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Chapter 1 - ​Chapter 1: The Glass Horizon​Chapter 1: The Glass Horizon

The Metropolitan Museum of Art was a fortress of glass and gold, crawling with the world's elite and at least forty undercover security contractors. Elara Vance moved through the crowd like a predator in Dior. Her floor-length crimson gown was backless, revealing a faint, jagged scar on her shoulder blade—a souvenir from a job in Prague that she usually kept hidden.

​She wasn't here for the champagne. She was here for the "Solstice Drive," a thumb-sized piece of hardware containing encryption keys for the global power grid.

​"Target sighted at ten o'clock," a voice crackled in her ear.

​Elara didn't flinch. She knew that voice. It was smooth, arrogant, and currently making her blood boil. Julian Thorne was standing by the Roman statues, looking like a god himself in a charcoal tux. They hadn't spoken since the betrayal in Marrakesh eighteen months ago.

​"You're out of your depth, Thorne," Elara murmured into her hidden mic, taking a flute of Moët from a passing waiter. "This is my contract. Go home."

​"And let you take all the heat?" Julian's voice dropped an octave, sending a traitorous shiver down her spine. "I'm the only one who knows the exit codes, Elara. We do this together, or we both end up in a federal black site."

​Before she could retort, the world went cold.

​The heavy oak doors of the ballroom burst open. Men in tactical gear, faces hidden by matte-black masks, swarmed in. They weren't security. They were the Vipers—mercenaries who didn't care about collateral damage.

​The Action Begins

The first shot shattered a crystal chandelier directly above the buffet. Screams erupted as thousands of shards rained down like lethal diamonds.

​"Down!" Julian was suddenly there, his hand firm on the small of her back, shoving her behind a marble pedestal.

​"I had it handled!" Elara hissed, reaching under the slit of her dress. She didn't pull out a lipstick; she pulled out a customized sleek, matte-black handgun.

​"Sure you did," Julian deadpanned. He drew his own weapon, checking the silencer. "On three, we make for the North Gallery. Don't get shot—it'll ruin the dress, and I happen to think you look breathtaking."

​"Shut up, Julian."

​They moved in perfect, lethal synchronicity. Elara provided cover fire, her shots precise and rhythmic. She didn't miss. Julian moved like a shadow, clearing the hallway with brutal efficiency.

​As they reached the heavy steel doors of the vault, Julian pinned her against the wall—not out of aggression, but to shield her from a spray of gunfire that chewed up the drywall inches from his head.

​Their faces were inches apart. The scent of gunpowder and his expensive sandalwood cologne filled her senses. For a split second, the chaos of the room vanished. His eyes, dark and intense, searched hers.

​"Still hate me?" he whispered, the sound of reloading magazines echoing down the hall.

​"More than ever," she breathed, though her hand lingered on his chest a second too long.

​"Good. Saves us the trouble of being polite."

​Julian punched the override code into the vault. The heavy door hissed open, but as they stepped inside, a thermal grenade rolled across the floor toward them.

​"Run!"

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