LOGINI woke to the soft glow of the morning sun filtering through the blinds. For a moment, I forgot all that's happened, thought it to be a normal morning, until I heard the quiet sniffle from the living room.
I pushed myself up, muscles aching, and crept toward mamá. She was sitting on the couch, eyes red, the muted television flickering the news across her face. My chest tightened. "Mamá..." I whispered, kneeling beside her. She didn't look at me at first, just shook her head, quiet tears slipping down her cheeks. I wrapped an arm around her, pulling her close. Her body was small and trembling against mine. "It's going to be okay," I murmured, though I wasn't sure I believed it. She clutched my arm. "Jenny... he's gone. My Miguel..." I pressed my forehead to hers. "I know, mamá. I know. But I'm here. We're together. We'll get through this." She nodded against me, a small shudder running through her, and for a moment, it felt like maybe we could survive the weight of the world together. After a long, quiet embrace, I helped her settle back onto the couch, smoothing her hair. "I have to go to work now," I said gently, brushing a tear from her cheek. "But I'll check on you later. I promise." She gave a weak, grateful smile, and I forced myself to step away. My heart still ached as I left the apartment, slipping my bag over my shoulder. Every step toward the taxi was heavy, but I kept my chin up. Miguel wouldn't let me stop, Not now. __ By the time I arrived at the office, the fluorescent lights reflected off the polished floors, harsh and unforgiving. Everyone was watching the news on the large screens in the breakroom. I froze, hands slowly curling into fists, nails sharp biting into my palms. The headline flashed: "Local Man Found Dead in Suspected Suicide." Miguel. A chill creeped down my spine, my stomach twisted, painfully. Each step toward my office felt heavier than the last. Like I might collapse. My coworkers' eyes immediately flicked toward me, offering silent condolences. But I didn't want them. Not now. Not like this. I brushed past murmurs, the hum of idle conversations fading. I found Daniel and grabbed his arm, pulling him toward my office. My nails dug into his sleeve. 'Daniel had been the only one in the office who ever had my back, no matter what.' "Jenny... what the heck, your hurting me-" he began, voice low, startled. "They're lying," I hissed, glancing over my shoulder. "Excuse me?" "Miguel didn't die of suicide." Daniel froze, hand hovering over the door latch. "Look, Jenny... I know this is hard, and slot to process but we need to accept the facts here." he said his tone low, gentle. As if I were fragile and could fall apart at any moment. "Goddamn it, Daniel," I whispered, voice trembling. "They killed him. I saw it myself... when they shot him, and. He sent proof of all they were doing... before he died." As if he knew he would, I thought. My vision began blurring from the tears I had been holding back. As a heavy sense of guilt crashed over me. Maybe if I had warned him, stopped him... he would still be here. Daniel's eyes darkened, as he exhaled slowly, hands flexing at his waist. "Jenny... if what you're saying is true... this changes everything." I nodded, swallowing the lump in my throat. My fingers trembled as I leaned on the desk, pulse hammering, stomach knotted as memories of that night came crashing in. He placed a hand on my shoulder, and for a minute there a soft sense of warmth cut through the panic. "But Jenny... we need to be careful. If they know you saw him, or least know you have this... they'll come after you next!" Goosebumps crawled up my arms, from what he just said. Because I knew it was true but still it was a risk I was willing to take. I rose back up, straightening my posture. "I know. But I don't care, we have to stop them." Daniel's eyes softened, but his voice remained sharp. "Then let's go through everything. Who had access to him? Where was he? And most importantly, what proof do we have?" I pulled my phone from my pocket, slick with sweat, anxiously twitching, and showed him the files Miguel had sent. Names, locations, transfers, operations... live evidence of Redwell Biotech's crimes. My hands shook as I scrolled, anger pulsing through me. Daniel's brow furrowed deeper with each video. Tension knotted his jaw. "Jenny... this company is untouchable." I squared my shoulders. Fear and guilt coiled in my chest and snapped into resolve. "Then they've never met us." He studied me long, weighing the fire in my eyes. He knew I wouldn't let this go. Daniel was brilliant, seeing patterns in numbers like others see colors. He usually avoided danger, preferring clean battles. But this wasn't just another case. This was personal. He didn't argue when I made my decision. When I jumped, Daniel would never let me fall alone. I sat across from him, letting the files play. Hands trembling, monitors casting a pale glow over my wide eyes. My fingers drummed on the desk. Outside, the city moved, unaware that a witness lived-one who could bring an untouchable company down. I exhaled, guilt pressing down, heart aching. But I couldn't stop. Miguel hadn't had that chance. I looked at Daniel, voice low but sharp, cutting the office silence. "We start tonight. It'll take time, but we'll find them, stop them, and make them pay for what they did to my brother." Daniel nodded, grim determination settling over his face. He tapped the desk. "Then let's get to work." We rose, chairs scraping softly. Legs heavy, stomach twisting, but the fire in my chest refused to dim. I peeked around the office, scanning the monitors and desks. Every shadowed corner, every idle employee reminded me how careful we had to be. I motioned for Daniel to follow. We moved to our workstations, setting up laptops and screens, the files in my pocket heavy-a physical reminder of Miguel's sacrifice. Fingers flew over keyboards, eyes darting between screens, matching the company's patterns against Miguel's proof. The hum of the office faded behind us. Outside, the city went about its oblivious rhythm. But inside these walls, we were the storm waiting to break. The night was waiting for us. And so were they. We worked late. We traced all we could, shell charities, medical grants, and erased trial records. Daniel followed the money. I followed the people. By the time we packed up, my head ached and my nerves buzzed. "We should stop for today," Daniel said. "We're pushing our luck. I'll drive you home." The parking structure was quiet, too quiet. Daniel unlocked his door, then froze abruptly causing me to fidget from his sudden pause, "What is it?" I asked. "Did you hear that?" he whispered. Footsteps. They were slow, calculated, and heavy. Suddenly a man stepped out from the shadows. "Daniel," I breathed. He moved in front of me instinctively. Then the sound of a gunshot cracked through the air. Daniel stumbled. For a second, I thought he had just tripped. "Daniel?" I called out. He collapsed. The gunshot was like a thunderclap in the deserted alley... a sharp, violent intrusion that made my ears ring. "No," I screamed. I dropped beside him, pressing my hands against his chest as blood soaked through my fingers. His breathing was shallow. Broken. "Stay with me," I cried. His eyes flickered open. "Jenny," he whispered. "I'm here. I'm here." His hand twitched weakly, gripping my wrist. "Listen," he rasped. "You have to go." "No," I sobbed. "I won't leave you." His fingers tightened with what little strength he had left. "Run," he said again, but this time forcing the word out. "Please." The footsteps got louder, closer. Daniel's eyes shifted past me towards the sound. "Jenny," he whispered urgently. "Now." Then suddenly a shadow fell over us. At first, I thought it was just the light shifting. A car passing. I convinced myself it was anything else. All of a sudden, the air felt too heavy to breathe, as if the alley had suddenly grown smaller. That scent... it feels too familiar. Velvet creek! I felt it before I saw it.Chapter 10 • ADRIAN POVIt been hours since, after she had left. I stayed where I was. Not a single step toward the door. Just my thoughts and the distant sound of the city sprawling beneath me. lights blinking from below like distant stars. Cars weaved, people moving, lives unaware of the games played above them.From my office balcony, I could see it all… the city I once ruled in shadow. The domain I once thought was untouchable, now… threatened. Not by another rival…But by a woman.The silence of the office pressed in. I poured myself a glass of whiskey, letting the amber liquid catch the light. I didn’t drink it. Not yet. My mind was elsewhere. A chessboard. Moves and countermoves spinning faster than my pulse.I replayed every second. Every word. Every flash of defiance in her eyes. I had already considered killing her. It was the cleanest, easiest way to eliminate a threat and bury the problem permanentlyBut, she wasn’t just any problem. She was something else entirel
I was watching her before she even stepped into the building. Camera three caught the taxi slowing by the curb. Camera four caught the door opening. Camera six caught her stepping out. She paused for half a second before finally entering the building. The building had that effect. Tall glass. Cold steel. No warmth. It was designed to make people feel small before they even reached the elevator. She adjusted her bag on her shoulder and walked in anyway. No hesitation. Interesting. I leaned back in my chair and watched the screens. My office was quiet. Too quiet. No assistants. No guards inside. Just me and the low hum of the monitors. She passed through security without issue. I had made sure of that. No alarms. No interruptions. I wanted her calm. Calm people revealed more. The elevator camera caught her reflection. Her jaw was tight. Her eyes were focused straight ahead. She held herself like someone walking into danger but refusing to acknowledge it. Not brave. Controlled
ADRIAN pov:“Dispose of him quietly.” I ordered, leaving them behind as I made my way back into the van. “Yes, sir.” They're voice responded in a sharp sync, as they carried his half-breathing body, into the back.The city blurred past the windows as we drove back in silence. No talk. Just focus. Jenny had vanished, yes, but chaos hadn’t followed yet. That’s what matters.The meeting place sat hidden in plain sight. An old private club that had gone bankrupt years ago, with it's name stripped from the records. But what no one knew was that behind those bars was a fingerprint lock and a steel door. Where the real room waited there.They were already there when I arrived. Three of them. The only men I trusted enough to sit across from. Men who have bled with me, laughed with me, buried problems with me. Business partners and friends, depending on the night.“Adrian,” Luca said first, slowly lifting his glass, his voice giving away the fact that he was completely under the influence of
ADRIAN POV“They know sir.” The words cut through the quiet of my office. I did not look up immediately. I finished signing the document in front of me, capped the pen, and set it aside with practiced calm. “Who knows,” I asked calmly, “and what do they know?” There was a brief pause on the line. I could hear breathing. Timid but slightly controlled.“Two auditors,” the voice said. “They took up the case tonight. The girl came in a few hours ago. She was… shaking. Paranoid.”Interesting, I thought to myself. “What did she report?” “From what I overheard sir. Redwell Biotech was mentioned.” That… got my attention.I leaned back in my chair slowly. Redwell was a name that did not surface unless someone had already stepped too close into actually finding out something.“Who is ‘she’?” I asked. “And who exactly is handling the case?”“She’s the sister to the man who died at the warehouse yesterday, sir,” the insider said. “She knows a lot sir. T-too much, she wasn’t guessing at all.”
Jenny's pov The next morning came within the blink of an eye, my head was still really heavy. Weighing me with memories from last night. Replaying. The alley. Daniel’s last words, and Adrian’s cold voice over the phone. The thudding in my chest gradually began beating unevenly, as each memory graced through my mind in a brutal pictorial remembrance. I moved through my apartment out of habit. Taking a quick bath. Although, the warmth of the water splashing gently against my skin did very little in terms of easing my nerves. I closed my eyes, letting the water soak through my hair. Feeling the coolness it offered as it graced down my scalp. But regardless, the memories kept replaying in an endless loop. I could still smell the scent of his blood mixed with the thickness of the air of that alley. I immediately shook my head, attempting to pull myself out of my own mind. “You’ve handled worse,” I muttered to myself, in a low voice. “You’re Jenny Havan. You dont back down. Yo
I lifted my head slowly, my hands still slick with Daniel's blood, my breath caught halfway in my chest. Polished shoes stopped a few feet from us.They were expensive. Immaculate. Completely out of place in the filth of this alley.My gaze carefully traveled upward. To tailored trousers. A dark coat and a hand hanging loosely at his side. The gun was almost casual in his grip. My breathing hitched unevenly.I followed the line of his arm, forcing myself to look up, even as every instinct screamed at me not to. That was when I saw his face.... Calm, controlled. Adrian Red.I knew who he was. Everyone in the city knew the Redwell Biotech logo; it was on every hospital, every pharmacy, every government health directive. He was the man who kept the city alive... and apparently, he was also the man who'd decide on who lives or not.His cold stern gaze moved from Daniel's body to me. A flicker of recognition sparked in his eyes... not the way a stranger looks at a face, but the way a coll
A taxi was already waiting at the curb. I climbed in, shutting the door, and pressed my forehead to the cool glass. My heart heaved, my skin crawled from humiliation. The rush of everything hit me at once... embarrassment, desire, exhilaration, shame, and an aching, lingering pleasure that refused
"Get on the bed."I froze. "You... aren't you going to take off your mask?""No," his answer was immediate. Final."But..."His eyes sparked with irritation. "Another word of protest, and I will have you escorted out. Do as I say, or get out. Is that clear?" His tone wasn't loud or threatening, but
Author'Note * Heyy guy's thank you soo much for taking up this story, I appreciate it soo much. I just want to let you guys know I'm still a little new to writting, so in case you see any mistakes kindly bare with me. I promise to improve, but in the mean while, best believe that you are in for a TR
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