Chapter 5 Katana #2

“Already did.” Vex grins, not looking up. “Obsidian’s one of the best hackers out there, even better than me. We should have more soon.”

The room goes still. You can hear the low hum of Vex’s tablet, the soft, rapid tapping of her fingers over glass. Diesel huffs a breath near Lady Cain’s boots, and Lolita starts absently twirling a knife between her fingers.

“How long is ‘soon’?” Scarlet mutters.

“I’ve seen her do it in less than five minutes,” Vex offers, but there’s tension in her voice.

“If she’s pulling from old federal cases, it could take longer,” Orchid says quietly. She’s leaning forward now, elbows on her knees, watching Vex like the screen is a ticking time bomb.

“Tick tock,” Lady Cain mutters, stroking Diesel's head when it pops up to meet her hand.

Vex raises one finger without looking up. “Don’t rush the genius. She’s in.” Another few keystrokes. A smirk. “Record time. Obsidian delivered.”

Everyone straightens.

Vex’s fingers blur. A new file opens. Her voice lowers. “Dante didn’t run clean fights in New York. Serrano backed him. His gym was used to launder money and move product. Drugs. Weapons.” She hesitates, then adds, “Girls.”

My stomach dips, and I don’t know why. Every sign points to Dante Cross being as dirty as they come.

“Why did he leave?” Quinn asks.

“Looks like he flipped.” Vex glances up.

“Either on Serrano or his brother. Not sure. The Feds built a case on both, but only one got pinched. Anthony Serrano’s doing a max sentence for laundering.

Obsidian says one day Dante burned down his gym, vanished, and six months later popped up in AC with fresh funding and a new fight circuit. ”

“Jesus,” Silk murmurs.

“Why hasn’t Serrano just killed him?” Meadow asks.

“Maybe he’s trying,” I say. “Maybe that’s what this is. A setup. Payback.”

Quinn leans back, eyes drilling into mine like she knows I’m torn. I shouldn’t be. Everything points to him being involved. But when I told him his ring was a death sentence, that look in his eye was real. Raw. He masked it fast, but I hit something deep.

“We don’t move on Dante yet. Not until we know if he’s working with Serrano… or hiding from him,” Quinn says.

“He’s hiding something,” Lady Cain mutters.

“Either way, we keep digging.”

Scarlet taps her pen against her tablet. “So what’s our play?”

Quinn turns to me. “Katana. He already knows your face. You’re the closest to a contact we’ve got. Get closer. Apply pressure. See what cracks.”

My gut twists. I hate this. Every instinct in me says stay the hell away from Dante Cross. I’m too close to it. But I know how to crack a man open from the inside, and we need the truth. If he’s connected to anyone hurting our girls, I’ll cut him down myself.

“Fine,” I say. What else can I do?

“Church adjourned,” Quinn says.

Chairs scrape back, the weight of what we learned dragging heavier than the sound of boots on the old floor. Nobody lingers tonight. They peel off in twos and threes, some heading for the bar, others outside for a smoke. Voices drop to murmurs, and even those die quickly.

I don’t say a word. Just rise from my chair, run a hand over the scarred steel grip one last time, and make my way down the narrow hall. The clubhouse’s quiet, the hum of the fridge in the kitchen the only sound following me.

I walk past the locked storeroom, past the framed photos of rides and rallies lining the wall.

Up the creaking stairs, each step echoing in the emptiness until I hit the second floor landing.

I head toward my room at the end of the hall pausing momentarily at the door to the room Amber was given for the time being.

I press my palm flat against it and slowly crack it open.

I’m greeted by silence. The kind of silence that feels heavy like it’s daring something to break it.

Amber’s tucked into the bed, covers pulled tight around her.

Good. She needs sleep. She needs peace. But I know it’s temporary.

She’s seen the man with the red-eyed snake tattoo.

That means she’s a target, whether we want to admit it or not.

Serrano doesn’t leave witnesses. She needs safety and The Royal Harlots will give her that for as long as it takes to put a stop to what’s going down on the streets outside our compound.

Turning back, I head to my room. The hallway feels longer than it should, the walls closing in on either side of me. My shoulders ache from carrying the weight of every unanswered question we’ve got.

Inside, my room’s pitch-black except for the weak spill of streetlight that cuts across the floor in broken lines through the blinds. I drop my cut over the back of the chair, toe off my boots, but I don’t sit.

Instead, I pace. Slow at first, then faster.

My mind’s not in this room. It's still back in Church, still staring at that damn red-eyed snake now burned into my memory. Rico Mendez. Serrano. Dante. The names loop like they’re welded together.

I try to make them separate but they keep snapping back into the same ugly chain.

I stop at the dresser, my fingers tracing across the wood, then I move again. Ten steps one way. Ten steps back.

I’m wired. Frustrated. Worn raw.

I strip down and head for the shower, letting the water run hot enough to sting. Steam curls up, fogging the mirror. I stay there longer than I need to, my palms braced against the tile, the pounding spray loud enough to almost drown out my thoughts. Almost.

When I’m done, I wrap a towel around myself, and wander back into the bedroom.

I exchange the damp towel for an oversized t-shirt and drop into the chair.

My phone’s already in my hand before I realize it.

I scroll through messages, photos, news alerts, anything that might distract me or give me something useful.

But it’s all the same recycled shit. No answers.

No clarity. I flip it face-down on the nightstand like that’ll keep it from looking at me.

I lie back, staring at the ceiling, counting the cracks I can just make out in the weak light bleeding through the blinds. I try to focus on breathing, on nothing, but my brain won’t let go. I press my knuckles against my jaw and exhale through my nose. Nothing helps.

It’s just past four a.m. when I give up pretending I’m going to sleep. I’m on my feet again, my legs won’t quit pacing. I cross the room to the window and push the blinds up with two fingers.

The street below is washed in the dull yellow glow of overhead lights. Empty. Still.

Except… I’m not.

My phone buzzes on the table behind me.

I freeze. No one texts me at this hour.

I snatch it up. An unknown number. But I read the text anyways:

It’s getting worse. If you want answers, we need to talk. - Dante

My thumb hovers over the screen. One question in my mind: how the hell did he get my number?

Everything inside me screams to proceed with caution. That this could be bait. That this might be a distraction. That he’s playing me.

The thoughts roll around with the others in my head, calculating whether Dante Cross is a problem… or an ally.

I’m not sure I know the answer, but I want to.

My thumb taps the screen, then pulls back. I stare at the blinking cursor like it’s a dare. I hold my breath a beat. My pulse pounding loud in my ears. Then I start typing:

Steel Roses Gym. Dawn. You show, you talk. I decide if I believe a damn word.

I hesitate. Then send it.

No pleasantries. Just a line in the sand. And a meeting I intend to control.

I slide the phone face-down onto the table, turn back to the window, and stay there watching shadows crawl across asphalt, waiting for dawn to break.

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