Chapter 228
Lola
:
85
The hotel smelled like lemon soap and recycled air, the kind of clean that money buys when it wants to hide fingerprints. Lola crossed the lobby like she belonged there, gym bag on one shoulder, heartbeat steady enough to lie.
She’d texted Jake on the way up, a single line: Need a favor. Quiet.
He’d replied with an access code to the sublevel he used as his cave.
Jake’s tech den was cold and humming. Screens washed the walls in blue light, lines of code scrolling like rainfall. He didn’t look surprised when she slipped inside, just gestured with his coffee mug like that counted as hello.
“I need you to look into a name,” she said, voice low. “Lucian Rinaldi. Don’t flag it. Don’t mention it. Especially not to Enzo.”
Jake’s brow furrowed. “You don’t usually come to me for ghosts.”
“I don’t usually have one,” she said. “I just want to know if it’s real before I decide how to feel about it.”
Because if I’m wrong, I’m paranoid. If I’m right, I’m hunted.
He set his mug down. “How deep?”
“Quiet deep,” she said. “If someone’s scrubbed it, I don’t want to be the reason it gets noticed again.”
Jake started typing, eyes flicking between screens. “All right. You’ll owe me something.”
“Put it on my tab.”
The keys clacked for a while. Data flickered, ran, erased itself. His face shifted from bored to intent, and then to something she didn’t like -focus sharpened by caution.
“You remember this name from where?” he asked, not looking up.
“When I was nine,” she said. “Before I ran. It’s the one piece of that day I can’t see clearly, Everything else plays like film–every voice, every smell. But not that one. It’s like someone fogged the reel.”
He nodded slowly. “Trauma does that.”
“Yeah,” she said, jaw tight. “So does being rewritten.”
Jake didn’t comment. His fingers kept moving. The room filled with quiet, the kind that builds when a secret gets too close to being born.
After a few seconds he said, “Digital footprint’s sterile. Too sterile. Either the man doesn’t exist or someone paid to make it look that way.”
“Which means he exists,” she said.
1/3
11:36 Mon, Oct 20 M.
Chapter 228
…
Jake nodded once. “I’ll keep digging. Carefully. You’ll know first if something moves.”
She exhaled through her nose, nodding. “Thanks, Jake.”
He gave her a small look, the kind that asked ten questions without words and went back to typing.
She stepped out into the hallway, the soundproof door closing soft behind her. The air out here was heavier. Her phone buzzed in her
hand: Enzo.
Wear something comfortable. I’ll be late. Don’t forget I love you.
She smiled. He had a way of making even plain words feel like gravity; steady, quiet, and warm in a way she never quite got used to.
Comfortable. Sure. That means no cloths.
She hit the elevator button and waited. The lobby below her was a blurred collage of sound and light, the faint music of money pretending not to care.
The elevator doors slid open with a pleasant chime. She stepped inside, hit the penthouse floor, and leaned back against the mirrored wall. The car began its smooth climb.
85
Halfway up, it jolted.
Not the kind of shake you get from weight or misalignment, this was a pulse. A manufactured stutter. The panel lights flickered. A hiss filled the small box something releasing. Her stomach went still.
No way this is maintenance.
The elevator shuddered to a stop. The doors didn’t open. A heartbeat later, something on the outside did a click, then a punch of sound so low she felt it in her ribs. The metal screamed as the emergency lock was forced.
She shifted weight, ready stance, hand finding the small utility blade she kept clipped inside her gym bag. The doors parted an inch–then three–then someone’s gloved fingers wrenched them wide.
No sound, no words just the rush of bodies in black.
Breathe. Count backward from trouble. Keep what’s yours.
The van exhaled and went still. Hood on, zip ties biting, Lola felt bodies settle around her, boots widening, a strap snugged, a radio clicked to whisper. No pep talk. Real men save air for work.
Light knifed in as the rear doors cracked. Warm warehouse air slid over her: rubber, dust, cleaner trying to make danger smell polite. A glove found her elbow; another thumbed the hood up just to her mouth for a mercy breath. In that sliver she clocked a square jaw, a gold watch, posture that said I am practiced at being obeyed.

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Accidentally Yours (Merffy Kizzmet)
This novel is sooo hilarious and amazing...