LOGINDorothea was still standing in the hallway, a tiny, spectral figure in the gloom.
Avery walked over and scooped her up. The child’s skin was like ice; there was no telling how long she’d been rooted there.
"Sweetheart, why are you out of bed?"
Dorothea didn't answer. She buried her face in the crook of Avery’s neck, her stuffed rabbit crushed between them.
"Mommy," she whispered. "He stopped."
Avery paused, her heart skipping. "Who stopped?"
"The one who was counting."
Avery carried her back, tucked her in, and pulled the duvet up to her chin. Dorothea blinked, clutching her rabbit, and after a long moment, her breathing finally leveled out into a fragile sleep.
Avery sat on the edge of the bed, watching her daughter’s face. So small. So eerily quiet.
Before the first rays of dawn could break, a sharp rap sounded at the door. It was Drake.
"Dr. St. Clair. We have a situation."
She followed him into the hall. Drake’s jaw was set, his expression grim.
"The surveillance in the east wing went dark for twenty minutes. The breach originated from your room. Your key card was cloned this morning."
Avery looked down at the card in her hand. She’d used it to enter Dominic’s study earlier. It hadn't left her pocket since.
"Dorothea—"
"The child is fine. The hallway is locked down," Drake reassured her, though his voice dropped an octave. "But that’s not the worst of it."
He handed her his phone. A message glowed on the screen:
Julian’s primary physician was replaced this morning. The new doctor immediately altered his medication logs. The medical trust account has been frozen.
Avery’s grip tightened until her knuckles ached. It was a trap—a blatant, jagged hook. Julian was the bait, and they were reeling her in.
If she went, she was walking into the lion's mouth. If she stayed, her brother would pay the price in blood.
She turned and marched toward Dominic’s study.
She pushed the door open without knocking. He was standing by the window, already dressed in a sharp, dark suit that screamed power. He had just ended a call.
"Your security was hacked," Avery said, her voice tight.
"I know."
"The access came from my room—"
"I know." He turned, his movement stiff, and handed her a remote.
The wall monitors flickered to life. Two black SUVs sat idling outside the main gate. They didn't move. No one got out. They just loomed there like vultures.
"My East Pier shipment was intercepted. The south side logistics are blocked. Two of my offshore accounts were flagged and frozen," he said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "And your brother’s doctor was swapped out an hour ago."
"But you just fixed that yesterday—"
"They’re cowards hiding in the shadows," he cut her off. "It’s easy to break things when you’re invisible."
He handed her a separate file.
"Your brother is holding something. A backup from Wenger. They’re coming for him because they need your signature for the authorization. They want you there, and they want that data."
Avery froze. "How could Julian have a backup from Wenger?"
"Wenger gave it to him," Dominic said flatly. "Wenger knew he was a dead man walking. He entrusted his most dangerous secret to someone who couldn't speak. Silence is the ultimate vault."
"What’s in the backup?"
"I don’t know. But they’re moving fast enough to risk a direct hit on me to get it."
A small sound echoed from the hallway. Avery stepped out to find Dorothea standing by the study door, clutching her rabbit and staring through the crack.
"Sweetheart—"
Dorothea wasn't looking at her mother. She was staring into the room, toward Dominic. "Uncle Julian is not okay," she whispered.
Avery quickly ushered Dorothea back to her room, then returned to the study. Dominic hadn't moved.
"You took her back," he noted. It wasn't a question; it was an observation of her maternal instinct.
"I did."
He was silent for a beat, his fingers drumming a restless rhythm on the window frame. Avery noticed something off—his gaze was fixed about five inches to the left of where she was standing.
He raised a hand to rub his brow, a sharp, frustrated gesture.
"Don't get the wrong idea," he rasped. "I just don't like people playing games on my turf."
He turned to Drake. "Get the cars. Notify the hospital team. We proceed as planned. Assign two men to the third floor—they don't leave the child’s side for a second."
Drake nodded and vanished.
Avery looked at Dominic, her doctor’s eye narrowing. "Your condition—"
"Is nothing compared to being handled like a pawn," he snapped, straightening his cuffs. "The rats in the dark need to be smoked out before I can crush them."
His gaze slid past her face again. He didn't correct it. He simply shoved his hands into his pockets and walked out.
The hospital was unnervingly quiet. The white walls bled cold light under the fluorescent tubes, and the air tasted of sharp bleach.
Avery led the way, with Dominic trailing a step behind. She noticed that as they stepped into the elevator, he reached out to steady himself against the wall. His knuckles turned white as he gripped the railing, letting go the instant the doors opened.
Julian’s room was on the third floor. The door swung open. The bed was stripped and empty.
"Julian—"
"In the next room."
The voice came from behind her. Avery spun around to see a man in his forties with gold-rimmed glasses. Dr. Greene.
She remembered him from an academic conference last month. Wenger had introduced them, claiming Greene was "fascinated" by her work on C-PTSD. Now, the memory felt like a premonition.
Dominic stood in the hall, a dark, silent sentinel. Avery looked back at him. He gave her a sharp, imperceptible nod. Only then did she step into Greene’s office.
Dominic leaned against the wall outside and dialed Drake. "Lock the exits on the third floor. Switch to the backup feed. I want eyes on every soul in this building."
"Copy that."
He hung up and closed his eyes. When he opened them, the light at the end of the hall dragged a ghostly trail across his vision. He didn't blink. He just stood by the door, listening.
Inside the office, Greene pushed a folder across the desk.
"The new treatment plan. Sign here, and we can begin immediately."
Avery picked up the pen, her hand hovering over the line. She flipped to the second page. A line of fine print caught her eye: Data usage rights transfer.
"What is this?"
"Standard clause."
"There is nothing standard about transferring my research data for a patient’s treatment."
"Hospital policy—"
"This isn't policy." Avery slammed the folder shut. "Who are you working for?"
Greene’s professional smile curdled. He took off his glasses, polished them slowly, and put them back on.
"Dr. St. Clair, your brother’s account is frozen. If you don’t sign, he misses his dose today. Think very carefully about his life."
The door flew open.
Dominic walked in, his presence instantly shrinking the room. He sat across from Greene as if he owned the building.
Greene’s face paled, then reset into a mask of feigned ignorance. "And you are...?"
"You know exactly who I am," Dominic said, his voice a low, lethal silk. "You’ve known since your first day in this dirty business."
Greene said nothing.
"That data transfer," Dominic said, sliding the folder back toward the doctor. "Tell me who the end-user is."
"I have no idea what you’re talking about—"
"You have thirty seconds." Dominic leaned back, his eyes cold and predatory. "After that, I can’t guarantee what my men will do to your friends in this building."
Greene’s fingers twitched.
"Twenty seconds."
Greene looked at Avery, then at the monster sitting across from him. He took off his glasses and set them trembling on the desk.
"I only know a codename," Greene whispered. "Devil."
Avery felt a chill settle in her bones. Dominic didn't move, but his eyes darkened.
Suddenly, Greene’s phone buzzed. He glanced at the screen and turned the color of ash.
CRASH!
The office window exploded inward. Glass shrapnel rained down. Avery dove for cover, a stray shard slicing a thin, stinging line across her cheek.
She looked up. A figure in a black hoodie and a tactical mask stood on the shattered windowsill, a suppressed weapon leveled at her.
"Don't move," the figure rasped.
"Wenger said we have to bring Avery back alive."
Early morning. At a private winery on the outskirts of Sunset City.The light was completely blocked by heavy velvet curtains. The room was thick with the mingled scent of medicinal herbs and cold leather—the smell of a man fighting a losing battle with his own body. The air was stale, heavy, carrying the faint metallic tang of blood and the sharp bitterness of the drugs that had become his only companions.Sweat beaded on Dominic's temples, sliding down the hollows of his cheeks. The nerve blocker was wearing off, and the knife-like pain in his skull was surging back with a vengeance, each pulse of agony sharper than the last. His fingers had gouged deep cracks into the leather armrest, the sound of tearing fabric barely audible over his labored breathing. The broken pen lay on his knee, a talisman he refused to let go of."Boss, Obsidian City swept three divisions last night. The remaining insurgents think you're injured and out of the city. They're planning to retreat to the west d
The morning after the storm, Sunset City was washed clean. A pale, watery light filtered through the dispersing clouds, catching the last droplets of rain still clinging to the leaves.The underground garage was still dim, the concrete floor slick with residual moisture. The air smelled of damp stone and exhaust.Evan had just opened his car door when two black sedans emerged from the intersecting passages ahead, one in front and one behind, boxing him in with surgical precision.The front vehicle's door opened. Drake stepped out, his expression unreadable, and pulled open the rear door.From the shadows within, Dominic leaned back against the seat. The black band across his eyes was impossible to ignore, even in the dim light of the garage. It wrapped around his head like a wound that refused to heal. Yet even sightless, the oppressive weight of his presence had not diminished by a single degree. His stillness was absolute—the stillness of a predator waiting.Evan rested his hand on
The violent impact of her back against the door sent a shockwave straight up her spine to the crown of her head. The cold wood pressed against her shoulder blades, unyielding and solid.In the pitch darkness, Avery instinctively curled her body and clenched her fists, every muscle primed for defense. Her knuckles were white, her nails biting into her palms as she tried to steady her racing pulse.A marine-scented cologne suddenly drew close. The scent was subtle—clean, restrained, carrying a faint, elusive herbal undertone that she had caught before in a different context.This scent… was familiar.Outside, a bolt of lightning split the night sky, illuminating the room in a stark, white flash. The brief burst of light revealed the sharp, refined face before her—those familiar features, those glasses she had come to recognize.Evan locked the door behind him with a soft click and released her arm, stepping back just enough to give her space."Don't be afraid. It's me."Evan leaned down
The morning of Sunset City was completely engulfed by a sudden, torrential downpour. Rain hammered against the streets, turning the gutters into rushing streams. At the entrance of St. George's Academy, the heavy rain battered the leaves into a frantic rustling, the sound almost deafening in the storm.Avery held Dorothea's hand tightly, watching as her daughter completed the complex and high-level enrollment procedures. When she saw the little girl being personally escorted into the teaching building by a Royal Fellow—a distinguished academic figure whose reputation spanned the entire Federation—the knot that had been lodged in her chest for days finally loosened. She had been carrying that anxiety for nights on end, barely sleeping, and now a weight she hadn't even realized she was holding finally lifted."Avery."A warm, familiar voice cut through the curtain of rain.Evan stood not far away, holding an umbrella. He was dressed in his usual refined manner today—a perfectly tailored
When Avery walked out of the hospital, night had fully fallen.Too much had happened in a single day—from the Kessler Group's explosive video that had shaken the Federation, to Evan Thorne's unannounced arrival. Each event landed on her chest like a heavy stone, pressing down until she could barely breathe. Her shoulders ached from the constant tension, and her temples throbbed with a dull, persistent pain that no amount of rubbing could ease.She dragged her exhausted body back to the rented apartment. As she turned the corner into the long hallway, a commotion reached her ears—the shuffle of hurried footsteps and the dull thud of heavy furniture being moved. The sounds echoed off the narrow walls, sharp and intrusive in the otherwise quiet corridor.The suite next door, which had been vacant for months, was now wide open. Several movers in matching uniforms were carrying in a pure black leather sofa. Their boots scuffed against the floor as they maneuvered the bulky piece through th
Half an hour after the inspection tour, the noise in the administrative corridor gradually faded.Avery returned to her private consultation room. She had just closed the door and hadn't yet had a chance to exhale when a soft click sounded behind her.On the patient chair, which should have been empty, someone was already seated.Evan Thorne had removed the gold-rimmed glasses that masked his true nature in public—the lenses that had projected that warm, gentle facade to the world. He was folding them slowly, methodically, before slipping them into his inner pocket. His posture was relaxed, yet every line of his body radiated controlled power.He leaned back in the chair, his impeccably tailored suit lending him an air of aristocratic elegance. His eyes, no longer obscured by glass, gleamed with unrestrained amusement—thick, almost syrupy, impossible to read."Long time no see." Evan let out a low, gentle laugh, his voice warm as silk.Avery's fingers tightened around the door handle.
When Avery returned from the headquarters, the staff members in the corridors immediately lowered their heads. They dispersed the moment they saw her. The news had clearly spread. Their public fallout at the tower was no longer a secret.Every glance directed her way was heavy. They looked at her a
A phone call from the sanatorium threw Avery's heart into turmoil.The approval for Julian's specialty medication had been stalled at the final step of the Kessler Trust. The other party claimed that a signature and re-verification were required. The voice on the line was formal, detached, as if di
Morning light poured through the floor to ceiling windows and spread across the cold grey marble floor. Pale. Like an operating room light.Avery sat up, her body aching. Her eyes swept the room.No photos. No plants. No decoration at all. Grey white walls, metal trim. So empty it made her chest ti
Before her appointment, Avery received an anonymous card.No signature. Just one line:"Experiment 047 is waiting for you. Don't disappoint him."She turned the card over and back again. No clues.047?A number for what?She didn't know what it meant, but the feeling of being calculated in advance ma







