close his ears* STOP SCREAMING," Elison snapped, clamping his hands over Azhael's ears as though that would somehow solve the noise problem at its source.Mateo Stellar—Heinz's perpetua
Lance Ivory flopped face-first onto his bed like a man who had given up on gravity entirely, one arm dangling off the edge of the mattress, the other still clutching his phone.*What's up? You look tired,* came the message from Van Hert, his best friend since childhood, always annoyingly perceptive even through a screen.*...nothing,* Lance typed back, though even he could tell how unconvincing it looked.*Lan.*Just his name. One word, and somehow it carried the full weight of Van's disbelief.Lance sighed, long and heavy, the kind of exhale that seemed to drag something loose in his chest along with it. *I'm getting married,* he finally admitted.*what's new in tha- WHAT??**ahh don't shout,* Lance typed quickly, wincing even though there was no actual sound involved.*wait, for real?**but what if...* Lance started, the sentence trailing off before he could even finish forming the thought.*don't think too much,* Van replied gently. *Your family and I are here. Don't be scared.*La
Adira Floris did not raise her voice often. She didn't need to. When she wanted something, the temperature in the room simply dropped a few degrees, and everyone within earshot understood they had exactly one chance to give her the right answer."I want to see the girl," she said, swirling the dark liquid in her glass without looking up.Heinz Floris, eldest son, the supposed responsible one, went very still."Is there a problem," Adira continued, voice smooth as poured silk, "or is there no such thing as your girlfriend, Mr. Heinz Floris?"Heinz's face did something complicated—somewhere between panic and prayer."ANSWER ME.""S-sorry, mom," he stammered, all pretense of composure gone.Adira set her glass down with a click that seemed to echo far louder than it should have. "You're getting married too, then. I'll find someone for you myself.""MOM, NO—""You want me to repeat myself?" Her voice sharpened, and both of her sons—because Elison had wandered close enough to be caught in
The room smelled of iron and rust—not from blood, not yet, but from the old chair the man had been tied to for the better part of an hour. Elison Floris stood before him with his sleeves already rolled to the elbow, though he hadn't touched a single thing. He didn't need to. His presence alone had a way of making people's spines curl inward, as if their bodies already understood danger before their minds caught up.The man in the chair was panting, sweat clinging to his collar, his breath coming out ragged and uneven."Looks like your owner has fed you well," Elison said, tilting his head, studying him the way one might study a particularly uninteresting insect."Do whatever you want," the man rasped, jaw tight. "I will not say anything."Elison's mouth curved, unbothered, almost amused. He turned toward the doorway where his personal assistant—and closest friend, though neither of them would ever say the word aloud—stood leaning against the frame with a glass in his hand, as though t
The chaos of reunion had barely settled when a new voice came barreling down the hallway, breathless with excitement."AUNTYY!" Ruby Ivory called, taking the stairs two at a time before launching herself straight into Adira's arms."My other baby," Adira said warmly, wrapping her in a tight hug."I missed youu," Ruby mumbled into her shoulder."I missed you too, dear."Ruby pulled back just enough to look up at her properly, something sharp and curious already flickering behind her eyes. "Aunty, did you know Lance is getting married?" she asked, breaking the hug entirely now, far too invested to stay still."Of course," Adira said simply. "He is marrying my son."Ruby's mouth fell open. "MOM IS THIS TRUE?"Lance, who had been hoping to avoid this exact conversation for at least another hour, sighed from across the room. "RUBY," he called out, already bracing himself.Ruby ignored him entirely, practically vibrating with excitement. "OMG, AUNTY, IS HE HANDSOME?""He is my husband, Ruby







