CHAPTER 1: THE CODE
LIAM’S POV
The warehouse smelled of damp concrete and stale gasoline. Rain tapped a steady rhythm on the corrugated iron roof high above, a sound like distant machine gun fire. The space was vast, empty except for a single chair in the middle of the concrete floor, bolted down, and the three men standing around it.
Liam Thorne stood with his hands in the pockets of his cashmere overcoat. The coat was black, absorbing the weak light from the single industrial lamp hanging directly over the chair. He didn't feel the cold. He only felt a familiar hollow focus.
In the chair sat Marcus. Once a lieutenant. Now just a man sweating through his shirt, the fabric sticking to his skin in dark patches. His wrists were bound to the chair arms with zip-ties. His eyes, wide and white, flickered between Liam and the two silent men who flanked him.
"Liam. Boss. Please," Marcus choked out. His voice echoed in the cavernous space. "It was a mistake. A one-time thing." Liam didn't answer.
He studied the man. He remembered Marcus five years ago, hungry and sharp, running numbers for a bookie on the south docks.
Liam had seen potential. A certain ruthless pragmatism. He'd brought him into the fold, promoted him, trusted him with a territory.
"How much?" Liam's voice was calm. It wasn't a shout. It was quieter than the rain, and it cut through the air like glass.
Marcus swallowed. "What?"
” The fentanyl. How much did you move through the three clubs on Harbor Street last month?"
The silence that followed was heavy. Marcus looked at the two other men. Kaela, a woman with a severe blonde ponytail and eyes the color of flint, stared back without blinking. Viktor, built like a retired heavyweight, simply crossed his massive arms.
"I don't... I can get you the numbers," Marcus stammered.
"You can't," Liam said, taking a slow step forward. The heel of his Oxford shoe clicked against the concrete. "Because you didn't keep records. You were skimming. You were selling poison to kids in my bathrooms, and you were too stupid or too greedy to even do it properly."
"It's just business!"
Marcus cried, the words bursting from him. "It's the new business! Everyone's doing it! The profit margin is-"
"It's not my business." Liam's interruption was final. He stopped a few feet from the chair. "You stood in this very room, Marcus. Two years ago. When I took over the syndicate from my father. You heard me say the words. What were the words?"
Marcus began to tremble. Tears mixed with the sweat on his face. He shook his head.
"Say them," Liam said, his tone still even, almost conversational.
"No... no drugs," Marcus whispered.
"Louder."
"No drugs!" Marcus yelled, the sound bouncing off the walls. "No dealing to kids! No... no hurting civilians."
"Civilians," Liam repeated, nodding slowly.
"Innocent people. People who are not in the game.
The waitress who serves the drinks. The student who just wants to dance. The man who owns the building. They are not part of this.
We do not bring our war to their doorstep. We do not poison their children for a quick dollar. These are the rules. This is the code."
He took another step closer. He leaned down slightly, bringing his face level with Marcus's. In the stark overhead light, the premature silver at Liam's temples gleamed. His ice-blue eyes held no anger. Only a terrible, disappointed certainty.
"You broke the code, Marcus. You brought that filth into my places. You targeted the vulnerable. You made me a liar."
"I'm sorry! I'll give it all back! I'll get out of the city! You'll never see me again!" Marcus was sobbing now, his body jerking against the restraints.
Liam straightened up. He looked past Marcus, to the far wall. "Do you have a sister, Marcus? Younger. In college." Marcus froze. His blood seemed to turn to ice.
"What? No! Leave her out of this! She doesn't know anything!"
"I know she doesn't," Liam said, his gaze returning to the terrified man. "She is a civilian. She is innocent. According to my code, she is protected.” He paused. "If my father were here, he would have had her picked up last week. He would have used her to make you talk. He might have hurt her anyway, after, as a lesson. To show what happens to the families of those who betray him."
Liam's lips thinned. The ghost of his father, Roderick Thorne, was a cold spot in the room. A man of casual, creative cruelty.
"I am not my father," Liam stated, and it was the core truth of his life. "Your sister is safe. She will remain safe. Her tuition is paid. Her life is untouched. This is between you and me."
The relief that flooded Marcus's face was so profound, it was painful to see. He sagged in the chair, weeping openly.
"Thank you. Thank you, Liam. I'll do anything."
"I know," Liam said quietly.
He gave a single, slight nod to Viktor.
Before Marcus could process the movement, Viktor was behind him. In one smooth, practiced motion, a thick, clean barber's strap of leather was wrapped around Marcus's forehead, yanking his head back against the chair's headrest. Marcus's eyes bulged, a new terror dawning.
Liam watched, his expression unmoved. This was not rage. This was surgery. The removal of a disease.
Kaela stepped forward. She held a small, professional medical case. She opened it. Inside, on a bed of black foam, lay a pre-filled syringe and a vial of clear liquid. She picked up the syringe.
"What is that?" Marcus shrieked, fighting against the strap, against Viktor's immovable strength.
"No! No, please! Not that!"
"It's pentobarbital," Kaela said, her voice cool and clinical as she tapped the syringe. "Very high dose. Used for animal euthanasia and, in some places, assisted dying. It's peaceful. You'll feel dizzy. Then you'll fall asleep. Your heart will stop. There is no pain."
"You said you weren't your father!" Marcus screamed, the sound raw and tearing from his throat.
"I'm not," Liam said. He didn't raise his voice. It was the simple, awful truth. "My father would have made it last for days. He would have made you beg for this. This is mercy, Marcus. For your betrayal. And for your sister's future."
He gave another nod.
Kaela found a prominent vein in Marcus's straining neck. She swiped it with an alcohol pad. The smell was sharp in the damp air. Marcus was begging now, words tumbling over each other, promises, prayers, curses.
Liam turned and walked away. He didn't watch the needle go in. He walked toward the large rolling door at the far end of the warehouse, his footsteps measured and sure.