Recognition.
The new file my ghost had sent me… it was…fuck, I don’t even know what it was. A death sentence wrapped in metadata. A breadcrumb trail soaked in blood. On the surface, it was terrifying. Clearly stating that someone dangerous, really dangerous had eyes, ears, and intentions set on killing both of us. But the deeper Nico and I went into it… the more it got under my skin. In that slow, skin peeling way. Because it wasn’t just a threat. It was personal. A whole file. On me. On my men. My ops. My allies. The time of day I liked to take a fucking shit. The routes I rotated through on shipments. Where my snipers perched. Where my mother lived. But what burned was my classification. Yellow. A mid-range threat. I sat back in the chair, hands clenched so tight the mouse cracked beneath my grip.
“Fucking bastards,” I muttered. “I’m a high-level threat! I’m Irish mafia, for fuck’s sake. I have guns, men, war stockpiles-shit, I’ve got Nico on payroll and
he’s half a damn Al.”
Nice gave me a look but didn’t argue. Then we opened her file. She gave it to me. Maybe it was a mistake, heat of the moment, everything falling apart and she didn’t have time to strip it out of the dump… but I don’t think it was. I think she wanted me to see it.
Her codename: Specter.
Also listed under an alias: Sage.
Her name is Sage and she’s a Red-Level Threat. Highest tier. Lethal. Uncontainable. Untraceable. “Engage only with elite force authorization,” it said in bold. She was flagged across multiple nations, private blacklists, government channels, syndicates. Some feared her. Others wanted to hire her. Most? Just wanted her gone and she wasn’t self-taught. She was trained. From birth. Under Yakov Antonov. My blood turned to ice. I knew the name. Everyone who’d ever dealt in weapons, blood, or shadows did. Yakov wasn’t a man. He was a myth. A former KGB spymaster turned international ghost trainer. He ran blacksite academies, facilities that raised assassins the way normal people raised kids. No names. No birthdays. Just blood types, reflex tests, psychological torture, and obedience drills. The graduates didn’t retire. They didn’t age. They were either dead… or untouchable. Yakov had disappeared a decade ago. Some said MI6 killed him. Others said he faked his death. I never gave a shit, until now. Because he trained her. The woman who hijacked my servers. Who killed a merc like he was nothing. Who bled on camera and still managed to smile at me. Who called herself a ghost and meant it. Sage. Specter. And she gave me her file. Just like that.
“You see this?” I said, voice raw. “She gave me her fucking death sentence, Nico.”
“Yeah…” he said quietly, scanning the feed. “Or maybe… she finally gave you her name.”
I didn’t know what scared me more. That she trusted me with it. Or that now that I knew… that I had her name, her face, her file, everyone would come gunning for me, too. Because when you hold a ghost’s truth, you become part of their myth. And Specter wasn’t just some assassin. She was the assassin. The kind of woman who only existed in whispers and closed-door intel briefings. Now she wasn’t just data on a screen. Now she had a voice, a face, a name.
Sage. I dragged a hand down my face and called Liam in. If there was anyone who could keep a level head while staring down the devil, it was him. I trusted Liam. With my life. With my crew. And now… with hers. He pulled up a chair beside us, coffee in hand, eyes narrowing as Nico clicked through the decrypted files. Liam wasn’t easy to shake, but the color drained from his face as the kill list loaded. All her marks. Every mission logged, timestamped, clean. Thousands. Maybe more. Nico, the paranoid genius, had the good sense to screen-record the whole thing when she hijacked his system earlier, so now, we had actual footage. Of her. Not just grainy shadows or infrared flashes. But her face. And fuck, it was haunting me. There was blood streaked across her temple, a cut across her cheekbone, hair wild and matted from the fight, but even in the chaos, her eyes had locked on the camera. On me. And I couldn’t look away.
“Boss…” Liam murmured, squinting at the frozen frame. “Doesn’t she look… familiar?”
“Familiar?” I repeated, leaning in, frowning. “You mean like we’ve seen her before?”
“Yeah. I swear I’ve seen her before. Somewhere.”
Nico paused his typing. All three of us just stared. We kept combing through the files, eyes burning, the silence broken only by the steady click of keys and the occasional curse under our breath. Another hour passed, until suddenly, Liam jolted upright, slamming a finger down on his screen.
“That’s it!” he said.
My head whipped toward him. “What?!”
“Right there.” He pointed at a screen full of mission logs, each one a name, a location, a clean-up summary. “That’s where I’ve seen her!”
1/2
His finger hovered over a familiar name, one that punched me square in the chest. Marcus Romanov. My breath stilled. Five years ago. Marcus was scum. Russian trafficker, smug bastard who thought untouchable meant invincible. We never touched his operation, until he got cocky. Stole one of my weapons shipments. Used the funds to expand his trafficking ring. That gave us reason. I remember the stench of that basement. Damp. Sour. The stink of fear clinging to the walls like rot. Girls, half-naked and trembling, stuffed into cages like animals. Children. Teenagers. That mission haunts me more than most. I put a bullet in Romanov’s skull without hesitation. Liam had taken point on evac, getting the girls out, finding them clean clothes, medical care, contact with home.
“She was there,” Liam said softly, pulling me out of the memory. His eyes hadn’t left the screen. “She didn’t want medical assistance. Didn’t speak. Didn’t ery. Just stared me down like I was nothing.”
“You sure it was her?” I asked, though my gut already knew the answer.
He nodded, voice low. “I unlocked the cage. She stood up. Walked right past me. Didn’t wait for a name, didn’t ask for anything. Just… vanished into the
smoke.”
Goosebumps prickled along my skin.
“I thought she was just some girl, y’know?” Liam muttered. “But she was already gone. Already turned into… this.”
“She wasn’t on the file as a victim,” Nico added grimly.
But now we knew… ‘She wasn’t a victim. She was there to kill him…but I got to him first.”
“Five years. Jesus. She’s been stalking you for five years.” Liam said with a low whistle.
Lucia Morh is a passionate storyteller who brings emotions to life through her words. When she’s not writing, she finds peace nurturing her garden.

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