
I carefully trimmed the thorns off a dozen long-stemmed, blood-red roses, my movements rhythmic and unconsciously precise. The air inside Petals and Pines, my small but successful shop nestled in a quiet, aggressively wealthy suburb of Aspen Grove, was thick with the scent of damp earth, crushed eucalyptus, and blooming lilies.
“Don’t work too late, Amber,” I said, tapping the Bluetooth earpiece tucked beneath my hair. “The semester finals are over and you survived, so you should really be out celebrating with your friends.”
On the other end of the line, my daughter’s laughter tinkled like wind chimes. “A group of us are going out to the estate of Franklin Fairchild, Mom. It is the annual Heir Gala at his place, and I am only going for the professional networking, I promise. It is a huge deal for a scholarship student like me to rub shoulders with those people.”
A familiar, icy prickle crawled up the base of my neck, right over a jagged bullet scar I kept perpetually hidden beneath soft wool cardigans. Vanguard University was an institution built for the global elite, and I knew exactly who the Fairchild family was. Franklin Fairchild Senior was a ruthless hedge fund manager who practically owned the state legislature, and his son, Franklin Junior, was royalty by extension.
“Just stay safe, honey,” I murmured, my eyes instinctively scanning the shop, noting the front door, the back exit, and the blind spots behind the refrigerated displays.
“I am twenty years old, Mom, and I am a big girl,” Amber sighed, the fond exasperation clear in her voice. “Besides, what is the worst that could happen at a billionaire’s mansion when they have more security than the federal reserve?”
“I know, but please keep your phone charged and do not leave your drink unattended,” I urged.
“I love you, Mom, and I will see you tomorrow morning,” she replied before the line clicked dead.
I looked at my reflection in the dark, rain-streaked shop window and saw a tired, forty-two-year-old florist in a canvas apron, her hands stained with yellow pollen. For a fleeting, terrifying second, the glass reflected a ghost of a woman in a heavy tactical vest, her face smeared with greasepaint, standing over a broken warlord in a windowless room in a forgotten corner of the world.
I blinked hard, forcing the phantom back into the locked basement of my mind, a metaphorical door in my house that Amber was never allowed to open. I swept up the discarded thorns, determined to finish the week’s inventory, but the antique brass clock on the wall struck midnight as my cell phone rang with an unknown local number.
“Hello?” I answered, a sudden dread coiling in my gut like a serpent.
“Is this Abigail Stone?” the voice on the other end was breathless, the background noise a chaotic symphony of sirens and shouting. “This is Mercy General Emergency Room, and we have a Jane Doe brought in by an anonymous drop-off who is in critical condition, and we found your business card crushed in her coat pocket.”
The hospital smelled of harsh bleach, sterile iodine, and quiet desperation. I stood perfectly still by Amber’s bed in the intensive care unit, the rhythmic, mechanical hiss of the ventilator acting as the only metronome in the suffocating silence.
My beautiful, brilliant girl was unrecognizable because her face was a swollen canvas of purple and black. Her left arm was encased in a thick plaster cast, and the chart at the foot of the bed documented a severe concussion, four shattered ribs, internal bleeding, and seven circular burns on her collarbone that perfectly matched the cherry of an expensive cigar.
The door to the private room clicked open, and a man stepped inside, bringing with him the cloying scent of sandalwood cologne and unearned arrogance. He wore a bespoke five-thousand-dollar suit that did not have a single wrinkle.
“Ms. Stone, I represent the Fairchild family and their various corporate affiliates,” the man said, his voice as smooth as oiled glass. He set a sleek, titanium briefcase on the small bedside table and popped the latches to reveal neat, banded stacks of crisp hundred-dollar bills.
“That is one million dollars, tax-free,” the man stated softly while looking at the ceiling. “This was a tragic accident at the gala tonight involving high spirits and far too much alcohol, but if you sign this non-disclosure agreement, the money is yours immediately. Amber’s medical bills will be covered in full, and I can personally guarantee her a highly lucrative internship at Fairchild Global upon her recovery.”
I did not look at the money, but my eyes locked onto the man’s throat as my brain began calculating the exact pounds of pressure required to crush his larynx. The civilian florist was gone, and the operator had taken the wheel.
“They beat her for three hours,” I said, my voice not a scream but a hollow, echoing rasp.
“They are young men with very bright futures, Abigail,” the man replied dismissively, holding out an expensive fountain pen. “Do not ruin your own life trying to fight people who literally own the courts in this state, so just take the money, pay off your little shop, and go back to your flowers.”
I reached out, but I did not sign my name; instead, I took his pen and wrote a single sequence of numbers on the back of the agreement before sliding it back to him.
“Get out of here,” I whispered, watching as he scoffed and snapped the briefcase shut with a look of supreme confidence.
As he walked out the door, I walked over to the small duffel bag I had brought from home and reached beneath the false bottom to pull out a heavy, encrypted satellite phone. I dialed the sequence of numbers I had just written on the contract, a number that had not been active in eleven years.
“This is Nightshade,” I said to the dead air, my voice entirely devoid of emotion. “I need full operational dossiers on the Fairchild Syndicate, and I am going active with code Blackout.”
The basement beneath my quaint suburban home had not seen the light of day in a decade, but it was not a storage space for old winter coats or gardening supplies; it was a Faraday cage. I sat in the glow of three high-definition monitors, the blue light reflecting off my irises as I surgically dissected the encrypted bank records of Franklin Fairchild.
The files I requested arrived within the hour, detailing the Fairchild Syndicate, which consisted of four untouchable heirs: Franklin Junior, the alpha; Hayes, the muscle; Paige, the sociopathic socialite; and Scott, the sycophant who always filmed their exploits.
My fingers flew across the mechanical keyboard with a muscle memory that terrified me as I bypassed the firewall of the Fairchild conglomerate. I located a forty-million-dollar offshore holding account, which was an unregistered, illegal fund meant for bribing foreign officials, and I rerouted the entire sum into an untraceable network of humanitarian charities across the continent.
“Phase one is complete,” I whispered to the empty room before opening a compressed video file I had just pulled from the cloud storage of one of the boys.
It was timestamped at 1:15 AM, the night of the attack, and I watched the first three seconds where I heard the sickening thud and my daughter’s terrified scream. I paused it, my hand steady, as the mother in me stayed locked away to keep Amber company in the hospital.
I pulled up a string of intercepted text messages from the phone of Franklin Junior.
“Hayes, are we in trouble?” the text read.
“Chill, the fixer said the florist took the bait, so we are totally clear,” the reply came back. “Come to the lake house tonight for a party and bring the imported stuff.”
I stood up from the monitors and walked over to a heavy steel gun safe bolted to the concrete foundation, spinning the dial with precision. Inside was the past I had sworn to bury, and I reached past the passports to retrieve a pair of black, reinforced tactical gloves, professional lockpicks, and my suppressed handgun.
“The party is officially over, Franklin,” I murmured.
Two hours later, I stood on the heavily wooded perimeter of the Fairchild Lake House, a sprawling glass and steel monstrosity isolated miles from the nearest town. I melted into the shadows as two armed, private security contractors walked past my position, completely oblivious to the predator three feet away.
I crept toward the main electrical junction box hidden behind a decorative waterfall, bypassed the tamper alarms with a pair of insulated wire cutters, and sliced the primary fiber optic lines. The entire estate plunged into absolute, suffocating darkness, and the heavy bass of the music inside abruptly died.
I tapped the communications unit in my ear, speaking to the phantom handler listening miles away. “I am going in now, and there will be no survivors of their reputation.”
I moved through the pitch-black mansion not as an intruder, but as a ghost haunting its own graveyard, my night vision optics painting the world in sharp, luminous green. The professional security team Franklin had hired was a joke, as they were ex-cops used to intimidating paparazzi rather than stopping a veteran operative.
I dropped from a second-story balcony behind the first guard, hooking my arm around his neck and pinching the carotid artery until he was unconscious in four seconds. The second guard turned a corner in the hallway, so I stepped inside his reach, drove the heel of my palm into his solar plexus, and shattered his collarbone with a precise, sickening crack.
I found the Syndicate in the basement home theater, a massive, soundproofed room lined with acoustic foam and leather recliners.
“Hayes, go check the breaker!” Franklin Junior yelled, his voice cracking with genuine fear as the room remained dark.
I stepped into the room and locked the heavy acoustic door behind me before reaching over to the wall panel to engage the emergency lighting. The room was instantly bathed in a harsh, bloody red glow, and I did not wear a mask because I wanted them to see my face.
I stood at the bottom of the stadium seating, holding a pair of heavy steel garden shears in my right hand and the encrypted ledger of Franklin Fairchild on a silver thumb drive in my left.
“What the hell is going on?” Scott stammered, backing away into a leather chair. “Who are you?”
Before anyone could move, the heavy door behind me rattled violently, a keypad override beeped, and Franklin Fairchild himself burst into the home theater, flanked by the man who had brought me the money.
“Who the hell are you?” Franklin screamed, his eyes darting from me to his terrified son. “I will have you locked in federal prison for the rest of your pathetic life!”
I walked slowly up the carpeted steps while Franklin Junior, Hayes, Paige, and Scott instinctively recoiled, realizing too late that the exits were blocked. I grabbed a fistful of heavy duty zip ties from my tactical belt and tossed them at the feet of the man in the expensive suit.
“Tie them to the chairs, or I start breaking fingers,” I commanded, my voice slicing through the room like a scalpel.
The man looked at my eyes, saw the abyss staring back at him, and immediately dropped to his knees, frantically securing the heirs to the heavy leather recliners.
“I am the woman who spent ten years in the government black sector, Franklin,” I said, stepping into his personal space as he smelled of fear sweat and stale Scotch. “I have overthrown entire sovereign regimes for less than what your spoiled son did to my daughter.”
Franklin’s arrogant facade crumbled as he looked at the shears and then at the thumb drive. “I will give you ten million, fifty million, or whatever you want, so just name your price!”
I raised the garden shears, the metal clicking sharply just an inch from his ear, and he flinched while whimpering.
“You thought my daughter was a nobody because her mother sells lilies, but you forgot to check why a woman with my specific DNA would be hiding in a flower shop,” I whispered, the cold steel brushing against his jawline. “I was not hiding from the law, Franklin, I was hiding from the monster I become when someone touches what is mine.”
I held up the silver thumb drive, letting it catch the red emergency light.
“I did not just cut your power tonight, because ten minutes ago, I sent your son’s video of the attack, along with forty gigabytes of your illegal offshore tax evasion, bribery logs, and blackmail files, to every major news outlet and federal prosecutor in the country,” I explained. “Your untouchable status just expired, and you are officially prey.”
Just as I turned to leave them for the swarm of police sirens I could already hear wailing in the distance, a heavy, painfully familiar voice echoed from the doorway. A man in a sharp, dark suit stood there, a gold government insignia pinned to his lapel.
“Nightshade?” the Director said, his tone a mix of awe and deep irritation. “You were not supposed to leave a blast radius this big, and the Agency is not happy.”
The fallout was biblical, and for the next two weeks, the headlines were relentless, dominating every screen in the country. The Fairchild Empire collapsed as secret videos revealed their brutality, and the Syndicate members were denied bail. Their wealth was seized, their reputations were incinerated, and their futures were traded for orange jumpsuits.
I sat in the quiet of the intensive care unit, the television in the corner muted, holding Amber’s undamaged right hand while tracing the delicate lines of her palm. Slowly, her eyelids fluttered, and she groaned while squinting against the harsh fluorescent lights.
She turned her head, her swollen eyes finding my face, and I saw her gaze drop to my hands. She saw the bruised, bloody knuckles, the dark half moons of dirt beneath my fingernails, and the cold, distant, hyper vigilant stare that had not quite faded from my eyes yet.
“Mom?” Amber whispered, her voice like crushed glass.
I squeezed her hand, and the operator vanished back into the dark, instantly replaced by the mother. “I am right here, baby, and it is over because they cannot hurt you anymore.”
Later that night, I stood in the middle of my shop, which was now entirely empty. The flowers had been donated, the shelves wiped clean, and the lease terminated. The Director stood by the glass door, watching me pack a single box of personal items.
“You did a hell of a job, Nightshade, as the feds are feasting on the Fairchild carcass,” the Director said, lighting a cigarette. “But you are entirely off the grid now, and you burned too bright to stay a quiet florist in this town anymore because the cartel associates Franklin was laundering money for will come looking for you.”
I picked up a beautiful, white calla lily I had meant to give Amber when she woke up. “I do not care, because I did what I had to do for my daughter, and if the price of her absolute safety is my soul, then I already paid it years ago.”
The Director took a drag, the cherry glowing in the dark shop. “We need you back in the field officially, and it is the only way we have the jurisdiction to keep the remaining associates of the Fairchilds from coming for you and the girl.”
I stared at the lily, then carefully placed it into the cardboard box. “I will come back, but under one condition, which is that Amber gets a brand new identity, a full, invisible security detail, and she never, ever knows what I am doing for you.”
The Director nodded slowly. “Done.”
He turned to open the door, then paused, looking back at me over his shoulder.
“There is one more thing you should know before you resign, Nightshade,” the Director said, his voice dropping to a grim murmur. “We analyzed the phones you dumped, and it turns out the Fairchild boy, Franklin Junior, was not the one who ordered the game that night; he was trying to impress someone else, and there is someone much higher up the food chain.”
Six months later, the sun hung low over the picturesque, snow-capped mountains, casting long, golden shadows across the pristine campus of the University of Zurich. Amber walked across the manicured courtyard, clutching a stack of art history books to her chest. She was laughing with a group of friends, her face completely healed, her eyes bright and unburdened.
She was thriving under the name Rose, fully believing her mother had simply taken a highly lucrative, traveling position as an international floral consultant. She looked up at the sky, closing her eyes against the crisp breeze, smiling as if she felt a guardian angel hovering just a heartbeat away.
Miles away, on a freezing, wind-whipped rooftop overlooking the crystal-clear waters of the lake, I adjusted the magnification dial on my spotting scope. Through the high-powered lens, I watched her smile, and a profound, radiating warmth bloomed in my chest that no amount of black operations or blood could ever chill.
My encrypted burner phone vibrated in the tactical pouch strapped to my thigh, and I pulled it out to read a single, self-destructing text message from the Director.
“New target identified in Singapore, so are you ready?”
I did not reply, but instead dropped the phone back into my pouch and began disassembling the heavy, suppressed sniper rifle resting on its bipod. I packed the barrel, the stock, and the optics into a discreet carbon-fiber violin case.
Before I closed the lid, I looked down at a small, delicate object taped to the interior grip of the weapon, which was a small, dried, pressed calla lily. It was a relic from a shop that no longer existed, from a woman who had died so the mother could live.
“I am the thorn that protects the rose,” I whispered to the freezing wind, snapping the case shut. “And I am always ready.”
I stood up, pulling the collar of my dark coat against the chill, and as I turned toward the rooftop access door, my hand brushed against something stiff inside my jacket pocket. I frowned, reached inside, and pulled out a small, heavy card edged in gold leaf.
I had not put it there, so someone had slipped it past my perimeter. I flipped it open to see an invitation to an exclusive, underground gala in Singapore, written in elegant, flowing calligraphy.
At the bottom, a handwritten note was scrawled in red ink: “We have been waiting for you, Nightshade, as the Fairchilds were just the audition.”
I stared at the red ink, a slow, terrifying smile spreading across my face. They thought they were inviting a guest, but they did not realize they had just summoned the executioner. This time, I would not need a million dollars, as I would just need more gloves.
THE END.