CHAPTER 8 THE VAULT POV THAYER
The metallic scent of fresh blood is heavy, cutting through the sterile, climate-controlled air of the master suite like a rusted blade.
I stand perfectly still, staring down at the small, trembling girl pressed against the reinforced glass.
The storm outside rages on, throwing jagged shadows across the room, but the only thing I can see is the crimson streak of the assassin’s blood I just deliberately smeared across Sybil’s pale cheek.
She doesn’t wipe it away. She doesn’t scream.
She simply looks up at me, her midnight-blue eyes completely dilated, swallowing the irises until they are nothing but bottomless, fractured voids.
Her chest rises and falls in rapid, erratic staccatos, the oversized cashmere sweater doing nothing to hide the violent shudder wracking her small frame.
She just watched me snap a man’s neck. She watched me shatter bone and extinguish a life with my bare hands, without a single weapon, without a sliver of hesitation. Any normal woman would be clawing at the walls to escape me.
But Sybil Vance is not normal. She is a survivor of a different kind of monster.
And as she stares at the blood on my knuckles, I can see the terrifying, irreversible shift happening in her mind.
The cognitive dissonance is completely fracturing her reality.
She realizes that the violence she spent her entire life fearing is the exact same violence that just kept her breathing.
A dark, primitive satisfaction uncoils in the center of my chest, thick and heavy like liquid gold.
Mine. "Thayer," she whispers. The sound is completely broken, a frail reed of sound that barely manages to cross the space between us.
"I told you," I murmur, my voice dropping into a dark, guttural vibration that makes the tiny hairs on her arms stand straight up.
I step over the lifeless body of the Commission rat, entirely ignoring the spreading pool of blood soaking into the million-dollar Persian rug.
"You are not a casualty of this war. Nothing I own gets broken. "
I don't give her the opportunity to process the trauma, or to pull back into the psychological shell her father built for her.
I close the remaining distance between us, completely trapping her against the cold glass.
I slide my left arm behind her knees and my right arm across her back, lifting her entirely off the floor in one fluid, terrifyingly easy motion.
She gasps, her hands immediately flying up to grip the lapels of my ruined suit jacket. Her cold fingers brush against my chest, and the contact sends a violent, electrical jolt straight down my spine.
I turn and carry her toward the splintered ruins of the master bedroom doors.
The corridor outside is absolute chaos, completely contradicting the lethal silence I just imposed inside the room.
Dante is sprinting down the hall, flanked by half a dozen heavily armed Syndicate soldiers.
Their automatic rifles are raised, the tactical flashlights slicing through the dim lighting of the residential wing.
Dante skids to a halt the second he sees me stepping over the shattered mahogany frame, carrying Sybil in my arms. His dark eyes drop to the blood coating my right hand, and then to the body lying twisted on the rug behind me.
"Boss," Dante breathes, his jaw locking tight. The realization of the catastrophic security failure hits him with the force of a physical blow. The compound was supposed to be impenetrable.
"The Commission," I state, my voice stripped of all emotion, a dead, flat frequency that sends a visible shiver through the soldiers behind Dante.
"He had a keycard, Dante. He bypassed the biometric scanners on the ground floor, walked past the perimeter guards, and unlocked the secondary service door to my private suite. "
The implication hangs in the air, heavy and suffocating. A keycard.
"An inside job," Dante growls, his knuckles turning white around the grip of his rifle.
"Burn the body," I command, my eyes sweeping over the soldiers, my paranoia instantly spiking into a lethal, hyper-vigilant overdrive.
Every single man in this hallway is now a suspect.
Every single person in this compound is a potential threat to the trembling girl in my arms. "Then lock down the entire estate.
Nobody leaves. Nobody makes a phone call.
If anyone tries to access the perimeter gates, shoot them in the knees and drag them to the basement. I will deal with them personally."
"And you?" Dante asks, his eyes flicking to Sybil, then immediately down to the floor, strictly adhering to the absolute law of my possessiveness even in the middle of a crisis.
"I am taking her underground," I reply. "Do not contact me unless you have the name of the rat who handed over that keycard. If you do not have a name by midnight, Dante, I will start executing the household staff one by one until someone speaks."
"Understood," Dante says, swallowing hard.
I adjust my grip on Sybil, pulling her closer to my chest, and turn away from the residential wing. I do not take her toward the grand staircase. I carry her in the opposite direction, down a long, narrow corridor reserved exclusively for my use.
At the end of the hall is a seamless, reinforced steel wall that looks like a dead end.
I press my bloodied thumb against a hidden biometric scanner embedded in the molding.
A green light flashes, and the steel wall slides open with a heavy, pneumatic hiss, revealing a private, claustrophobic elevator car.
I step inside. The doors seal shut instantly, cutting off the noise of the soldiers, the storm, and the world above.
There are no buttons in this elevator. It only goes to one place.
The descent is rapid, dropping us deep into the bedrock beneath the compound.
The air grows noticeably cooler, carrying the faint, sterile scent of ozone and filtered oxygen.
Sybil presses her face into the crook of my neck.
She is shivering violently now, the adrenaline crash hitting her system in terrifying waves.
"I've got you," I murmur, burying my face in her dark, tangled hair, inhaling the intoxicating scent of vanilla and panic. "You're safe."
"He was... he was going to kill me," she chokes out, her fingers curling into tight, desperate fists against my chest. "He had a knife, Thayer."
"He is dead," I state methodically. "His heart is no longer beating. His lungs are empty. He is a piece of meat on the floor, Sybil. He cannot hurt you."
The absolute, unfeeling brutality of my words should horrify her. But in the twisted logic of survival, the undeniable finality of death is the only guarantee of safety. She lets out a long, ragged exhale, her body sagging heavier against me.
The elevator comes to a smooth halt. The doors slide open.
We step into the Vault.
It is my true inner sanctum. A subterranean bunker built to withstand a nuclear blast, designed for the absolute worst-case scenario.
It is a sprawling, open-concept space of polished concrete, dark steel, and minimalist, brutalist luxury.
There are no windows. There is no natural light.
It is entirely self-sustaining, equipped with its own power grid, air filtration, and an arsenal that could supply a small army.
It is the ultimate cage. And no one, not even Dante, has the biometrics to open the door from the outside.
I carry her across the dark concrete floor, bypassing the massive tactical monitors and the sprawling, dark leather seating area, heading straight for the bunker's bathroom.
I push the heavy frosted glass door open with my shoulder. The bathroom is aggressively sterile, entirely cast in white marble and stainless steel, lit by harsh, surgical-grade lighting. I set Sybil down on the edge of the massive marble vanity counter.
She immediately wraps her arms around her waist, pulling her knees together. Under the bright lights, she looks entirely translucent. The streak of blood on her cheek is a glaring, violent violation against her porcelain skin.
I reach over and turn on the stainless steel faucet, letting the warm water run over my hands. I grab a heavy white towel and vigorously scrub the assassin’s blood from my knuckles, watching the crimson swirl down the drain until the water runs completely clear.
I turn off the tap. The silence in the bunker is absolute, heavy, and completely isolating.
I step between her parted knees, stepping completely into her physical space.
Sybil’s breath hitches audibly. Her eyes dart from my clean hands up to my face. The pulse at the base of her throat is frantic, a trapped bird fluttering desperately against her delicate skin.
"Look at me," I command softly.
She drags her gaze up to meet mine.
"Did he touch you?" I ask, my voice dropping to a low, dangerous frequency.
"No," she whispers, shaking her head slightly. "I fell backward. He lunged... and then the door broke."
"I need to be sure."
I don't wait for her permission. I reach out and take hold of the hem of the oversized charcoal cashmere sweater.
Panic immediately flares in her eyes. The trauma of exposure, the deep-seated fear of vulnerability that her father ruthlessly instilled in her, triggers an automatic defensive response. Her hands fly up to grip my wrists, trying to stop the upward motion of the fabric.
"Thayer, please," she gasps, her fingers completely ice-cold against my skin. "I'm not hurt. You don't have to—"
"Sybil," I interrupt, my tone leaving absolutely no room for debate.
I don't break her grip, but I don't stop moving either.
I simply use my overwhelming physical strength to slowly, deliberately pull the sweater up.
"I just watched a man try to drive six inches of serrated steel into your chest. I am not taking your word for it. Let me see."