Chapter Six: Chasing Ghosts đź‘»

1399 Words
The hum of fluorescent lights above the hospital hallway buzzed faintly as Dr. Amara Blackwood reviewed her final patient file for the night. The calm around her felt artificial, like the world was holding its breath. It had been two days since Killian Black vanished from her life again. No cryptic messages. No sudden appearances. Just silence. That kind of quiet wasn’t peace—it was a warning. Amara tucked the file under her arm, her heels clicking sharply as she moved toward her office. Her body begged for rest, but her mind buzzed with questions. She hadn’t slept well since her run-in with Killian in the alley, nor since that first time their lips touched like a promise neither of them could keep. She was halfway down the hall when her phone vibrated. Unknown Number: “You should stop asking questions, Doctor. Ghosts don't like to be chased.” Her breath hitched. She stared at the message, fingers frozen mid-air. Another message popped up seconds later. “Come to the rooftop. Bring nothing. Trust no one.” Her heartbeat pounded in her ears. She glanced around. The hospital hallway was empty—eerily so. Moments later, she emerged onto the rooftop. The wind was sharp. The city below glowed like a restless beast. And Killian was standing there, back turned to her, dressed in black from head to toe. His silhouette radiated danger. "You came," he said without turning. "You called," she replied, steel in her voice. He finally looked at her, and for the first time, she saw fear in his eyes. Not for himself. For her. “We don’t have time,” Killian said, stepping closer. “I need to show you something. Everything you think you know—it’s worse. Much worse.” Before she could respond, a shot rang out. Killian grabbed her and pulled her to the ground. Screams below. Chaos. Another bullet whizzed past. Killian rolled over her, shielding her with his body. “They found me,” he growled. “No,” she whispered. “They found us.” Amara's breath caught in her throat as Killian pulled her behind the rooftop generator, his hand gripping hers tightly. The tension in his body told her everything—this wasn’t a scare tactic. This was real. This was war. “Who’s shooting at us?” she hissed, heart thundering. Killian didn’t answer immediately. His eyes scanned the surrounding buildings, calculating. “The same people who erased my past. The ones who don’t want you finding answers.” “Answers about what?” she whispered. He turned to her then, face inches from hers. “Me. You. Your father.” The name hit her like a punch to the gut. “My… what does my father have to do with this?” “Everything,” Killian said, voice low. “Your father was the one who brought them in. He opened the door for everything—the experiments, the disappearances, the files you found. He thought he could control it. He was wrong.” Amara felt the ground tilt beneath her. Her father, a respected surgeon. A mentor. A man who taught her to heal—he was involved in something dark? Before she could process, Killian lifted a hand to her cheek. “They’ll try to use you next. Twist you. Threaten your career. Your life.” “Why are you telling me this?” she asked, voice cracking. “Because I made a promise,” he said, eyes burning into hers. “To protect you. Even if you hate me for it.” His lips brushed hers—just once. Fierce and fleeting. Then he stood, eyes cold. “I’ll lead them away. You disappear. Burn everything. Never look back.” “No,” Amara said, standing with him. “I don’t run.” Killian gave her a look of both admiration and grief. “Then we do it together.” In the distance, another gunshot echoed. The chase was on. And this time, Amara wasn’t just a doctor. She was a woman with fire in her blood and war in her heart. They didn’t wait for another bullet to find them. Amara followed Killian down the fire escape, the metal rattling beneath their feet. Her mind spun with everything he’d revealed—her father, the experiments, the lies stitched into her life like hidden threads. “Where are we going?” she asked between breaths. “To someone who can help us disappear,” Killian muttered. “Temporarily.” They hit the alley, shadows swallowing them. The city suddenly felt hostile—every light a spotlight, every face a threat. Amara tried to process the pieces: Killian’s broken past, her father’s hidden agenda, and the terrifying reality that someone wanted them both silenced. “Did you love him?” Killian asked abruptly, breaking the silence. “What?” “Your father. Did you love him?” Amara froze. “Yes. He wasn’t perfect, but… he was everything I looked up to.” Killian looked away. “Then I’m sorry for what you’ll find out.” They slipped into an abandoned subway tunnel, the scent of rust and time thick in the air. A woman stood there waiting—tall, lean, with a military posture and scars that spoke louder than introductions. “Killian,” she said. “You’ve brought trouble.” He nodded. “The usual.” Amara stepped forward. “Who are you?” “I’m the one who’s going to help you stay alive,” the woman replied coolly. “Name’s Rael. Ex-intelligence, off the books.” Rael tossed Amara a burner phone and a fake passport. “You're not a doctor now. You’re no one.” Amara gripped the ID. “But I have patients. A life.” Rael looked her dead in the eye. “You want the truth or comfort? You can’t have both.” Killian placed a hand on her back. “This is just the beginning. You ready?” Amara took a deep breath. “No. But let’s go anyway.” As the tunnel swallowed them, Amara felt it—the past was unraveling fast, and the future was burning behind it. But she wasn’t running anymore. The safehouse Rael led them to was tucked beneath an old bookstore in a forgotten district of the city. Dust lined the shelves, and the stale scent of aging paper mingled with tension. Killian threw his jacket on a couch and turned to Amara. “We have maybe twelve hours before they catch up.” She didn’t answer. Her mind was spiraling—memories of surgeries, white coats, her father’s smile, now tainted with suspicion. She sat on the floor, back against the wall, arms wrapped tightly around her knees. “You okay?” he asked, kneeling beside her. Amara gave a dry laugh. “I just found out my father was involved in human experimentation, I’ve been shot at twice in one night, and I’m being hunted like a fugitive. So yeah... peachy.” Killian sat beside her. “I didn’t want to drag you into this.” “You didn’t,” she said quietly. “My father did.” He looked at her, expression softening. “You’re stronger than you think.” She glanced at him, tired. “You don’t know me.” “I’ve seen the way you stand your ground when you’re scared. That tells me enough.” For a moment, the space between them shifted—less chaos, more vulnerability. Then she reached for the small medkit on the table and pointed to his shoulder. “You're bleeding. Again.” He winced as she dabbed at the wound. “You’re a terrible patient,” she muttered. “You’re a terrifying doctor,” he replied, a smirk tugging at his lips. Their eyes locked. The smirk faded. Time slowed. “I shouldn’t,” she whispered. “You should,” he replied. And then she kissed him—fiercely, desperately—like everything might collapse tomorrow. Because it might. When they pulled apart, breathless, Amara whispered, “If we die tomorrow, at least I did something reckless tonight.” Killian grinned. “Then let’s make tonight count.” Outside, the city continued to breathe, unaware of the storm building underground. Inside, two fugitives clung to the only thing they had left: each other.
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