Chapter 1 – Undercover Vows

748 Words
“Don't look so nervous, April," Sophie Lane murmured into her champagne glass, smile razor-sharp. The man beside her didn't glance her way. “You're sweating. Bad sign." “I'm not sweating. I'm glowing." “You glow when you lie?" Agent McKinley's voice crackled in her earpiece. “Classy." She adjusted the diamond teardrop earring—bugged, naturally—and scanned the glittering ballroom. Chandeliers blazed. The Chicago elite mingled like predators in formalwear. Her target, Arthur Morgan, stood near the charity auction table, black tux, navy tie, controlled stance. He radiated power. Dangerous power. “Target at ten o'clock. Approaching the Monet." Sophie glided forward, heels silent, posture poised. “April Stanford," she announced, extending a manicured hand. Arthur took it, his grip precise. “Arthur Morgan. New money or old?" “Depends. Do federal bonds count as heritage?" she quipped. A flicker of something—amusement? suspicion?—flashed in his slate-gray eyes. “Only if you bought them in 1929." She tilted her head. “Maybe I did." “Let the games begin," McKinley murmured in her ear. Arthur gestured toward the canvas. “You bidding on this mess?" “It's a Monet," Sophie said, sipping. “And yes. I like lost light." “Or maybe you like expensive distractions." “I'm told they run in the family," she countered. He laughed—low, surprised. “Touché." The moment stretched. A shriek sliced through the air. Gunshots exploded. Screams rippled across the ballroom. Masked assailants stormed in, semi-automatics raised. “DOWN!" someone shouted. Sophie shoved Arthur behind a marble pillar, skirts flaring. “Stay here." “You carry a gun?" She drew nothing—but her heel clicked sharply as it came off. The attacker didn't even see the blade until it sliced across his throat. Arthur stared. “That's not Prada." “Nope," she muttered, ducking behind a buffet cart. “Try Dagger & Co." “Target secure?" McKinley asked. “Temporarily." One assailant raised his weapon—Arthur lunged, tackling Sophie aside. Gunfire shattered glass above their heads. They landed hard, tangled. Sophie's hand was on his chest, breath rapid. Arthur blinked down at her. “You're insane," he muttered. “Thank you." Sirens wailed outside. The gunmen scattered. Arthur helped her up. “You didn't flinch." “Neither did you." They stared at each other. “Come by the site tomorrow," he said suddenly. “The new foundation we're funding. You'll like it." She arched a brow. “You inviting all your saviors on tours?" “Just the ones who stab people with shoes." He walked away, jacket torn, blood on his collar. Sophie waited until he vanished, then turned sharply and exited through the staff kitchen. She slipped into a black sedan waiting at the curb. McKinley sat in the back, chewing a protein bar. “You blew your cover heel on Night One?" “It worked." He offered a tablet. “Early transmission. Bureau says we're greenlighted to escalate the operation. Morgan took the bait." Sophie leaned back, heart pounding. “What's the next play?" “Move fast. He doesn't trust easily. Get in close. Get the ledgers. Then we bring down the whole Morgan operation." She nodded but didn't respond right away. “Something on your mind?" McKinley asked. Sophie looked out the window at the city skyline. “His eyes," she said. “When he looked at me." McKinley frowned. “Sophie—" “I know. I know." She leaned forward, accepting the next dossier, the next stage, the next lie. --- **Five hours later.** She stood alone in her safehouse apartment overlooking the lake, the window cracked open to let in midnight wind. She stared down at the encrypted tablet, her fingers hovering over the keys. **Progress report: Mission Alpha-Violet. Cover intact. Target responsive. Relationship escalation probable. Objective ledgers remain hidden. Risk: increasing. Personal bias:—** Her fingers paused. Then she typed: **Acknowledged. Proceeding.** She set the device down and moved to the kitchen, pouring decaf into a chipped mug. Outside, fog coiled across the water. She traced her reflection in the glass—formal curls unpinned, gown abandoned on a chair, combat bruises rising. “Just a job," she whispered. But when she closed her eyes, she saw him again—Arthur's hands braced against marble, his breath warm on her ear, the moment before the first shot. And deep in her gut, a strange twist of guilt and something she refused to name.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD