Total pages in book: 38
Estimated words: 34715 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 174(@200wpm)___ 139(@250wpm)___ 116(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 34715 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 174(@200wpm)___ 139(@250wpm)___ 116(@300wpm)
He glances over at me, those gray-blue eyes catching mine for a brief second before returning to the road. “You okay?”
I nod way too fast, my voice coming out bright and brittle like cheap glass. “Peachy. Absolutely peachy. Just casually fleeing for my life with a man who moonlights as my personal bodyguard. Normal Tuesday shit, right? Happens to everyone. I’m totally not replaying that knife coming at me on loop in my head or anything.”
The corner of his mouth twitches, the tiniest hint of amusement breaking through his serious expression, but he doesn’t smile. Instead he taps the screen again and says, “I need to make some calls. I’m gonna put them on speaker. I want you to hear this.”
I stay quiet. Very, very quiet. Because listening feels a thousand times safer than talking right now. My romcom-loving brain is still trying to process that this man is not just a meet-cute gone wrong. Hes my protection detail. And somehow that makes him even more attractive, which is deeply unfair to my already overwhelmed nervous system.
He hits a button on the steering wheel. The truck fills with the sound of a ringing line, then a deep, steady voice answers on speaker.
“Crewe. It’s me.”
“Talk fast,” Crewe says immediately. He sounds tense, like he’s been pacing wherever he is, waiting for bad news all day. “We’ve been holding position on the mountain lead. What happened?”
“Anniston was attacked outside the boutique on Fifth,” Banks reports, his voice even and professional. “Knife. Professional operator. No hesitation. I neutralized him, zip-tied him, but there were at least two backups waiting near her building. They knew her route. We got out clean. Heading to the secondary safe house in the woods now.”
A short pause crackles over the line. Then a rougher, gruffer voice jumps in. “You hurt, brother?”
“Negative, Colt. Minor cut on my sleeve. Nothing worth mentioning. Anniston’s fine. Shaken but physically fine.”
I’m not fine. I’m spiraling hard, my mind flashing back to the glint of that blade and the way Banks had moved like liquid lightning. But I keep my mouth shut and stare out at the passing trees.
A third voice comes through, lighter but sharp with energy. Jace. “You need us to move in? We can be wheels up in under two hours if you need extra hands.”
“Not yet,” Banks answers. “I’ll update Mack when we’re secure. Tell him to keep Elena looped in but quiet. No unnecessary chatter. This just proved the pipeline is deeper than we thought. They’re not playing anymore. We need to know if Shaw has friends. They sent a hitter in broad daylight. This is coordinated.”
My stomach flips violently at his words. Pipeline. Alden Shaw? These names are threads straight from my own late-night research sessions, the same shadowy connections involving D.C. consultancies, shell nonprofits, and dirty money that have kept me up for weeks, typing furious notes and double-checking sources. Hearing them come out of Banks’s mouth in that calm, matter-of-fact tone makes everything feel ten times more real and terrifying. These aren’t just conspiracy theories anymore. These are people willing to kill me.
The men exchange a few more short, coded updates. I catch fragments about a mountain lead, their missing father, someone named Nash and Sin who were taken. Brothers. Plural. Of course Banks has brothers. They sound like the kind of men who would all look unfairly good in tactical gear, moving through the world with the same quiet intensity he has. The thought almost makes me smile despite everything.
Before I can fully process that, Banks ends the call and immediately dials another number.
This time the voice that answers is smooth, older, carrying the crisp edge of someone used to command. “Vance.”
“Vance, it’s Banks Hawthorne,” he says. “The principal was hit twenty minutes ago outside the boutique on Fifth. Knife attack. I engaged, secured her, and we’re moving to the woods location now. Target was neutralized but there were spotters. They knew her exact route. This wasn’t random.”
Vance swears under his breath, a low, vicious sound. “I just got the retainer approved this morning. They’re moving fast. You need backup out there?”
“Not yet,” Banks replies. “I have her. But I want a full file dump on anyone connected to the D.C. consultancy network. Cross-reference with the financial pipelines Anniston’s been exposing. And pull the boutique security footage before the locals lock it down and bury it.”
“Already on it,” Vance confirms. “I’ll have my team scrub everything. Keep her breathing, Hawthorne. She’s worth more alive than dead to a lot of powerful people right now, and that makes her a walking target.”
The call ends with a soft click. Silence fills the truck again, broken only by the low, steady hum of the tires on the asphalt and the occasional whoosh of a passing semi-truck.
I swallow hard, my throat dry. My voice comes out smaller than I want it to, almost fragile. “So… Vance is your boss? The one who hired you to babysit the girl who knows way too much about things she probably should’ve left alone?”