Elara’s POV
Clap.
Clap.
Clap.
My fists ca up before my brain caught up. Knuckles split and slick with blood that wasn’t mine. Legs shaking. Heart hamring so loud it nearly swallowed the sound of those slow, asured strikes of palm against palm.
"Stay back." My voice ca out raw. Scraped thin. But steady. "I an it."
The silhouette didn’t move. It just stood there at the mouth of the alley, hands still raised mid-clap, as casual as soone watching a street perforr.
Then a low chuckle. Male. Rich. Threaded with an accent I couldn’t place.
"Easy, sweetheart." The voice was unhurried. Almost amused. "If I wanted to hurt you, I wouldn’t have announced myself."
"People who an no harm don’t lurk in dark alleys."
"Fair point." Another chuckle. "But then again, people who an no harm don’t usually shatter a man’s nose with a textbook knee strike either."
The figure stepped forward. One step. Two. Moving out of the deep shadow and into the thin wash of light that bled from a window sowhere above.
He was tall. Lean. Wearing a long dark coat with the collar turned up and a hood that cast the upper half of his face into darkness. When he reached up and pushed the hood back, black hair fell across his forehead. Sharp jaw. High cheekbones. A face that was striking in the way a blade was striking—all angles, no softness.
His eyes caught the light. Pale. Almost silver. They swept over with the detached precision of soone appraising livestock at market.
I didn’t lower my fists.
"How long were you standing there?"
"Long enough." He stopped a few paces away. Close enough to talk. Far enough that I wouldn’t have to swing. Smart. "Saw the whole thing. The setup. The chase. The—" He gestured loosely at the blood on the cobblestones. "Resolution."
My stomach turned. He’d watched the entire thing. Watched that man corner . Pin . And he’d done nothing.
"You watched," I said. "And you didn’t help."
"Didn’t look like you needed it."
The words landed like a slap. Not because they were cruel. Because they were true.
He reached into his coat. I tensed. My weight shifted to the balls of my feet. Ready to bolt. Ready to fight. Ready for whatever ca next because the night had already proven it could always get worse.
But what he pulled out was a small white card.
He held it between two fingers, arm extended toward the way soone might offer a treat to a stray dog. Carefully. Without sudden movent.
"Take it."
I didn’t move.
He sighed. Then he bent and set the card on the ground between us. Straightened. Took a step back.
"My na is Zane Thorne," he said. "And I have a business proposition for you."
I stared at the card on the filthy cobblestones. In the dim light, I could make out the text. Clean black letters on white stock.
Zane Thorne. Talent Acquisition.
No address. No title. No crest.
"Talent acquisition," I repeated flatly.
"That’s right."
"You’re a recruiter."
"Of a sort." He slid his hands into his coat pockets. Relaxed. Conversational. Like we were chatting over tea instead of standing in a blood-spattered alley at this hour. "I find people with very specific skill sets and connect them with opportunities that match those skills. Lucrative opportunities."
"I’m not interested."
"You haven’t heard the offer."
"Don’t need to. Whatever you’re selling—"
"That knee strike," he interrupted. Not loudly. Just firmly enough to cut through my refusal. "The one you drove into his groin. That wasn’t panic. That wasn’t flailing. You waited. You went limp first. Let him think he’d won. Then you targeted the nerve cluster with surgical precision." His pale eyes narrowed. "And the sweep. You hooked his ankle, destabilized his base, and let gravity do the rest. That’s not luck. That’s training."
The air in my lungs turned solid.
"It was survival instinct," I said. Too quickly. "Adrenaline. Nothing more."
"Sweetheart." His mouth curved. Not quite a smile. Sothing sharper. "I’ve been scouting for underground fight rings for fifteen years. I know the difference between a desperate woman throwing wild punches and a fighter executing a rehearsed sequence. What you did to that man was the latter."
My jaw locked. I forced my breathing to stay even. Forced my expression to stay flat.
"You’re wrong."
"I’m not." He said it without arrogance. Just certainty. The certainty of soone who had seen enough violence to know its grammar. "Where did you train? Military? Private security? One of the rcenary guilds?"
Panic flared hot in my chest. He was too perceptive. I couldn’t let him—or anyone in this brutal mortal underworld—know that my lethal precision had been secretly forged in the Imperial Knight Training Grounds. If my ties to the supernatural and the Empire were exposed here, the consequences would be catastrophic.
"I didn’t train anywhere," I lied, forcing my voice to stay steady. "I fought back and got lucky."
"Lucky people don’t throw sweeps like that."
"This one does."
He studied for a long mont. Those silver eyes moved from my face to my bloody hands to the ruined canvas sack on the ground. The crushed bread. The cracked jar leaking dark preserves across the stones. My ager rations of instant noodles, still intact, resting in the ss like a sad reminder of how I survived.
His expression shifted. Just slightly. The predatory appraisal softened into sothing that might have been understanding. Or pity. I couldn’t tell which, and I hated both options equally.
"Those noodles," he said. "That’s dinner?"
"That’s none of your business."
"How many nights a week do you eat like that?"
I said nothing.
He nodded slowly. As if my silence had answered him more honestly than my words ever could.
"Here’s what I know," he said. "I know you’re broke. I know you’re alone. I know you’ve got skills you’re pretending not to have, and I know that whatever put you in this alley buying bargain noodles in a bad part of the city isn’t going to fix itself."
Each sentence landed with the quiet force of a hamr tapping a nail. Precise. Unhurried. Driving the point deeper with every word.
"I run fighters," he continued. "Private matches. Underground. High-stakes. The kind of events where the purse for a single bout could cover your rent for months."
My stomach clenched. Not from disgust. From sothing worse.
Interest.
"I’m not a fighter," I said.
"You just proved that you are." He nodded toward the blood on the cobblestones. "That man outweighed you by a significant amount. He had reach, mass, and position. And you dismantled him in seconds. That’s not just talent, sweetheart. That’s a commodity."
The word sat between us like a thing with teeth.
Commodity.
"What I’m offering," he said, "is simple. You co train with . I turn what you already know into sothing refined. Polished. A killing machine, if we’re being honest." He paused. Let that land. "And in return, you fight. You win. You get paid. Enough to eat real food. Enough to sleep behind a locked door without wondering if you can afford it."
I picked up the card from the ground. The stock was thick. Expensive. The kind of paper that cost more than everything in my ruined grocery sack combined.
Zane Thorne. Talent Acquisition.
"Why ?" I asked. "You could recruit anyone."
"I don’t want anyone. I want soone with your instincts. Your composure. That thing you did—going limp, letting him believe he’d won—most trained fighters can’t pull that off under real pressure. You did it with a stranger’s hand over your mouth in a dark alley. That’s not teachable."
I turned the card over. The back was blank.
"Think about it," he said. He pulled his hood back up. His face disappeared into shadow again. "You know where to reach ."
He turned toward the alley’s entrance. Took a few steps. Then stopped.
"One more thing, sweetheart." He glanced back over his shoulder. The faint light caught the edge of his jaw, the ghost of that sharp, not-quite-smile. "If you send word to , I promise you sothing."
He let the pause stretch. Deliberate. asured. The sa way his applause had been asured.
"You will never have to be afraid of a man like him again."
Then he walked into the dark, and the alley swallowed him whole.
I sat on the cold cobblestones with blood drying on my knuckles and a white card pressed between my fingers, staring at the space where he’d been.
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