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Her Obsession (by Sheridan Hartin) novel Chapter 107

We Keep Cutting The Chain.

Conner

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I leaned back in the chair, letting her weight settle on me, one hand lazily stroking her hip as I thought about how to tell it. Alright then. My part wasn’t as pretty as yours. You and Arl got the clean cut.

Her brows flicked, interest sparking. I smirked, keeping my voice low and even, letting her feel the vibration of it in my chest. We had eyes on three trucks, moving steadily, no suspicion at all. They didn’t know their feed was dead yet. Nico jammed their chatter like a bloody magician, and by the time they realised they were flying blind, we were already on them. Liam cut off the lead, Naomi went for the tail, and I walked straight down the middle with my boys at my back.

I kissed the top of her head, slow, deliberate. No fireworks, no messy heroics. Just quick hands, sharp steel, and drivers smart enough not to try anything stupid. We pulled them out, took what we needed, papers, manifests, hard drives. Left the rigs looking like they’d just broken down on a bad stretch of road. By the time anyone finds them, it’ll just look like bad luck.

She shifted slightly, watching me now, her lips curved the slightest bit. I gave her a grin, crooked and sure. Simple, efficient. But the best part?I tapped her chin lightly with my finger. It worked. His whole bloody chain’s starting to jam. Yakov can’t see us, can’t move without guessing. First hit and he’s already stumbling.

Her smile tugged wider, and I felt a swell of pride that had nothing to do with trucks or papers. And you, little ghost,I added, voice dropping lower, you’re the reason it all started so damn clean.

She looked away, maybe embarrassed, but I caught her jaw and turned her back to me. Don’t shrug it off. I also got a very nice trophy from a gorgeous lady afterwards as a reward.

I smirked and pressed my mouth to hers, then, slow and deep, the kind of kiss that made the room fade until it was just us, her on my lap, me telling her the story she’d asked for, and the war outside waiting for tomorrow.

Nico’s voice scraped from the corner, all mock misery. I hate when Mum and Dad get all loveydovey.

Liam snorted, the sound halflaugh. Even in a room full of tired, wired people, the little bits of normal cut through. I tightened my hold on Sage for a second, then let go enough to clap a hand on Nico’s shoulder. Shut it, Nicholaus. We’re not flinging salad here.

Ari’s voice cut in clean and sharp, businessfirst. Let’s plan the next hit.

And just like that, we slipped our masks back on and got to work.

The next few days ran together in a clean, brutal rhythm travel, watch, strike, vanish. We hit three targets in quick succession: a refuel stash under a farmer’s barn, a small relay on the east road, and a convoy that tried a different route to avoid the bridge. Each job was the same in method and different in detail. Recon at dusk, Nico testing the jammers and whispering frequency windows into our ears, small teams moving in and out like vultures on quiet wings. No fireworks. No grand speeches. We took fuel, manifests, hard drives, and hands- on men who knew too much. We staged breaks and breakdowns that looked accidental to any passing patrol. The whole thing felt surgical, fast, efficient, and ugly in all the ways that mattered.

It worked. Each hit tightened the screws on Yakov’s logistics. Routes slowed. Drivers hesitated. His men started checking twice where they’d only glanced before. But we weren’t stupid; every success comes with a price. By the third strike, the patterns were different. He was already testing patches, rerouting convoys at odd hours, and sending scouts ahead to sniff for traps. He’d noticed the blackout windows and the missing manifests. He knew someone was cutting at his chain.

So we changed our pacestaggering our travel, using different safe houses, and taking new routes everywhere we went. We split teams and kept radios brief. The work grew lonelier and sharper. We had small groups completing tasks for which they were trained, then folding

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12:03 Tue, Oct 21

We Keep Cutting The Chain.

back into the quiet of the farm between rotations, so that Pa could patch and teach, and we could turn rookies into operators who thought for themselves.

Every night when I pulled Sage close, I could feel it in her, the same tired hunger I carried. We’d won ground, but the war doesn’t end with a single blade. It becomes a matter of attrition. We’d made him stumble; now we had to keep him off balance until he either came looking in person or his trust dissolved into panic.

Either way, we were ready to keep chopping.

Today, dusk falls on the village we’ve got our eyes on, and Ari points: camera blind spot, hedgerow gap, and squeaky gate to avoid. I put Liam and two steady hands on the road. Naomi takes the tail. Nico settles on the ridge with his kit and gives me a quick grin and two fingers at his mouth: two minutes. Everyone knows their mark. Nico taps his keys. The relay goes dead on his signal. For a second, the world goes thin and electric. The convoy slows, drivers shout and we step out. Liam cuts the lead. Naomi clamps the tail. I walk the middle with my men behind me, calm and precise. We start pulling manifests, ripping the couple of boxes we need from the back of the truck. Smooth. Surgical. It should be simple.

Then something feels wrongquieter than the trucks. There’s a shimmer over the hedgerow. A drone’s camera catches the light. Two black SUVS materialise where no vehicle should beScouts, and they’re not ours.

Pull back!I shout. The order snaps through us. I can see the worry in the rookiesfaces; they move because we move, not because they know why.

Nico’s voice is in my ear, clipped. Interference. More nets. East side units moving.Static eats the end of his sentence. Then nothing. I look toward the ridge. Footprints cut through the mud up there. Shadows move too quickly. Men drop from the slope, and before I can process it, one of them has Nico by the throat. Another clamps a bag over his head. They work fast; ties go on like they’ve practised the knots a hundred times. Nico fights for a second. Then he goes still.

No!Naomi lunges. Two of the men turn quickly and efficiently. The drone folds its head back and watches. The SUV’s angle in. This isn’t a raid we can win. This is a theatre meant to lure us out.

Withdraw! Withdraw now!I bark. We peel away the way we came, hedges, ditches, the world a blur. Naomi lays down fire to cover us, the sound raw and immediate. At the rendezvous, the ridge is empty. Nico’s kit lies overturned. No laptop. No man. My stomach goes hollow.

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