ham
d the knot of my silk tie and ripped it loose, gasping for air. The enclosed space triggered the old panic, the suffocating terror of being locked in the dark c
d number. The Bluetooth system in the car beeped loudly b
er echoed through the speakers, followed by the sound of hot coffee spill
quiet register. I told him I knew exactly where his mother and sister lived in Queens. I
ven me the full itinerary back then. He said
ook the car. I roared at the dashboard, demanding to k
e phone line. The only sound was R
s and ordered my driver to turn the car around and head straight to JFK Airpor
ind spot in the schedule, a detour he had scrubbed from the records. On that freezing, snowy day, before g
edgehammer. A high-pitched ringing pierced m
I asked him what she was doing at a maternity hospital. Robert sobbed, saying he did not know. He
ngers. I fell back against the headrest, my mouth opening a
*
nna
in my wide executive chair, watching the city move below me. Lucian w
e echoed in the room, celebrating the perfect exec
iny yellow cabs crawling through the financial district. He turned hi
old him it was not a gamble; it was bait for a starving beast. The naive, desperate girl I used to be had
standard interface, diving straight into the b
r hacker IPs, carrying the distinct digital signature of the Rio
ned me that if Graham found any trace of Leo's
the decoy firewall I had set up months ago. I watched the R
was not hiding the truth. I was feeding Grah
*
ham
t the floorboard. I picked it up.
ashed through the hospital's three-year-old archive system. Th
it to the car's secu
ed document appeared. My hands shook so violently I could barely hold the device. I
: 12 weeks. Fetal heartbeat: critically weak. Rec
lapsed my lungs. The tablet slipped from my numb
into my scalp. A guttural, animalistic sob tore its wa
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