[Jake’s POV]
The Lennox Club was the kind of place that did not need a sign. It sat on the upper floors of a restored pre-war building near Madison Avenue, hidden behind a private elevator, a bored doorman, and enough old money arrogance to make the air feel taxed. n like Richard Bellamy did not go there to enjoy themselves. They went there to feel safe while making decisions that ruined people who would never be invited inside.
Victoria’s file said the club had been founded by railroad heirs, shipping families, and bankers who thought democracy was a temporary inconvenience. It had no public website, no social dia presence, and no listed mbership committee. The only photographs online were from charity galas where the background had been carefully blurred. That was how you knew the place mattered. Anything rich people truly valued, they hid.
I stood across the street in the back of a black SUV, watching the front entrance through the tinted window. Ethan sat beside with a fresh bandage beneath his shirt and a cup of soup in one hand because Nia had apparently decided he was not allowed solid food until he stopped bleeding through expensive furniture. He looked offended by the soup, which was probably why I enjoyed seeing him hold it.
"This place looks boring," he said.
"That ans soone inside is doing cris."
"That your professional assessnt?"
"Rich people only make rooms this quiet when they are hiding sothing."
Ethan glanced at the entrance as a gray-haired man in a cal coat disappeared through the doors. "You know, before I t you, I thought private clubs were just places old n drank whiskey and complained about taxes."
"They are."
"And cris?"
"Those are usually after dessert."
Claire was in the passenger seat, tablet in hand, already tracking movent patterns from three separate street caras Nia had patched into without asking permission from whatever governnt agency technically owned them. Her hair was pulled back, her face calm, but I could see the tightness around her eyes. She had not slept enough. None of us had. The only person who seed energized by this was Nia, and that was because she had been awake for so long her body had probably mistaken exhaustion for personality.
"Procurent director just arrived," Claire said. "Martin Hale. No relation to Margaret, unfortunately for everyone who enjoys irony."
Ethan leaned forward. "Which one?"
"Blue coat, red scarf, nervous walk."
I saw him imdiately. Martin Hale was in his early fifties, thin, balding, and carrying a leather briefcase like it contained either state secrets or lunch he was ashad of. He checked the street twice before entering. Not professional. Just scared.
"Bought or threatened?" Ethan asked.
"Threatened," I said.
Claire looked back at . "You sound sure."
"He looked at the street before he looked at the door. Bought n check who might see them. Threatened n check who might follow them."
Ethan stared at Martin as he disappeared inside. "That is disturbingly useful."
"It is also why you keep losing at poker."
"I lose at poker because Nia cheats."
"She calls it probability managent."
"She has a laptop."
A blue screen flickered in front of .
[Ding!]
[Mission Update!]
Mission: The Woman in Gloves
Objective: Identify Margot’s pressure route through the Lennox Club.]
Reward: Compromised Board Network Access.]
Penalty: Host will develop mild hiccups during next flirtatious conversation.]
Another line appeared beneath it.
[Side Objective: Do not insult the club décor.]
Penalty: Temporary inability to sit comfortably in leather chairs.]
I stared at the screen.
The System knew too well.
"Face," Ethan said.
I looked at him. "Say stupid strategy face and I will pour that soup on you."
He pulled the cup protectively closer. "This soup has been through enough."
Claire’s mouth twitched, but she kept her eyes on the tablet. "Second target arrived. Aldridge legal scheduler, Elena Markham."
My attention sharpened.
Elena Markham stepped out of a silver town car, dressed in a black coat and low heels, her dark hair pulled into a tight bun. She looked composed, but she kept one hand pressed to the side of her handbag the entire ti she walked. Not guarding a weapon. Guarding a phone. Or a recorder. Or a ssage she was terrified would appear.
"She works for Aldridge," Claire said quietly. "Mid-level legal logistics. Access to eting windows, contract signings, travel schedules."
"Sofia’s side," I murmured.
The na sat between us for a second.
Claire did not look at .
Neither did Ethan.
No one in the car said what we were all thinking. Sofia had gone silent. Aldridge Enterprises was moving on ergency instructions, but nobody had spoken to her directly. Elena Markham being pressured ant Isabella was reaching into Sofia’s house too.
And I was not there to stop it.
I forced the thought down.
The third target arrived five minutes later.
Aether Capital’s dormant account manager, Simon Vale, looked the least afraid of the three, which made him the most suspicious. He was younger, maybe late thirties, with perfect hair, a navy suit, and the relaxed walk of a man who had practiced looking important in mirrors. He did not check the street. He did not look over his shoulder. He just adjusted his cufflinks and entered the club like he belonged there.
"Bought," I said.
Ethan nodded. "Even I saw that one."
"Good. Progress."
"Do I get a reward?"
"No."
The System chid.
[Ding!]
[Optional Objective: Encourage ally growth.]
Reward: None.]
Penalty: Host will feel vaguely guilty.]
I ignored it.
A second later, a mild wave of guilt hit .
I sighed. "You are improving, Ethan."
He turned slowly. "Did Nia put you up to that?"
"No."
"That felt painful for both of us."
"It was."
Claire looked at like she was deciding whether to ask a question she already knew I would not answer. Then she looked back at the tablet. "All three are inside. Marianne is ready."
A second SUV was parked one block behind us. Marianne Bellamy sat inside it with Victoria, wearing a dark green dress, a cream coat, and the kind of calm expression won wore when they had decided fear was no longer useful. Her role was simple. She would call one of the trustee wives connected to the Lennox Club and let just enough panic enter her voice to suggest she was reviewing charity transfers after finding irregularities. If Margot was watching, she would hear.
If Margot was careful, she would send soone.
If she was arrogant, she would co herself.
Nia’s voice crackled through the comm. "Marianne’s call starts in thirty seconds. Try not to breathe dramatically, Jake."
"I do not breathe dramatically."
Ethan raised his soup. "You absolutely do."
Claire said, "Ten seconds."
I watched the club entrance.
The city moved around us like nothing important was happening. A delivery cyclist cut through traffic. A woman in a red coat walked a tiny dog that looked more expensive than most apartnts. A cab honked at another cab because apparently civilization required rituals.
Then Marianne made the call.
We did not hear her words, only Claire’s live transcript as it appeared across the tablet.
Concerned about foundation irregularities.
Need advice before involving counsel.
Richard unavailable.
Afraid this may touch European donors.
I watched the club.
Nothing happened for almost two minutes.
Then Martin Hale ca back outside.
He was moving too fast.
Claire’s eyes narrowed. "He received a ssage."
Martin stepped onto the sidewalk, phone pressed to his ear, face pale. He turned left, walking quickly toward a narrow side street beside the building.
"Stay here," I said.
Ethan imdiately opened his door.
I looked at him. "That ans you."
He froze. "I hate that you clarified."
"You have cracked ribs."
"You keep bringing that up."
"They keep being cracked."
Claire looked at . "Jake, no heroics."
"I am going to have a conversation with a frightened procurent director in an alley behind a club full of cowards. That barely qualifies as exercise."
"That sounds exactly like sothing said before getting shot."
"Noted."
I stepped out of the SUV and crossed the street without rushing. The cold air cut through my coat as I followed Martin Hale around the corner. He was halfway down the side street now, pacing near a service entrance, whispering harshly into his phone.
"I told you, she knows sothing," he said. "No, I don’t know how much. Bellamy is gone. Richard is gone, and now his wife is asking questions."
I stopped ten feet behind him.
Martin turned and saw .
The phone almost slipped from his hand.
"Mr. Hart," he breathed.
I smiled. "Martin."
"I... I didn’t know you were back."
"That seems to be a popular sentence today."
His eyes darted toward the street. "I should go."
"You should hang up first."
His face went white.
The voice on the phone beca faintly audible. Female. Calm. French accent.
"Martin?" the woman said. "Who is there?"
I held out my hand.
Martin stared at like I had offered him a snake.
"Give the phone," I said.
He shook his head. "I can’t."
"You can."
"She’ll ruin ."
"She already has."
That broke sothing in him.
His hand trembled as he slowly gave the phone.
I lifted it to my ear.
For a mont, neither of us spoke.
Then the woman on the other end said softly, "Mr. Hart."
Margot.
Her voice was smooth, elegant, and cold enough to make the winter air feel warm.
I looked at Martin, who stood shaking in front of like a man waiting for a sentence.
"Margot Delacroix," I said. "I was starting to feel neglected."
A soft laugh ca through the phone. "You should not involve yourself with frightened wives and weak n. It makes you look smaller than the stories."
"The stories are usually written by people who weren’t in the room."
"And yet here you are, chasing clerks through alleys."
"Everyone has hobbies."
There was a pause.
"You are not what I expected," she said.
"I get that a lot."
"No," Margot said. "I an you sound tired."
That landed closer than I liked.
I looked at the club’s rear entrance. A shadow moved behind the frosted glass. Soone inside was watching.
"Two years away will do that."
"Isabella thought you would co back angry."
"She thinks about too much."
"She thinks about threats."
"Then she should look closer to ho."
Margot went silent for half a second.
Good.
I had touched sothing.
Behind , Claire’s voice ca through the comm, low and urgent. "Jake, two n just exited the club through the side entrance. Ard posture."
I kept my face calm.
Margot spoke again. "You are standing in a bad place, Mr. Hart."
"I have been in worse."
"Yes," she said softly. "We know."
The side door opened.
Two n stepped into the alley.
Both in dark coats. Both moving too cleanly.
Martin saw them and panicked. "No, wait, I did what she asked—"
The first man reached inside his coat.
I threw the phone at his face.
It hit him just as his hand ca up, buying half a second. I grabbed Martin by the collar and shoved him hard behind a parked delivery truck as the first suppressed shot cracked into the brick wall beside my head.
Martin scread.
I dropped low, grabbed an empty glass bottle from a trash bin, and hurled it into the second man’s face. It shattered across his nose. He staggered back, cursing. The first man recovered and raised his gun again.
A black SUV screeched into the mouth of the alley.
The rear window rolled down.
Ethan leaned out with his Glock in both hands.
"Duck," he shouted.
I ducked.
Ethan fired twice.
The first shooter dropped behind a stack of crates. The second man stumbled toward the side door, blood running down his face.
Darius ca out of the SUV before it had fully stopped.
That ended the fight.
He moved like a door being kicked open by God. The second shooter tried to raise his weapon, but Darius crossed the distance, caught his wrist, broke it with a sharp twist, and drove him face-first into the brick wall. The man collapsed without a sound.
The first shooter looked at Darius.
Then at Ethan.
Then at .
He made the only smart decision of his career and ran through the side door back into the club.
Darius looked at . "Conversation?"
I adjusted my coat. "Productive."
Ethan lowered the gun, wincing. "I thought you said no heroics."
"That was before I was ambushed."
"That is always your excuse."
Martin Hale was curled behind the delivery truck, shaking so hard his teeth clicked together.
I crouched in front of him.
He flinched.
"I didn’t know they would kill ," he whispered.
"Yes, you did."
He shook his head violently. "No. They said if I cooperated, I would be safe."
"Martin," I said quietly. "n like you are never safe. You are useful, then you are evidence."
Tears gathered in his eyes.
That was good.
Fear made n stupid. Terror made them honest.
"Who else?" I asked.
He swallowed. "Markham. Vale. Bellamy. Others. I don’t know all of them."
"How many?"
"Maybe twelve."
Claire stepped into the alley behind , tablet in hand, eyes sharp. "Nas."
Martin looked at her, then at .
"If I tell you, my family—"
"Will be protected," I said.
"You promise?"
"Yes."
The System appeared.
[Ding!]
[Mission Progress: 48%]
Target Martin Hale: Broken.]
Reward Pending.]
Penalty Warning: If Host lies about protection, severe penalty will apply.]
I stared at the last line.
For once, the System sounded serious.
I looked back at Martin.
"I promise," I said again.
This ti, I ant every word.
Martin lowered his head and began to talk.
By the ti he finished, Claire had seven new nas, two private dinner locations, three shell routes, and one phrase that kept appearing in Margot’s ssages.
The Winter Table.
When Martin said it, Claire went very still.
"What?" I asked.
She looked up from the tablet.
"The Winter Table is not a company," she said. "It’s a private social circle. Wives, donors, mistresses, retired judges, foundation chairs. The kind of won n like Richard Bellamy underestimate."
I looked toward the club doors.
Sowhere inside, Margot Delacroix had just learned I was back in the ga.
Not as a ghost.
Not as a myth.
As a man willing to chase frightened clerks into alleys and pull the whole room apart by its loose threads.
The System chid.
[Ding!]
[New Mission Chain Unlocked!]
Mission Chain: The Winter Table.]
Objective: Enter the social circle behind Isabella’s pressure network.]
Reward: Access to hidden influence routes.]
Penalty: To be determined.]
I smiled faintly.
There it was.
The real room.
The one behind the boardroom.
The one nobody secured because nobody respected it enough to fear it.
I turned to Claire. "Find an invitation."
She looked at like she already hated the answer.
"You are going to hate the guest list."
"I usually do."
Ethan climbed carefully out of the SUV, one hand on his ribs. "Can I vote against whatever this is?"
"No."
"Great. Democracy is dead again."
Darius dragged the unconscious shooter toward the SUV like he weighed nothing. "We need to move."
Martin looked at the body, then at . "What happens to ?"
"You get to live," I said. "That is already more than Margot planned."
He started crying then.
Quietly.
Pathetically.
Honestly.
I did not pity him, not yet. But I understood fear. Fear made people sell pieces of themselves and call it survival. Isabella had built half her network on that simple truth.
We would build ours on sothing better.
Or at least sothing more useful.
As we left the alley, the System flashed one last ssage.
[Penalty Applied!]
Reason: Host sounded inspirational without proper authorization.]
Penalty: Mild hiccups for 10 minutes.]
I hiccupped once.
Claire stopped walking and slowly turned to .
Ethan stared.
Darius said nothing, which sohow made it worse.
I cleared my throat.
"Do not," I warned.
Ethan raised both hands. "I said nothing."
Claire’s mouth twitched despite herself.
I walked toward the SUV with as much dignity as a man with supernatural hiccups could manage.
The Winter Table was next.
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