Waking up in silk sheets should have felt like a dream, but the smell of expensive whiskey and masculine musk triggered a warning siren in my skull. I was in Dorian McClain's bed-the man who could crush my entire existence with a single signature. I fled his hotel suite like a ghost, but in my hungover panic, I snatched the wrong phone. By the time I reached my crumbling apartment in Queens, that one mistake had already set my life on fire. My uncle Silas had trashed my home, demanding money for my grandfather's nursing home bill. When he saw Dorian's encrypted phone, he didn't see a mistake; he saw a ransom. He sold me out to debt collectors who held a switchblade to my throat, forcing me to call the billionaire I had just abandoned. Dorian didn't save me out of mercy; he came to reclaim a security breach. He treated my rescue like a cold business transaction. He had me fired from my job and forced me into a marriage contract just to secure his family trust. He even made me beg for my grandfather's life, demanding a humiliating act of submission for a medical bill that was mere pocket change to him. To him, I was just a mute, broken girl-the perfect silent accessory for his public image. "Welcome to hell, Mrs. McClain," he murmured, his voice a low rumble as he slid a massive diamond onto my finger. He thinks my silence is a trauma-induced weakness. He thinks he bought a submissive pawn who will stay in her gilded cage. But as I sat in his penthouse and bypassed his "unbreakable" firewalls in seconds, I realized he had made a fatal mistake. Dorian McClain didn't just buy a wife; he invited the CIA's most dangerous ghost into his private mainframe. Echo is back online, and I'm going to burn his empire to the ground.
Ines Mccall woke with a gasp, her lungs seizing as if she were underwater.
She sat up, the movement sharp and violent. The sheets beneath her fingers were silk, cool and slippery, nothing like the rough cotton blend she had washed a thousand times in a Queens laundromat. The air smelled different here. It smelled of expensive cedar, stale whiskey, and a heavy, masculine musk that triggered a warning siren in the base of her skull.
Her head throbbed. A dull, rhythmic pounding behind her eyes brought flashes of the previous night. A bar. The burn of alcohol she hadn't meant to drink. A man's profile, sharp as a knife's edge.
She turned her head.
Dorian Mcclain lay on the other side of the massive bed. He was asleep, his breathing slow and even. even in sleep, he looked dangerous. His jaw was set tight, his dark hair messy against the white pillowcase. This was the man who could crush her entire existence with a signature.
Panic, cold and liquid, flooded her stomach.
Ines forced herself to freeze. Breathe, she commanded her racing heart. In for four. Hold for four. Out for four.
It was a reflex from a life she had buried three years ago. Her pulse slowed, though the terror remained a cold knot in her chest. She had to leave. Now. Before he woke up. Before he remembered whatever mistake they had made last night.
She slid her legs out from under the duvet, her bare feet sinking into plush carpet. She moved like a ghost, every muscle controlled to prevent sound. Her dress, a cheap navy thing she had bought at a thrift store, was a crumpled heap on the floor. Her hands shook as she pulled it on, the zipper snagging briefly before she forced it up.
She scanned the room for her purse. It was on the nightstand.
Next to it sat two phones. Both were black, sleek, and encased in identical matte shells. No logos. No distinguishing marks. Her own cheap, cracked phone lay beside them, looking pathetic in comparison. She snatched it first, her lifeline.
Ines grabbed her purse. Her hand hovered over the phones. Her vision blurred slightly from the hangover. She snatched the one on the outer edge, shoved it into her bag, and turned away.
She didn't look back at Dorian. She couldn't afford to.
She slipped out of the suite, the heavy door clicking shut with a sound that felt like a gunshot in the silence. The elevator ride down was a blur of mirrored reflections she refused to look at. She smoothed her hair, wiped the smudge of mascara from under her eye, and walked through the lobby.
The doorman didn't even look at her. To him, she was just another walk of shame.
Outside, the Manhattan morning air was biting. It hit her exposed arms, raising gooseflesh. Ines wrapped her arms around herself and walked fast, heading for the subway station.
The transition from the Pierre Hotel to the N train was a physical assault. The subway car smelled of stale sweat and breakfast sandwiches. The noise was deafening-the screech of metal on metal, the static of the announcements, the loud conversation of two tourists next to her.
Ines stared at the floor. She watched hands. The tourists had relaxed hands, open and gesturing. The man across from her clutched a briefcase, knuckles white. A woman to her left picked at a hangnail.
Hands told the truth when faces lied.
She got off at Queensbridge. The air here was different-heavier, laced with exhaust and frying oil. She kept her head down, the brim of her invisible hat pulled low, navigating the cracked sidewalks. She avoided the corner where the dealers stood, their eyes tracking her like predators.
Her apartment building loomed, a gray block of concrete that had seen better decades. The front door lock was broken again. It hung loose from the frame, a metal tongue lolling out.
Ines climbed the stairs to the fourth floor. Her legs burned.
Her apartment door was ajar.
Her heart hammered against her ribs. She pushed the door open.
The small living room was a disaster zone. Drawers had been pulled out and dumped on the floor. Her few books were scattered, pages bent. Clothes were strewn everywhere.
The smell of cigarette smoke was thick enough to taste.
Silas Vance sat on the only sturdy chair in the room, his boots resting on her overturned desk. He was her uncle, her only living relative besides her grandfather, and the bane of her existence.
He looked up as she entered. He didn't look sorry. He took a drag from his cigarette and blew the smoke toward the ceiling.
"Where were you?" he asked, his voice a gravelly rasp.
Ines opened her mouth. Her throat tightened, the muscles locking in a familiar, paralyzing spasm. No sound came out. It wasn't that she didn't want to speak. It was that her body physically refused to let her.
She raised her hands, her fingers forming the shapes of American Sign Language. I was out.
Silas stood up, kicking the desk away. "Don't give me that hand-waving bullshit. Where's the money?"
He crossed the room in two strides. Ines flinched, backing into the wall.
"I checked your stash," Silas spat, looming over her. "Empty. You holding out on me, Ines?"
He grabbed her purse from her shoulder, dumping the contents onto the floor. A tube of lipstick, a few coins, her keys, and the black phone skittered across the linoleum.
There was no cash.
Silas's face twisted. Then, his eyes landed on the phone. It looked expensive. Too expensive for her.
He reached for it.
Ines moved on instinct. She dove, her hand clamping over the device. A jolt of adrenaline shot through her. She didn't know why, but every alarm bell in her head was ringing. Do not let him take this.
Silas shoved her.
She flew backward, her shoulder slamming into the wall. Pain radiated down her arm, but she curled around the phone, tucking it against her chest.
"Fine," Silas sneered. He leaned down, his face inches from hers. His breath smelled of rot. "Keep the damn phone. But the nursing home called. They're kicking the old man out if the bill isn't paid by tonight. You want him on the street? That's on you."
He turned and stormed out, slamming the door so hard plaster dust drifted from the ceiling.
Ines sat on the floor, clutching the phone, the silence of the room crushing her.
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