I press my forehead to the cool surface of the door, breathing hard.
Okay.
New plan.
I turn slowly, eyes falling to the call button near the bed. The one Nico sograciouslytold me would summon the chef.
Of course.
I straighten, my lips curving.
I press the button, request a sandwich, and sit on the edge of the mattress like I’m behaving. Like I’ve accepted my fate. The perfect little captive.
Ten minutes go by, maybe less.
Then I hear it: the softbeepof the outer lock disengaging. The door swings open, and a man in chef whites walks in carrying a silver tray, head ducked, polite and professional.
He doesn’t see it coming.
The moment he steps into range, I slam the tray out of his hands, grab him by the collar, and drive my knee up into his gut. He wheezes, his eyes wide.
“Sorry, Chef,” I mutter. “Nothing personal.”
I shove him face-first against the wall and deliver one sharp blow to the side of his neck. His body slumps before he can scream.
I catch him mid-fall, lower him to the floor, and yank the key fob from his apron with a tight grip.
Click.
The lock disengages.
My heart slams hard against my chest as I crack open the door just wide enough to slip into the hall.
Carefully, I shut the door behind me and press my back to it, listening.
Muffled voices echo faintly down the corridor. There’s two guards, maybe three. The usual rotation. I clocked their routines on night one of gathering observations, burned it into memory.
I start moving, taking soft steps and careful breaths. I duck past a set of tall windows, their thick curtains spilling angled strips of moonlight onto the marble floor.
There’s a security camera just ahead. I time its rotation, wait for the subtle click as it swivels the opposite way… then move fast, sliding low behind a pedestal holding some grotesque marble statue I’ll never understand.
I glance up at the camera. Red light. Still active.
I need to cut left, toward the west hallway.
The garage is on the other side of the estate, past the gallery, near the armory. If I take the central corridor, I’ll be seen. I cut through the side hall instead—tight, dark, and lined with abstract paintings and motion sensors I pray stay dead.
I freeze when I hear footsteps.
Shit.
I drop to a crouch and slip behind a decorative screen just as someone rounds the corner. Someone with black boots and a familiar presence. I let out a quiet exhale when he speaks, and I realize it isn’t Nico.
It’sLuca.
My lungs go still. He’s maybe ten feet away.
He stops.