: Mistake
When they were gone, Aaron opened a hidden compartment in his desk. Inside lay something that made the air itself seem to grow colder—a black token the size of a poker chip, carved with ancient symbols that seemed to writhe in the dim light.
The Soul-Chasing Token.
He hadn't used it in years. Didn't need to. The reputation alone was enough to make most threats disappear. Every person marked by this token in the past had died within half a day—no exceptions, no mercy.
Aaron's fingers closed around the token, and his eyes burned with purpose.
Anyone who threatened Marcus Steel would die. Anyone who threatened the Dragon King's return would be eliminated.
No matter who they were.
Meanwhile, in the north city's Skyline Bar, Oliver Hartford lounged in a private room that reeked of cigarette smoke, cheap cologne, and expensive alcohol. He counted out two hundred thousand dollars in cash, sliding the neat stacks across the table to Bruno King.
Bruno grinned, gold teeth glinting. "Damn, Oliver. You really hate this guy, huh?"
"Marcus Steel," Oliver spat the name like poison. "That useless piece of trash suddenly thinks he's somebody. Walking around the Hartford company like he owns the place, talking back to the executives, acting like he's not just Quinn's worthless husband."
"Ex-husband soon, from what I hear," Bruno chuckled, pocketing the money. "Word is she's dumping him for Alexander Grant."
"Good riddance," Oliver said viciously. "But before that happens, I want him dealt with. I want him broken. Think you can handle that?"
Bruno leaned back, supremely confident. "Brother, for two hundred K, I'll break his legs and his arms. Hell, I'll make it so creative he'll wish Jasper's boys had finished the job earlier. That useless son-in-law won't even remember his own name when I'm done."
"Just make sure it can't be traced back to me," Oliver warned. "I can't have Quinn finding out I was involved."
"Relax," Bruno waved dismissively. "I'm a professional. This ain't my first—"
The door exploded inward.
The kick was so powerful it tore the entire door off its hinges, sending it crashing across the room. A man stepped through the opening—compact, muscular, with eyes that promised extreme violence.
Bruno's confident grin vanished instantly. His face went pale. "D-Dominic Martinez..."
"Who the hell are you?" Oliver demanded, trying to salvage his dignity despite the sudden spike of fear in his chest. "Do you know whose room you just—"
"Shut up," Dominic said simply.
Oliver did.
Then another figure appeared in the doorway, and the temperature in the room seemed to drop twenty degrees.
Aaron Jackson.
Bruno actually whimpered.
"Well, well," Aaron said quietly, stepping into the room with the casual grace of an apex predator. "What do we have here? Bruno King and... who's this? Some Hartford family brat playing gangster?"
"I'm Oliver Hartford," Oliver said, trying to sound authoritative and failing miserably. "Quinn Hartford's cousin. You better watch who you're—"
"Quinn Hartford," Aaron repeated, his voice going dangerously soft. "The same Quinn who was married to Marcus Steel?"
The name hung in the air like a death sentence.
Oliver's bravado crumbled. "I... I don't know what you're talking about..."
"Don't lie to me, boy." Aaron moved closer, and Oliver pressed back against the leather booth. "We heard everything. You paid Bruno here two hundred thousand to 'deal with a useless son-in-law.' That son-in-law wouldn't happen to be Marcus Steel, would it?"
Silence.
"I thought so," Aaron continued. "Dominic, take Mr. Hartford outside. Give him a beating he'll remember for the rest of his miserable life. But don't kill him—the final decision about Quinn's family belongs to Marcus."
"Wait!" Oliver scrambled backward. "You can't do this! My family will—"
Dominic grabbed him by the collar and dragged him out like a sack of garbage, Oliver's protests fading into the hallway.
Aaron turned his full attention to Bruno.
Bruno shook uncontrollably, gold teeth chattering. "A-Aaron, man, listen. I didn't know, okay? I swear I didn't know who Marcus Steel really was. Oliver just said some nobody, some unemployed loser—"
"You accepted money to hurt someone under my protection," Aaron said quietly. "That's your first mistake. Your second mistake was accepting that contract after Jasper Grant's assassins failed."
"I'll give the money back!" Bruno pleaded, fumbling for the cash. "All of it! Two hundred K! Just let me—"
"It's too late for that."
Aaron reached into his jacket and withdrew the Soul-Chasing Token. The black token seemed to absorb light, its carved symbols writhing with malevolent energy.
Bruno's eyes went wide with primal terror. "No... no, please, not that... Aaron, I'm begging you..."
Aaron spoke four words, each one carrying the weight of absolute finality:
"To kill you."
His fingers flicked.
The Soul-Chasing Token flew through the air in a perfect arc, embedding itself in the wall directly above Bruno's head. The symbols glowed with sickly red light.
"You have until sunrise," Aaron said calmly, turning toward the door. "The token has marked you. There's nowhere you can run, nowhere you can hide. Your death is already sealed."
: The Soul-Chasing Token
Bruno King collapsed to his knees the moment Aaron Jackson fully revealed the Soul-Chasing Token.
The black marker seemed to pulse with malevolent energy, its ancient symbols writhing like living things in the dim light of the bar's backroom.
"No... no, please..." Bruno's voice cracked, all his earlier bravado evaporating like morning mist. "Not that. Anything but that."
Aaron lit a cigarette calmly, the flame from his lighter casting dancing shadows across his face. "You know about the token, then. Good. That saves me the explanation."
"Everyone knows about it," Bruno whispered, his gold teeth chattering. "Wesley Cooper... three years ago... they found him dead in his penthouse. No marks, no explanation. Just... dead. The token was on his chest."
"Wesley was a fool who thought money made him untouchable," Aaron said, exhaling smoke. "He learned otherwise. And before him, there was Jennifer Walsh, David Chen, Michael Santos... all marked, all dead within half a day. The Soul-Chasing Token has never failed."
Bruno's hands shook violently as he pressed them together in supplication. "Aaron, man, I swear on my life—I never offended anyone important! I'm just a small-time operator! I take jobs, I do work, but I never crossed any major players! Never!"
"You offended someone tonight," Aaron said quietly, tapping ash from his cigarette. "Someone far beyond your comprehension. Someone who makes the people you consider 'major players' look like insects."
"Who?" Bruno's voice was barely audible. "Who could I have possibly—"
"Marcus Steel."
The name hung in the air like a death knell.
Bruno's face went from pale to ashen. "Marcus Steel? That... that nobody? That useless son-in-law everyone laughs about? The unemployed loser who married Quinn Hartford?"
"That 'nobody,'" Aaron said with dangerous calm, "is the person you accepted two hundred thousand dollars to hurt. That 'useless son-in-law' is the man who survived four professional assassins tonight. That 'unemployed loser' is someone you should have never, ever agreed to touch."
"But... but he's nothing!" Bruno protested desperately. "Everyone knows it! The Hartford family treats him like garbage! Quinn is divorcing him for Alexander Grant! How could he possibly—"
"What the Hartford family thinks is irrelevant," Aaron interrupted. "What Quinn Hartford believes is meaningless. Marcus Steel is protected by forces that would crush the Hartfords without a second thought."
Bruno's eyes went wide with sudden hope—desperate, clawing hope. "My brother! Tyler King! He's got connections! Real power! Money, influence, politicians in his pocket! He can protect me! He can negotiate with whoever—"
Aaron laughed. It wasn't a pleasant sound.
"Tyler King," he repeated, crushing his cigarette in the ashtray. "Your brother who runs drugs through the east district? Who thinks he's a kingpin because he's got a few cops on payroll and some city councilmen who owe him favors?"
"He's powerful!" Bruno insisted. "He's got reach! If you just let me call him, if you give me a chance to—"
"Compared to the colossal force backing me, the King family is insignificant," Aaron said flatly. "Your brother's entire operation, all his wealth, all his connections—they're worth less than pocket change to the people I serve. And if Tyler King knew who you offended tonight, he'd be the first one putting a bullet in your head to avoid the fallout."
Bruno's last hope crumbled. He grabbed at Aaron's legs, sobbing openly now. "Please! I'll work for you! I'll do anything! I'll be loyal, I swear! Just take the token back! Give me a chance!"
Aaron looked down at the pathetic figure clinging to his pants. "Even if I wanted to spare you—which I don't—it's too late. The token has been issued. The mark has been placed. Your death is already written."
"No... no, please..." Bruno's sobs echoed through the empty room.
Aaron pulled out his pistol—smooth, efficient, practiced. He pressed the barrel against Bruno's forehead.
"You should have chosen your contracts more carefully," Aaron said quietly.
The gunshot was deafening in the enclosed space.
Bruno King slumped backward, eyes staring sightlessly at the ceiling, a neat hole in his forehead. The Soul-Chasing Token's record remained flawless—everyone marked died within half a day.
Aaron holstered his weapon and walked out without looking back. Dominic Martinez waited in the hallway, Oliver Hartford unconscious and bloodied at his feet.
"It's done," Aaron said simply.
"And the Hartford brat?"
"Leave him alive. Marcus will decide his fate." Aaron paused. "The Dragon King is returning to his full power. Everyone will learn soon enough what that means."
The Hartford household loomed like a monument to old money and older grudges. Marcus Steel stood at the entrance, his hand on the doorknob, steeling himself for what he knew would be an unpleasant encounter.
He'd only come back for his things—his few possessions, the documents he'd need, the last physical traces of three years wasted on a marriage that had been dead long before tonight.
But when he pushed open the door, he found Quinn waiting.
She never waited for him. In three years, she'd never once been home early to greet him, never prepared dinner, never showed any interest in his comings and goings.
Yet here she sat at the dining table, surrounded by untouched dishes—expensive food growing cold on expensive china. Her parents flanked her on either side, Brandon Hartford's face carved from granite, Karen Ridge practically vibrating with barely contained fury.
"You're late," Karen snapped the moment Marcus closed the door. "Do you have any idea what time it is?"
Marcus checked his watch—a cheap thing that had survived the building collapse somehow. "It's eight-thirty. I wasn't aware I had a curfew."
"Don't you dare take that tone with me!" Karen's voice rose shrilly. "You show up whenever you please, treat this house like a hotel, and expect us to just accept your complete lack of responsibility!"
"I came to get my things," Marcus said calmly. "I'm not staying."