Page 143 of Fractured Loyalties

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“Still good at hiding,” he says. Voice barely above a whisper. Close enough to hum through the wall.

I say nothing. Let silence do what bullets can’t.

“You ever wonder,” he continues, “why she stays so quiet when you leave? Why she never really asks where you’re going?”

I step toward the wall and press the hilt of my blade against a seam I feel under my fingertips.

“She doesn’t ask,” I murmur, “because she already knows.”

A pause.

Then metal groans.

The wall fractures inward.

And I see him.

Standing just inside a split alcove behind the glass wall, shadow-drenched. Pale. Not thin. But precise. Like he carved away every part of himself that didn’t serve a purpose.

“Elias,” he says, and it sounds like a memory that never belonged to either of us.

I step in.

He doesn’t move.

Only his eyes track me.

“You’re not going to shoot me,” he says.

“Why not?”

“Because you want answers.”

I tilt my head. “Then start talking.”

I don’t lower my blade. He doesn’t flinch.

Vale exhales like he’s been waiting years to speak. “It was never about her at first.”

I don’t respond. I want him to hear the silence between us like a second blade.

“She was a variable I didn’t calculate. But once I saw the way you looked at her….” He shrugs. “I understood what she was worth.”

“Careful,” I say, voice low.

“No threat,” he says, palms briefly up. “Just recognition. We all have our soft places. Yours happens to walk like a weapon and look like a wound you want to reopen every night.”

I take a step forward. He tracks it. His throat flexes, and the skin there twitches.

He’s afraid of me.

Good.

“You used her clinic to mirror aliases I burned,” I say. “You buried data in her path. You watched her sleep.”

He tilts his head. “You think I’m the only one watching?”

I stop.