The wind at four hundred feet didn't just blow; it screamed.
Zora clung to the glass of the Vane Tower like a spider made of obsidian. Her 5'2" frame was an advantage here—less wind resistance, less weight for the suction grips to carry. Her mahogany skin was nearly invisible against the midnight sky, save for the faint, rhythmic pulse of the city lights reflecting in her dark eyes.
Thirty seconds to the sweep, she thought, her breath hitching in her chest.
She kicked off, swinging her body toward the balcony of the penthouse. She landed as silent as a falling leaf, her boots hitting the marble without a click. She tapped a sequence into the glass door's bypass.
Click.
She was in. The penthouse smelled of expensive cedar, old money, and something sharper—power.
Zora moved through the shadows of the living room, a blur of lethal grace. She didn't look at the $10 million paintings or the floor-to-ceiling view of the Tri-State Sector. She only saw the safe. It was hidden behind a bust of some forgotten Roman emperor.
Her fingers danced. She was a "Ghost," trained to breathe through the tension. When the heavy steel door hissed open, she grabbed the encrypted drive—the "Soul of Vane."
"It's smaller than I expected," she whispered to herself.
"Most things of value are."
The voice didn't come from behind her. It came from the armchair by the fireplace, which had been turned away from the door.
Zora didn't scream. She didn't freeze. In one fluid motion, she drew a ceramic karambit from her thigh holster and spun, dropping into a low crouch.
Silas Vane sat there, a glass of amber liquid in his hand. He wasn't wearing a jacket, just a crisp white shirt with the sleeves rolled up, revealing forearms that looked like they were carved from granite. He was 6'4" of pure, predatory stillness. His silver eyes weren't angry; they were hungry.
"The Wraith," he said, his voice a low, gravelly barrette. "I've spent three months and two million dollars tracking your shadow across three continents. And here you are, in my living room, looking like a dream I'm not ready to wake up from."
"Don't move," Zora hissed. Her heart was hammering against her ribs, but her hand was steady. "I'll kill you before you reach the alarm."
Silas didn't even blink. He took a slow sip of his drink, his eyes never leaving hers. "You're 5'2". Maybe 115 pounds. You've taken down men three times your size, I know. I've watched the security footage of your hits in London and Dubai. You're fast. You're precise."
He stood up. The height difference was sudden and suffocating. He moved toward her, not with the haste of a man in danger, but with the confidence of a man who already knew the ending of the book.
Zora lunged. She was a blur, aiming for the soft tissue of his neck.
Silas didn't reach for a gun. He moved with a terrifying, calculated speed. He caught her wrist mid-air. His grip wasn't just strong; it was absolute. It felt like being caught in a vice made of warm velvet. With a sharp twist, he spun her around, slamming her back against his chest.
His other arm wrapped around her waist, lifting her until her toes barely brushed the floor. He was a wall of heat behind her.
"Let go," she snarled, trying to drive her elbow into his ribs.
He didn't budge. He leaned down, his lips brushing the shell of her ear. The scent of sandalwood and danger filled her lungs.
"You have two options, Zora," he whispered. "Option one: I call the police. You'll spend the rest of your life in a cage where the sun never touches your skin. Option two..."
He let his hand slide down her arm, his fingers trailing over the mahogany skin of her hand, forcing her to drop the drive.
"You become my shadow. My weapon. My... possession."
Zora tilted her head back, her dark eyes defiant even as her pulse raced where his thumb pressed against her neck. "I don't belong to anyone."
Silas's grip tightened, his hand moving to her jaw, forcing her to look at him. A dark, twisted smile pulled at his lips.
"You do now. Welcome home, Vantablack."
