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Edited at March 31, 2026 09:07 PM by Rose Thorn Manor
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Isla nodded once, small and tight, the way someone signs a contract with their eyes before the ink dries. Adrian would be Nikolai — fine. That meant she was Aliana, and the rest of the night narrowed into a checklist. She moved immediately from theory to practice. “Good,” she said, voice low and efficient. “We swap into their silhouettes tonight. You take Nikolai’s stance, his cadence, his hands in pockets or on the armrest. I’ll take the flirt — the half-lidded smile, the laugh on the breath, the way she perches. We’ll rehearse the small things until they’re muscle.” She set the parameters fast. “Tonight: mimicry drills in the corridor. You coach me on Nikolai’s reactions; I coach you on the exact tone and timing of Aliana’s whispers. We film one quick clip of each other — two angles — to watch for tells. Wardrobe after that: we find a dress and a coat that read the same at a glance. You bring any mannerisms you remember; I’ll pick up the rest.” Her eyes sharpened. “Containment is still last resort. No sloppy chloroform blunders; if we have to render them unconscious, do it quietly and cleanly. Phones off, swapped for dead ones, keys taken. We rehearse exits — two cars, two routes. Signals are strict: green, amber, red. No improvisation.”
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Edited at March 31, 2026 09:07 PM by Rose Thorn Manor
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Isla listened, every line of Adrien’s plan folding into her like a file into a drawer. He wanted blunt solutions — knock them out, swap clothes, one car, one exit. The logic was efficient. The cost, she thought, was messier than he seemed willing to admit. She let him finish, then answered with the same crisp control she always wore like armor. Her tone narrowed. “I want the ledger intact and I want them alive if there’s any reasonable alternative. You want Mirov dead — we can deal with him after paper’s in hand and in a place we can clear. You accept those constraints, we proceed. You don’t, then you carry the fallout you claim to want to avoid pretending you can control.” She paused, watching him for the flicker that would tell her which version of Calder she had in front of her: the cleaner who liked tidy endings, or the man who’d burn the room to get his truth. Rain tapped the window. The clock kept time.
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Edited at March 31, 2026 09:08 PM by Rose Thorn Manor
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Isla let his promise sit for a beat, tasting the aftertaste of it — competence wrapped in menace. She could feel the practical logic: the ledger first, Mirov gone after, a silent cleanup. It was a clean solution, ugly but efficient. She nodded once, small and deliberate. “All right,” she said, voice even. “We do it your way — ledger first, then Mirov. You get your silence, and I get the paper and a clean exit.” Her words were an agreement, not a surrender. But she made sure he knew the price of that trust. Isla’s eyes narrowed in a look that held steel more than warmth. “I’m accepting this on conditions. I want names and times for your cleanup contacts — who they answer to, how long they take, and what they need from us. I need confirmation that the extraction routes are locked and that there’s a medical contingency if containment goes sideways. Those are non-negotiable.” She stepped back slightly, folding the deal into the ledger of risks she carried. “I don’t trust you yet, Calder,” she added bluntly, “but I accept the temporary alliance. Prove me wrong.” Rain tapped the window. The clock kept time. The plan, ugly and precise, began to take shape.
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Edited at March 31, 2026 09:08 PM by Rose Thorn Manor
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Isla listens to the names and lets them settle like facts on a table: Nicole, Angela, Giovanni, Kevin, Kayla. She doesn't react with warmth — she never does when someone offers people as currency — but she does sharpen, like a blade readied. “Names help,” she says, voice even, “but names aren’t enough.” She steps closer until the lamp throws both their faces into the same pool of light and lays out what she needs, precise and unromantic: “I want photos — recent, full body — and the exact positions they’ll hold tonight. Which uniforms are they wearing? Which one will be posted directly outside the lounge door, and under what cover story? Tell me who, if anyone, officially liaises with House Security so we’re not surprised by an unforeseen patrol.” Her tone shifts to logistics. “Medical contingency: which of your people are med-trained? Who carries sedatives and who carries the reversal or basic first aid? If someone’s rendered unconscious, I want a breathing monitor on them. No deaths if there’s another option.” She taps the edge of the nightstand once, counting off the next demands like coordinates. “Comms: give me radio channels or a dead-drop schedule, and the call signs your team will use. Extraction: where is the car staged? What valet ticket will we present? What are your cleanup team’s ETAs and their chain of command if something goes sideways?” Isla watches him for micro-tells as she speaks — any hesitation would be data. “Give me those details plainly,” she adds, “and I work with your people. Leave them vague and I walk out that door and never look back. This is time bought, not trust. Make it count, Calder.”
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Edited at March 31, 2026 09:08 PM by Rose Thorn Manor
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Isla absorbed every detail he offered, dissecting the information with the quiet, predatory stillness of someone who’d spent her adult life deciding what could be trusted and what absolutely could not. The pieces he withheld didn’t surprise her — no agency volunteer-hands their people’s blood type and home addresses, and she didn’t expect him to. What mattered was that the operational gaps were filled. They were. By the time the plan was fully locked into place, her jaw had unclenched, though not entirely. Relaxation wasn’t in her nature — but the hard edge of suspicion had eased into something more like functional tolerance. Then he said, “Okay, so you’ll stay here tonight.” Her spine stiffened instinctively. The room. The one bed. The implications. The risks. Before she could speak, he glanced at the bed and visibly winced. “You take the bed, I’ll sleep on the floor.” Isla blinked, surprised by the instinctive gentleman-gesture — genuine, almost awkward in its earnestness. She didn’t trust him, not yet, but she noted the gesture. Catalogued it. Filed it under makes inconvenient attempts at decency. He excused himself for a shower, and Isla let out a breath she didn’t realize she’d been holding. Alone, she set about making the room operational: she checked the door’s deadbolt, wedged a folded towel into the latch as a sound trap, placed her garrote wire within reach beside the bed, and swept the corners for surveillance points out of habit. The room appeared clean — but she trusted that about as much as she trusted him. The shower shut off. A moment later, he stepped out with nothing but a towel, and Isla’s hand went automatically, reflexively to the knife sheath hidden under her blazer. He mumbled an apology, flustered, grabbed his clothes, and vanished back into the bathroom. Only then did she exhale — not embarrassed, but annoyed with herself for reacting at all. When he returned dressed in sweats and a worn t-shirt, she straightened. “Next time,” she said coolly, “announce yourself before walking out half-naked. My reflexes don’t care that you’re unarmed.” Her gaze flicked briefly to the bed, then back to him. “And you’re not sleeping on the floor. If we’re playing the Orlovs tomorrow, I need to study proximity. Their mannerisms don’t work if we can’t even sit beside each other without bristling.” A beat. Then, clipped: “But don’t read into it. Pillows down the middle. Try not to snore.”
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