LOGINShe 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."
She said nothing. Outside the bathroom the apartment was silent. Dominic's city hummed forty floors below.
"I need more time," she said.
"You've had three years."
"The situation is complicated."
"The situation is simple. It has always been simple. You were given a target and a directive and you have done everything except the one thing you were sent to do." His voice stayed level. That was the worst part about Reza — he never got angry. Anger would have been easier. "Sable is already in position."
"I know where Sable is."
"Then you know what her orders are."
"Call her off."
Silence.
"Lena."
"Call her off, Reza. Give me the thirty days you promised and call her off."
"The thirty days were a courtesy." Slow. Deliberate. "I think we both understand you have no intention of using them for their intended purpose." A pause. "You've been protecting him."
She didn't confirm it. Didn't deny it.
"Four incidents," Reza said. "The sedan this week. The dock situation in March. The Briggs leak. And the thing in November that you thought we didn't know about." He let that land. "We know about everything, Lena. We always have. The question I've been sitting with is why."
"I was managing the timeline," she said.
"No." Quiet. Certain. "You weren't."
The tap kept running. Steam gathered at the edges of the mirror.
"He's more useful alive," she said. "His network, his contacts"
"Stop." Something underneath his flatness shifted. The particular stillness of a man who had run out of patience for a performance he could see through. "I trained you. I know what a managed asset sounds like. I know what a compromised operative sounds like." A beat. "I know which one I'm hearing."
She pressed two fingers to the bridge of her nose.
Then she heard it faint, barely there. A sound from the hallway. The specific quality of silence that changed when someone was moving through it.
She kept her voice completely even. "What does Sable know?"
"Enough."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only one you're getting." He exhaled slowly. "I'm going to ask you something. Think carefully before you answer."
She waited.
"Are you in love with him?"
The tap ran. The steam gathered. Forty floors below the city moved without caring about any of it.
"No," she said.
"Lena."
"I said no."
"And I heard you say it the way people say things they've been rehearsing." A pause. "Which tells me everything the answer does."
She said nothing.
"Sable has orders," Reza said. "If you move to interfere if you position yourself between Sable and the target in any capacity, your status changes. You understand what I'm saying."
"I understand."
"You stop being an operative with a compromised mission." His voice was almost gentle. Almost. "You become a liability. And we both know what happens to liabilities."
The silence stretched between them across whatever distance Reza was calling from. She had never known where he was, not once in twelve years, and had stopped trying to find out around year three when she realized the not-knowing was deliberate.
"Thirty days," she said quietly. "That's all I'm asking."
"And then what?" Something shifted in his voice. Not warmth, Reza didn't do warmth. But something close to curiosity. "You complete the mission and walk away? You've been in that apartment three years. You've been in his bed. There is no clean exit from this. There hasn't been for a long time."
She already knew that.
Had known it longer than she wanted to admit.
"Call off Sable," she said one last time.
Reza hung up.
She sat on the edge of the tub. Then stood, turned off the tap, wiped the mirror clear with the back of her hand.
Her own face looked back at her. Steady. Unremarkable. The face she had worn so long she sometimes forgot there was another one underneath.
She opened the bathroom door.
Dominic was standing in the hallway.
Arms crossed. Fully awake. Watching her with those dark, direct eyes that missed nothing — that had always missed nothing. The question was never whether he saw. It was how much, and how long, and what he had decided to do about it.
He said nothing. Neither did she.
They stood in the hallway in the dark and the silence between them had a different weight now. Not the comfortable silence of three years of mornings and small familiar things.
This one had edges.
"How long have you been standing there?" she asked.
His jaw shifted slightly
"Long enough," he said.
The photographs fell from Lena's hands onto the concrete floor. One by one. Each image more impossible than the last.Her mother stood in a room with blood on her hands. Not metaphorically. Actual blood. On her skin. On her clothes. On the wall behind her.Her mother stood over a man who was barely recognizable as human anymore.Her mother smiled while holding a gun to someone's head."No," Lena whispered. "This isn't—these are fake. These are""They're real," Victoria said quietly. She wasn't cruel about it. She was matter-of-fact. Like she was telling Lena the weather. "Your mother was many things. Brilliant. Visionary. Capable of building an empire from ash and blood. But she was also something else.""A murderer," Dominic said. His voice was flat. Observational."A believer," Victoria corrected. She stepped closer to the photographs scattered on the ground. "She didn't kill people because the business required it. She killed people because she believed they deserved to die. Not fo
The warehouse smelled like rust and old concrete. The kind of space that had been abandoned so long it forgot it was supposed to be used for anything. Dominic's hand found Lena's as they walked deeper into the darkness, their footsteps echoing off metal walls.The Founder stood in the center of the space, backlit by a single overhead light. She looked different here, outside the boardrooms and business meetings. She looked like what she actually was. Dangerous. Ancient. A woman who'd been winning wars before Dominic was born."Dominic Moretti," she said, her voice steady and sure. "Lena Vasquez. Thank you for coming."Up close, Lena could see the resemblance now that she was looking for it. Not in the face. In the way she held herself. In the particular stillness of someone who'd learned to control every muscle, every breath."My name is Victoria Volkov," the Founder said. "Though I've used many names. Your mother called me Tori. I called her the most brilliant woman I'd ever met." Sh
Lena read the message three times. Her mother understood. Her mother created it. Her mother didn't run away."Sable," she said, and her voice came out hollow. She turned away from Dominic, away from Marco, toward the hallway where her brother had retreated. "Sable, get back here."He appeared almost immediately, like he'd been waiting for her to call. His sharp features, so similar to hers, shifted into something cautious."Our mother," Lena said. Not a question. A demand. "Tell me about our mother."Sable glanced at Dominic, then back at Lena. He moved into the kitchen, sat at the counter like this was a conversation that needed sitting for. "Her name was Anastasia Vasquez," he said quietly. "She was beautiful. Intelligent. Ruthless. She built the organization from nothing starting when she was twenty-three years old.""She's dead," Lena said. It wasn't a statement. It was something she needed confirmed."No," Sable said. "She's not dead. She disappeared when you were five years old.
Sable's phone was already in his hand before Dominic finished speaking. Not because he was reaching for a weapon, but because he needed to move, needed to act, needed to process what had just happened. His dark eyes went distant for a second, the way someone's eyes go when they're calculating odds they weren't prepared to calculate."That's not how this works," Sable said, but there was no anger in his voice. Just observation. Disbelief. "The Founder doesn't negotiate terms. She makes offers. You accept or you don't.""Then tell her I'm negotiating," Dominic said. He was still looking at Lena, like she was the only thing in the room that mattered. Like the organization, the Founder, the entire world could wait. "Tell her those are my conditions."Sable looked between them, and Lena could see something shift in his face. Recognition, maybe. Understanding. He'd come here expecting to deliver a message and collect a response. He hadn't expected to deliver a counteroffer. He hadn't expect
Lena's weapon lowered all the way this time. Not because she lowered it intentionally, but because her hands stopped working. Her entire body went still, frozen in a way that had nothing to do with training and everything to do with the impossible standing in front of her.Sable Vasquez. Her brother.Dead for five years."No," she said, and her voice came out wrong. Cracked. "No, that's not—you're not real."Sable's face was exactly as she remembered it, just older now. Sharper. His eyes, the same dark brown as hers, held something different than they used to. Something harder. But when he looked at her, there was recognition there. Real recognition."I'm real," he said quietly.Dominic was watching her, not Sable. She could feel his attention on her face, reading every reaction, every emotion breaking through her control. She wanted to look away from his gaze but couldn't. Couldn't look away from either of them."I saw your body," Lena said to Sable. Her hands were shaking now. She s
The first operative through the window died before his feet touched the marble floor. Dominic's shot was clean, professional, the kind of shot that comes from years of knowing you might have to end someone in your own home. The body dropped. The second operative came through the glass immediately after, using the first as cover, and Lena was already moving.She fired from the kitchen counter, three shots in rapid succession. Two hit. The operative's shoulder, his arm. He didn't go down, but he lost grip on his weapon. Marco came from the side and finished the job, tactical and cold."Main stairwell, they're moving up," Marco shouted over his shoulder. "Four more coming through emergency stairs in ninety seconds."Dominic was at the security panel, fingers flying across the keyboard. The lights in the east corridor cut out. The emergency stairwell doors locked from the inside, trapping whoever was coming through. He knew this building better than he knew his own heartbeat. Every entran

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