Chapter 14
KNOX
The utility closet door splinters under my shoulder like rotted kindling, the hinges screaming their surrender as I barrel through with Cypress tucked against my side.
The maintenance ladder stretches upward into darkness, a rusted iron skeleton that leads to the roof access hatch, but the thunder of pursuing footsteps tells me we have perhaps thirty seconds before the guards round that final corner and trap us in this dead-end corridor.
"The ladder. I can climb. I'll go first and—"
"No time." I wrap my arm around her waist and lift her off her feet, ignoring her startled yelp as I sling her over my shoulder like a sack of grain.
The document box presses into my back as she instinctively grabs onto my turtleneck for balance, her fingers twisting in the fabric hard enough to stretch the weave.
"Hold tight, little valkyrie. This may be somewhat. .. undignified."
"Knox, what are you—"
I leap.
My hand catches the ladder six rungs up, and the rusted metal groans in protest as I haul us both upward with raw strength. The muscles in my arm burn with the familiar fire of exertion as I climb, each pull lifting us another three feet toward the roof access.
Below us, voices echo in the utility closet. Flashlight beams sweep across the walls, painting dancing shadows on the ladder rungs.
"They went up! Roof access!"
I climb faster.
The hatch resists my first shove, decades of disuse having sealed it shut with accumulated grime and rust, but the second impact of my fist punches it open with a screech of tortured metal.
Cold night air floods down around us, and I heave us both through the opening onto the tar-paper surface of the roof, rolling immediately to put my body between Cypress and the hatch in case the guards are faster than I estimated.
"Stay down." I push her behind a HVAC unit, pressing her into the shadows where the ambient light from the city cannot reach. Her eyes are huge in the darkness, glittering with fear and adrenaline and something else—something that looks remarkably like exhilaration.
The hatch clangs below us as the first guard attempts to follow our path.
I grab the heavy maintenance door that covers a secondary access point and wrench it free from its hinges, the bolts shearing with a satisfying snap, and I wedge it over the hatch opening just as the guard's head emerges.
The impact is deeply satisfying, and the guard's muffled curse as he drops back down the ladder is even more so.
"That will delay them perhaps two minutes." I grab Cypress's hand and pull her toward the roof's edge, where the emergency fire escape ladder descends the building's exterior. "We must move quickly."
"Knox, that's four stories." She peers over the edge at the dizzying drop, her face pale in the amber glow of the streetlights below. "If you think I'm climbing down that in these shoes—"
"You are not climbing." Her arms wrap automatically around my neck, and the scent of her—jasmine and fear-sweat and something uniquely, intoxicatingly her—fills my lungs like battle-smoke. "You are being carried. Hold the evidence. Do not let go."
"Of the box or of you?"
"Both."
I swing over the roof's edge and drop.
The fire escape shudders under my weight as I land on the top platform, the metal grating groaning in protest. I do not pause to let it recover.
Each flight of stairs becomes a controlled fall, my free hand catching the railing just long enough to redirect our momentum before I release and drop again.
Cypress has buried her face against my neck, her breath hot and rapid against my pulse point, and her fingers have twisted so tightly into the fabric of my turtleneck that I suspect she may have permanently stretched the collar.
Third floor. Second floor. First floor.
My boots hit the alley pavement with a bone-jarring impact that I absorb through bent knees and rolling momentum, and then we are running—or rather, I am running, my legs eating up the distance between Hoffstead's building and the darkness of the adjacent street while Cypress clings to me like a particularly determined barnacle.
The document box digs into my ribs with each stride, a sharp reminder of what we have won tonight, what we are stealing toward freedom.
Behind us, I hear the fire escape clatter as the guards finally reach the roof and discover our escape route.
Shouts echo through the night, orders to pursue, to intercept, to call for backup—but we are already rounding the corner, slipping into the shadows of a delivery alcove where I press us both against the cold brick wall and hold absolutely still.
My blood roars in my ears like the drums of war. Her breath mingles with mine in the narrow space between our faces, and in the darkness, her eyes find mine.
"That was—" She swallows hard, her throat working visibly. "That was the most insane thing I have ever done in my life."
"We are not finished yet." I force myself to set her down, though every instinct screams to keep her pressed against me where she is safe. "My vehicle is two blocks north. Can you run?"
"In these shoes?" She looks down at her feet, at the sensible but still feminine flats she wore for the infiltration. "I can sprint."
"Then we sprint."
We do not sprint. We run with the desperate, ground-eating pace of soldiers fleeing a battlefield, weaving through alleys and side streets while the distant wail of sirens begins to pierce the night.
My hand never leaves hers, my fingers wrapped completely around her smaller ones, and I find myself constantly adjusting my stride to match her shorter legs.
The document box swings between us, evidence of our victory, proof of our enemy's corruption.
When we finally reach my vehicle—a sleek black SUV with tinted windows and reinforced frame—I bundle her into the passenger seat with perhaps more force than strictly necessary. She does not complain.
"Your penthouse. We need to go somewhere they won't think to look. Somewhere safe."
"My penthouse is a fortress." I take a corner at a speed that makes her grab the door handle for stability, but she does not protest. "Biometric locks on every entrance.
Private elevator requiring retinal scan.
The building itself employs security personnel loyal to my clan.
They would die before allowing Hoffstead's vermin to breach our perimeter. "
"That's... actually really comforting right now."
The drive across the city takes seventeen minutes—far longer than I would prefer, but I force myself to ease off the accelerator once we are clear of Hoffstead's territory.
Drawing attention from local law enforcement would complicate matters unnecessarily, and we need time to process what we have stolen before the next phase of battle begins.
Cypress does not speak during the drive.
She holds the document box like a talisman, her fingers tracing absent patterns on its cardboard surface, and her gaze remains fixed on the passing lights of the city.
I can see her mind working behind those clever eyes, processing and planning and strategizing even as the adrenaline slowly drains from her system.
She is magnificent. She has always been magnificent, but tonight she blazed like a star going nova, all courage and cunning and the kind of determination that makes warriors sing their enemies to death on the battlefield.
I have raided fortresses and conquered territories and brought entire clans to their knees through superior tactics and overwhelming force, but I have never—never—experienced the raw, intoxicating thrill of watching this small human woman crack a vault code while I stood guard with nothing but my fists and my fury.
I am utterly, catastrophically, irreversibly hers.
The parking garage beneath my building swallows us into cool darkness, and I guide the SUV into its designated space with hands that have finally stopped trembling. The adrenaline is fading, replaced by a bone-deep weariness that I refuse to acknowledge until we are safely inside my walls.
"Come." I round the vehicle and open her door, offering my hand to help her down.
She takes it without hesitation, her fingers curling trustingly around mine, and I feel that touch echo through my entire body like the first note of a battle hymn.
"We review the evidence. We plan our counterattack. And then..."
"And then?"
I do not answer. I simply lead her toward the private elevator, my palm pressed against the biometric scanner, my eye positioned for the retinal sweep. The doors slide open with a whisper of expensive engineering, and we step into the brushed-steel interior together.
The ride to the top floor takes forty-three seconds. Forty-three seconds of standing beside her in silence, acutely aware of every breath she takes, every shift of her weight, every lingering trace of fear-sweat and jasmine that clings to her skin.
The war must be won before I allow myself to claim my victory prize.
The elevator opens directly into my penthouse.
Cypress takes in her surroundings for the first time.
The space is vast—nearly four thousand square feet of open floor plan—with floor-to-ceiling windows that showcase the glittering Manhattan skyline like a conquered kingdom spread before its new ruler.
The furnishings are minimal but expensive withleather sofas the color of old blood, a dining table hewn from a single slab of reclaimed oak, abstract sculptures that suggest violence barely contained.
"This is where you live?"