Chapter Forty
Asher
Raine doesn’t move when I emerge from the bedroom. She’s still at the table, her gaze fixed somewhere beyond the open laptop in front of her.
I pause in the doorway, watching. She’s not tense. Just quiet in the way I’ve come to understand means she’s processing—arranging fragments of information like she’s just opened a new puzzle and has finally separated out all the edge pieces.
I can see the change when she senses me.
Her shoulders drop, and she presses her fingertips to the table top.
“Every GSD agent has a risk score. Break a rule, that score increases. If it gets too high, Coherent Path is inevitable. There’s no appeal.
No chance to plead your case or change your behavior. ”
Her voice is even, but underneath, there’s a hint of vulnerability. She turns and holds out her hand.
After what those assholes did to her, she shouldn’t be able to trust anyone. Wanting touch–wanting me–is something I’ll never take for granted.
I take the other chair, my fingers curled loosely around hers, but don’t speak. She’s still working through what comes next.
“Compliance doesn’t change the protocol. Belief does. Compliance without belief is what determines disposal.”
There’s no crack in her voice. No hesitation. Just the smooth clarity she gets when something horrible finally makes sense in a way she can use.
A tremor runs through her fingers, and I tighten my hold.
“There’s a review authority somewhere. There has to be.
Coherent Path only does what it’s told.” A breath that isn’t quite a sigh follows.
“That line in my file? ‘Subject shows signs of mimicry’? I understand it now. Why they’d marked me as a compliance failure.
They could break my body. They knew they couldn’t change my mind. ”
A cold, steady pressure settles beneath my ribs. Shock, horror, and a low, dangerous kind of rage tangle together, anchored to a truth I suspected but wasn’t prepared to hear.
I swallow everything I want to say. Raine doesn’t need me to comfort her. She’s not reliving what happened. She’s categorizing it and turning it into leverage.
The way her mind works still catches me off guard.
Most people who survive even half of what was done to her shrink or fracture in ways that never quite heal.
I don’t know who she was. But now? This woman is brilliant and relentless.
Her strength doesn’t come from denial, but from the quiet, deliberate refusal to let anyone else decide who she gets to be.
“You called Inara?” she asks, curling her fingers around mine.
“I did. There’s a car watching your building. They’re not being quiet about it. A handful of parking tickets in the past twenty-four hours.”
Her eyes go glassy, and she curls inward, as if making herself smaller will somehow fix things. But after only a few seconds, she straightens. “What else?”
I fill her in, and she nods like she expects every single escalation.
“They’re accelerating faster than I anticipated. How long until they find us?” Raine’s voice splinters at the edges.
“I don’t know. I’ve been careful since I brought you here. I wasn’t so careful before. I didn’t have a reason to be. A day. Maybe two.”
Raine swallows, then presses the fingers of her left hand to the table hard enough a tremor runs up her arm.
“I…I need rules,” she says, so quietly, I have to strain to hear it. “A plan. For when we have to move.”
“This place is secure enough that we won’t be surprised. There are three exits, and I’ll walk you through them whenever you’re ready. Two cars in the garage with clean plates, and a third in long-term parking on the next block.”
She nods, but the tremor persists.
“I’ll handle packing. You won’t have to leave anything behind. Clothes, shampoo, extra socks… Everything should fit in two bags. We’ll test yours. Make sure it doesn’t aggravate your shoulder.”
Her breath evens out, and she drops her hands to her lap. “Okay. I can work with that. Where do we go?”
“I have a second safe house in Bellevue. It’s leased to a different shell company than this one, tied to an alias that hasn’t been touched yet.
As long as it stays that way, and we don’t expose ourselves digitally, we can probably spend several nights there.
If we need more than that…I’ll make some calls. See what favors I can call in.”
“Comms?” she asks.
“Two of the burners in the storage unit are flip phones. Harder to trace those. But we don’t touch them until we move.”
“We should set up secure messaging drops if we’re…separated.”
The tremor’s back. Worse this time. Fuck. She’s not ready for this. Neither am I. Not truly. The idea of Raine on her own… I know she’s capable. Hell, she spent fifteen years in the field. She’s probably more capable than I am. But after what she survived, she needs stability.
“We will. I’ll handle that first. Unless you have a protocol you’ve used before? You tell me what you need, and I’ll make it happen.”
“I…trust you.” Her gaze finally meets mine, and the truth there…it’s enough to destroy me. “We can’t keep playing defense. I’ve been hiding for too long. The only way to end this is to find something I can use to stop them.”
“Okay. You do that. I’ll handle logistics. Everything. I won’t get in your way, but if you need help—or if you need me to tell you what I’m doing and how—I’m here.”
I’m already running through exits in my head—the stairs, the service corridor three floors down, the elevator, even the roof. GSD will come for me first. Raine might be the end game, but they think I’m the leverage.
She turns back to the laptop, tense, but focused. “I could do this alone,” she says, opening the stolen log files and then glancing up at me. “It matters that I don’t have to.”
In the bedroom, I crouch down and open the panel in the back of the closet. The safe is barely large enough to hold a shoebox, but its contents are worth more to me than anything else in the apartment—except Raine.
I take inventory. Enough cash to get us out of the country, four fresh ID packets for me, a 9mm Beretta, two boxes of ammunition, and a thumb drive of secrets I’ve collected over the years. In case I ever had to blackmail someone to get myself out of danger.
There’s one more thing I need, but I can’t get it on my own.
In five minutes, I open an encrypted text channel from my tablet.
I need one more favor. But only if you can do it without going through a single government channel.
Inara replies almost immediately.
“Name it.”
If I’m wrong about her, this could backfire. But I’ve stayed alive this long because I’ve learned how to read people.
I need a clean ID for Raine. Clean enough to get her out of the country. Somewhere warm. Somewhere that doesn’t computerize Customs records. And I need it by tomorrow.
The chat bubbles dance along the bottom of the screen. Stop. Then start again.
Dead drop after 4:00 p.m. You pick the location.
I blow out a long, slow breath.
How much do I owe you?
More bubbles. Shorter this time.
You saved my life once. I can cover it. Send me the location by 3:30 p.m. and I’ll make it happen. No contact, and if I see anyone who looks like they shouldn’t be there, I’ll let you know.
The tension holding my shoulders halfway up to my ears eases as I sever the connection. Whatever happens next, Raine will have options. As long as I’m alive, I’ll do whatever I can to make sure no one takes that from her again.