Elnora jolted awake, a groan escaping her lips as she sat up, disoriented. The room was unfamiliar, sterile in its simplicity. Panic surged through her as the events of last night flooded backâOctavia and her men, the rough extraction from Giaâs Whistle Blower club. She bolted from the bed, her heart racing as she ran to the door, twisting the knob frantically.
What troubled her most was not just the fact that Octavia had taken her, but the sinking realization that Mason and Gia likely thought sheâd bolted. Gia would be quick to paint her as a traitor, and Mason⦠well, she didnât want to think about how Mason might react.
The room was small, with a queen-size bed in the centre and a large TV mounted on the opposite wall. It felt more like a holding cell than a bedroom. She turned back to the door, hammering on it with her fists. âOctavia!â she shouted, fury lacing her voice.
She wasnât sure what was worseâthe kidnapping or the fact that Richard had called Octavia âboss.â Nothing made sense, and the frustration gnawed at her.
An agent outside the door finally opened it, peering in with a blank expression before stepping aside to let her through. Elnora shot him a withering glare as she stepped into the hallway, flanked by two more armed agents who led her through what looked like a military bunker.
When they reached the control room, Octavia stood at the centre, her eyes fixed on a large screen displaying surveillance footage. Gone was the polished suit; she was dressed in combat pants and a navy green shirt, looking like the military operative she was.
âSleeping beautyâs up,â Octavia quipped without looking at her. âLeave us,â she ordered the analysts at their stations, snapping her fingers.
Elnora watched as the room cleared out, then moved to Octaviaâs side, her eyes narrowing at the surveillance footage of Giaâs club. âWhat the hell, Octavia? Care to explain why you thought drugging and kidnapping me was a stellar idea?â she snapped, arms crossed, her glare icy enough to freeze hell.
Octavia turned to her with and raised an eyebrow. âShouldnât you be grateful we saved you from the mafiaâs clutches? Or have you developed a fondness for criminal company?â
âGrateful?â Elnora let out a bitter laugh. âForgive me if I donât send a thank-you card. From where Iâm standing, looks like Iâve just swapped one prison for another.â
Octaviaâs eyes narrowed. âSo Clawson was right, and youâve switched allegiances to the Italians.â
She scoffed, rage flashing in her eyes. âGo to hell, Octavia,â she snapped, turning her back on the woman. âGo straight to hell!â
As she turned, she felt the heaviness of Masonâs jacket on her shoulders. His scent lingered on the fabric, an infuriating reminder of the man sheâd left behindâof the confusion, the danger, the attraction that clouded her judgment.
âWho the hell is Clawson?â she muttered under her breath, spinning back to face Octavia
Octavia didnât miss a beat. âWait, you mean you donât know the Priest?â She reached for a file on the desk and tossed it at Elnora, who caught it with both hands. âOr are you seriously going to stand there and tell me you didnât find the new location of the common ground and didnât bother to share it with me? What were you thinking going there to auction yourself off?â
âMy activities outside our contract are none of your business.â Elnora told her. She couldnât very well tell her that sheâd stumbled into the underground by mistake. Or that the only reason she really was so invested in helping Octaviaâs team with their investigation into the collective was because she was trying to find Enrico or whatever trace of him was left.
âWhen they interfere with my investigation, they damn well are!â Octavia shot back, her grey eyes flaring with rage. âYou gave the Italians access to the beamer you created for us. Thatâs a felony, El. What the hell were you thinking?â
âIâm not interested in your baseless accusations,â Elnora retorted with a dismissive tone. âWhat I want to know is how you managed to get into Whistle Blower club. Who was your informant, and why did Richard call you boss?â
Octavia laughed, a harsh sound that immediately made Elnora realise she was so very mad at her. âSo you give them away like you did with Burrell?â
Elnora stiffened. She hadnât meant to drag Burrell into this mess, but things had spiralled out of control before she could stop them. It was ironicâunsettling, evenâthat she found herself more worried about Masonâs reaction than her own safety. Loyalty to a man like him wasnât something sheâd planned on, yet here she was. But how the hell did Octavia know about Burrell? If she had that intel, it meant the common ground really was compromised. Mason should have let her make them invincible when she had the chance.
âI donât understand whatâs going on here,â Elnora said. âAre you trying to save me, or am I under arrest?â
Octavia scoffed, her expression hardening as she turned to her computer. The sound of keys clicking filled the tense silence until a familiar image flashed on the screenâa picture of Mason. His eyes stared back at Elnora, pulling her deeper into his spell that triggered those inexplicable feelings she didnât fully comprehend.
âWho is he?â Octavia demanded. âOur intel shows youâve been holed up with him for quite some time. Heâs never turned up in any of our investigations, and somehow, heâs managed to stay off your radar as well. Is that because youâre his lover or his inside woman?â
The accusation wasnât entirely annoying, at least she thought Mason was her lover, but she couldnât deny the truth. âI donât know who he is,â she replied. It was the truthâMason was an enigma, and her suspicions about him were just that. But there was no way in hell she was going to give Octavia more than that.
âWhy did Richard call you boss back there?â Elnora added, her voice softer but no less firm. âPlay whatever game you want, but donât mess with him. Iâve seen what he does to friends who cross him. Breaking into one of his clubs is a quick way to end up dead. You need to be more careful.â
Then Octavia hissed and Elnora wasnât sure if it was concern or jealousy, but it was there, and it was real. Octaviaâs breath hitched as she ran her fingers through her honey-brown hair, a gesture Elnora recognized all too well from their past.
Octavia stepped closer, her voice dropping to a near-whisper. âHereâs the deal: Iâm giving you a chance to come clean, or Iâm going to charge you with treason and aiding a known mafia operative.â
Her eyes flashed with anger. âTreason? For what, exactly? Arenât you and your people guilty of the sameâsnooping, invading privacy, and doing whatever the hell you want in the name of the âgreater goodâ?â She shot Octavia a scathing look. âDonât forget who helped you with your illegal hacks. I know where all the bodies are buried, Octavia. If you want to threaten me, youâll have to do better than that. Donât try to use some crap the Priest fed you as leverage.â
As she walked away from Octavia, she tossed the folder back onto the desk. Whatever lies the Priest had concocted didnât concern herânot when the real danger was standing right in front of her.
Octaviaâs eyes burned with frustration and something elseâsomething angrier. âAre you going to deny that youâre not Icarus? That youâre not the hacker selling government secrets?â
Elnora rolled her eyes, the accusation almost laughable. âYou just accuse people without bothering to verify anything, donât you?â She leaned against the desk, folding her arms over her chest. âTell me, Octavia, did you send the Priest to the underground?â
Octaviaâs reaction was swift and unexpected. She grabbed Elnoraâs arm, her grip ironclad with a simmering rage in her eyes. âIâm detaining you until you answer my questions,â she hissed, pulling Elnora closer, their faces inches apart.
Elnora frowned as she stared into Octaviaâs stormy grey eyes, the anger there unmistakable. But beneath that fury, she saw something elseâsomething familiar. It was the same emotion sheâd seen in those eyes when they were lovers. A memory flickered in her mind, unbidden: the way Octaviaâs touch used to linger just a little too long when they worked together, the way sheâd lean in just a little too close, teasing with every stolen touch. It wasnât so different from the way Kristine had approached her, though Kristineâs methods were blunt and direct.
But while she had easily brushed off Kristine, Octavia had been different. There was something very curious about her, a desire to experiment that Elnora couldnât resist, even when she knew she should. Sheâd given in, let herself be swept up in the dangerous pleasures of Octaviaâs game. And now, even as Octaviaâs grip tightened around her arm, there was a part of Elnora that remembered how much sheâd enjoyed itâremembered and responded to that spark.
âAre you going to make me talk?â Elnora asked, her lips curling into a suggestive smile.
For a moment, Octaviaâs hard expression softened, the edges of her anger blurring as a mischievous glint sparked in her eyes. She leaned in closer, her breath warm against Elnoraâs cheek, sending a shiver down her spine. âOnly if you want me to,â she whispered.
There was a reason Octavia had pulled her out of Giaâs club, and it wasnât just for old timesâ sake. Playing along with Octaviaâs games might get her answers, but she wasnât in the mood to indulge whatever twisted plans Octavia had in mind.
âIâm not here to play games with you, Octavia,â Elnora said as she pulled back slightly. âItâs simple: I donât know the answers to your questions. A blind date led me to a club where I got auctioned off. Thatâs how I ended up with him.â She jerked her chin toward the screen, where Masonâs image still stared back at them. âI donât know who he is, and I couldnât find any information on him.â
âThen why stay with him?â Octavia pressed suspiciously.
Elnora forced a frown, giving Octavia a pointed look. âHe bought me,â she replied, the words bitter on her tongue. âAnd, if Iâm being honest, I think heâs hot. I was hoping to roll around naked with him a few times.â She grinned, her smile all teeth.
Octaviaâs face twisted in disgust. âUgh.â She released Elnoraâs arm and began pacing.
Elnora watched her, her mind racing. How much did the bureau actually know about her activities as Icarus? And more importantly, how much did she need to keep hidden? It didnât surprise her that they were in bed with the Priest; heâd had access to her work computer through Marcy, after all. Clawson, huh? So that was the maggotâs name?
âWhy did you put yourself up for auction?â Octavia demanded as she stopped pacing to face Elnora. âAnd donât lie to me. I have irrefutable evidence to prove it.â Her stare was unyielding. âWe may be the âslow poke hackersâ you tagged us as, but our data is accurate.â
She shrugged, refusing to let Octavia see how much the accusation stung. âOf course youâd think that. Let me explain something, though. Outside the narrow scope of what you consider âaccurateâ is a whole web of liesâcarefully designed to make you think exactly that. Nothing is accurate any more, Octavia. Itâs just data, and anyone with the right tools can manipulate it. You know this. The government takes people down with fabricated data all the time.â
âI hate how smart you can be sometimes,â Octavia whispered.
âI seem to recall you liked that about me.â Elnora allowed herself a small, satisfied smile as she caught the flush in Octaviaâs cheeks.
Octavia quickly shook off the moment, her eyes hardening again. âAs it stands, you did auction yourself off, and I want to know why.â She turned away, distancing herself from Elnora as if needing the space.
âWhy would I do that? I didnât even realize I was in the underground. I was nervousâit had been a while since Iâd been on a blind date. The truth is, I walked past men Iâve done recon on without even noticing until he,â she pointed to Mason on the screen, âtold me where we were.â
âStop lying to me!â Octavia snapped.
Elnora sighed heavily, the frustration now seeping into her voice. âThereâs no reason for me to lie. Forget everything the Priest has told you and listen to me. I wasnât in there for more than ten minutes. You know how Table Eleven works. The auction site started streaming me right before the soldiers let me in, and before I could even sit down, heâd already bought me.â
âAnd you just went home with him? Youâve been there for how long nowâwhy?â
âAre you blind?â Elnora moved closer to the screen. âWho wouldnât want to go home with this?â She gestured toward Masonâs image. âThe man is breathtaking.â
Octavia scoffed. âCool your jets, horny,â she said, pulling out a chair and sitting down. âIf you were that desperate, you couldâve called.â
âLetâs not do this,â Elnora snapped, her glare sharp enough to cut.
âFine.â Octaviaâs voice was cold. âLetâs say I believe your perfectly crafted liesââ
Now her frustration boiled over, and her voice rose in a half-scream. âOh, good god! Then lock me up! It would be better than this miserable back-and-forth thatâs going nowhere. You really need to take a moment and consider whoâs feeding you all this crap and why. While youâre wasting your time on me, the real culprits are slipping away.â
Octaviaâs eyes narrowed as she shifted in her chair, fingers resuming their steady dance across the keyboard. âSay I choose to believe what youâve said,â she replied, her tone measured but sharp. âHow do you explain this?â
The screen flickered, replacing Masonâs image with a series of documents. Elnoraâs eyes skimmed the content quietly. The rage that followed was matched only by the sinking realization that she was being cornered.
âExplain your exact calling code on all those hacks and breaches,â Octavia continued. âHereâs my favourite.â She clicked on a file, and the screen displayed a text message Elnora had sent months agoâaltered and twisted beyond recognition.
Her stomach clenched as she stared at the screen, a sickening sense of betrayal washing over her. The Priest wasnât capable of this level of manipulation. That left one terrifying possibility: Marcy. Her best friend, the one person sheâd never suspected, had been tampering with her life right under her nose.
âWhere did you get this?â Elnoraâs voice was low, controlled, betraying none of the storm raging inside her.
Octaviaâs smile was smug, her fingers drumming on the desk. âFrom your incredibly helpful partner at Neon.â
âOf course.â The nonchalance in Elnoraâs tone was forced, but she was careful to keep her expression unreadable. Inside, her mind was spinning, trying to piece together how she had missed something so glaring. But, if it was so easy to connect the dots to Marcy, maybe it wasnât her.
âWe have you exactly where we want you, El,â Octavia purred as she stood, crossing the room to stand beside Elnora. She leaned in, stroking Elnoraâs chin with a familiarity that annoyed her now. âAnd considering our long-standing relationship, Iâm open to cutting a deal. Whoever your boyfriend is, deliver him to us.â
Elnora eyed her. âOr?â
âYouâre facing life in prison, El.â Octaviaâs voice was cool, but there was satisfaction in it, as if she relished the idea of holding this power over her.
She scoffed and walked over to Octaviaâs computer, her mind already racing with ways to turn this situation to her advantage. âIâll pass on both,â she said, lowering herself into the chair and pulling the keyboard closer.
Octaviaâs voice took on a warning tone. âI will not allow you to access government databases or satellites from my computer.â
Elnora shot Octavia an icy glare, her fingers hovering over the keys, itching to take control. âIâm basically doing your job for you, so you have no choice. Just leave me to my work,â she snapped, her frustration barely contained as she turned her focus back to the screen.
Someone was playing a dirty game with her, and she needed to find out who it was. The web of deceit surrounding her had grown too thick, too tangled, and she was not having it anymore. Octaviaâs threats were just noise at this point, an irritating distraction from the real problem at hand. Whoever was manipulating things from the shadows was clearly underestimating her, and that was their first mistake.