An hour had lted away in the quiet gravity of the hospital room — that strange, suspended kind of hour that feels both endless and fleeting. The air hung heavy with the sterile scent of antiseptic and the low hum of machines, their soft beeps deliberately muted at Rafael’s insistence. Shadows clung to the corners, deep and still, as if even ti itself had paused to catch its breath.
The adrenaline that had once burned through Eliana’s veins had faded, leaving behind a hollow, trembling calm. She sat on the edge of Rafael’s bed, her body angled toward him, small and fragile against the starched white sheets. Their fingers were laced together — a lifeline, a silent conversation more honest than words could ever be. Rafael’s hand, warm and steady despite the IV taped to his wrist, clung to hers with quiet desperation. His strength, once an armor of unshakable confidence, now flickered between exhaustion and restraint.
He tried to hide it behind that usual veil of dry humor and control — but tonight, the mask slipped. His storm-grey eyes, dulled behind the pretense of blindness, betrayed him; they burned with a volatile mix of fear and fury. Fear for her. Fury at himself. At Mirabel. At whatever force had dared Mirabel to touch her.
Eliana could feel it in the subtle tension of his grip — that restless energy coiled beneath his skin like a live wire. She wanted to tell him to let go of it, to rest, but the words stuck sowhere between her heart and her throat. So she stayed quiet. Present. Her thumb brushed over his knuckles in small, absent circles, grounding them both in the mont’s fragile stillness.
The jasmine scent of her perfu lingered in the sterile air — faint but unmistakable, the ghost of comfort wrapped around the sharper tang of antiseptic and fear. Outside, London glowed against the dark glass — city lights flickering like faraway constellations, utterly indifferent to the chaos that had almost claid them.
Her hair — once neat, now a disheveled tumble of dark waves — frad her face in a way that made her look both worn and achingly human. The soft brown of her skin glowed faintly under the muted light, flushed with the remnants of panic. Her simple dress, creased and streaked with gri from the rough handling by Mirabel’s n, told the story of the night far better than either of them wanted to. And yet, there was sothing quietly unbroken about her — a grace that refused to be smudged by fear or circumstance.
Rafael watched her, or rather, ’felt’ her presence in that quiet way he had — attuned to the air shifting with her every breath. There was a ti when silence between them ant strategy, calculation, control. But tonight, it ant sothing else entirely. Sothing raw. Sothing real.
Rafael sat propped against a stack of crisp white pillows, the hospital gown doing little to dull the quiet command in his presence. Even here — confined, stripped of his usual armor — there was an unshakable power about him. The gown might have been sterile, but it couldn’t hide the strength in his shoulders or the way his every movent carried a restrained energy, like a predator forced into stillness.
His dark, wavy hair had fallen slightly out of place, the result of a long evening of chaos, and his jaw — sharp, tense — worked subtly as he fought to keep his composure. His eyes, were locked sowhere ahead of him, unfocused yet unnervingly steady. To anyone else, it would seem like he was staring into the void. But of course he wasn’t.
He "felt" her presence — every tremor of her breath, every twitch of her fingers in his. He hadn’t released her hand since she’d stord into the room and all but collapsed against him, the shock and exhaustion spilling out of her in a flood of silent tears. "You’re not going anywhere," he’d murmured then, his voice low and rough with a possessive tenderness that still echoed in her chest.
Now, that sa silence stretched between them, no longer suffocating but fragile, filled with the soft beeping of machines and the occasional hitch in her breathing. The air carried a faint chill, brushing against their skin like the ghost of the night that had almost taken her.
Then ca the creak — soft, deliberate — of the door opening.
Jas entered, his shadow preceding him like an on. Every movent of his was controlled, calculated — the gait of a man who’d learned long ago that panic never saved anyone. His tailored suit was immaculate despite the hour, every line screaming precision, his wire-rimd glasses catching a brief flash of the sterile light. His face bore the weary map of years spent watching, protecting, calculating — a soldier’s face in a civilian’s fra.
He had been outside for the last hour, pacing the corridor with his phone pressed to his ear, his clipped voice carrying orders down invisible lines of communication. The network was in motion again — spies, contacts, shadows working to contain the fallout from the kidnapping attempt. Now, as he stepped inside, the faint hum of that orchestrated chaos seed to follow him.
"Sir," Jas said finally, the word landing like a stone dropped into still water. His voice was low, gravelly, the kind that demanded attention without ever needing to raise itself.
Eliana’s fingers tightened slightly around Rafael’s.
Jas hesitated for half a heartbeat, his gaze flicking toward her before returning to his employer. "I need a word. Privately." His tone left no room for misinterpretation, yet there was sothing careful in it — an acknowledgnt of the woman sitting beside the man he served. "It’s important. Sothing you need to know right now."
The air shifted. The quiet hum of the machines suddenly felt louder, sharper.
Rafael’s grip on Eliana’s hand tightened imperceptibly, his thumb brushing over her knuckles in a soothing rhythm. He didn’t turn his head—maintaining the charade of blindness—but his tone was sharp, laced with that signature sarcasm that hid his vulnerabilities. "Privately? Jas, if this is about what happened tonight—the kidnapping attempt on Eliana—then spit it out. Is it Mirabel’s doing? Don’t dance around it like you’re at a bloody tea party."
Jas paused, his broad shoulders squaring as he t Rafael’s "unseeing" gaze. He rubbed a hand over his stubbled jaw, weighing his words. After a long beat, he nodded. "Yes, Sir. It’s about Mirabel. And the kidnapping attempt on Eliana."
Eliana’s honey-brown eyes widened slightly, her full lips parting in quiet anticipation. She squeezed Rafael’s hand back, her voice soft but steady. "Rafael, if it’s about , I want to hear it too. No more secrets, please. I’ve had enough surprises for one lifeti."
To be continued...
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