His Stolen Kiss, Her Lethal Cure

The rain hadn't stopped by the time Elia reached the Upper East Side.

The towering, limestone townhouse stood behind wrought-iron gates. It reeked of old money and new arrogance. The Chapman residence.

Elia walked up the pristine marble steps. Her cheap sneakers left muddy, wet footprints on the white stone.

She pressed the brass doorbell.

A minute later, the heavy oak door swung open. A butler in a tailored uniform looked at her. His eyes dropped to her soaked canvas bag, then to the water dripping from her frayed jeans onto the welcome mat.

His nose wrinkled. "Deliveries go to the side entrance."

Elia didn't speak. She simply stepped forward.

Her shoulder clipped the butler's chest, forcing him to stumble back. She walked straight into the grand foyer, the crystal chandelier overhead casting harsh light on her dripping clothes.

"Excuse me!" the butler gasped, rushing after her.

"Who is making that racket?"

A sharp, nasal voice echoed from the living room.

Elia walked past the sweeping staircase and stepped onto the plush, cream-colored Persian rug.

Mavis Chapman sat on a velvet sofa, a porcelain teacup paused halfway to her lips. She wore a silk dressing gown, her blonde hair perfectly coiffed.

When Mavis saw Elia, her eyes widened in horror. She looked at the dark, muddy water seeping from Elia's shoes into the expensive rug.

"What is this?" Mavis slammed the teacup onto the glass table. "Do you have any idea how much that rug costs? You look like a drowned rat!"

Footsteps padded lightly down the stairs.

Geri Chapman appeared. She was wearing a pristine pink ballet leotard, her hair pulled back into a tight bun. She looked like a porcelain doll.

"Mom, don't yell," Geri said, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness. She walked over, keeping a safe distance from Elia's wet clothes. "She grew up in the rust belt. They don't have rugs like this in trailer parks. She doesn't know any better."

Geri offered Elia a sympathetic, pitying smile.

Elia's expression didn't change. She didn't look at the rug. She didn't look at Mavis.

She looked dead center into Geri's eyes.

"Where is my room?" Elia asked. Her voice was flat, carrying the coldness of the rain outside.

Mavis's face flushed red with anger at being ignored. She stood up, pointing a manicured finger toward the back of the house.

"Down that hall. The last door on the left. And don't you dare touch anything else on your way there."

Elia turned and walked away.

She opened the last door on the left.

The room was tiny. It smelled of dust and disuse. A single, narrow bed sat against the wall. There were no decorations, no welcoming touches. It was a storage closet repurposed to hide a shameful secret.

Elia closed the door. The click of the lock severed the sound of Mavis's complaining voice.

She dropped her wet canvas bag onto the bare mattress.

She didn't change out of her wet clothes. The cold clinging to her skin kept her mind sharp.

She unzipped the bag and pulled out a thick, matte-black laptop. It looked heavy, encased in military-grade shock-absorbent rubber.

Elia sat cross-legged on the floor, resting the laptop on her thighs.

She flipped the screen open.

There was no Windows logo. No Apple icon. Just a black screen with a blinking green cursor.

Her fingers hit the keyboard.

The sound of her typing was a rapid, continuous blur of plastic clicks. Green code cascaded down the screen, reflecting in her dark pupils.

She bypassed three international firewalls in under forty seconds.

She entered the Dark Web.

She logged into the deepest, most heavily encrypted intelligence exchange forum.

Her username glowed in the top right corner: L.

Elia pulled up a global tracking algorithm. She typed in the unique, fourteen-digit serial number engraved on the back of the Cartier pendant.

She hit enter.

The screen flashed. Data packets flew across the globe.

Five minutes later, a red ping appeared on the map.

Someone was actively searching for that exact serial number. They were pumping massive amounts of untraceable offshore funds into the black market, offering a reverse-bounty to find the owner of the necklace.

Elia traced the money.

She stripped away the shell corporations. She shattered the proxy servers. She dug through layers of corporate espionage defenses like a knife through hot butter.

The final destination of the funds appeared on her screen.

Wolf Group.

A high-resolution photo loaded next to the company name.

Elia stared at the screen.

It was the man from the alley.

Kane Wolf. The ruthless, untouchable CEO of Wall Street's most aggressive private equity firm.

He was wearing a pristine suit in the photo, his eyes sharp and dangerous. But Elia remembered the feel of his erratic pulse. She remembered the black blood.

Suddenly, a warning siren blared from her laptop speakers.

The screen flashed yellow.

INTRUSION DETECTED. REVERSE TRACE INITIATED.

Wolf Group's elite cybersecurity team had noticed her digging. They were trying to lock onto her IP address.

Elia's lips parted. A cold, humorless smile touched the corners of her mouth.

Her fingers flew across the keys. She didn't panic. She didn't disconnect.

She built three hundred virtual jump-points across servers in Russia, China, and Brazil. She watched the Wolf Group hackers scramble, chasing ghosts across the globe.

Then, she did something deliberate.

She left a tiny, microscopic crack in her defense. A breadcrumb.

She let a single packet of data slip through, carrying a vague geolocation tag.

Manhattan.

As soon as they grabbed the tag, Elia hit the kill switch.

The screen went black. The connection severed completely.

She closed the laptop. The heat from the battery burned against her cold, wet jeans.

He wanted to find her. He was using her necklace to hunt her down.

Let him come.

Heavy footsteps pounded down the hallway.

The doorknob rattled, then the door was pushed open.

Gorge Chapman stood in the doorway. He was wearing a tailored suit, his face set in a hard, uncompromising scowl. He didn't look at Elia like a father looking at a daughter. He looked at her like a bad investment.

He tossed a manila folder onto the floor at her feet.

"Your schedule for tomorrow," Gorge said, his voice clipped. "You start school."

Elia looked down at the folder. The logo of a rundown, underfunded public school in Queens was stamped on the front.

She looked back up at Gorge.

"Be ready by six," he ordered, turning to leave. "And don't embarrass me."

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