[Jake’s POV continued]
Richard Bellamy moved fast for a man who probably believed exercise was sothing poor people did because they could not afford private drivers. He slipped through the corridor beside the east gallery with his phone pressed to his ear, his shoulders stiff beneath his tailored navy suit. He did not look back. That was his first mistake. n who believed they were being hunted always looked back. n who believed they were escaping consequences kept their eyes forward.
I followed at a steady pace, keeping enough distance between us that the museum staff would not imdiately notice the chase. Around us, the Harrington Museum continued pretending to be civilized. Elderly donors studied paintings they did not understand. Waiters moved with silver trays. A curator with wire-frad glasses explained a marble bust to a woman who clearly wanted to be anywhere else. Nobody scread. Nobody ran. That made the whole thing feel more dangerous.
Claire’s voice ca through my comm, calm but tight. "He is heading toward the east service exit. If he reaches the side street, his driver can pull up within thirty seconds."
"Does he have security?"
"Not visible. But he made a call the mont he left the dining room."
"Who did he call?"
"I’m checking."
Ethan’s voice cut in, rough with pain. "I can get around to the east doors."
"No, you can’t."
"I am already moving."
"Ethan."
"What? I’m walking. Walking is allowed."
I passed a glass case filled with silver ceremonial knives and almost smiled. Of course the museum had weapons on display while pretending not to be violent. Rich people loved violence as long as it was old enough to be called heritage.
Richard reached the end of the corridor and pushed through a staff-only door without hesitation.
That was interesting.
A guest did not know which museum doors led to service corridors unless soone had told him ahead of ti.
I followed him through.
The air changed imdiately. The polished perfu and old wood of the museum disappeared, replaced by cleaning chemicals, concrete, and the dull hum of ventilation. The corridor behind the gallery was narrow and badly lit, with stacked crates along one wall and frad paintings wrapped in protective cloth.
Richard was twenty feet ahead of .
He finally looked back.
His face went pale.
"Mr. Hart," he said, lowering the phone from his ear. "This is a restricted area."
"So is leaking internal security schedules," I said.
He froze.
Only for half a second.
Then he ran.
For a man in Italian leather shoes, he had a decent burst of speed. He bolted down the corridor, shoulder-checking a startled museum worker carrying a crate of catalogues. The man cursed as the papers scattered across the floor. Richard did not stop. He reached a tal stairwell door and shoved it open, disappearing into the concrete steps beyond.
The System appeared.
[Ding!]
[Optional Objective Generated!]
Objective: Stop Richard Bellamy without causing a public scene.]
Reward: Mission Progress 10%]
Penalty: Host will trip slightly during next dramatic entrance.]
I stared at the screen while walking faster.
"Not now," I muttered.
[Penalty Applied!]
Reason: Host complained during active mission.]
Penalty: Mild calf cramp.]
My left calf tightened imdiately.
I almost swore.
Instead, I pushed through the stairwell door and followed Richard down. He was already one flight below, breathing hard, one hand gripping the railing as he descended toward the service level. His polished shoes slapped against the concrete steps. Mine followed slower, controlled, because if I sprinted with the calf cramp the System had gifted , I would probably tumble down the stairs and turn the entire operation into a dical cody.
"Richard," I called down. "Running makes you look guilty."
He did not stop.
"It also makes you sweat through expensive tailoring."
Still nothing.
Claire’s voice sharpened in my ear. "His call connected to a blocked number routed through a Swiss relay. I can’t identify it yet, but the encryption signature matches one of Isabella’s courier channels from Zurich."
"Good."
"Good?"
"It ans he panicked in the correct direction."
I reached the second landing just as Richard shoved through another door into the museum’s delivery bay. Cold air rushed in from outside. A white service van was parked near the loading dock, its rear doors open, engine running. Two museum workers stood beside it, staring in confusion as Richard hurried toward them.
He was not heading for his own car.
He was heading for a pickup.
That ant Isabella’s people had already prepared extraction.
The driver of the van stepped out.
He was not a museum employee.
Too still. Too broad. Right hand inside his jacket.
I stopped at the edge of the doorway.
Richard saw the van and looked relieved.
The driver looked at and did not.
"Claire," I said quietly. "Tell museum security there is an unauthorized vehicle in the loading bay."
"Already doing it."
The driver moved first.
His hand ca out of his jacket holding a compact pistol with a suppressor attached.
The old would have seen the attack a second before it happened through Oracle. The new only saw the shoulder shift, the wrist angle, the way his feet planted.
It was enough.
I grabbed a tal rolling cart beside the door and shoved it hard down the ramp. The cart slamd into the driver’s knees just as he raised the gun. His first shot went wide, cracking into the concrete wall behind with a muted snap. The museum workers scread and dropped behind a crate.
Richard shouted sothing I did not hear.
I moved.
Not gracefully. Not with perfect prediction. My calf still hurt, my body was tired, and my right shoulder pulled sharply as I closed the distance. But I had spent two years surviving n who wanted dead in worse places than a museum loading bay. The driver recovered fast, lifting the gun again, but I was already inside his reach.
I caught his wrist with both hands and drove it upward. The second shot cracked into the ceiling. Plaster dust rained down. I twisted his arm hard enough to make him grunt, then drove my knee into his stomach. He folded, but not enough. He was trained. He slamd his forehead into my cheek, and pain burst across my face.
For a second, the world flashed white.
No Oracle.
No warning.
Just pain.
The driver tried to bring the gun back down.
I headbutted him back.
It was not elegant. Darius would have hated it. Ethan would have called it desperate. It worked anyway.
The man staggered. I wrenched the pistol from his hand and slamd the butt of it into his temple. He collapsed against the side of the van and slid to the floor.
I stood over him, breathing harder than I wanted to admit.
The System chid.
[Optional Objective Complete!]
Reward: Mission Progress 10%]
Penalty Avoided: Public scene.]
A museum worker scread again.
The loading bay alarm started wailing.
Another screen appeared.
[Correction: Public scene partially created.]
[Penalty Applied!]
Penalty: Host will trip slightly during next dramatic entrance.]
I stared at the screen.
"Unbelievable."
Richard tried to run past the van.
He did not get far.
Ethan stepped into the loading bay from the side entrance, one hand pressed to his ribs and the other holding his Glock low at his side. His face was pale, his jaw tight, and he looked like walking had beco a personal insult. But the gun in his hand was steady.
"Hi, Richard," Ethan said. "Bad ti?"
Richard stopped so abruptly he nearly slipped.
I looked at Ethan. "I told you to stay put."
"I walked."
"You have cracked ribs."
"And a positive attitude."
"You look like death."
"So do you."
The museum alarm continued blaring.
Claire appeared behind Ethan a few seconds later, moving quickly in her dark blazer, her tablet in one hand and irritation on her face. She looked at the unconscious driver, the pistol in my hand, Richard’s terrified expression, and then .
"You said quiet," she said.
"I was quiet. He brought a gun."
"That is becoming a pattern around you."
"I inspire strong feelings."
Richard backed toward the van, hands raised. "You have no idea what you are doing."
I turned to him.
His voice was shaking now. The boardroom polish was gone. The cautious executive had collapsed, and underneath was a frightened man who had made a deal with sothing he could not control.
"I know exactly what I’m doing," I said. "The question is whether you do."
Richard swallowed. "If you touch , Isabella will destroy my family."
Marianne’s voice ca from behind .
"No, Richard. You did that."
I turned.
She stood at the top of the loading ramp, one hand gripping the railing, her face pale but composed. Her coat moved slightly in the cold wind blowing in from the open bay. She had followed us. Of course she had. Won like Marianne Bellamy did not survive eighteen years beside weak n by waiting in dining rooms while their lives fell apart in corridors.
Richard’s face crumpled. "Marianne, you shouldn’t be here."
"That seems to be your favorite way to speak to lately."
"This is not what it looks like."
She walked down the ramp slowly, her eyes moving from the unconscious driver to the gun in my hand, then back to her husband. "It looks like you ran from a charity lunch into a service bay where a man with a gun was waiting to collect you."
Richard opened his mouth.
Nothing ca out.
Marianne stopped a few feet away from him. "Who is she?"
Richard looked away.
Marianne’s voice sharpened. "Who is she, Richard?"
He flinched.
There it was.
Not fear of .
Fear of her.
That was useful.
Claire stepped closer to Marianne, her voice gentle but firm. "Mrs. Bellamy, we need to move. Museum security is coming, and so are police. We can explain so of this, but not all of it."
Marianne did not look at Claire. Her eyes stayed on Richard.
"Was she the one who called you at night?" she asked. "The one you took into the guest wing? The one who made you afraid every ti Jake Hart’s na appeared on the news?"
Richard’s shoulders slumped.
"Yes," he whispered.
The System chid.
[Mission Progress: 66%]
[Target Trust Increased.]
[Target Spouse Integrity: Collapsing.]
System Comnt: Marriage counseling not included.]
I ignored it.
Marianne looked at then.
There was no flirtation in her expression. No seduction. No softening. Only a woman standing in the ruins of a lie, deciding how much of herself she was willing to save.
"Can you protect my children?" she asked.
"Yes."
I answered too quickly.
Claire looked at .
Ethan did too.
But I did not correct myself.
Marianne nodded once, as if that was the only answer that mattered. Then she turned back to Richard.
"You are going to tell him everything."
Richard shook his head. "You don’t understand. She has docunts. Accounts. Our trust structure. The children’s school records. If I talk, she will—"
Marianne slapped him.
The crack echoed through the loading bay.
Everyone went still.
Richard stared at her, stunned.
Marianne’s hand trembled, but her voice did not.
"You brought that woman into our ho."
He looked like he wanted to disappear.
Sirens sounded in the distance.
Not close yet.
But coming.
Claire moved beside . "Jake, we have maybe three minutes."
I nodded and looked at Richard. "Start with the call."
Richard swallowed, one hand touching his reddened cheek. "It was not Isabella directly."
"Na."
"I never got one."
"Richard."
"I swear," he said quickly. "It was always through a woman. French accent. Maybe Swiss. She called herself Margot."
Claire’s eyes narrowed. "Margot?"
Marianne frowned. "That was the na in your phone?"
Richard looked at her, horrified. "You checked my phone?"
She almost laughed. It was not a pleasant sound. "You were whispering in the guest wing and hiding bank papers in the piano bench. Of course I checked your phone."
Even Ethan looked impressed.
Richard sagged against the side of the van. "Margot sent the audit firm recomndation. She said if I pushed it through quietly, nothing would happen. If I refused, the trust would be exposed. The children’s accounts. The offshore structure my father set up. Everything."
I looked at Claire.
She was already typing.
"Offshore structure?" I asked.
Richard closed his eyes. "Bellamy family money. Old money. Untaxed money. Illegal money if soone wanted to be cruel about it."
Evelyn would love that.
I almost smiled.
Then the System chid.
[Ding!]
[Intelligence Fragnt Acquired.]
Fragnt: Margot / Swiss-French interdiary / Audit Firm Pressure Route.]
Reward: Intelligence Fragnt 1/3.]
Mission Progress: 78%]
Good.
Finally.
Then another notification appeared.
[Penalty Applied!]
Reason: Host felt smug before mission completion.]
Penalty: Sudden sneeze within 60 seconds.]
I stared at it.
"No."
Claire looked up. "What?"
I sneezed.
The loading bay went silent for half a second.
Ethan stared at . "Did you just sneeze at a hostage confession?"
"Allergies."
"To what?" Claire asked.
"Arugula."
Marianne looked confused.
Richard looked terrified, which was fair.
The first museum security guard appeared at the far corridor door, radio in hand, shouting for everyone to stop. Two more guards followed him, eyes widening at the unconscious driver and the weapon on the floor.
Claire imdiately stepped forward, Vanguard authority settling over her like armor.
"This man attempted to draw a firearm inside your loading bay," she said, pointing toward the unconscious driver. "Call your director, lock down the east service entrance, and preserve all security footage. Mr. Hart will provide a statent through counsel."
The guard hesitated.
Claire’s voice hardened. "Now."
He moved.
I looked at Marianne. "You need to co with us."
Richard pushed off the van. "No. Absolutely not. She is not going anywhere with you."
Marianne did not even look at him. "I am going wherever my children are safest."
Richard’s face twisted with desperation. "Marianne, please."
She turned to him then, and for the first ti since I t her, all the softness left her face.
"You should have said that before you sold us."
That finished him.
Richard looked down.
Claire stepped beside Marianne. "We can move you through the private exit. Ethan, can you walk?"
Ethan straightened, offended. "I have been walking this entire ti."
"You have been leaning dramatically near exits."
"I add atmosphere."
I handed the driver’s pistol to Claire grip-first. She took it with a look that told we would be discussing my choices later. I was getting that look a lot lately.
We moved fast.
Museum security was busy trying to understand whether they were dealing with a wealthy donor incident, a criminal attack, or the return of a man most of them had probably assud was dead. Claire used that confusion like a key. Within ninety seconds, Marianne was in the back of our car, Richard was seated beside Ethan under silent threat, and I was lowering myself into the opposite seat while my calf finally stopped cramping.
The car pulled away from the museum just as the first police vehicles arrived at the main entrance.
Marianne sat very still, hands folded in her lap.
Richard looked like a man being driven to his own funeral.
Ethan kept one hand inside his jacket, watching him.
Claire sat beside Marianne, tablet open, already arranging protection for the Bellamy children.
I looked at Richard.
"Where are the docunts?"
He swallowed. "My townhouse."
Claire glanced up. "The piano bench?"
Marianne answered before he could. "No. That was where he kept the decoy papers. The real files are in the wine cellar."
Richard stared at her.
She looked back coldly. "You are not as clever as you think."
Ethan smiled faintly. "I like her."
Richard looked like he might faint.
I leaned back against the seat, studying Marianne. The mission had started as a simple contact. A board mber’s wife. A social door. But Marianne Bellamy was not just a door anymore. She was the person inside the house who had seen the rot before anyone else admitted there was a sll.
The System appeared.
[Mission Complete!]
Mission: Open the Door
Objective: Initiate aningful contact with Marianne Bellamy.]
Reward: Intelligence Fragnt.]
Penalty Avoided: Host will stutter during introductions for 12 hours.]
Bonus Reward: Target Cooperation Secured.]
Mission Progress: 100%]
I let out a slow breath.
Then another line appeared.
[New Mission Chain Unlocked!]
Mission Chain: The Bellamy Thread
Objective: Follow the fear back to Isabella’s interdiary.]
Current Lead: Margot.]
Reward: Access to Compromised Board Network.]
Penalty: To be determined.]
I hated those words.
Marianne looked at . "Mr. Hart."
"Jake."
Her eyes held mine.
"If I help you, you protect my children first. Not your company. Not your reputation. Not your war with Isabella."
I did not hesitate.
"First."
Claire looked at again.
This ti, the look was different.
Not suspicion.
Sothing softer.
Sothing that hurt more.
Richard’s voice broke from the other side of the car. "She will co for us."
I looked out the window as the museum disappeared behind us.
"No," I said. "She already did."
The city moved past in cold gray lines of glass and stone. Sowhere behind those windows, Isabella’s people were watching channels go dark and wondering why Richard Bellamy had not reached the extraction van. Sowhere, a woman calling herself Margot would realize the first thread had been pulled.
I smiled faintly.
Just a frightened husband, an angry wife, and a na.
Back to basics.
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