Elease walked into the massive walk-in closet. It was larger than most apartments in the city.
Rows of designer dresses, shoes, and handbags lined the walls. Hermès, Chanel, Dior. They were trophies, not clothes. Kason had bought them to drape over her, to make her palatable for his public image, even as he hid her away.
She ignored them all.
She went to the back of the closet, pushing aside a rack of fur coats. There, tucked in the corner, was a battered canvas duffel bag. It was a relic from Elease's past, a bag she’d packed for a camping trip at age twelve and never seen again until it was anonymously returned to the house a year later, empty.
Kason appeared in the doorway, leaning against the frame with his arms crossed. He was watching her, waiting for the crack in her armor.
"You're taking the trash bag?" he asked. "Fitting."
Elease didn't respond. She opened a drawer and pulled out two plain black t-shirts and a pair of jeans. She folded them with military precision and placed them in the bag.
She reached for a velvet jewelry box on the island counter.
Kason smirked. "Those diamonds stay. They belong to the Stephens family trust."
Elease opened the box. A diamond necklace glittered under the recessed lighting. It was worth half a million dollars.
She bypassed it completely.
Her fingers closed around a small, tarnished silver locket nestled in the corner of the box. It was cheap, old, and worthless to anyone but her.
She opened it. A tiny, faded photo of a woman with kind eyes stared back. Isolde Finch. Her mother.
Elease snapped the locket shut and shoved it into her pocket.
She moved to the shelf where her electronics were kept. She grabbed a laptop. It looked like a standard model, scuffed and old, but inside, the hardware had been modified. The dormant Phoenix persona had guided her hands years ago, a subconscious urge to build a back door, a hidden weapon she never consciously knew she possessed.
She placed the laptop in the bag and zipped it up. The bag was barely half full.
She turned to Kason. She was wearing silk pajamas.
"Turn around," she said.
Kason rolled his eyes. "I've seen it all before, Elease. The scars don't scare me anymore. They just bore me."
Elease didn't argue. She simply stripped off the silk top.
Kason looked away instinctively, a grimace flickering across his face. The scars on her back were different from the one on her face. They weren't from the fire five years ago. They were older, a horrifying latticework of pale, raised lines—some surgical, some clearly from burns and shrapnel, a map of the lab explosion and experiments that had stolen a year of her childhood. It was a history he knew nothing about, a pain he could not comprehend.
She pulled on a black hoodie and leggings. She slipped her feet into a pair of running shoes.
She picked up the bag.
She walked toward the door. Kason didn't move. He blocked her path, his body filling the frame.
"You're walking out with nothing?" Kason asked. His voice was louder now, edged with frustration. "You think this martyr act will make me feel guilty? Because it won't."
Elease looked up at him.
"Guilt requires a conscience, Kason," she said. "You have none."
She stepped to the side. It was a fluid motion, a subtle shift of weight that allowed her to glide past him without touching him.
Kason reached out and grabbed her arm. His grip was tight, possessive.
"Chelsea is coming here in an hour," he hissed. "Don't be lurking in the lobby like a stray dog."
Elease looked down at his hand on her arm. Her muscles tightened. Her mind, the reawakened Phoenix, calculated the angle of his wrist, the pressure point on his thumb. She could break his wrist in two seconds. It was a skill she didn't know she had until this very moment, but it felt as natural as breathing.
"Let go," she said. Her voice dropped an octave. "Or I break it."
The threat was delivered with such absolute calm that Kason released her instantly. He stepped back, looking at his own hand as if it had been burned.
He laughed, a nervous, jagged sound. "You've lost your mind."
"I've found it," Elease corrected.
She walked down the hallway. Her footsteps were silent on the marble floor.
She passed a large wedding photo hanging on the wall. Kason looked like a prince. Elease was turned away from the camera, hiding her face.
She paused.
Kason watched her, thinking she was having second thoughts.
Elease reached out and turned the frame face down on the console table.
"Bad feng shui," she muttered.
She opened the heavy front door.
"Walk out that door and you don't get a cent!" Kason yelled from the hallway. His voice echoed in the empty space.
The door slammed shut.
The sound was final. It was the sound of a cage opening.
The elevator doors opened into the lobby. The doorman, a man named Henry who usually looked through Elease as if she were invisible, blinked in surprise.
He saw the canvas bag. He saw the hoodie.
"Calling the town car, Mrs. Stephens?" Henry asked, his hand hovering over the phone.
"Ms. Finch," Elease corrected without breaking stride. "And no."
She pushed through the revolving doors and stepped out onto the sidewalk.
The noise of Manhattan hit her instantly. Horns blaring, sirens wailing, the low hum of millions of people moving. It was chaotic. It was perfect.
She walked to the curb and pulled out her phone.
Her fingers flew across the screen. She wasn't opening a social media app. She was accessing a hidden partition in the operating system.
The colorful interface vanished, replaced by a black terminal screen with scrolling green text.
SkyNet Protocol: Active.
She typed in a command string. She pinged a secure offshore server located in the Cayman Islands.
The query wasn't a balance check. It was an execution command. Phoenix rerouted a fraction of a percent of global high-frequency trades through a ghost algorithm, simultaneously draining three dark web escrow accounts belonging to arms dealers. It took twelve seconds.
The result appeared on the screen.
New Account Balance: $500,000,000.00
They were the spoils of a war she had just started. They were untraceable, liquid, and entirely hers. They had been sitting dormant in the dark corners of the web, waiting for a predator like her to claim them.
She didn't transfer it all. That would trigger flags at the NSA.
She activated a sub-routine to funnel a stream of cash into a generic, untraceable spending account. She set the limit: one hundred thousand dollars a day.
She closed the terminal and opened a ride-share app. She spoofed her GPS location to bounce off three different satellites, making her digital footprint a ghost.
A black SUV pulled up to the curb thirty seconds later. It was a priority dispatch she had hacked into the queue.
High above, on the penthouse balcony, Kason Stephens was watching.
He gripped the railing. He expected to see her crying on the bench. He expected her to look lost.
Instead, he saw her open the door of a premium SUV. She moved with a military-straight posture. She didn't look back. Not once.
His phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out.
"Darling, I'm almost there," Chelsea's voice purred through the speaker.
Kason felt a sudden wave of irritation. "Fine," he snapped, and hung up. He stared at the spot where the SUV had been, a strange unease settling in his gut.
Inside the car, the air was cool and quiet. The tinted windows turned the city into a dark, moving blur.
Elease caught her reflection in the glass.
The scar on her cheek was a map of Kason's survival and her public shame. It was jagged, pulling at the corner of her eye.
"First order of business," she whispered to herself. "Fix the hardware."
Her reawakened medical knowledge, far beyond anything taught in a university, surfaced. She knew the science of cellular regeneration. She knew what to buy and where to find it.
She typed a query into her phone: Bio-gel synthesis materials. Supplier: Dark Web.
The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror. He saw a woman in a hoodie with a scarred face. His expression remained professionally neutral, his eyes meeting hers for only a fraction of a second before returning to the road.
"Destination?"
"The Pierre Hotel," Elease said. She needed neutral ground. She needed luxury. She needed a fortress.
Her phone vibrated again.
The screen lit up. Caller ID: Father.
Elease stared at the name. Franklin Finch.
She let it ring.
The phone went silent, then beeped for a voicemail.
She didn't dial into the voicemail system. She accessed the audio file directly through the terminal, playing it at 2x speed.
Franklin's voice was venomous, distorted by the speed but clear in its intent.
"If you ruined the deal with Kason, don't bother coming home. You are useless to me if you aren't his wife."
Elease smirked. It was a dark, dangerous expression.
"Home?" she said to the empty car. "No. I'm coming to a battlefield."
The SUV merged into the heavy traffic, leaving the Stephens empire behind in the dust.
Elease walked up to the reception desk at The Pierre. She didn't have a credit card. Instead, she tapped her phone on the payment terminal.
"One suite," she said. "Indefinite stay."
The receptionist hesitated, looking at her hoodie and the canvas bag. But when she saw the payment go through, the system approved it instantly with a VIP flag.
"Of course, Ms...?"
"Smith," Elease said, providing a name that was both common and untraceable.
Ten minutes later, she was in a suite overlooking the city. It was luxurious, filled with cream-colored furniture and fresh orchids, but to Elease, it was just a base of operations.
She dumped her bag on the floor and set up the laptop on the mahogany desk.
She connected to the hotel's network, instantly building a firewall around her connection. Her fingers danced over the keys.
She pulled up the Finch Family digital calendar.
Tonight. 7:30 PM. Charity Gala Strategy Dinner. Location: Finch Estate.
Franklin Finch was planning to sell her out again. The voicemail had confirmed it. He needed Kason's money to prop up his failing company.
Elease leaned back in the chair. A memory surfaced-Isolde, her mother, sitting in the garden, staring at nothing. Weak. Medicated. Trapped in that house with the monsters.
Her mother, Isolde, was from a less prominent branch of the powerful Hendricks family, granted a small trust but no real power or stake in the main family empire. Franklin had spent years trying to leverage that tenuous connection for his own gain, with little success.
"I can't just leave her there," Elease decided. The guilt of the 'Elease' persona was a useful fuel. It gave Phoenix a mission.
She would attend the dinner. Not as a victim. Not as the scarred daughter. But as a disruptor.
She looked down at her clothes. The black hoodie and leggings were functional, but they were not armor. In the world of high society, clothes were weapons.
She needed war paint.
She authorized a temporary, high-limit virtual card on her phone, spoofing the credentials of a limitless American Express Centurion.
She grabbed her phone and left the room.
Downstairs, the doorman hailed her a cab.
"Bergdorf Goodman," she told the driver.
Meanwhile, miles away at the Finch Estate, the atmosphere was toxic.
Franklin Finch was pacing the living room, a glass of whiskey in his hand. His face was red.
"Call her again!" he screamed. "If Kason pulls the funding, we are ruined! Do you understand?"
Isolde sat on the edge of the sofa, trembling. She held a lace handkerchief to her mouth.
"She... she might be hurt, Franklin," Isolde whispered. "She never ignores calls."
Alvera Sykes, Franklin's long-time mistress and "partner," sat on the opposite sofa. She was sipping tea, looking perfectly at ease.
"She's just being dramatic, Isolde," Alvera said, her voice dripping with fake sympathy. "Like you. It runs in the blood."
Fannye, Alvera's daughter, laughed from the doorway. She was scrolling through her phone.
"Oh, Mother, be kind," Fannye said with a saccharine smile. "Imagine how awful it must be for her. Kason has finally come to his senses. I just hope poor Elease has a nice, thick veil to wear now that she doesn't have his money to hide behind."
Back in the cab, Elease watched the city roll by. She wasn't just recalling memories; she was running a tactical analysis on the Finch family structure. She watched Franklin's pacing gait in her mind's eye, recognizing the agitation of a narcissist who had lost his primary asset. She replayed Alvera's calm posture, the classic overcompensation of a manipulator terrified of losing her position. And Fannye... Fannye was just a parasite, motivated by a jealousy so deep it was her only personality trait.
She formulated a plan. Step 1: Psychological warfare.
The cab pulled up to the department store. The doorman hesitated when he saw her exit the vehicle in a hoodie.
Elease walked past him. She didn't look at him. She projected an air of absolute authority that made him step back and hold the door open without a word.
Inside, the air was cool and smelled of expensive perfume and leather.
She headed straight for the VIP section on the third floor.
As she rounded a corner near the evening wear, she heard a familiar, shrill laugh.
She stopped.
Standing near a rack of designer gowns were three women. Fannye, and her two shadows, Sloane and Blair.
They were holding up a dress-a backless silver thing that would look terrible on Elease's scarred skin.
"Imagine the Scarface wearing this," Sloane giggled, holding it up against herself.
Elease stood still. This was better than she had planned.
She approached them from behind, silent as a shadow.