Are You Safe? Sage
The second i stepped into the safe house, I knew I didn’t have time to test. My muscles ached, my shoulder was still bleeding sluggishly from earlier, and my brain was rumming on fumes but this wasn’t over. Not even close. I had gear to replenish, wounds to tend, weapons to clean, and one stubborn Irishman to keep alive. The lock clicked behind me. I moved on autopilot, reloading, stashing weapons, restocking hidden compartments. My fingers itched to check in on Conner. I flicked open my laptop, bypassing my layers of encryption and routing through dead nodes to reach the security feeds I’d hijacked. He’d done exactly what I’d expected. Good boy. Extra guards. Bigger weapons. Altered supply runs. Inner-circle access only. He was taking this seriously and for a man like hon, that meant a hell of a lot. But that also meant he was a bigger target now. Power draws fire. I scanned the perimeter footage. Four new guards posted on retation, extra surveillance drones, motion sensor laser grids on the east and south flanks. Not bad. Not bad at all. But if I could get through them? Se could someone else. I didn’t hesitate. I pulled out my burner, patched it through the most secure line I had.
He answered on the second ring. “Ghost?”
“Tell Nice to accept the link I’m sending.” I said, already tapping in the backdoor code. “I’m doubling your firewalls. Your system has holes. Not many, but enough.”
There was silence for a moment, then a rustle, the sound of movement.
“Is it that bad?” His voice was low, serious now. “You think they’ll come here?”
They already want to,” I said. “I just don’t plan on letting them.”
A soft beat, then his voice came quieter. “Where are you?”
I stared at the screen, watching him pace the perimeter of his server room, Nico in the background typing rapidly, plugging in the link I sent. He looked tired. Sharp. Dangerous. And concerned.
“It doesn’t matter,” I said quietly, eyes flicking over the changing firewall readings. Already stronger. Safer.
“Sage,” he said again, and damn it, hearing him say my real name, my real name made something twist deep inside me.
“Are you safe?” I asked, cutting him off.
He didn’t answer for a beat. Then: “Getting there.”
“Good.” I leaned back in my chair, exhaled slowly. “Then it doesn’t matter where I am.”
Because as long as he was alive, I’d keep moving. Keep killing. Keep staying invisible.
Even if the fire was getting closer.
Conner
The second Nico called out that he had an incoming link, my stomach twisted. Only one person could get through our system like that.
I moved fast, coffee still steaming on the desk as I crossed to his station. “It’s her?”
He nodded, fingers already flying across the keyboard. “Yeah. Ghost.”
Then my phone rang.
“Ghost?”
“Tell Nico to accept the link I’m sending.”
1/3
Are You Safe?
No hello. No preamble. Just straight to it. That was her. Efficient. Cold. Sharp as a goddamn scalpel. I gestured to Nico. “Do it.”
He tapped a few more keys, and I watched the feed flicker, then suddenly everything sharpened, new layers of firewalls appearing, some shit I didn’t even recognize. My eyes flicked between the screen and Nico’s face, which had gone pale.
“She’s rewriting the system in real time,” he muttered. “Jesus Christ.”
Her voice was how strady while she explained what she was going, but it felt like a storm just beneath the surface. I could feel it. The weight behind her words. The exhaustion. The pressure and then I did something I shouldn’t have. Something soft. Something stupid.
“Where are 100?*
Silence. For a second, I thought she might hang up.
Then. It doesn’t matter.”
“Sage.”
I said her name before I could stop myself and fuck me if it didn’t feel like a punch to the chest. Like breathing her in even from miles away.
Her voice dropped. “Are you safe?”
I didn’t answer right away. Couldn’t. Because in that moment, all I wanted was to see her. To pull her out of the shadows and make her stay. But I knew
better.
“Getting there,” I finally said.
“Good,” she replied. “Then it doesn’t matter where I am.”
The line went dead a second later. I stood there, phone still in hand, heart pounding in my ears. It did matter. It mattered to me.
Liam was still staring at me like I was a puzzle he couldn’t quite crack. His brows were pulled low in thought, his head tilted just slightly, like if he looked at me long enough, he’d find the missing piece that explained everything. And maybe he would. I didn’t even know what the fuck I was doing anymore. Meanwhile, Nico was glued to his screen like it held the keys to the damn universe. The feed Sage had given us was still unraveling, layer after layer of encrypted brilliance, revealing network weaknesses we hadn’t even known existed.
“Fuck,” he muttered under his breath, not looking away. “I’m going to learn so many things from your girl.”
I froze. Your girl. That’s all I heard.
Not “Specter.” Not “ghost.” Not “the hitwoman with a thousand kills and zero remorse.” No, my girl. And I didn’t correct him. Was she? Could she be? That woman had blood on her hands that would never wash clean. But so did I. And somehow, even under the weight of that reality, the idea of her being mine didn’t terrify me. It made something deep in my chest twist and pull and ache. I didn’t want to admit it, not even to myself, but she wasn’t just a storm I’d crossed paths with. She was the storm that could burn this whole fucking world down and I wanted to stand in it.
“Why don’t you go take a shower, boss,” Liam cut in, his voice softer now, like he could see the thought spiral I was trapped in and was trying to throw me a rope. “Maybe eat some real food for once.”
“And make us something while you’re at it,” Nico added, not missing a beat, still tapping away at his keyboard. “Your fridge is depressing.”
I blinked, coming back to the room, dragging my focus away from her face still frozen on one of the monitors.
“Right,” I muttered. “Shower. Food. Got it.”
But even as I stood, I couldn’t stop looking at that screen. Couldn’t stop thinking about the way her voice had gone soft when she asked if I was safe. Couldn’t stop remembering the girl in the cage who never cried, never begged. The girl who just walked away. Now she was walking right back into my life, wrapped in shadows, breathing danger, and holding my world in the palm of her hand.
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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