WE HAVE A COMMON ENEMY
Author: StarVessel
last update2026-02-21 07:45:18

Someone had gone through a lot of trouble to start a war. Michael Cross intended to find out exactly who.

He sat at the compound's desk with Marie standing over his shoulder and ran the metadata on the photographs in under ten minutes. Every digital image carried invisible information — timestamps, device identifiers, editing software signatures. These photographs had been created four days before the wedding. Three days before Michael ever set foot in Switzerland.

"They were made before we eve
Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • FRIGHTENING REVELATIONS

    Professor David Kells had been teaching paralegal studies for twenty years. Before that he'd been a practicing attorney with a specialty in civil procedure, which was exactly the kind of background that produced excellent paralegal educators — close enough to the practical work to teach it correctly, far enough removed to organize it pedagogically. He was sixty-two, had published two textbooks that were used in programs across three states, and had been at the institution where Isabella was enrolled for eight years. His professional record was clean and substantial and built the way professional records were built by people who took their work seriously and did it consistently for a long time.Richard Vale's connection to him was what Richard had described: a shared term on a legal reform advisory board five years ago. The board had produced a policy recommendation that had been partially adopted by two state bar associations. Both Richard and Kells had served for the same two-year te

  • TWENTY YEARS AND COUNTING

    Professor David Kells had been teaching paralegal studies for twenty years. Before that he'd been a practicing attorney with a specialty in civil procedure, which was exactly the kind of background that produced excellent paralegal educators — close enough to the practical work to teach it correctly, far enough removed to organize it pedagogically. He was sixty-two, had published two textbooks that were used in programs across three states, and had been at the institution where Isabella was enrolled for eight years. His professional record was clean and substantial and built the way professional records were built by people who took their work seriously and did it consistently for a long time.Richard Vale's connection to him was what Richard had described: a shared term on a legal reform advisory board five years ago. The board had produced a policy recommendation that had been partially adopted by two state bar associations. Both Richard and Kells had served for the same two-year te

  • TIME TO INVESTIGATE

    The apartment was the apartment of a man who had been in one place long enough for the place to have become entirely his. Books everywhere — on shelves, in stacks, on the coffee table, in piles near chairs as if they'd been pulled out and hadn't quite made it back. Research papers interleaved with the books. A desk in the corner that had the quality of being used for actual work rather than display. Photographs on the walls — places rather than people for the most part, which told you something about a person's relationship with their own history.Richard Vale was 78. He moved with the careful deliberateness of a man whose body had opinions about things now, but whose mind was clearly still running at whatever pace it had always run. He made tea without asking, which was another thing that told you something about a person — the ones who made tea without asking were the ones who understood that hospitality was an action not a question.He set the cups down and sat across from Ethan in

  • CRIMINALITY

    He told Lily about the package that same evening, which is to say he'd already shown her the book and they'd read the sentence on the inside cover together and they both already knew. What he meant when he said I'm going to Vienna was that the decision had been made.Lily said: "I'm coming.""Yes," he said. He hadn't been going to argue. The Mirror had introduced herself through a personal channel — a book, no intermediary, a direct message. He wanted to receive that with the same quality. Directly, personally, without the organizational apparatus of Pierce or David or anyone who would change the texture of whatever was about to happen."Nobody else?" Lily said."Nobody else," he said. "She chose us to approach. We approach the same way."They flew the next morning. They told no one — Adrian would have wanted to be useful, Pierce would have wanted to know operationally, David would have insisted on security infrastructure. All of those would have been reasonable and all of them would

  • Grace Ellerbee's network

    He told Lily about the package that same evening, which is to say he'd already shown her the book and they'd read the sentence on the inside cover together and they both already knew. What he meant when he said I'm going to Vienna was that the decision had been made.Lily said: "I'm coming.""Yes," he said. He hadn't been going to argue. The Mirror had introduced herself through a personal channel — a book, no intermediary, a direct message. He wanted to receive that with the same quality. Directly, personally, without the organizational apparatus of Pierce or David or anyone who would change the texture of whatever was about to happen."Nobody else?" Lily said."Nobody else," he said. "She chose us to approach. We approach the same way."They flew the next morning. They told no one — Adrian would have wanted to be useful, Pierce would have wanted to know operationally, David would have insisted on security infrastructure. All of those would have been reasonable and all of them would

  • ANTONIO MORETTI

    He told Lily about the package that same evening, which is to say he'd already shown her the book and they'd read the sentence on the inside cover together and they both already knew. What he meant when he said I'm going to Vienna was that the decision had been made.Lily said: "I'm coming.""Yes," he said. He hadn't been going to argue. The Mirror had introduced herself through a personal channel — a book, no intermediary, a direct message. He wanted to receive that with the same quality. Directly, personally, without the organizational apparatus of Pierce or David or anyone who would change the texture of whatever was about to happen."Nobody else?" Lily said."Nobody else," he said. "She chose us to approach. We approach the same way."They flew the next morning. They told no one — Adrian would have wanted to be useful, Pierce would have wanted to know operationally, David would have insisted on security infrastructure. All of those would have been reasonable and all of them would

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App