The Events Unfolding.
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The engines steadied into a low drone, a rhythm that finally let me unclench my jaw. The cabin was too tight, too full, bodies pressed into every corner, but at least it was safe for now. Winnie lingered in the aisle, hovering close to Ari’s side, her hands twitching between helping Matteo and needing somewhere to collapse. She caught my eye, a silent request. I glanced at the cramped bench beside Sage, then back to Winnie.
“C’mere,” I muttered.
Careful not to jostle her too hard, I slid an arm beneath Sage’s knees and shifted her across me. She was light but solid, muscle over steel, the scent of blood and gunpowder clinging to her skin. She didn’t even stir as I pulled her onto my lap, her head lolling against my shoulder like the fight had finally drained her dry. My ghost, asleep in the middle of hell. Winnie dropped into the freed space beside us with a shaky sigh, relief softening her face as she leaned back against the bulkhead. She gave me a slight nod of thanks before turning immediately toward Ari again, eyes scanning her as if sheer will could keep the girl alive. That’s when Sage moved. Her lashes flickered, and then those sharp eyes snapped open, still blazing even after everything. She looked straight at Winnie, no hesitation, no softness, like she’d been aware the whole damn time.
“What the hell happened?” she rasped, her voice rough, low, but demanding all the same.
Winnie’s mouth opened, then shut, her fingers tightening around the roll of gauze in her lap.
Sage.
Her voice was small at first, like she wasn’t sure if she had the right to speak it out loud. I leaned forward anyway, pinning her with my eyes. “Tell me. All of it.”
Winnie’s fingers twisted in the gauze, white–knuckled. “It was Yakov,” she whispered, and the cabin went still, the engines the only sound. “He caught Ari covering your tracks. You and Naomi. He… he shot her.”
The words hit harder than any bullet. My stomach knotted, but I kept my face stone. “And you?”
“I ran,” Winnie admitted, guilt sharp in her tone. “I thought it was over right there, but half the compound was asleep. They didn’t know what he’d done yet. I managed to slip out before anyone realised.”
Her eyes flicked to Ari, pale and stitched on the floor, then back to me. “I followed her because she was still moving. And because I owed her. She was the only one in that place who ever treated me like I wasn’t dirt. Like I mattered. I couldn’t leave her there, not after that.”
Her breath hitched, but she pressed on, faster now, as if she stopped, she wouldn’t be able to finish. “Ari gave me directions, even while she was bleeding out. Told me how to get to you. Said you were our only shot. So I just… I kept her moving.”
She finally stopped, shoulders sagging under the weight of it all, waiting for me to tell her she’d failed.
Instead, I reached out and laid my hand on her wrist. “You did more than most would’ve. You kept her breathing, and you brought her back. That’s not failure, Winnie. That’s survival.”
Her eyes welled, but this time she didn’t look away. I leaned back against Conner’s chest, gaze sweeping over the men, the blood, the wreckage we’d dragged onto this plane. Yakov thought he could break Ari. Figured he could use her.
He had no idea what he’d started and what tool he had just led right into our hands.
That bastard didn’t just stumble into Ari’s betrayal. He caught her covering us. Which meant two things: first, he had eyes sharper than I
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The Events Unfolding
gave him credit for. Second, he was already watching me. Always one step behind, never losing the scent. That wasn’t luck, that was obsession. And the shot? That was never meant to kill her clean. No. Yakov wanted a message carried in her blood. He wanted us to see what happened to anyone who protected me. To anyone who put themselves between his leash and my throat. But Ari didn’t fold. Even as she was bleeding out, she managed to feed Winnie directions and a map to us. Which meant she’d already chosen her side. Yakov underestimated her, underestimated the loyalty she’d built even in the cracks of his compound. That mistake would cost him. My jaw clenched. He thought fear would scatter us. Instead, it bound us tighter. Winnie had risked her own skin to drag Ari through hell because of kindness, something Yakov would never understand, something he’d never inspire in anyone. And that made him dangerous, yes, but also blind. He’d marked himself tonight, whether he knew it or not. Every stitch pulling Ari back together was a thread in the noose we’d wrap around his throat. I smoothed a hand over Conner’s thigh absently, grounding myself even as my thoughts turned sharper, darker. You made a move, Yakov. Now it’s my turn.
Winnie’s shoulders slumped after the confession, the fight draining out of her in a sigh. She stared down at Ari’s pale face, then back at me, voice barely more than a whisper.
“So… what do we do now?”
For a moment, the hum of the engines was all I heard. Then Conner’s chest rumbled against my back, his voice cutting through the cabin like a blade.
“We go to Ireland,” he said, steady and sure. “To my Ma and Pa. And we build an army of ghosts.”
The words hit the air like a promise, dark and heavy. His grip on me tightened, almost possessively, before he looked out at his men. “We’re gonna train every single one of you bastards, every one of my family’s men, to look, think, and act just like her.” His chin brushed the top of my head, his voice a growl. “And then we’re gonna come back and slaughter anyone who dares stand with Yakov.”
The silence that followed was thick, electric, the kind of silence before a storm breaks. Every pair of eyes was on him, on us, like the weight of what he’d just said had rearranged the air itself. From the other side of the cabin, Nico’s head popped into view, hair wild, grin even wilder. “That sounds absolutely fucking terrifying…” He smirked, teeth flashing as he leaned back against the bulkhead. “And I’m
here for it.”
A few strained chuckles broke out, tension snapping just enough to let the men breathe. But beneath it all, my skin buzzed–an army of ghosts. My methods and instincts are replicated in all of them. The thought should’ve chilled me. Instead, it made something sharp and deadly unfurl in my chest. Because if Conner was serious and I knew he was, then Yakov’s reign had just been put on notice.
Chapter Comments
Pakalana Piper–somalinog
1 days ago
welcone to Ghost school boys!!! yeeeee I’m so excited!
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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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