LOGINThe guy Cedric was just about to fuck ran off, leaving Cedric’s alone to scramble for an exit strategy, What the hell was he supposed to do? Talk his way out? Run? Fight? Beg?
There was absolutely nowhere for him to hide, the alley had only one single exit, currently blocked by three guys who looked like they were out to kill him. “Look,” Cedric said, backing up into the brick wall while trying to sound calm and reasonable. “I don’t know what this is about, but I think there’s been some kind of mistake…” The leader’s voice cut harshly, “Your father’s debt. We’re here to collect it.” Cedric’s stomach dropped “I’ve been making the payments every single month, like clockwork. You can check with-” “We want the rest.” The man who looked to be the leader took a step closer, and in the dim yellow light spilling from the street, Cedric could make out more details. He had on an expensive-looking suit, with greying, slicked-back hair and a scar across his left eyebrow. “All of it. Now.” “Now?” Cedric let out a sharp, bitter laugh. “Wait. Are you fucking serious? That’s two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. No one can pay that kind of cash at once, especially with all the interest you assholes keep piling on top-” The hit came out of nowhere. The second man’s fists connected with Cedric’s cheekbone so hard that he saw fireworks. Pain radiated through his skull and he staggered sideways, his shoulder slamming into the wall as blood filled his mouth. “What the fuck was that for?” He spat blood onto the pavement, his hand flying to his face. “Do you know how much this face is worth? I need this shit to work, you fucking moron. How am I supposed to make your money if I look like I got hit by a bus?” The leader stepped closer, closing the distance between them until their eyes met, and Cedric felt pure terror. His eyes were dead. Empty, emotionless shark eyes that had seen far too much violence and felt too little about it. “We didn’t come here to listen to your bitching,” the man said slowly, like he was explaining something to a very stupid child. “There’s been a change in management, a new kingpin is taking over operations in this city, and he’s cleaning house.” He continued, his voice dropping coldly, “That means all outstanding debts are being called in. In full. Upfront. So no more payment plans, and no more extensions.” Cedric’s heart was hammering so hard he could practically hear it. “Where the hell do you expect me to get two hundred and fifty grand? Do I look like Elon Musk to you?” The leader smiled. “Two hundred and fifty?” He tilted his head, and something almost like amusement flickered across his face. “No, kid. Try five hundred thousand.” “What? You can’t just… that’s not… You can’t just double someone’s debt because you feel like it-” The second bastard hit him again, this time in the ribs. Cedric doubled over with a choked gasp. Something in his torso made a sound it definitely shouldn’t have made. Cracked, maybe. Possibly broken. “Stop. Fucking. Talking.” The leader crouched down to Cedric’s level, close enough that Cedric could see the flecks of gold in his brown eyes, the perfect knot of his tie, and the glint of a very expensive watch on his wrist. “That’s exactly why we had to waste valuable time tracking down a worthless little man-whore like you tonight,” he said conversationally, like they were discussing the weather. “To personally inform you that your debt just doubled. New management, new terms, new rules." “That’s not-” Cedric coughed up blood, clutching his ribs. “That’s not fucking fair-” “Fair?” The leader laughed, genuinely amused. “No one gives a fuck about what’s fair. Six years ago, your father borrowed money from some very dangerous people who don’t accept ‘sorry’ as payment, and when he couldn’t pay, well…” The man shrugged. “I’m sure you don’t want to end up like he did.” “Screw you! I’m not-“ The third man, who'd been silent until now, stepped forward and pressed the cold barrel of his gun against Cedric’s temple. “You’ve got a smart mouth on you,” the man said quietly. “Bet that gets you in trouble a lot.” Every survival instinct Cedric had left was screaming at him to shut up, to nod and grovel and promise them anything they wanted. But those instincts had been drowned years ago in alcohol and pills and the kind of recklessness that came from having nothing left to lose. So instead, Cedric grinned, leaning into the gun with a lewd look in his eyes, the same kind he used in his p**n videos. “Why don't you take me somewhere quiet so I can show you just what this mouth can do?" The gun pressed harder, digging into his skin. “What the fuck is wrong with you? Are you trying to seduce me, faggot? Do you have a death wish?” The second guy cut in, “Maybe we should make an example of him right now and save everyone the trouble. One less junkie on the streets.” “You could do that,” Cedric said, his voice rough but steady. “But then who’s gonna pay your boss his five hundred grand? You really wanna explain to your shiny new kingpin why you put a bullet in his investment? Pretty sure that’s bad for business.” Then the leader stood, brushing invisible dirt off his expensive suit. “Two weeks, Cedric. That’s what you get. Fourteen days to come up with five hundred thousand dollars, or we else start collecting in other ways.” He paused to let that sink in. “Your mother’s a nurse at St. Vincent’s Hospital, isn’t she? She works the late shift on Tuesdays and Thursdays.” His words shook Cedric to the core. “What does my mother have to do with-” “It’d be a real shame if something happened to her. New York is a dangerous city, you never know who you might run into.” “Don’t you fucking dare-” “Two weeks. Or we find you, kill you, then the rest of your fucking family.” They went back into the shadows as quickly as they’d appeared, and for a long moment, Cedric stayed frozen against the wall, listening to his own ragged breathing, and feeling the throb of his face and ribs. Five hundred thousand dollars. Two weeks. His mom. His mom. Then his legs gave out. He slid down the brick wall, his hands were shaking, his whole body was shaking. The adrenaline was gone now, leaving him hollow and cold and so fucking scared he could barely breathe. He pressed his palms against his eyes, trying to hold back the tears, but they came anyway, all the fear and rage and helplessness he kept buried under the sarcasm and sex and chemical numbness. Out here, alone in the dark with nobody watching, he could finally fall apart. Until his phone buzzed in his pocket. Cedric almost threw the damn thing against the wall, but years of being the responsible fuck-up, the one who always answered when family called, made him pull it out with bloody, trembling fingers. It was his Mom. He wiped his face with his sleeve, trying to steady his voice. “Hey, Ma.” “Cedric.” Her voice was too tense, something was definitely wrong. “I need to tell you something.” “What happened?” He was trying to stand now, panic overriding pain even though his ribs screamed in protest. “Are you okay? Did someone… did they come to the house? Ma, are you safe?” “I’m fine, baby. I’m safe. But…” Her voice broke, “They fired me.” “What?” “The hospital. They fired me today.” She let out a shaky breath. “They said debt collectors have been calling the main line. They’ve been showing up at the hospital during my shifts, asking for me, making a scene and scaring all the patients. Then HR said I was creating a disruptive work environment, so I had to go.” “They can’t do that.” Cedric’s voice was rising, “That’s illegal, Ma. It’s wrongful termination. They can’t fire you just because people are harassing you...” She laughed, but it sounded like she was holding back tears of her own.“I don’t know what we’re going to do, rent is due in two weeks. Without my paycheck, we can’t… Cedric, I don’t know how we’re going to make it.” “Don’t worry, Ma,” Cedric heard himself say. “I’ll figure something out. I promise. I’ll fix this.” “Cedric…” “I gotta go. I love you.” He hung up before she could respond. Cedric stood alone in the alley, blood drying on his split lip, his ribs hurting with every breath, clutching his phone tight in his shaking hand. And for the first time in six years, he had absolutely no idea what the fuck he was going to do.Months bled into one another, and the world finally started to feel like it could breathe again. The rescues never stopped, but they stopped being raids in the dark. Now they were missions with names, with teams, with hope. Cedric stood at the center of it all, voice steady as he coordinated the deprogramming, the therapy, the new safe houses that were rising like islands in a sea of broken kids.Dozens of them. Scattered across continents, hidden in plain sight or buried in the dark. Each one a ghost wearing someone else's skin, eyes that remembered pain instead of faces. They came to the new center outside the coastal town, quiet places with blue water and wide skies, and Cedric met them one by one, hand on their shoulders, telling them the same thing over and over."You're not weapons. You're people. And people can choose different endings."It was slow. Painful. Some of them fought every single step, screaming at the light, clawing at the therapy tables. A few couldn't be saved, t
The compound was burning.Flames roared through the corridors, black smoke choking the air, curling along the ceiling in oily ribbons that stung the eyes before they ever reached the lungs. Concrete cracked and rained debris like the desert itself was trying to bury the dead. Somewhere below, a fuel line caught, and the whole building shuddered, dust sifting down from the rafters like gray snow.Cedric led his sister through the chaos, her hand tight in his, too tight, like she was afraid the smoke would swallow him if she let go. The sling on his shoulder screamed with every step, a hot line of pain that pulsed in time with his heartbeat, but he didn't slow down. Couldn't. Not now.Gianni stayed glued to his other side, gun raised, eyes scanning every shadow, every doorway, every flicker of movement that might be a guard instead of a falling beam. Lily covered their rear, calm as a held breath, firing once, twice, dropping a guard who lunged out of the smoke to block the exit. The ma
The outback compound stretched under a sky the color of old bruises, red dust swirling in lazy spirals around the watchtowers. The heat had broken with the sun, but the ground still radiated warmth through the soles of Gianni's boots, and somewhere out past the perimeter fence a dingo called once, twice, then went quiet, as if even the wildlife knew better than to linger here tonight.Gianni crouched behind a dune, binoculars pressed to his eyes, scanning every angle like he was reading a map only he could see. Three years of this, three years since Marcus had taken Elena, since the Society had become more than a rumor whispered in safehouses, and it had all come down to one stretch of corrugated steel and razor wire in the middle of nowhere."There's a blind spot near the water tower," he said low, voice rough from the desert wind. "If we can take that out, the lights go down."Cedric nodded once, shoulder still screaming under the fresh bandage. The wound was four days old, a throug
The hospital room smelled of antiseptic and the faint metallic tang of blood that refused to wash out, no matter how many times the nurses changed the sheets. Sunlight slanted through the blinds in thin golden stripes, catching on the white sheets and the bandage wrapped tight around Cedric's shoulder, turning the gauze the color of old honey. His arm sat heavy in a sling, the motion of his fingers still stiff and unfamiliar, like they belonged to someone else's hand. The pain was a dull throb now, nothing like the fire it had been the night in the theater, but it lived in him anyway, a low ember that flared every time he forgot and moved too fast.He sat on the edge of the bed, boots still on, laces dragging on the floor, staring at the wall like it might give him answers it had no business having. He'd been replaying the fight for days, every bullet, every missed shot, every time Marcus had slipped through his fingers like smoke. The same thought kept looping, relentless, a groove w
The abandoned theater in Melbourne was a ghost of its former glory, spotlights long dead, curtains hanging in dusty shreds like torn skin. The air smelled of mildew and old blood, and every footstep echoed like a warning. Once, this place had been full of laughter and applause, velvet seats and golden trim. Now it was a tomb dressed up in its own ruins, and Gianni had chosen it on purpose. Marcus had loved this theater once. Gianni was counting on that.He had studied the footage for weeks, hundreds of hours of grainy security tapes, old interviews, a single home video where Marcus had laughed at something off-camera. Gianni had learned the way the man tilted his chin before he lied, the half-second pause before a threat, the rhythm of his breathing when he thought no one was listening. The voice modifier hummed faintly in his throat now, a constant pressure against his vocal cords, and his posture had folded itself into Marcus's old swagger so completely that even his own shoulders f
The gun stayed cold against Cedric's chest, a small steel mouth pressed just hard enough to remind him it could open at any second. The bar's bass thudded through the floorboards, through his shoes, up into his knees, but none of it touched the stillness inside him. His face stayed calm, carved smooth, like someone had switched off the engine behind his eyes years ago and never bothered to restart it. Underneath, though, underneath, his heart slammed against his ribs so hard he was sure Sarah could feel it through the barrel of her own weapon, could read it like a pulse against her trigger finger.He let the silence stretch. He'd learned that much from her, watching her work for three years before she ever knew his name: silence was a blade too, if you held it right."You want the truth?" he asked, finally, leaning in until her perfume, something sharp, like crushed citrus and gun oil, filled the space between them. His voice stayed low, level, a man laying down cards he'd already mem
The clinic was a crime scene, but Gianni’s men moved through it like ghosts who knew exactly how to make bodies disappear. They scrubbed blood from the floor, bagged the corpses of Brett’s men and Enzo Falcone, wiped down every surface, and replaced shattered glass with pre-cut panels from a van pa
Six months had passed since the fire consumed the base and everything Cedric thought he knew about his life.New identity. New city. New name. He was Chris now, a quiet veterinary technician in a small clinic in Portland, Oregon. The place smelled of antiseptic, wet fur, and the faint coffee from t
Time slowed to a crawl.Cedric saw the gun. He saw Brett’s ruined face twisted in rage and pain, one eye a bloody mess from the drive he had rammed into it. He saw the muzzle flash.He threw himself forward, trying to shield Lily, arms outstretched.But someone else was faster.Gianni.The man who
The base was a maze of rusted metal and shattered concrete, shadows swallowing everything except the occasional flicker of emergency lights. Cedric moved through the darkness with Lily close behind, guided only by the faint sound of children crying somewhere deeper inside. His gun felt heavy in his







