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Nadia's POV
--- "Yuck!" I muttered it under my breath, kicking a pebble off the narrow path as I walked. The shortcut through Delvin Road smelled like wet concrete and bad decisions — which was exactly why I never used it. Except tonight my brain decided to betray me. *Take the short route, Nadia. You might meet your soulmate.* I don't know what part of my subconscious thought that was helpful information at 10:47 PM after a twelve-hour shift at the teaching hospital, but here I was. Tired, hungry, and walking down a road that hadn't seen proper streetlights since probably 2009. "Yuck," I said again, louder this time, because the ground was damp and my sneakers were not built for damp. I don't need a soulmate. I need a shower, a full plate of rice, and eight hours of sleep that nobody interrupts. I am twenty-three years old, one semester from my medical degree, and I have a plan. The plan does not include soulmates. The plan includes graduating, passing my licensing exams, and never eating hospital cafeteria food again. I pulled my jacket tighter and kept walking. That was when I heard it. A groan. Low. Rough. The kind that doesn't ask for help — the kind that escapes before the person making it can stop it. I froze. My brain said 'keep walking.' My feet said 'find the source.' Four years of medical training broke the tie immediately — I was already moving toward the sound before the argument in my head finished. He was on the ground beside a black car that had rolled halfway into the ditch running along the road's edge. I almost missed him in the dark. Almost. But I didn't. I dropped to my knees beside him without thinking, my bag already off my shoulder, fingers going to his neck for a pulse. It was there — faint, unsteady, but there. My eyes swept him fast. Male. Young. Broad-shouldered, dressed in what looked like an expensive suit that was currently soaked through with blood from a wound below his left ribs. Not an accident. The car hadn't rolled — it had been driven off the road. And the wound wasn't from glass or impact. Someone had shot this man. 'Walk away, Nadia.' I didn't walk away. "Hey." I tapped his face lightly. "Hey, can you hear me?" His eyes opened. They were dark. Startlingly dark, and even half-conscious, even bleeding on the side of a road, the look in them wasn't fear or confusion. It was assessment. He was looking at me the way people look at a situation they're trying to control. It lasted about three seconds before his eyes closed again. "No — stay with me." I pressed my hand firmly over the wound, feeling the warmth of blood seep through my fingers. "I need you conscious. What's your name?" Nothing. "Okay. That's fine. You don't have to talk." I was already pulling my scarf from around my neck, folding it into a compress. "I'm going to apply pressure. It's going to hurt. I need you to stay with me anyway." Another groan. His jaw tightened. "I know," I said, and I meant it. "Just breathe." I worked quickly, the way they trained us to work — efficiently, without panic, without wasting movement. The bleeding was significant but the angle was survivable if I kept pressure on it and got him help within the next twenty minutes. I reached for my phone with my free hand and dialed emergency services. The line connected. Then his hand closed around my wrist. My breath caught. His eyes were open again — fully this time, focused on me with an intensity that made my stomach do something I didn't have time to analyze. "Don't." His voice was low, wrecked but certain. I stared at him. "You're bleeding. I need to call—" "Don't call anyone." He said it like it wasn't a request. Like it had never been a request. "Call my number. Jacket pocket. Left side." "Sir, you need a hospital—" "Call. My number." There was something in his voice that my body responded to before my mind caught up. Not fear exactly. Something more like 'recognition' — the instinct that understands, without being told, that this man was not someone who repeated himself. I ended the emergency call. I told myself it was because he was lucid enough to make decisions about his own care. I told myself it was the rational, patient-centered thing to do. The truth was simpler — something in his voice left no room for argument. "Happy?" I said flatly. He didn't answer. His breathing had evened slightly but the blood soaking through my scarf said we were running out of negotiating time. I needed better supplies. Proper ones. The compress was holding for now but 'for now' had an expiry. "I need to clean this wound properly," I said, more to myself than him. "What I have isn't enough." "I'll be fine." I looked at him. "You will not be fine. You have a gunshot wound below your ribs and you're bleeding through a scarf that costs less than your shirt button. You are the opposite of fine." His jaw moved. Something that might have been irritation — or amusement. It was too dark to tell. "I don't need—" "I live four minutes from here." I cut him off cleanly. "I have a kit. Proper supplies. I can close that wound without a hospital record, which I'm assuming is what you want since you stopped me from calling anyone." I held his gaze. "Or you can stay here and prove a point to nobody and bleed out on a road that smells like old rain and a piece of sh*t. Your choice." Silence. The kind that meant he was actually considering it — which surprised me. I had expected another flat refusal. His dark eyes moved over my face slowly. Still assessing. Always assessing. "Four minutes," he repeated. "Four minutes." Another silence. Then — almost imperceptibly — he shifted his weight, bracing to move. "Slowly," I said immediately, hand still firm on the wound. "And don't argue with me about the pace. I set it, not you." The look he gave me could have stripped paint. I didn't move. He didn't argue.I looked at him. "Starting what?"Kane glanced behind me. I turned.At the very top of the hill, set back just enough that I hadn't noticed it from the car, sat a restaurant with glass walls and warm light spilling out onto the stone path leading up to it. The kind of place that looked like it existed specifically to make the city below feel like it belonged to whoever was sitting inside."Dinner," he said, and started walking toward it.I fell into step behind him, looking around at the empty hill, the empty path, the empty parking area. "Where is everyone?""They aren't coming."I looked at the restaurant again. Every table inside was set, every light was on, soft piano drifting through the glass. "Is it closed?""I rented it."I stopped walking. He didn't. I started again. "You rented the whole restaurant.""Yes.""...Why?"He glanced at me briefly. "So nobody bothers you."Not *us*. *You.* I heard the difference and didn't say anything about it, just followed him through the entra
Nadia's POVThe back garden was exactly what Kane had said it would be — quiet, tucked away from the rest of the house like someone had deliberately forgotten to make it impressive. No fountain, no carefully trimmed hedges trying to look like something out of a magazine. Just grass and a few old trees and a stone bench that had probably been there longer than anyone currently living in the house. I liked it immediately.I'd been sitting there for almost an hour with a book open in my lap, not really reading it. My eyes kept moving across the same paragraph without taking any of it in, and eventually I stopped pretending and just sat there looking at the trees, letting the afternoon do what it wanted around me. Birds. Wind. The distant sound of someone moving around inside the house. Nothing alarming, nothing urgent, nothing asking anything of me.It was the most peace I'd had in longer than I could accurately remember.I turned a page I hadn't actually read and stared at the next one.
Nadia's POVI didn't remember falling asleep. One moment I had been crying and the next I was opening my eyes to complete silence, staring at the ceiling while everything that had happened replayed itself in pieces — the warehouse, the chair, those men, their laughter, the video, the blood that had soaked through my shirt. I shut my eyes again. I didn't want to remember any of it.A soft knock came from the door and it opened slowly. The older housekeeper stepped inside carrying a tray, her smile gentle in the way that made something in my chest ache a little. "I thought you might be hungry."I sat up slowly. "I'm not.""You haven't eaten since yesterday."I looked away. "I know."She placed the tray on the bedside table and walked over with the quiet certainty of someone who had made this argument before and intended to win it again. "Just a little." I wanted to refuse, but looking at her worried face made it impossible — she'd already been through enough because of me. I nodded once
The recording light flashed.Then before he could finish the sentence, gunshots erupted through the warehouse.The door exploded inward.Nadia barely had time to register what was happening before something warm and wet hit her face and chest, and for one terrifying second she thought it was her own blood, thought maybe she'd been hit and hadn't felt it yet, her body going rigid with shock. Then she saw the man beside her — the older man, the one who'd been smiling into the camera — collapse sideways onto the concrete floor, and she understood. It wasn't her blood. It was his.The room descended into chaos immediately. Gunfire echoed off the concrete walls from every direction, sharp and overlapping, and Nadia screamed without meaning to, twisting against the restraints as bodies moved fast around her, shouting, falling, fighting. Through the smoke and noise she caught a flash of a familiar figure moving with brutal precision through the room — Kane, his expression unreadable even now
Nadia's POV"...She's waking up."The voice sounded distant, like it was coming through water, and for a moment I thought I was still dreaming. Then another voice came, closer this time."Told you she'd wake up eventually."I forced my eyes open. Everything looked blurry and my head throbbed with a heaviness that went all the way to the back of my neck. I blinked several times, slowly, until the room came into focus around the edges.The first thing I noticed wasn't where I was. It was the fact that I couldn't move my hands.I pulled instinctively and got nothing — my wrists were restrained behind the chair, tight enough that the position sent a sharp ache shooting through both shoulders the moment I tested it. I looked down. My ankles were restrained too, fixed to the legs of the chair with something I couldn't see clearly, and my heartbeat quickened immediately, the kind of fast that didn't feel like it was going to slow down on its own."What..." My voice came out hoarse, rougher t
Nadia's POVThe afternoon had been unusually peaceful. The house was quiet, most of the staff having returned to their work after lunch, leaving only the occasional sound of footsteps echoing through the long hallways. I stood near the living room window looking out at the garden, not thinking about anything in particular, just looking.The silence didn't feel uncomfortable anymore, not exactly. I was beginning to understand how the house breathed — every employee moving with purpose, nobody raising their voice, nobody asking unnecessary questions, even the security guards outside changing shifts without disturbing the calm. I wrapped my arms around myself and sighed. Maybe I should read. Maybe I should go back to the kitchen. Maybe—A sharp crack echoed from outside.I frowned. Another followed, louder, then another, and my heart skipped before my brain had caught up. Fireworks? No. The realization landed almost instantly, cold and certain.Gunshots.Someone screamed downstairs. A se
NADIA'S POVThe first thing I noticed was the smell — clean, too clean, that sharp hospital smell that made your body uncomfortable before your brain had even caught up with where you were.For several seconds I didn't open my eyes. I stayed still, heavy and warm, my arm hurting in a dull and dista
Nadia's POVThe first sound didn't register immediately. I looked up from the bed, and then another came — sharp, heavy, the kind of sound that didn't belong inside a house. My body went still before my brain caught up.Gunshots.My stomach dropped. The room suddenly felt smaller. I stood, heard an
Nadia's POV --- He was not a good patient. Not in the dramatic, thrashing way — Kane didn't move an inch he hadn't calculated first. But there was a stillness to him that wasn't cooperation. It was tolerance. Like he was enduring me rather than accepting help, which was a distinction I felt ever
Nadia's POV --- Getting him off the ground was its own ordeal. He was heavy in the way that had nothing to do with dead weight — all of it was solid, deliberate, like even his body resisted being helped. He made it to his feet on the second attempt, one hand braced against the car, the other han







