The rain did not fall; it attacked.
Francisqui Noel's lungs burned as she sprinted down the dark alley behind the private club. Her right heel snapped with a sickening crack. She slammed into the wet brick wall, sliding down until her knees hit the pavement.
Her chest heaved. Cold water plastered her hair to her face.
Two black Escalades rolled into the alley. They made no sound. The blinding high beams pinned her against the wall like a bug under a microscope.
The doors opened. Three men in dark suits stepped out into the downpour. The man in the front, Vance, pressed two fingers to his earpiece.
"The boss wants it done now," Vance said. His voice cut through the sound of the rain. "I don't care who she is."
Francisqui pushed herself up. Her stomach dropped. She needed to explain that she was just leaving a client meeting. She opened her mouth.
Nothing came out.
Her throat locked. The familiar, suffocating paralysis of Selective Mutism clamped down on her vocal cords. Her jaw trembled, but her voice was dead.
Vance stepped closer. His eyes scanned her soaked, high-end clothes. He recognized the subtle tension in her posture, the way she didn't immediately scream like a normal civilian would.
Francisqui raised a shaking hand. She held up five fingers. Give me five minutes. I have five hundred dollars in my purse.
Vance stared at her hand. His eyes narrowed into slits. He tapped his earpiece, his voice dropping to a cautious, tactical murmur. "She's not afraid of us, and she's throwing up hand signals. Five fingers. Run a facial recognition scan immediately. She might be a scout from a rival firm, or an operative signaling a five-man backup team. Proceed with extreme caution."
Francisqui's eyes went wide. Her heart slammed against her ribs. She shook her head frantically, pressing her back harder against the bricks.
A second man grabbed her from behind. A cloth soaked in ether clamped over her nose and mouth. The chemical burned her sinuses. Her vision blurred, turning the headlights into long, white streaks before the world went completely black.
Her skull throbbed.
Francisqui opened her eyes. The bright lights of a penthouse suite stabbed her retinas. She was lying on a massive Italian leather sofa. Her wet clothes were gone, replaced by an oversized silk men's button-down shirt.
A loud crash made her flinch.
She pulled her knees to her chest. Across the room, Burleigh Livingston sat in a custom wheelchair facing a massive flat-screen monitor. A team of stern-faced SEC lawyers and federal trust regulators stared back at him through the live video feed. He swung a metal golf club into a Ming vase. Porcelain shattered, spraying across the hardwood floor.
"Traitors," Burleigh muttered. His eyes were hollow, manic. "The SEC thinks they can audit me? I'll bury them."
A sharp piece of porcelain flew across the room and sliced Francisqui's cheek. A drop of warm blood rolled down her jaw. She bit the inside of her cheek to keep from screaming.
Burleigh stopped. He glared at the webcam, ensuring the lawyers witnessed every second of his erratic, violent outburst before he nodded sharply. Vance stepped forward and abruptly cut the feed, plunging the screen into darkness.
He turned the wheelchair. The electric motor hummed as he rolled toward the sofa. His shadow fell over her.
He lifted the golf club. The cold metal head pressed under her chin, forcing her to look up. His eyes were not manic anymore. They were dead. He looked at her the way a man looks at a spreadsheet.
"My security team thinks you're a corporate spy demanding a five-million-dollar payout to keep quiet about what you've seen tonight," Burleigh's voice was a low rumble. "Your services better be worth it, mute."
Francisqui tried to push the club away, but the ether still pumped through her veins. Her arms felt like lead. She glared at him. Her chest rose and fell with heavy, angry breaths.
Burleigh tilted his head. He thought her anger was part of the act. A roleplay.
He dropped the club. It clattered against the floor. He pressed a button on the table next to him. The door opened instantly. Vance walked in.
"Clean her up," Burleigh said. He didn't look at her again. "Get her signature and get her out."
A man named Lewis stepped forward. He handed Francisqui a thick stack of papers and a piece of paper that made her breath catch.
It was a check. For $5,000,000.00.
She looked at the document. Non-Disclosure Agreement - Regarding the Medical Privacy of Mr. B. L.
They thought she was a cleaner. Someone hired to witness his breakdown and keep her mouth shut.
Her fingers shook as she took the pen. She scribbled a fake name on the signature line. She needed to get out of this room before he picked up the golf club again. But as she stared at the zeroes on the check, a cold realization washed over her. She needed resources. She needed access to the closed archives of the elite families to find out who really ordered the hit that killed her mother twenty years ago. This money, or this dangerous connection to the Livingston empire, could be the key.
Ten minutes later, Vance dragged her out the front doors of the Livingston Estate. He shoved her down the stone steps.
The rain was still pouring. Francisqui stood in the driveway. She didn't cry. She clenched her fist around the five-million-dollar check until the paper cut into her palm. The fear in her chest hardened into something cold and sharp.