Elwyn leaned his head against the plush leather headrest of his Rolls Royce Phantom.
The city lights blurred past the tinted windows. He wore a tailored, charcoal-gray suit that fit perfectly across his broad shoulders. He emanated a dark, suffocating authority.
Arthur Page sat in the passenger seat, scrolling through an iPad. "Sir, The Sovereign Club has cleared the entire third floor. The Onyx room is completely secure. Total privacy."
Elwyn gave a single, curt nod. He didn't open his eyes.
His private cell phone vibrated in his jacket pocket. He pulled it out. The screen flashed with an incoming call: Bristol Evans.
A wave of pure disgust washed over him.
He pressed the red button, rejecting the call, and immediately blocked the number.
Arthur glanced back. "I take it the investigation into Bristol Evans is concluded?"
"She isn't the girl," Elwyn said, his voice hard. "Your report confirmed she was in the city ten years ago, but the timeline doesn't fit. More importantly, Bristol is a coward. The girl who pulled me out of that burning car had the eyes of a feral wolf. She fought. Bristol only whines."
"Understood," Arthur said. "I will widen the search parameters."
The Rolls Royce glided down a private alleyway and stopped in front of the reinforced steel doors of The Sovereign Club's underground entrance.
"Sir, I used your top-tier anonymous profile 'Kaden Bryan' reserved at The Sovereign Club," Arthur noted from the front seat. "They have cleared the floor and arranged for the manager to greet you personally."
Mr. Davies, the club manager, was waiting on the curb. He bowed slightly as Elwyn stepped out of the car.
"Good evening, Mr. Bryan," Davies said smoothly, using Elwyn's alias. "Everything is prepared."
Elwyn walked past him without a word, stepping into the private elevator.
Three minutes later, a sleek, black Ferrari SF90 roared into the club's secondary VIP garage.
Elodie killed the engine.
She stepped out of the car. She wore a backless, black silk gown that clung to her curves like liquid night. The slit ran up her thigh, revealing a silver stiletto. Her hair was pulled back into a severe, elegant knot. Her face, completely free of the birthmark, was a mask of cold perfection.
She tossed the keys to the valet and walked toward the biometric scanner.
She leaned in. The red laser scanned her iris.
The heavy steel door slid open. The digital screen flashed: Welcome, Ms. Surety.
Elodie walked into the club. The air was thick with the scent of expensive cigars and aged bourbon. She bypassed the crowded main floor and headed straight for the private stairwell leading to the third floor.
She reached the top of the stairs and turned down the long, dimly lit hallway. The thick carpet absorbed the sound of her heels.
At the exact same moment, the elevator doors at the far end of the hall opened.
Elwyn stepped out, flanked by two massive bodyguards. He turned and started walking down the hall, heading straight toward her.
The lighting in the corridor was intentionally poor, casting deep shadows across their faces.
They walked toward each other. The distance closed. Fifty feet. Thirty feet. Ten feet.
Just as they were about to cross paths, Elwyn's smartwatch vibrated with a high-priority medical alert from his R&D team. He looked down at his wrist, his brow furrowing in concentration.
Simultaneously, Elodie pressed her finger to her earpiece, listening to Scrap confirm the security feed of the Onyx room. She turned her head slightly to the right, her eyes scanning a large oil painting on the wall to avoid eye contact with the approaching men.
They passed each other.
Less than two feet of space separated them.
Elwyn didn't look up, but as the woman in the black dress walked past, a scent hit him.
It wasn't heavy perfume. It was clean, sharp, and cold. Like pine needles buried under fresh snow. But underneath that icy freshness, there was a faint, almost imperceptible trace of a metallic ozone scent. It was the exact same combination of scents he had smelled in his bedroom last night.
Elwyn's footsteps faltered for a fraction of a second. His chest tightened.
He stopped and turned around.
But the hallway was empty. The woman had already turned the corner.
Elodie stood in front of the heavy oak door marked Onyx. Her heart was beating a little faster than normal. The man she just passed had a massive, overwhelming presence.
She took a slow breath, raised her knuckles, and knocked on the door.
"Come in," a deep, resonant male voice echoed from inside the room.
Elodie pushed the heavy door open and stepped inside.
The Onyx room was darker than the hallway. The walls were painted a matte black. The only source of light was a single, harsh spotlight shining down on a round obsidian table in the center of the room.
A man sat in a leather armchair on the far side of the table, his broad back facing her.
A crystal glass of whiskey sat on the table next to a smoldering cigar.
Elodie let the door click shut behind her. The automatic locks engaged with a heavy thud. The silence in the room was absolute.
She activated the micro-modulator hidden in her throat choker.
"Mr. Bryan," Elodie said. Her voice came out lower, slightly metallic, stripping away her natural cadence. "I am Surety."
The man in the chair went perfectly still.
Elwyn's fingers, which had been resting on the armrest, slowly curled inward.
The voice was altered. He knew tech well enough to hear the modulation. But the underlying tone, the absolute lack of fear in the delivery... it sent a jolt of electricity straight down his spine.
It felt exactly like the phantom presence in his bedroom.
He didn't turn around immediately. He picked up his whiskey glass.
"Scrap briefed you on my requirements?" Elwyn asked, his voice a low rumble.
Elodie walked forward. Her movements were fluid, predatory. She pulled out the chair opposite him and sat down, placing her hands flat on the cold obsidian table.
"He did," Elodie said. "You need a mistress to blow up a marriage contract. I need to hear the details from you."
Her bluntness surprised him. Most people who walked into this room trembled. She sounded bored.
Elwyn slowly turned his chair around.
He leaned forward, resting his forearms on the table. The spotlight illuminated the space between them, leaving both of their faces cast in heavy shadows.
Elodie looked at him.
Her heart violently slammed against her ribs.
Even in the shadows, she recognized the sharp jawline. The intense, dark eyes.
It was Elwyn Lyons IV.
The man she had scanned last night. The boy she had saved ten years ago. Her legal fiancé.
A wave of pure shock crashed over her, threatening to break her composure. Her fingers dug into the edge of the table, her nails biting into the stone.
She forced her breathing to remain steady. She couldn't let him see her panic. She was in the shadows. He couldn't see her face clearly.
Elwyn stared back at her. He saw a woman with flawless pale skin and a sharp, beautiful profile. No birthmark.
A fleeting thought crossed his mind: the Evans daughter could never be someone like this. The dossiers claimed his arranged bride was plain and unremarkable, while the woman sitting before him screamed danger from every perfectly styled strand of hair.
He pushed his suspicion down. It couldn't be the Evans girl. But the energy radiating off this woman was intoxicating.
"My fiancée," Elwyn started, his voice dripping with venom, "is from the Evans family. They are parasites. They sell their own blood for a profit."
Elodie's stomach twisted into a painful knot.
He was talking about her. He was paying ten million dollars to destroy her.
The irony was so sharp it physically hurt. She was sitting across from her fiancé, negotiating the terms of her own public execution.
"I see," Elodie managed to say, her modulated voice hiding the tremor in her throat. "And what exactly do you want me to do?"
Elwyn slid a thick manila folder across the table.
"This is the contract," Elwyn said. "Sign it, and the money is yours. The first installment transfers tonight."
Elodie didn't look at the folder. She kept her eyes locked on his.
"Money isn't the issue," Elodie said coldly. "Why me? There are a hundred women in this city who would gladly play your whore for free."
Elwyn leaned back, a slow, dangerous smile spreading across his face.
"Because Scrap said you never fail," Elwyn murmured. He tilted his head, his eyes burning into hers through the dark. "And because I have a weakness for mysteries. I want to see what you're capable of."
He was testing her. The job wasn't just a transaction; it was a game.
Elodie's blood ran cold. She was playing a very dangerous game with a man who was already hunting her.