LOGINThe wire itched.
Cedric stood in the club's bathroom, full of black marble and gold fixtures that probably cost more than his entire existence, and stared at his reflection. The crisp white shirt they'd given him was tailored within an inch of its life, tucked into black slacks that actually fit for once. His ribs didn’t hurt as much anymore. His hair was styled back, his face had healed enough that makeup covered the worst of the bruising, and he looked hot as hell, like someone who belonged in a place like this. The wire was taped to his chest, a tiny microphone no bigger than a button, and the transmitter pack was clipped to his back beneath his shirt. Marcus's voice echoed in his head from the briefing two hours ago: “Don't take it off. Don't compromise the equipment. We need everything.” Cedric's fingers found the edge of the tape, then he ripped the wire off in one sharp motion, gasping at the sting, before dropping the whole setup into the trash and burying it deep under paper towels. "Fuck the police," he muttered to his reflection. He'd figure this out his own way. He always did. The club was called Elysium, which Cedric thought was pretentious as hell, but he had to admit, it was stunning. Three floors of pure excess, each level even more exclusive than the last. The ground floor was where the beautiful people danced and got wasted, their bodies pressed together under trippy lights that turned everything into a fever dream. The second floor was VIP with private booths, bottle service, and clientele who dropped thousands without a second thought. The third floor was invitation-only. And that's where he was working tonight. "Table seven needs another bottle of the Armand de Brignac," his manager, Alessandro, with a thick Italian accent, snapped his fingers in Cedric's direction. "And smile, tesoro. You look like you're at a funeral." Cedric grabbed the bottle. Fifteen thousand dollars, the price tag had said, for champagne that probably tasted like every other champagne. He rolled his eyes and made his way through the crowd, ignoring the suggestive looks and cat calls from the people he passed. Sure he wanted some old rich guy to take him somewhere, show him a good time and make him a sugar baby or something. Cedric was always down for a little fun, but not tonight, otherwise Marcus would probably nag his ears off. Focus, Cedric told himself. You’ve got this, what could possibly go wrong? The third floor was much darker and more intimate. Booths lined the walls, each one occupied by men in expensive suits and women in designer dresses. You could smell practically the money in the air. Table seven was occupied by three men in their forties, already drunk and already handsy. Cedric poured their champagne, dodging a grab at his ass, smiling the smile that said you could afford me, but you're not worth my time, before collecting a crisp hundred-dollar tip. He only had twelve more nights of this, playing servant to greedy old fucks who wouldn't piss on him if he was on fire. Twelve more nights to figure out how the hell he was going to get five hundred thousand dollars. "You, pretty boy." Cedric turned. Alessandro was gesturing frantically. "The owner's booth. They need service. Go. Vai, vai." "Which booth…" "The black one, in the corner. And for the love of God, be professional. No flirting, no attitude, just pour and disappear. Understand?" The black booth. Cedric's eyes tracked to the far corner of the third floor, where a semicircular booth sat slightly above the rest, with sheer black fabric curtains creating an illusion of privacy while still allowing its occupants to survey everything. He could see silhouettes behind the fabric, and for some strange reason, he felt eyes on him. Someone’s gaze had been burning into the back of his neck ever since he step foot in the third floor. "Who…" "Just go!" So Cedric went. He grabbed a tray, loaded it with glasses and a bottle of expensive whiskey, and made his way across the floor. Each step felt heavier than the last. The music was loud enough to feel in his bones, but somehow the corner seemed quieter, as though all sound died before it reached that booth. He pushed through the sheer curtains. Five men sat in the booth, but Cedric's eyes went immediately to the one in the centre. And oh, fuck. He was younger than Cedric expected, maybe early thirties, with the kind of face you only saw on magazine covers. Sharp cheekbones that could cut glass, dark hair pushed back from his forehead in a way that was so hot, it was actually unfair. He wore a black suit that was clearly custom-made, moulded to broad shoulders and a muscled frame, the crisp white shirt open at the collar revealing a glimpse of his perfectly sculpted chest. And the way he sat, relaxed but alert, with one arm draped across the back of the booth, legs spread in a way that screamed confidence and raw power. So much so that Cedric wanted to turn his brain off and kneel so this guy could put a leash on him and tell him what to do. Gianni Falcone. Had to be. The other men were talking, laughing about something, but Falcone wasn't listening. His attention was on his phone, his fingers moving across the screen with quick efficiency, his expression unreadable. "Gentlemen," Cedric said, his voice steady despite the fact that his heart was trying to escape through his ribs. "Compliments of the house." He tried to do his job, listen for anything that sounded important or interesting, but it was impossible. The music was way too loud, and anytime he went near anyone to serve them they would lower their voices. Clearly, they knew better than to trust the help. He started pouring, working his way around the table. The men barely acknowledged him; to them, he was just another piece of furniture or decoration, not worthy of their notice. All except one. Cedric could feel Falcone's attention shift; he could feel those eyes on him, the same intense gaze he felt a while ago, watching his movements closely as he poured champagne into crystal glasses. Don't look at him. Pour and leave. Just do your job and get out. But Cedric had never been good at following instructions, and so when he reached Falcone's glass, he couldn’t help it. He looked up, their eyes met for just a second, and Cedric forgot how to breathe. Dark brown eyes, almost black in the dim light that made Cedric's stomach flip in a way that had nothing to do with fear and everything to do with the terrible realisation that this man was possibly the most attractive person he'd ever seen in his life. Which was inconvenient, considering said man was a killer probably wanted him dead. Cedric forced himself to look away, finishing the pour with hands that were absolutely, definitely shaking now. "Will there be anything else?" he asked everyone at the table. "No, we're good," one of the men said, waving him off. “Get us another bottle of whiskey. The night is long, just one won’t be enough.” Another one said, before taking a puff on his cigar and blowing out smoke. “Uh huh. Got it. Be right back.” Cedric turned to leave, already counting the steps to the curtain, to freedom, to anywhere that wasn't in the direct line of sight of that beast of a man. One…. Two… "Wait." Falcone commanded. Everyone at the table went silent, the whole booth seemed to hold its breath, waiting for what the Don would say next.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 prison where Linda had died was cooperative, too cooperative. The warden met them at the gate with a forced smile and a stack of paperwork, his hands trembling slightly as he handed over the files. Records showed she had been cremated within twenty-four hours of her death, no autopsy performed,
The first thing Cedric noticed was that he'd stopped flinching at cars.Not all at once. It happened gradually, the way the body unlearns things, one morning he realized the sound of a vehicle slowing outside the house hadn't made him tense, and he stood in the kitchen holding his coffee and tried
Anna pressed enter.Nobody said anything. They just watched the upload bar move.It wasn't dramatic. That was the thing Cedric hadn't expected, how quiet the actual moment was. Just a progress bar on a screen in a cabin in the mountains, while outside the generator hummed and the trees stood in the
The room smelled like every bad decision the previous guests had ever made.Cigarette smoke soaked into the walls so deep it had become part of the structure. The carpet had a path worn into it from the door to the bed, thin as a scar, from however many people had paced this same small square of fl







