LOGINTobin spent the first three days performing the role of a frightened hostage with a discipline that would have impressed his old commanding officers. He kept his head down, spoke only when spoken to, ate the meals that were brought to his room, and spent his visible hours reading the paperback he had packed and staring out the reinforced window with the vacant expression of a man who had accepted his circumstances.
The invisible hours were a different matter entirely. Between midnight and four in the morning, when the security rotation thinned and the cameras followed their predictable sweep patterns, Tobin mapped the estate. He memorized the patrol schedule within two nights. He identified blind spots in the camera coverage along the east corridor and the service stairs. He counted doors, noted which ones were locked electronically and which ones used traditional hardware, and built a mental blueprint of the manor that grew more detailed with every passing hour.
On the second morning, he met Silas Draven.
Emeric's head of security was built like someone who had been constructed for a specific purpose and had never deviated from it. Broad shoulders, close-cropped hair, and eyes that moved across a room the way searchlights move across a prison yard. He intercepted Tobin in the hallway outside the guest wing with a smile that contained approximately the same amount of warmth as a surgical blade.
"You're the collateral," Silas said, and the word landed like a label being pressed onto a jar.
"That's what they tell me."
"Let me explain something to you, because I only explain things once." Silas stepped close enough that Tobin could smell the coffee on his breath and the gun oil on his hands. "The east wing, the basement level, and the third floor are off limits. The grounds are open during daylight hours. If you try to leave the property, we will find you before you reach the wall, and the conversation that follows will not be pleasant."
"Understood."
Silas studied him for a long moment, and Tobin could feel the man's instincts probing for inconsistencies the way a doctor probes for fractures. Whatever he found apparently satisfied him, because he stepped back and gestured toward the staircase with a courtesy that managed to feel like a threat.
"Breakfast is in the kitchen. Maren will show you."
Maren was the opposite of everything else in the Saal estate. She was in her late fifties, with silver hair pulled back in a loose bun and hands that had clearly spent decades doing practical work. She ran the kitchen and the household with a quiet efficiency that reminded Tobin of the senior NCOs he had served under, the kind of people who kept entire operations running while the officers took credit for the results.
She set a plate of eggs and toast in front of him and poured him coffee without asking whether he wanted any, and when she sat down across from him at the kitchen table, she looked at him with an expression that contained something Tobin had not encountered since arriving at the estate. It took him a moment to identify it, because it had been absent from his life for so long, and then he realized it was simply kindness.
"You're younger than I expected," she said. "When they told me we were getting a hostage, I pictured someone older. Someone harder."
"Sorry to disappoint."
"Don't be. Eat your eggs before they get cold."
She told him, in the careful way that people share information when they know they shouldn't, that Emeric had been running the syndicate for seven years and that the estate had housed various forms of collateral before, but never for longer than a few months. She told him that Emeric was fair in his own way, which Tobin understood to mean fair by the standards of men who operated outside the law. She also told him that Emeric had asked about him twice since his arrival, which was twice more than he had asked about any previous hostage.
Tobin filed that information away and finished his eggs and thanked her for the meal, and when he walked back toward the guest wing, he paused at the junction where the main hallway split toward the east corridor and noticed something that made his pulse quicken slightly.
The third door on the left, set into the wall between two large paintings, was Emeric's private office. Tobin had identified it on his second night by tracing the building's electrical conduit and following the concentration of hardwired security feeds to a single location. The door had a Kaba mechanical lock, high security but not electronic, which meant it wasn't connected to the central monitoring system. It also meant it could be picked by someone with the right tools and enough time.
Tobin looked at the door for exactly three seconds, long enough to confirm the lock model and short enough that the camera at the far end of the hall wouldn't register anything more than a man pausing in a corridor. Then he continued walking back to his room, his face blank and his heart steady, with the tension wrench in his bag calling to him like a voice in the dark.
He would give it one more night. Let the patterns settle. Let the guards get comfortable with the quiet hostage who read his book and stared out the window and caused no trouble whatsoever.
And then, on the fourth night, he would open that door and find out what Emeric Saal was hiding.
The security breach turned out to be an inside job, a low-level staff member bought by a rival faction for an amount of money that Emeric described, with cold contempt, as insulting. Silas identified the man within twelve hours, the matter was handled in the basement level, and the estate returned to its routines with new encryption protocols on every electronic lock.But nothing returned to what it had been before the dark. Tobin felt it in the way Emeric looked at him across the breakfast table, a half-second longer than necessary. He felt it in the way their chess games had changed, each move carrying meanings that had nothing to do with strategy. The silence of the study had transformed from something tactical into something charged, the kind of silence that exists between two bodies that have stopped pretending.Three days after the blackout, Tobin was in the kitchen at one in the morning, standing at the counter with a cutting board and a knife and a collection of ingredients ga
The power went out at eleven forty-two on a Friday night, and the darkness that followed was so immediate and so total that Tobin was on his feet with his back against the wall before his conscious mind had finished processing the absence of light.He had studied the estate's electrical system during his first week, noting the backup generators and the battery-operated emergency lighting along the main corridors. Everything going dark simultaneously meant either catastrophic failure or deliberate sabotage, and in his experience, the former was almost always a cover for the latter. He moved to the door and stepped into a hallway lit only by the faint blue glow of a single emergency strip running on its own battery.Footsteps approached from the end of the corridor, measured and deliberate, and Tobin's body tensed before his mind identified the cadence. He had memorized the way every person in this estate walked within his first week, and these particular footsteps belonged to Emeric.E
The chess game that night started like all the others, with Emeric behind the white pieces and Tobin behind the black and the study lit by the amber glow of a single desk lamp that made the room feel smaller and warmer than it was. But something was different in the air between them, a tension that had been accumulating since the overheard conversation with Nikolai and that now sat in the space above the board like smoke that refused to dissipate.Emeric opened with the Queen's Gambit, which Tobin had learned was his preferred opening when he had something on his mind. The aggressive openings were for restless days. The Queen's Gambit was for days when he wanted to talk."You play differently when you are thinking about something," Emeric said, moving his bishop into a controlling diagonal. "Your pawns become defensive. You build walls instead of lines of attack.""Is that an observation or a criticism?""An observation. I do not criticize the way people reveal themselves. It would be
Nikolai came to Emeric's office on a Thursday evening, and Tobin heard every word because the ventilation system in the east corridor carried sound with the fidelity of a confessional.He had discovered the acoustic flaw on his second night at the estate, cataloguing it alongside the camera blind spots and the patrol gaps and all the other imperfections in a security system that was excellent but not perfect. The vent in the hallway outside the guest wing shared a duct with the one in Emeric's office, and when both grilles were open, voices travelled through the sheet metal with a clarity that was almost indecent.Tobin stood in the hallway with his back against the wall and his pulse measured and even, and he listened to the sound of Nikolai laying out his case like a prosecutor who had already decided the verdict."His name appears in a military intelligence database," Nikolai said, and his voice carried the rough satisfaction of a man who had been waiting for this moment. "Not the
Tobin spent the next two days watching Nikolai the way a soldier watches a perimeter he knows will be breached. The elder Saal brother moved through the estate with the restless energy of a man who believed the world owed him something it had not yet delivered, appearing at meals and meetings with a frequency that felt deliberate, as if he wanted Tobin to know he was being observed in return.The confrontation in the hallway had changed something fundamental about the geometry of the estate. Before, Tobin had operated with two concerns: advancing his mission and managing his proximity to Emeric. Now a third variable had entered the equation, one that was volatile and personal and carried the name of the man who had killed his mother.Tobin found himself cataloguing Nikolai's movements with the same precision he had once reserved for Emeric's security systems. Nikolai took his coffee black and drank it standing. He made phone calls from the terrace where the estate's surveillance did n
Tobin did not sleep that night. He lay on the bed with the ceiling pressing down on him and the contents of that file rearranging everything he had built over the past two years. Every piece of intelligence he had gathered, every hour of planning, every cold and careful step that had led him to this estate had been aimed at one man, and that man turned out to be the wrong one.Emeric Saal had not ordered the raid that killed his mother. He had not known about it until it was over, and when he found out, he had punished his brother and launched an investigation. The civilian casualty report was clinical and brief, the kind of language that reduces a human life to a line item, but it existed, which meant someone inside the syndicate had at least acknowledged that a woman had died who should not have died.The person who should be sitting at the other end of Tobin's fury was Nikolai. The brother with more ambition than patience, the one who left his bishop exposed and ran unsanctioned op
Being Emeric Saal's shadow was nothing like Tobin had anticipated. He had expected surveillance, the cold and clinical monitoring of a man who wanted to keep a potential threat within arm's reach. What he got instead was proximity of a different kind entirely, the kind that stripped away the layers
Tobin waited until 2:17 in the morning, when the security rotation left a four-minute window between the east corridor camera sweep and the nearest patrol's return circuit. He moved barefoot down the hallway, staying close to the wall where the floorboards were less likely to creak, carrying nothin
The men came on a Tuesday, which Tobin Leith would later find almost funny, because Tuesdays had always been the most unremarkable day of his week. He was sitting at the kitchen table in his brother's apartment, cleaning a handgun that didn't belong to either of them, when the front door opened wit







