Chapter 4: The Executioner's Bargain

998 Words
The neon lights of the police station flickered with a rhythmic, dying hum, casting long, sickly shadows across the cracked linoleum floor. The air was thick with the smell of floor wax, stale cigarette smoke from the back rooms, and the sour tang of desperation. I sat on a cold metal bench that felt like it was leaching off the very warmth from my bones. My wrists were bare, but the weight of the accusations, the theft of the Thorne family anklet felt heavier than any iron shackles. The officers behind their high desks were busy filing paperworks, their movements sluggish and indifferent. To them, I was just another gold-digger caught in the crosshairs of a powerful family. They didn't see the woman who had spent the last three years silently mapping the vulnerabilities of the Thorne empire. They didn't see the Blackwood Heiress. They saw a nuisance and a thief in a wine-stained dress. "The Blackwood records," I whispered, my voice barely a breath. My thoughts raced to the estate. If Sarah followed through on her threat to level the ruins of my childhood home, the only physical proof of my lineage, the birth records, the hidden safe, and the truth of my identity would be buried in the dust. "They won't be destroyed. Not unless I allow it." I thought that was me assuring myself but the voice was a low, gravelly resonance that it seemed to vibrate through the metal bench and into my spine. I looked up. Theo Sterling stood in the entrance of the precinct, a figure made of charcoal and shadow. He looked entirely too clean, too expensive, for a place this grimy. The lines on his bespoke suit were sharp enough to cut, and his presence alone seemed to command the oxygen in the room. He didn't walk; he moved with the predatory grace of a man who knew he was the most dangerous thing in any building he entered. He stopped a few feet away, leaning against a grime-covered pillar. His silver-gray eyes fell on the smear of wine on my dress before it then moved to my face, searching for a c***k in my stoicism. "Elena." He called. "Mr. Sterling," I said, my voice echoing slightly in the hollow room. "I wasn't aware that the Executioner frequented police stations at three in the morning. I am yet to hear of that tale. Or have you come to watch the public execution?" "I don't watch executions, Elena. I make them happen," he replied. He stepped into the light, and I saw the cold, satisfied tilt of his mouth. He reached into his inner breast pocket and pulled out a small, charred photograph. My breath hitched. My heart, which I had trained to beat in a steady, analytical rhythm, thudded painfully against my ribs. The photo was old, the edges curled and blackened by fire. It showed a child, me,being carried through a wall of orange, roaring flames. It was a piece of my history I thought had been consumed by the earth. "How did you know? And where did you get that?" I hissed, rising from the bench. My legs felt weak, but I forced them to hold. He held it just out of my reach. "I was there, Elena. I’ witnessed the whole unfortunate event And I have been searching for you since the night the Blackwood estate became a funeral pyre. Everyone thought the heiress died in that hospital, together with her parents. But of course, everyone except me." The room seemed to close in on me. The sounds of the precinct: the phones ringing, the distant sirens, the chatter of officers, it all faded into a dull roar. There was only Theo and the terrifying truth he held between his fingers. "You think you are playing a long game against Julian," Theo murmured, his voice dropping an octave as he stepped into my personal space. The scent of sandalwood and expensive tobacco enveloped me. "But Julian is just a petty thief playing with a crown that doesn't fit. Do you want to know the man who actually ordered the hit? The man who funded the so-called accident that killed your parents?" "You know who it is," I realized, the coldness in my chest turning into a searing heat. "But how were you able to figure out all of this without even dropping and hint for me to follow?" "I have the names of those who were involved, I have the bank transfers, I have the evidence to bury Julian Thorne and everyone he ever looked at ten feet under the city's bedrock." He paused, his gaze darkening with a hunger that wasn't about business. It was possessive, primal. Theo leaned closer, his hand coming up to rest on the wall behind my head, effectively trapping me between his shadow and the cold stone. "Sarah’s excavators are idling at the gates of the estate as we speak. And at the moment, only I can stop them with a single text. I can turn your 'theft' charge into a formal apology from the Chief of Police within the hour." " And what do you want in exchange?" I rasped He tilted his head, his silver eyes locking onto mine with an intensity that made it hard to breathe. "One of the things I love about you is your sharp-wit, you already know that the Executioner doesn't work for free. To get your justice, you have to partner with the Devil. And I don't want your money, neither do I want your gratitude." "What is it that you want?" I asked again, searching his eyes for an answer. He leaned in until his lips were inches from my ear, his voice a lethal promise. "I want you to marry me by sunrise. Sign my contract, and I will give you the world. Refuse, and you can watch from your jail cell while Sarah turns your past into a parking lot."
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