LOGINShe was placed in his world to kill him. Three years later, she still hasn't. Instead she has been quietly dismantling every threat moving against Dominic from the inside no orders, no credit, no explanation while playing the fragile woman he thinks he rescued. Now the syndicate is done waiting. A second operative has been sent to finish the job, and Lena knows the truth she isn't just a protector anymore. She's a loose end. Saving Dominic means burning her cover. Burning her cover means showing him everything every lie, every performance, every moment of vulnerability she manufactured. Except somewhere between the mission and the man, some of it stopped being manufactured. And she can't tell the difference anymore.
View MoreThe man was already dead
He just didn't know it yet.
Lena Vasquez stood at the penthouse window, fingers wrapped around a glass of water she hadn't touched, watching the street below like she was watching nothing at all. Casual. Unbothered. The way you watch something that can't hurt you.
The black sedan three floors down had been parked in the same spot for forty minutes. Wrong angle for surveillance. Wrong distance for a drive-by. But perfect, absolutely perfect for a man who wanted a clear line of sight to the building entrance the moment Dominic Moretti stepped outside.
She picked up her phone. Typed one message to a number that didn't exist in her contacts. Sent it.
Then she went to touch up her lip gloss.
By the time she came back, the sedan was gone.
She was slicing tomatoes when she heard the elevator.
Dominic's tell. Private elevator, never the stairs, always between eight and nine unless something had gone wrong. The sound of those doors had become as familiar as a heartbeat. Three years of listening for it.
The doors opened at 8:47.
"Something smells good."
His voice arrived before he did — low, unhurried, the voice of a man who assumed he'd be listened to and was never wrong. Dominic Moretti filled doorways the way most men filled chairs. Broad. Still. The particular stillness of someone who had never needed to raise his voice to make a room go quiet.
He had a fresh cut on his jaw.
Lena looked at it for one second. Then looked back at the tomatoes.
"You're bleeding," she said
"I'm aware." He dropped his jacket over the chair like he owned the apartment which he did and came around the island. Close enough that she could feel the warmth off him. He looked at what she was making.
"Tomatoes," he said.
"Very good."
"You're making fun of me."
"I would never."
Something moved at the corner of his mouth. Not quite a smile. The thing that lived just before one.
He reached past her, stole a slice, ate it. "How was your day?"
"Quiet," she said. "Yours?"
"Complicated." He leaned against the counter, arms crossed, eyes on the side of her face. "There was a situation outside the building. Someone had eyes on the entrance."
Her hands didn't stop moving.
"What kind of someone?"
"The kind we don't see again." Simply. Factually. The way he said everything that should have been horrifying. "Marco handled it."
Lena set the knife down. Let her eyes go wide just slightly. Just enough.
"Are you okay? That cut"
"It's nothing." He reached out and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. A gesture so familiar now that neither of them remarked on it. "You're safe. That's all that matters."
She looked up at him.
He meant it. That was the thing about Dominic she had never accounted for in any of her pre-mission profiling. He always meant it.
She was the one who had sent the message that cleared that sedan.
She was the reason he was standing here telling her she was safe.
He didn't know. He would never know. That was the point.
"Okay," she said softly.
He watched her face a moment longer than necessary. Those dark, direct eyes moving across her features like he was checking for something. Looking for cracks.
She didn't have any. Not where he could see them.
"Go shower," she said. "I'll finish dinner."
"Don't burn anything."
"I've never burned anything."
"The eggs. March."
"Your stove runs hot."
"My stove ran perfectly for four years before you"
"Dominic."
He pointed at her. Almost smiled. Walked away.
She listened until she heard the shower start.
Then she turned back to the tomatoes.
Perfectly steady hands.
She was still awake at midnight when her phone buzzed once on the nightstand.
Dominic was asleep beside her, breathing slow and even, his arm heavy across her waist. She reached carefully for the phone, angled the screen away from him, and read the message.
Four words and a number.
Thirty days. Complete it.
She read it twice. Set the phone down. Stared at the ceiling.
Dominic shifted. Pulled her closer. Murmured something low that might have been her name.
She lay perfectly still.
Thirty days to do what she came here to do. What she had been placed in this apartment, this bed, this man's life to do.
Her phone buzzed again.
No words this time.
Just a photograph.
A woman. Silver hair. Standing on the street directly outside the building.
Looking up.
The morning after was quiet in a way that had teeth.Dominic made coffee. Set a mug in front of her without speaking. Sat across the kitchen island with his own cup and looked out the window at the city the way he did when he was working something out in his head and hadn't gotten there yet.She watched him the way she watched everything without appearing to.He hadn't mentioned the hallway. Hadn't mentioned finding her awake, or the bathroom, or the way they had stood in the dark looking at each other with that new and terrible silence between them. He had simply gone back to bed, and she had followed, and they had lain side by side in the dark not touching, not speaking, until somewhere around three in the morning she had felt his hand find hers under the covers.He hadn't said anything then either.That was the thing about Dominic that kept catching her off guard after three years. Other men filled silence with noise. He sat inside it like he owned it too."You're staring," he sai
She waited until he was asleep.Dominic went out at eleven-fifteen — she knew his sleep the way she knew everything about him. The exact moment his breathing changed, when the tension left his shoulders, when he stopped being the most dangerous man in the city and became just a man. She waited ten more minutes after that. Then she slipped out from under his arm, picked up her phone, and walked barefoot to the bathroom at the far end of the hall.She ran the tap. Sat on the edge of the tub. Dialed.Reza picked up on the second ring."You saw the photograph." Not a question. His voice was the same as always — flat, unhurried, the voice of a man who had never needed to raise it. Reza ran the Veil the way certain men ran empires. Quietly. From a distance. With the patience of someone who knew the outcome before the game started."Who took it?" she asked."Does it matter?""It matters to me.""Then you're already more compromised than I thought." A pause. "Which is saying something, Lena."
He told her three days in advance.That was unusual. Dominic didn't plan things. He moved and she moved with him, that was the rhythm they had settled into without discussing it. So when he came home Wednesday and said "clear Friday night, just us, no phones", she filed it under notable and spent the next forty-eight hours wondering what had changed.Friday came. He took her to a place with no sign outside and a host who knew his name before he said it. Small table in the back. No guards inside two on the street, which she clocked without appearing to look. Candlelight. The kind of quiet that cost money.He ordered for both of them without asking."You do that every time," she said."Do what?""Order. Without asking."He looked up from the menu. "You were going to get the same thing.""You don't know that.""Lena." He set the menu down. "You've gotten the same thing at every restaurant we've been to for two years."She opened her mouth. Closed it."That's not the point," she said."Wh
She found it on a Tuesday.Not because she was looking, she was always looking, that was the point. But this particular Tuesday she was sitting at the kitchen counter with a coffee she hadn't touched, scrolling her phone like a woman with nothing to do, while quietly running a cross-reference on three names Dominic had mentioned at dinner.One of them didn't line up.Cael Briggs. Mid-level. Handled logistics for Dominic's shipping routes which routes moved when, which docks, which drivers. Invisible enough to be ignored. Important enough to do real damage. She had flagged him six weeks ago as a low-level concern.Overnight, that thread had moved.A transfer. Small enough to miss if you weren't looking for the shape of it. She knew that shape. Had used it herself — the specific way money moved when someone was being paid not to talk but to listen.Cael Briggs was feeding information outside the Moretti organization.The problem wasn't finding him. The problem was she couldn't report it






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