Chapter One Hundred and Thirty-Nine
He knew she had the gun on him.
Not when she lifted it.
Not even when the barrel was aligned.
He knew it before that; in the way her silence suddenly weighed more than any threat she had ever made, in the way the air around her turned unfamiliar, like a room he had walked into one too many times and finally did not recognize.
He saw her finger resting against the trigger.
Trigger. Such a small word for something that ended empires.
He watched her hand.
Watched as it tightened around the gun.
And then back to her eyes. Watched as her eyes focused on him. They weren’t shaking. They weren’t wild. They were steady.
A final resolute had settled in them.
His breath had caught not from fear, not at first, but from disbelief so sharp it felt almost innocent.
She wouldn’t. Would she? His mind reached for the truth the way a drowning man reached for air. She couldn’t. Not her. Not like this. Not after everything they had given each other in hiding and in silence. Not after the way she had trusted him in pieces instead of words.
But then...
She pulled the trigger.
He didn’t move.
It was not because he was brave.
Because for a fraction of a second, he genuinely believed she wouldn’t do it.
Not because the gun might fail but because she wouldn’t.
He had lived too long believing the world bent where he was concerned. The woman who made hardened men flinch, who ruled with blood and silence, and had suddenly gone strange around him. He thought she had grown softer. Slower.
Careful in ways she was with no one else. He had mistaken that for immunity.
He had mistaken it for safety.
If she meant to warn him, he thought she would graze him. Either his shoulder. Or his arm. Anywhere that said Remember who I am. Anywhere that said Don’t test me again.
But this!
This was different. This wasn’t a lesson. This wasn’t restraint. This wasn’t mercy dressed as fury.
When she aimed at his chest, and when her eyes went colder and more deliberate, he understood too late that she had not come to remind him who she was.
She had come to end him.
Sound detonated inside his chest.
Not pain at first.
Just like an Impact.
Like being struck by something huge and invisible all at once. His body absorbed it before his mind could follow. The force drove the air from his lungs in a violent rush, his ribs screaming as though they had cracked even if they hadn’t. His chest burned.
It didn’t stab. It burned.
Then the pain caught up.
It crawled through him like a living thing, spreading heat and fire through muscle and bone and breath. His vision smeared sideways. The warehouse lights bled into one another, white warping into yellow warping into nothing he could name.
Still, he didn’t fall right away.
He refused to.
His knees buckled, slower than they should have. Not from mercy, but from stubbornness. He would not collapse in front of her. Not like a beggar. Not like the men he had put down without ceremony. He had lived too long ruling rooms to die kneeling at anyone’s feet.
Only now did it strike him that he had never truly faced death before. Not until Asli, and the realization burned as fiercely as the wound in his chest. It was a cruel enlightenment that finally taught him exactly how his victims had felt in their final, breathless moments.
Blood filled his mouth. It tasted metallic. Thick. He swallowed it because he refused to spit like an animal.
His world narrowed into strange details.
The cold was creeping up from the concrete beneath him and the echo of the shot was bouncing off.
The ache in his chest deepened into something vast and terrifying. He dropped anyway.
Not like a man giving in.
Like a mountain finally remembering gravity existed.
When his body hit the floor, sound returned to him, not like the crack of a weapon, nor like the rush of pain but the dull, heavy truth of weight meeting earth. His skull rang. The impact rattled what little breath remained inside him loose from his lungs.
Somewhere above him, she stepped forward.
He heard it.
He recognized the sound of her boots the way some men knew their lover’s heartbeat. The rhythm of her had lived inside him too long not to.
His body responded before his pride could stop it. Something in him strained toward her. Not his hand. Not his mouth.
His chest. His bloodied chest.
Instinctively.



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