LOGINNadia'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 hanging at his side with a rigidity that told me he was absorbing pain and converting it into stillness. I'd seen that before. In soldiers. In people who had trained themselves to feel things privately. I didn't comment on it. "Arm over my shoulder," I said. He looked at me like I'd suggested something offensive. "I'm not going to drop you," I said. "I'm stronger than I look and you're worse off than you're admitting. Arm. Now." A beat. Then his arm came over my shoulder — carefully, with a control that told me he was managing exactly how much weight he put on me. Even half-conscious and bleeding he was calculating. We moved slowly. Four minutes stretched into seven because I set the pace and I meant it, picking the flattest parts of the path, steering us around the worst of the uneven ground. He didn't complain. He didn't speak at all, actually, which I appreciated because it meant he was conserving energy like I'd silently willed him to. My apartment building appeared at the end of the street — a narrow four-storey walk-up with a rusted gate and a landlord who fixed things on his own timeline. I felt him take it in. "Don't," I said, before he could form whatever thought was forming. He glanced at me. "Don't downgrade my house." I pushed the gate open with my hip and kept us moving toward the entrance. "It's what I can afford and I got it myself, with my money. So whatever you're thinking, keep it there." He said nothing for a moment. Then, quietly — "I wasn't going to say anything." "You were doing the face." "I don't have a face." "Everyone has a face." I got the front door open and guided us inside. "Yours just has less expression than most." The staircase was narrow. First floor, mercifully — I had thanked God for that every single time I came home with heavy grocery bags and I was thanking Him again now as I shouldered my front door open and got us both inside. I deposited him onto the chair nearest the door — the old one with the patched armrest that I kept meaning to replace — and went straight to my room for the kit. It was a proper one. Not a basic first aid box — I'd built it myself over two years, adding to it each semester as I learned more. Suture kit, antiseptic, saline, gauze, surgical tape, gloves, a small penlight. I grabbed it all and came back. He was exactly where I'd left him, which I appreciated. Sitting upright, jaw set, eyes moving around the apartment with that same quiet assessment he'd had on the ground. I set everything on the coffee table and pulled on my gloves. "I'm going to remove your jacket and shirt," I said. "I'll try not to damage them but I can't promise anything." "The jacket costs more than your rent." I looked up at him. He looked back at me, and I realized with mild irritation that it was the driest joke I'd heard in months. "Then you should have thought about that before you got shot," I said, and reached for the jacket. He let me work. That was the thing that surprised me most — once he'd made the decision to trust the process, he surrendered the control of it cleanly. No flinching away, no grabbing my hands. He sat still and let me peel back the layers and assess the damage properly under real light for the first time. The wound was clean entry, no exit. The bullet was still in there. I sat back on my heels and looked at it for a moment. "I can clean this, close the surface, and manage the bleeding," I said carefully. "But the bullet needs to come out by someone with surgical equipment. I don't have what I need for that here." "Can you do it anyway." It wasn't a question. "Did you hear what I just said?" "I heard you." His eyes met mine. "Can you do it anyway." I stared at him. He stared back. The apartment was quiet. "What's your name?" I asked. A pause. "Man." I stopped. Looked up at him slowly. "...Man." "You asked." I stared at him for a long moment. He stared back. Completely unbothered. Bleeding through my good gauze and unbothered. "Okay," I said flatly, turning back to the wound. "Okay, Man. This is going to hurt. And I need you conscious through all of it."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
Kane's POVThe private jet landed just before noon. Kane stepped onto the runway without waiting for anyone to open the door, and a line of black SUVs waited several meters away with their engines already running. Lev walked beside him holding a tablet. "The meeting starts in twenty minutes."Kane adjusted his shirt cuff. "Move it to fifteen.""I'll inform them," Lev said, without question.The convoy left the airstrip almost immediately, and the city outside the window looked nothing like home — lower buildings, less traffic, more warehouses than offices. Kane watched it pass in silence until the vehicles pulled into the compound of one of his business partners.The conference room was already occupied. Five men stood the moment he entered, greeted him respectfully, and took their seats again. Kane sat at the head of the table and the meeting began immediately, no introductions, no unnecessary conversation. Contracts were pushed across the polished surface, profit projections filled
The morning after Kane left felt longer than it should have.I wandered. Not with a destination, just moving through rooms because staying still felt worse. The new house was different from the last one — slightly smaller, slightly warmer somehow, though still far too large for the number of people actually living in it. I passed through the sitting room, looked out a window for a while, walked back through the hallway, and generally accomplished nothing useful for about an hour.Then I noticed the kitchen door was open.I almost walked past it. Then a smell reached me and I stopped completely — warm and sweet and familiar in a way that had nothing to do with expensive houses or security rotations or any of the past few weeks. It smelled like something my mother used to make on slow Sunday mornings, something that belonged to a version of life that felt very far away right now.I stood in the doorway for a moment. Inside, one of the older housekeepers was working at the counter, her h
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
The office door opened halfway through the second report. Kane didn't look up immediately. There were only a handful of people who entered without announcement. His father happened to be one of them. He walked in calmly and closed the door behind him before crossing the office and sitting opposite
I woke up slowly, not because I wanted to, but because for a few seconds my brain simply refused to cooperate. Everything felt unusually soft, too soft, my body sinking slightly into the mattress, and for one brief moment before memory returned I thought I was home. Then I opened my eyes and immedi







