Drink and Dagger
last update2025-08-25 18:28:41

The safehouse is a pressure cooker, the air thick with suspicion after Lena’s bombshell about a traitor. My split lip stings, my arm’s still raw from the gym graze, and Lena’s avoiding my eyes, her fingers hammering her tablet like it’s the enemy. Her warning about the hidden message in Sophia’s call logs hangs over us like a guillotine. Evie’s pacing, her red gala dress swapped for jeans, her usual smirk gone. Marcus is cleaning his pistol, his scarred knuckles flexing, his silence louder than any argument. I’m trying to keep us together, but Dorian’s hack and the botched gym job have us rattled. We need to get that button camera off Crane’s coat before he notices it, and tonight’s our shot—a charity auction at the Grand Meridian, where Crane’s flaunting his wealth and his “unbreakable” vault.

“Plan’s simple,” I say, my voice steady despite the knot in my gut. “I spill a drink on Crane, swap the button while ‘cleaning’ it. Evie, you’re my eyes in the crowd. Marcus, cover the exits. Lena, run tech from the van.” Lena’s jaw clenches at Evie’s name, and I feel the weight of her jealousy from the gala. That moment on the couch last night—her lips, her heat—feels like a lifetime ago.

“Got it,” Lena mutters, her hazel eyes locked on her screen. “Crane’s coat is still transmitting. He’s at the Meridian now, schmoozing with the elite.” Her voice is all business, but there’s a tremble, like she’s holding back a storm. I want to fix this, but the clock’s ticking.

By 8 p.m., the Grand Meridian’s ballroom is a sea of tuxedos and gowns, chandeliers casting golden light over champagne flutes. I’m in a borrowed suit, feeling like a wolf in sheep’s clothing, my knife strapped to my ankle. Evie’s in a black dress that hugs her curves, her blonde hair swept up, already charming a tech mogul for cover. Marcus is at the back, disguised as security, his bulk blending with the hired muscle. Lena’s voice hums in my earpiece, guiding me through the crowd. “Crane’s by the stage,” she says. “Black tux, gold watch. Careful, Jax—he’s got two guards close.”

I spot him, Victor Crane, his silver hair gleaming, his sneer cutting through the room as he boasts to a cluster of investors. His coat’s on, the button camera still stitched in, feeding Lena his every move. I grab a glass of red wine from a passing tray, my pulse racing—not just from the job, but from the way Lena’s voice curls around my name. I weave through the crowd, my eyes locked on Crane, when a familiar face stops me cold. Dorian Black, in a tailored suit, his dark curls and smug smirk unmistakable, chatting up a woman by the bar. Lena.

My heart stumbles. She’s out of the van, in a sleek green dress, her auburn hair loose, laughing at something Dorian says. Her eyes flick to me, and there’s a challenge in them, like she’s daring me to care. Jealousy burns, hot and sharp, but I shove it down. “Lena, what the hell?” I hiss into the comms.

“Backup plan,” she snaps back, her voice low. “Dorian’s here. I’m keeping him busy.” Her words sting, but there’s no time to argue. Crane’s moving toward the stage, and I’ve got seconds to act.

I bump into him “accidentally,” the wine splashing across his coat. “Oh, shit, I’m sorry,” I say, playing drunk, grabbing a napkin and dabbing at his lapel. My fingers work fast, snipping the camera free, palming it into my pocket. Crane’s eyes narrow, his hand grabbing my wrist, and for a second, I think he’s onto me. “Watch yourself,” he growls, his voice like ice.

“Apologies, sir,” I mumble, slipping away as his guards close in. My heart’s a jackhammer, but the camera’s out. I’m halfway to the exit when the lights flicker, and an alarm screeches. Dorian. That bastard’s done something—rigged the system, maybe, to screw us over. The crowd panics, guards shouting, and I see Evie darting through the chaos, her cover blown.

“Jax, move!” Lena’s voice cuts through, but it’s not just panic—it’s fear. I spot her across the room, Dorian’s hand on her arm, his smirk gone, replaced by something darker. My blood boils, but before I can reach her, a guard tackles me, his fist slamming into my jaw. Pain explodes, my vision swimming, but I roll, kicking his knee out and grabbing my knife.

The ballroom’s a warzone—guests screaming, tables overturning, bullets flying as Crane’s security opens fire. Marcus is a blur, slamming a guard into a wall, while Evie’s dodging shots, her dress ripping as she dives behind a pillar. I fight my way to Lena, my knife flashing, cutting through a guard’s sleeve. She’s pulling away from Dorian, her tablet clutched tight, but he’s not letting go.

“Get off her!” I roar, tackling Dorian. We hit the floor, fists flying, his smug face twisting as I land a punch. He’s fast, slipping free, but not before I see Lena’s eyes—fear, anger, and something that makes my chest ache. She’s not just mad at Dorian; she’s mad at me.

“Jax, exit now!” Marcus bellows, dragging Evie toward a side door. I grab Lena’s hand, her skin warm despite the chaos, and we sprint through the gunfire. Bullets shred the chandeliers, glass raining down as we hit the stairwell, Marcus covering our rear. Lena’s breath is ragged, her hand tight in mine, and for a second, it’s just us, running, alive.

We spill into the alley, Lena’s van waiting, engine roaring. She dives into the driver’s seat, and I’m beside her, Marcus and Evie piling in back. The van screeches off, New Avalon’s neon blurring past, but my mind’s on Lena. Her eyes are stormy, her hands shaking on the wheel. “You okay?” I ask, my voice softer than I mean.

She doesn’t answer, just floors it. The silence is louder than the gunfire we left behind. Evie’s cursing in the back, Marcus grunting as he checks for wounds, but all I see is Lena—her jaw set, her lips tight. I want to pull her close, kiss away the tension, but Dorian’s words echo in my head: “Game’s just started, Jax.”

As we hit the safehouse, Lena slams her tablet down, the button camera’s feed still active, showing Crane’s coat discarded in the chaos. We got it out, but at what cost? She turns to me, her eyes blazing. “Dorian left you a note,” she says, tossing a crumpled paper my way. I unfold it, my blood running cold: The vault’s not what you think.

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  • The Decoy Drop

    The safehouse smelled of old coffee and stress. None of us had slept since Crane’s broadcast. His smirk had been burned into our retinas: a live demo of the vault in forty-eight hours. That meant he was dragging his secret into the spotlight, daring anyone—especially us—to stop him.Lena paced like a caged animal, her hair messy from hours in front of her screens. She jabbed at the holo-wall where schematics glowed. “We need to buy time. He thinks he controls the stage? Fine—we build him a fake one.”Marcus leaned against the counter, arms crossed, bulk filling the corner. “Fake heist? He’ll smell it.”“He doesn’t have to believe it,” I said, rubbing the grit from my eyes. “He just has to react. Panic him, scatter his men, pull eyes in the wrong direction. While he chases smoke, we get closer to the fire.”Evie stretched across the couch, legs swinging, a sly smile curling her lips. “So what’s the bait? You want Crane to think we’re stupid enough to hit one of his jewel depots?”“That

  • Heartbreak Hack

    The safe house was more silent than gunfire. Lights shone upon Lena’s face on screens, but her gaze was not on them—it was far away, drowned in the revelation that had just shattered her world.“Dorian,” she whispered again, as if saying his name aloud might make it less true. “Sophia’s lover… it’s him.”Marcus cursed under his breath and closed a drawer. “Should’ve guessed. Bastard’s everywhere.”I remained silent, observing Lena’s hands shaking. She’d spent years of her life constructing armor from steel made out of code and sarcasm and late-night coffee. Tonight that armor had split. It wasn’t anger — that would have been easier. She looked hurt.“Lena—” I started.“Don’t.” Her voice shook. “Don’t try to make it neat. I allowed myself… I convinced…” Her hand danced to her forehead. “I think he caught me once- Dorian that is. As not the hacker, as not just a tool. And all this time—Sophia.”Her laugh was thin, bitter. “Even bad guys have a type, I guess.”I covered the room before I

  • The Voice Clone

    The apartment shrank as the machines hummed hot, each fan spinning and monitor hurling green and red onto Lena’s pale skin. She hadn’t said anything in twenty minutes — just clicks, taps, code streaking like lightning. Marcus paced the furthest wall, nervously stomping his toes, while I braced myself against the counter and watched her grind herself to dust.Finally, Lena took off her headset and exhaled. “She speaks.”The speakers crackled. A smooth-as-silk woman’s voice flowed into the room: “Access granted. Welcome home.”Sophia.Or rather, Lena’s Sophia.For a moment, nobody breathed. Marcus whistled low. “Damn, that’s… uncanny.”“It’s decent,” Lena confessed, keeping an eye on the waveform spiking up and down across part of his screen. “Too good. The vault’s fail-safe checks tone, frequency, modulation/we’re golden. But—”She pressed another key. The voice played again, same words but this time a sharp stutter truncated the middle. “Access gra—nnn—ted. W-W-Welcome…”The room went

  • Evie’s Gambit

    They’d always said that fear smells the way hot metal and old cigarettes do. Now, standing on the roof with Lena and Marcus, watching the city breathe neon beneath us, I knew that I’d been wrong; fear had a sound, and it was only discovered one night when everything Adrian said flashed into static — the tinny chirp of a disposable phone cutting out mid-sentence; his voice expanding to fill every corner of the room that once never held him.Lena’s subterfuge arcade leaned the alley below in thermal blips and a dozen CCTV feeds, but the one she cared about was gnarled and jittery: It was a not-so-real-time feed from a cheap camera Dorian liked to wave around when he wanted to humiliate you. It showed Evie for three seconds, hands tied behind her back, hair loose and mascara smeared down her face before it cut out. For three seconds there was something in her face that did not belong — no panic, exactly. Something tight, practiced. I swallowed bile.“Where did he take her?” I asked, beca

  • Love and Lies

    The weak light of a single bulb threw shadows across the new safehouse, a run-down loft above New Avalon’s waterfront warehouses. The air felt thick with dust and the low hum of the city below. Lena was curled against me on a worn mattress, her red-brown hair spread over my chest, her breath warm on my skin. My ribs ached from the chase at the gala, and my shoulder stung from a bullet wound, but her touch – gentle, constant – pushed it all away. The tracker we'd found in her equipment last night, Dorian's secret control, had shaken her up, and I was holding her tight, like she was the only thing keeping me together. Her hazel eyes met mine, vulnerable yet strong, and I kissed her, slowly and deeply, tasting salt and worry. The vault's important information, Sophia's meeting with the President, Dorian's games – they were all still out there, but right now, it was just us, stealing a moment in a world that felt like it was falling apart."I'm scared, Jax," she whispered, her voice crack

  • Presidential Games

    We were in front of the Sapphire Pavilion, a fancy venue on the waterfront, hosting a charity event packed with the city's influential people – and Sophia Laurent, the key to unlocking the vault's voice-activated system. Dorian's video, showing her meeting with the President and hinting at a "delivery" and "global influence," made me uneasy. The vault wasn't just about valuables; it held a national secret, something important enough to involve the highest leader in the country. My ribs still ached from the skyscraper fire, and Lena's kiss in the fish market hideout lingered in my mind, but her silence since then, her avoiding my gaze, told me she was struggling with the possibility of a traitor in our midst. Evie watched me from the van, her blonde hair tied back, her smile sharp and knowing, while Marcus was on lookout, his bandaged shoulder tense, his PTSD a constant, inner battle. I was about to step into Sophia's world, and the situation had become incredibly dangerous."Jax, Soph

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