Mimicking Ghosts.
Fog clung to the East River like gauze, the kind that hides a wound without healing it. Pier 17 groaned under the weight of the tide and the tired hush of night crews finishing their lies. I moved the way she would, low, patient, part of the dark instead of fighting it.
“Nico,” I murmured, mic barely a breath. “Talk to me.”
“Loop’s holding,” he said in my eat, fingers I couldn’t see flying over keys I knew too well. “Marina cams are blind on your side for ninety seconds at a time. Courier’s on schedule. White van, partial plate. He’ll cut his lights before he hits the ramp like a good little ghost.”
I took the catwalk along the warehouse edge, boots finding every quiet board Sage would have spotted.. Twenty yards from the ramp, I dropped behind a stack of crab pots still slick with brine. The van rolled in slow. The driver killed the headlights. He wasn’t sloppy. Just sure.
“Three… two…” Nico breathed.
The door slid open. A man in a gray windbreaker hopped down with the casual confidence of a routine that had never failed. He scanned left, right, a bad scan, just head movement and reached into the cargo bay. I was already moving. Two steps, silence. My hand clamped the back of his neck, thumb pressing the nerve that blanks a thought, the other hand jamming the suppressed pistol under his ribs. He stiffened, half–turning.
“Don’t,” I said softly. The gun kissed cartilage.
“Wh-
“Shh.” I dragged him deeper into the mouth of shadow. The river slapped pilings and the city exhaled far away. He hadn’t even seen my face.
“Who- he tried again.
“This is from my girl,” I said, almost gentle.
I squeezed. One subsonic round tore the heart. No thrash, no noise. He folded like his bones had been borrowed. I caught him, lowered him clean, wiped the faint spatter with a pad from the evidence kit, her pattern: one shot, center mass, low residue, no theatrics.
“Package?” Nico asked, calm as if we were ordering takeout.
I climbed into the van and found the drop tucked behind a false wheel well. Hard drive, cash straps, a folded ledger with dates that made my jaw tick. I took what mattered, put what didn’t back exactly wrong, the way Sage would, to make the audit eat its tail.
“In hand,” I murmured. “Pier’s clear.”
“Exit northwest,” Nico said. “You’ve got fishermen arguing about cigarettes at your twelve. Don’t become a story.”
I ghosted out the way I came, pulse steady, breath even. Not my first hit, but the first time I’d worn her shadow like a second skin. It felt like sacrilege and promise all at once.
“Mark two complete,” Nico confirmed. “Signature reads Specter. Good work.”
“Don’t tell me that,” I said. “Tell him when he tries to figure out why his courier didn’t come home.”
“Copy. Reset for Ridgewood. Liam’s inbound,”
Ridgewood smelled like old stone and fried onions from the deli on the corner that never closed. The safehouse was a two–story with a dead lawn and a curtain that never moved. Our mark, the Cleaner, the transmitter carrier from that gilded cage. Liam leaned against the shadowed brick across the alley, hood up, hands gloved. He looked like trouble and smiled like it, too.
“You ready to borrow lipstick you’re not wearing?” I asked.
He snorted. “I’ve got the attitude for it.”
1/2
7:27 pm X D
Mimicking Ghosts.
Nice cut in. “Interior cams dumb as rocks. Motion sensor is the only brain in that place and I’ve got it counting sheep. Cleaner just finished a call, Russian, short and he’s moving to the kitchen for a drink. Window’s open two inches. Liam, you take Naomi’s approach: casual corridor, maybe a false stumble, close- range distraction. Conner, Specter exit. We do this and we go home.”
“On your mark,” I said.
“Now.”
We split. Liam sauntered down the side path with the kind of swagger Naomi wore like perfume. Audible footfall, just enough. He let his shoulder hit the back door. “Whoops,” he said, voice pitched to a lazy drawl. The handle turned because men like our mark lock front doors, not kitchens. I slid under the opposite window, counting his steps, listening to the clink of glass. The Cleaner’s silhouette shifted. Liam stepped into the doorway, head tipped, gun held low and loose the way Naomi played with her food.
“Hi, handsome,” he said, and the word was so close to hers it curled in my chest. “Remember me?”
The Cleaner reached for his waistband. Liam’s shot hit the tile by his foot, a deliberate miss, Naomi’s warning flare. The man flinched and stumbled. That gave me my line. I came through the window like smoke. Two strides, no sound. The Cleaner turned toward Liam, wrong choice. My hand found his jaw and shoved his head left. The suppressed round went in at the base of the skull, angle crisp. Specter’s signature: mercy–fast, forensic–clean. He dropped, knees hitting first, then face. Liam was already moving, catching the glass in the sink before it could shatter.
“Heartbreaker,” he whispered, half–grinning, half–awed. “Your girl’s style is rude.”
“Yours flirts with the furniture,” I shot back, and we were both breathing a little too fast.
“Evidence,” Nico reminded, all business. “One smear, left–handed, mid–height, back–of–chair. That’s Naomi. Then Conner, kill the kitchen camera permanently. And boys? No souvenirs.”
We did exactly that. Liam pressed a thumbprint where Nico told him, then swiped it half–clean. I reached up and killed the camera with a precise snip and a dead port, the kind Sage would leave so the repair ticket blames old wiring.
“Out the back,” Nico said. “Trash pickup in three turns, patrol car lazy on the seven–minute loop. You’re ghosts in five if you don’t get cute.”
We slipped into the alley, the night swallowing us without complaint. Liam bumped my shoulder as we cut between buildings.
“Two down,” he said. “One week covered.”
I thought of Sage in my bed in my shirt, breathing shallow but steady, and of the note she’d left that still burned like a brand. I thought of Yakov counting ghosts like inventory and of the ledger now tucked under my jacket that would ruin a few more men before this was over.
“Not covered,” I said. “Paid forward.”
“Same difference,” Liam muttered, but he didn’t argue. We moved quiet, the city around us loud as ever. And for the first time since she’d slipped out into the dark, I felt like I was doing something she might actually approve of. Maybe even something that would get her back to me faster.
Chapter Comments
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Cedella is a passionate storyteller known for her bold romantic and spicy novels that keep readers hooked from the very first chapter. With a flair for crafting emotionally intense plots and unforgettable characters, she blends love, desire, and drama into every story she writes. Cedella’s storytelling style is immersive and addictive—perfect for fans of heated romances and heart-pounding twists.

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