The war room slled of coffee gone cold and the particular flat tension of n who had not slept enough. Raven dropped the Alessio file on the table and waited for the room to settle.
It settled fast. It always did now.
She walked them through it. "Lucian pinned the Butcher. Fixed position. Outer industrial block. Third warehouse from the Caruso-controlled port access. Two-hour window, maybe less."
Adrian and Dante were already watching her.
"Light deploynt," she said. "Three."
Adrian gave one nod. Dante rolled his shoulders and pushed off the wall.
Vincent was at the far end of the war room. She felt his eyes lift from the city map when she said it. She didn’t look back. She picked up the file and walked out.
The industrial district ran dark at this hour. Streetlights stripped or dead, the kind of black that ant no one wanted to see clearly here. The warehouse sat between two gutted loading bays, corrugated walls bleeding rust. Raven took the east approach. Adrian north. Dante held the south periter exit. Standard three-point close.
She slipped in through a seam in the wall panel that had been pried loose once before and never fixed. The Butcher had chosen well — angles of sight in every direction, four exits, enough industrial noise to cover movent.
He had also chosen it knowing she would co.
The first sign was the missing guard. There should have been one. She slowed. Let her eyes adjust. The interior slled of machine oil, standing water, and sothing tallic that definitely wasn’t machine oil. She moved along the east wall, back to the corrugated steel, knife already out.
He dropped from above.
She heard the shift half a second before impact. Rotated. He caught her shoulder instead of the back of her neck and the montum slamd them both into the wall. Steel rang loud. Pain exploded through her bad shoulder. She drove an elbow back hard, got space, and spun.
He was bigger than she rembered. Faster. He’d been doing this longer than she’d been alive. He ca again before she finished turning, going straight for the right forearm — the old healed wound, the one she’d learned to compensate for without thinking. The angle was perfect. He knew exactly what it cost her.
She gave him the forearm.
Let him commit. Let him feel the small flinch she didn’t stop. Then she drove the knife into his weapon hand with her left while he was focused on the right. He dropped the blade. She stepped inside his reach before he could recover and the size advantage ended right there.
It got ugly fast.
He didn’t fight clean. Elbows, a headbutt she barely ducked, a knee that glanced her hip when she shifted. She worked him down thodically. No speeches. No hesitation. The Butcher had carved his ssage into a kid’s chest. She sent hers back through the body.
When it was over the warehouse went quiet again. Her right forearm burned — not reopened, but set back, the healing pulled tight and angry under the bandage. Her shoulder throbbed where it had hit the wall. Her ankle protested every shift of weight. She stood there breathing hard, blood on her knife, blood on her hands, and felt the ugly satisfaction settle low in her gut.
Adrian was waiting at the north door. He looked at her arm.
"Graze?" he asked.
"Re-aggravated. Not open."
He read the difference and said nothing else. That was Adrian.
Dante ca out of the south approach and took one look through the open door. "She done?"
"Done," Adrian said.
Dante looked at Raven. His face did sothing — not pity, not concern, more like recognition. He knew what this thread had cost her since the beginning. He didn’t say any of it.
"Let’s go ho," he said instead.
The mansion’s east entrance was quiet when they ca through. Past twenty-two hundred. The Blades peeled off — Adrian toward the Blade corridor, Dante with a brief hand on her shoulder that she allowed — and Raven stood alone in the corridor outside the war room.
Adrenaline was still draining slow under her skin. Her forearm throbbed in ti with her pulse, hot and insistent. She should go to the dical kit. She should debrief. She should do a dozen sensible things and none of them was standing here waiting for sothing she hadn’t nad yet.
Vincent ca through the war room doors.
He had been tracking the op. She knew he had. He would have watched every update. He would have known when the position went quiet. He would have known when they were coming back.
He didn’t say any of that.
He stopped two feet from her. Looked at the forearm first — the bandage, the way she was holding it slightly away from her body so the fabric wouldn’t catch the heat — then at her face. Reading the entire op through her.
She looked at him.
The corridor was empty. The house was quiet. The adrenaline was still there, lower now, running out under her skin. She was aware of the distance between them — two feet, less — and aware that she had not moved to close it and aware that she was going to.
She crossed to him. Stopped when the gap felt wrong. Her right hand ca up — the bandaged one, the one that hurt — and she pressed it flat against his chest. Not grabbing. Not reaching. Just her palm against the front of his shirt, over his sternum, feeling him breathe.
He went completely still.
Not the stillness of a man who didn’t know what to do. The stillness of a man who was not going to move until she decided what this was.
She kept her hand there. His breathing moved under her palm. Steady. Present. She could feel his heartbeat if she paid attention, and she was paying attention. The forearm ached. The corridor was cool. His shirt was warm.
She didn’t decide what it was.
She stood there for five seconds, or ten, and then she stepped back. Withdrew her hand. Didn’t explain it. Turned toward her room.
"Raven."
One word. Her na. Low and even, the way he said it when sothing had shifted and he was not going to let it pass unnad.
She kept walking. Her door was at the end of the corridor. She reached it, went through it, and stood on the other side in the dark.
Her palm was still warm where it had been against his chest.
She sat on the edge of the bed, forearm across her knee, and looked at the wall. The quiet of the room settled around her. The forearm throbbed. The wound was manageable — set back, not serious, a week’s healing lost. She would rewrap it in the morning. She would debrief in the morning. She would do all the sensible things in the correct order.
Tonight she sat with her back to the door and her hand still warm and didn’t try to na any of it.
But the warmth stayed.
And she was starting to wonder how long she could keep pretending it didn’t an sothing.
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