The agency did not believe in comfort.
Not in words. Not in emotions. Not in hesitation.
Only in precision.
Seraphina Cole stood in the dimly lit corridor, her posture straight, her expression unreadable. Around her, the building breathed silence, thick, controlled, almost suffocating. It was the kind of silence that trained people like her… and broke those who didn’t belong.
Footsteps echoed from behind.
Measured. Familiar.
She didn’t turn.
“You’re early.”
The voice was calm, deep, carrying authority without effort. The man stopped beside her, his presence filling the space without needing to announce itself.
Seraphina finally shifted her gaze toward him.
“Timing is discipline.”
A faint smile touched his lips. “Still the same.”
He handed her a thin, black file. No markings. No labels. Just like every mission that mattered.
Seraphina took it without a word.
“This one is different,” he said.
That made her pause.
Not visibly. Not enough for anyone untrained to notice. But inside, something sharpened.
Every mission came with danger. Every mission came with uncertainty. The agency never repeated warnings unless there was something worth fearing.
She opened the file.
A photograph stared back at her.
A man in his late twenties. Sharp features. Cold eyes. Seated in a wheelchair.
Adrian Vale.
The name alone carried weight.
Even she knew it.
One of the most powerful families in the country. Old money. Influence woven into politics, business, and power structures most people didn’t even know existed.
And the heir… was broken.
“Public narrative?” she asked.
“Survivor of a tragic accident,” the man replied. “Car crash. Lost his ability to walk.”
Seraphina studied the image longer than necessary.
There was something about his eyes.
Not weakness.
Not defeat.
Something else.
Something that didn’t match the story.
“And the real narrative?” she asked quietly.
The man’s silence answered first.
“We don’t have it. That’s where you come in.”
Her eyes flicked up.
Interest.
Sharp. Focused.
“Your mission,” he continued, “is to enter the Vale estate as domestic staff. A maid.”
Seraphina didn’t react.
Titles didn’t matter. Positions didn’t matter.
Only access.
“And the objective?”
A brief pause.
Then the words landed heavier than expected.
“Protect him.”
She blinked once.
That was new.
She had infiltrated organizations. Extracted targets. Eliminated threats. Guarded assets from a distance.
But this?
Close proximity. Continuous exposure. No separation between mission and subject.
Risky.
“Threat level?” she asked.
“Unknown.”
Her grip on the file tightened, just slightly.
Unknown was worse than high.
Unknown meant hidden.
Unpredictable.
Dangerous.
“He’s being watched,” the man added. “Not from outside.”
Seraphina’s eyes narrowed.
“Inside the house.”
Now ,That changed everything.
“Family?” she asked.
“Yes.”
She closed the file.
“Names.”
“Victor Vale. His uncle. Currently controlling most of the family affairs.”
She nodded once.
“Lucas Vale. Cousin. Charming. Careful. We don’t trust him.”
A pause.
“Evelyn Vale. Victor’s wife.”
Seraphina waited.
The man exhaled slowly.
“She’s the one you should pay attention to.”
That was enough.
Silence settled between them again.
“One more thing,” he said.
Her gaze lifted.
“This is not a standard protection assignment.”
Her expression remained calm, but her focus sharpened.
“You are not just there to guard him,” he continued. “You are there to observe, uncover, and survive.”
“And if necessary…”
He didn’t finish the sentence.
He didn’t need to.
Seraphina understood.
Neutralize.
She slipped the file under her arm.
“When do I leave?”
The man glanced at his watch.
“You don’t need to.
She stilled.
“The transport is already here.”
Right on cue, the low hum of an engine echoed faintly from outside the building.
Seraphina turned toward the exit.
No hesitation.
No questions.
This was her life.
The corridor stretched ahead of her, long and quiet. Each step she took felt like crossing an invisible line,the one that separated her past missions from whatever this one would become.
At the end of the hall, the doors slid open.
Cool air brushed against her skin as she stepped outside.
A black vehicle waited.
Engine running.
Door open.
Everything prepared.
Just like always.
She stopped for a brief second, her eyes scanning the night sky above. Dark. Endless. Empty.
Then she moved.
As she entered the vehicle, the man’s voice followed her one last time.
“Seraphina.”
She paused, her hand resting on the door.
“For the first time,” he said, “you’re walking into a place where the enemy already knows how to smile.”
Her lips curved faintly.
Not warmth.
Not humor.
Something colder.
“Then I’ll make sure,” she replied, “I learn how they lie.”
The door shut.
The car pulled away.
And just like that, she disappeared,
not into the night.
But into a mission that would change everything.