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The billionaire's hidden queen
img img The billionaire's hidden queen img Chapter 9 IMPOSSIBLE HEIST
9 Chapters

Chapter 9 IMPOSSIBLE HEIST

The Grand Continental Hotel was once the jewel of the city's skyline, a sprawling Art Deco masterpiece of gold leaf and velvet. Now, it was a ghost of its former self. The gold was peeling, the velvet was moth eaten, and the lobby smelled faintly of lemon bleach and desperation. Because it was tied up in the Sterling bankruptcy, the creditors had cut the maintenance budget to zero.

Aria stood in the center of the lobby, but she wasn't the Heiress today. She wore a simple charcoal turtleneck, jeans, and a pair of glasses. Beside her, Ethan Knight had traded his $10,000 tuxedo for a dark hoodie and a leather jacket. To any passerby, they looked like a young couple looking for a cheap room.

"It's worse than the reports said," Aria whispered, her eyes scanning the cracked marble tiles. "The staff are demoralized. Look at the concierge, he's playing games on his phone instead of greeting guests. The soul has been ripped out of this place."

Ethan leaned in, his breath warm against her ear. "A hotel is like a body, Aria. The building is the bones, but the data is the blood. If we want to take this from the creditors for pennies, we don't need to fix the elevator. We need to find the heart."

They checked into a "Standard King" room on the 14th floor. The room was small, the air conditioning hummed like a dying beast, and there was only one bed.

Aria felt a sudden prickle of nervousness. For three years, she had shared a bed with a man who barely noticed her. Now, standing in a cramped hotel room with Ethan Knight, the air felt electric, charged with a tension that had nothing to do with business.

"I'll take the chair," Ethan said, his voice dropping an octave as he noticed her hesitation. He began unpacking a high end portable hacking rig from his backpack. "We only have twenty nine days left, Aria. We don't have time for modesty."

Aria sat on the edge of the bed, opening her laptop. "The creditors are led by a man named Julian Vane. He's a shark. He wants to tear the hotel down and sell the land for luxury condos. To stop him, we need to prove the hotel is more valuable as a functioning business."

"Or," Ethan said, his eyes fixed on a scrolling line of code, "we find out why Julian Vane is so desperate to destroy it. Look at this, Aria."

He turned the screen toward her. He had bypassed the hotel's ancient security firewall and reached the private guest logs from twenty years ago.

"There's a floor that doesn't exist on the elevator panel," Ethan pointed out. "The 19th floor. It's listed in the architectural blueprints, but it was sealed off in 2005. The maintenance records show that the electricity to that floor is still being paid for by a private offshore account."

Aria's eyes widened. "The Sterling family used this hotel for more than just guests. My father always said Victor Sterling had a Black Box a place where he kept the dirt on his political allies. If that box is on the 19th floor..."

"Then we don't just buy the hotel," Ethan finished. "We buy the leash to every politician in the state. Vane doesn't want to build condos. He wants to get in there and burn the evidence before someone like you finds it."

As they worked through the night, the line between "partners" and "lovers" began to blur. At 3:00 AM, Aria found herself leaning over Ethan's shoulder to look at a decrypted file. Her hair brushed against his cheek, and his hand instinctively moved to steady her, resting firmly on her waist.

Aria froze. Ethan turned his head, his face inches from hers. In the dim light of the laptop screens, his eyes were dark, intense, and filled with a longing he could no longer hide.

"Aria," he whispered.

"We should focus on the file," she breathed, though she didn't move away.

"The file can wait five minutes," Ethan said. He reached up, his fingers gently tucking a stray lock of hair behind her ear. "You spent three years being invisible. I want you to know that I see you. Not the Thorne Heiress. Not the business genius. Just you."

Before she could respond, the room's ancient smoke detector began to chirp. But it wasn't smoke. It was a signal.

Ethan's rig let out a sharp beep. "Someone is in the service elevator. They're heading to the 19th floor. Now."

The romantic tension vanished, replaced by the thrill of the hunt. Aria grabbed her tablet, and Ethan grabbed a pair of heavy duty flashlights. They slipped out into the hallway, avoiding the main cameras by using the service stairs.

They reached the 19th floor landing. The door was reinforced steel, locked with a biometric scanner that had been recently upgraded.

"Vane's people," Aria whispered, pointing to a small, glowing light on the scanner. "They're already inside."

"Then we make an entrance," Ethan said. He pulled a small electromagnetic pulse device from his pocket, a "gift" from his tech division. "Cover your eyes."

THUMP.

The lights in the hallway flickered and died. The magnetic lock on the door let out a metallic click as it failed.

Aria pushed the door open. The 19th floor wasn't a hotel floor. It was a high-tech archive, filled with rows of servers and physical filing cabinets. In the center of the room, two men in tactical gear were pouring gasoline over the servers.

"Stop!" Aria shouted, her flashlight beam cutting through the darkness.

The men turned, drawing silenced pistols. Ethan was faster. He tackled the nearest man, the sound of the struggle echoing through the cavernous room. Aria didn't stay back. she grabbed a heavy fire extinguisher from the wall and swung it with all her might at the second man's knees.

As the fight intensified, a third figure emerged from the shadows of the server racks. It was Julian Vane himself, holding a lighter.

"You Thornes just don't know when to stay dead, do you?" Vane sneered. "If I can't have these files, no one will."

He flicked the lighter.

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