Raven stepped back from the table slowly, eyes never leaving Vincent’s.
She pulled her hand off the docunt like it burned her. Not a full retreat. Just enough to breathe. The knife stayed low at her side, still ready, still heavy in her grip.
"I’m not agreeing," she said, voice low and rough. "I’m listening."
Vincent watched her for a beat. Steady. Unshaken. Like her words were exactly what he expected.
"That’s enough."
He turned and started walking. No warning. No explanation. Just... moved.
The Crown’s Blades fell in around him like they’d rehearsed it a thousand tis. Gabriel took point on the left, broad shoulders clearing the path. Lucian slid into position behind, eyes scanning everything. Dante brought up the rear with heavy steps that made the floor vibrate.
The others — Sebastian, Matteo, Adrian, Leonid — filled the gaps without a word, their formation tight but not crowding.
Raven stood frozen for half a second, pulse spiking sharp behind her chest. Then she moved too. Not rushing to catch up. Not falling too far behind. She slipped into the space they left for her, matching their pace even though every instinct scread to bolt.
The casino floor stretched out empty and quiet. No guests. No music. Just the low chanical hum of the building and the faint echo of their footsteps. Lights still glowed gold overhead, but now they felt colder. Controlled. The pillars and caras were placed to watch every angle. No blind spots. No easy escapes.
This wasn’t a casino anymore. It was a machine. And she was walking through it with the man who owned every gear.
Her bare feet whispered against the marble. The dried blood on her dress pulled tight with every step, sticky and uncomfortable. Sweat cooled on her neck and between her breasts. The knife felt both useless and necessary in her hand.
They moved into a narrower private corridor. Lighting dimd. Air grew cooler. A reinforced door with a keypad passed on her left — no guards visible. The absence made her stomach turn. They didn’t need guards here. The place guarded itself.
Vincent didn’t look back. Didn’t slow down. The others matched him perfectly.
Raven’s pulse wouldn’t settle. Every step took her farther from the exit she’d planned, deeper into his world. Sothing hot and unwanted moved beneath the surface of her anger — not fear exactly. Sothing sharper. A sick awareness of how easily he moved through his own territory while she was barefoot, bloodstained, and outnumbered.
They reached the elevator. No sign. No button at first. Vincent rested his fingers on the dark panel and it lit up under his touch like it knew him.
The doors slid open silently.
He stepped in first. The others followed in their perfect pattern. Raven went last, stepping into the enclosed space with blood roaring in her ears. The air felt cooler. Thinner. The tal walls reflected everything at strange angles.
The doors closed.
The elevator started descending.
No one spoke.
Raven stood opposite Vincent, knife still in her grip, angled low. The small space made everything feel too close. She could sll the faint mix of his cologne and the dried blood on his throat. Her own sweat. The tallic tang still clinging to her dress from the guards she’d killed.
She shifted her weight, testing the air. None of the n adjusted. They were already exactly where they needed to be. Gabriel’s bulk took up space without trying. Leonid stood behind her — close enough that the hairs on her neck stayed raised. Dante’s heavy presence pressed from the side.
She wanted to claw the composure off his face. How little the fight earlier seed to have cost him. How her own body was still buzzing with leftover adrenaline and sothing hotter she didn’t want to na.
"You trust them," she said quietly. The words ca out rougher than she ant.
Vincent didn’t glance at the others. "I don’t need to. They’re consistent."
Consistent. The word settled cold and heavy in her gut. Trust could break. Consistency was a blade that never dulled.
The elevator humd lower. Then slowed. Stopped.
The doors opened into an underground garage.
The space was wider than she expected but still felt oppressive. Low ceiling. Dim lighting that cast long shadows between rows of black armored vehicles. The air slled of concrete, oil, and cold tal. Footsteps echoed.
Lucian’s voice cut through the quiet. "Movent confird. Caruso assets repositioning outside the periter."
Vincent didn’t slow. "Let it."
Raven’s stomach dropped. They knew. They’d been watching the whole ti. Her people were already moving, and Vincent was letting it happen like it was part of the plan.
They stopped at one of the sleek black SUVs. Vincent opened the back door and stepped aside. Not forcing her. Not inviting. Just... waiting.
She paused at the threshold. Each beat a hamr strike against her ribs. Stepping into that car ant leaving the casino. ant going deeper into his territory. ant she couldn’t just turn around and disappear the way she always had.
Her bare feet felt cold on the concrete. The knife in her hand suddenly felt small.
She stepped inside anyway.
Vincent followed right after her. The door shut with a heavy, final click. The engine purred to life. The vehicle rolled forward smoothly as the garage door opened ahead, revealing the exit ramp curving upward toward the night.
Raven pressed closer to the window, scanning desperately. The city lights glittered in the distance. No visible guards. No obvious tails. Everything looked normal.
But she couldn’t map a single clean exit anymore.
The SUV rged into the city streets. Buildings slid past. Streetlights flickered across Vincent’s face in the dark interior. He sat relaxed beside her, one arm resting along the seat back, close enough that she could feel the heat coming off him.
Her pulse wouldn’t slow. A line of moisture slipped along her hairline. The dried blood on her dress itched. Every bump in the road made her hyper-aware of how close he was. How easily he’d disard her earlier. How calmly he’d handed the knife back like he knew she wouldn’t try again right away.
Her skin betrayed her with warmth. The way her body noticed the line of his jaw, the steady rise and fall of his chest, the quiet confidence that made her want to both stab him and lean closer at the sa ti.
Vincent didn’t speak. Didn’t gloat. Just sat there like the night was unfolding exactly as he’d planned.
Raven gripped the knife tighter in her lap, knuckles white. The city blurred past the tinted windows. She was leaving the casino. Leaving the plan. Leaving everything she’d prepared for.
And she still didn’t know whether she was being taken hostage... or walking straight into a different kind of cage.
The Queen of Hearts was still back on that table.
But the real ga had already left the building with her.
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