"BENEATH THE MASK" Chapter 1 — The Interpreter
Chapter 1 — The Interpreter
The interrogation room smelled like cold metal, burned coffee, and old blood.
Eliana Vale noticed all three before she noticed the men.
That was usually how these places worked. Fear settled into walls long before it settled into people.
BLACK VEIL’s temporary compound sat beneath an abandoned shipping warehouse somewhere near the Turkish border, though officially, according to every database Eliana had broken into during the last forty-eight hours, it did not exist.
Neither did the men inside it.
Especially not him.
Ghost.
The name had appeared in redacted files, encrypted chatter, contractor rumors, and one panicked voicemail from a dead intelligence analyst who had sobbed before the line went quiet.
Ghost was not a man, the rumors said.
Ghost was what BLACK VEIL sent when governments wanted a problem solved without admitting there had ever been a problem.
Eliana had expected some theatrical monster.
A man built out of scars and ego. The usual mercenary nonsense. Big gun, bigger shoulders, emotional range of wet concrete.
Instead, the room gave her six armed men, one prisoner screaming behind reinforced glass, and coffee so bad it should have been prosecuted under international law.
The prisoner slammed his cuffed hands against the metal table and shouted in Russian.
Eliana glanced down at the transcript in her folder.
Then back at the glass.
Then at the coffee.
“Just so we’re clear,” she said, “am I translating his confession, or are we all pretending this coffee isn’t the real war crime?”
Silence.
Heavy silence.
The kind that told her she had said the wrong thing to the wrong audience.
Eliana lifted her eyes.
Six operatives stared back at her.
No one smiled.
Interesting.
A tall man near the surveillance monitors leaned slowly against the console. Late thirties, close-cropped hair, tired blue eyes, sniper posture. One of those men who looked relaxed only because he had already calculated where every bullet in the room would go.
Kane Mercer.
Kael Vanth’s sniper partner.
Former special forces. Dry humor. Deep loyalty. File said he was dangerous.
Files always said men were dangerous. It was rarely the most interesting thing about them.
Kane studied her like she was either stupid or suicidal.
Possibly both.
“You always joke during interrogations?” he asked.
Eliana crossed one leg over the other and opened the folder.
“Only during the emotionally repressed ones.”
One of the younger operatives coughed into his fist. Another stared down at his boots like eye contact might implicate him.
Kane’s mouth twitched.
Not quite a smile.
Close enough.
“Christ,” he muttered. “You really are new here.”
“I prefer fresh.”
“Fresh gets people killed.”
“Then stale must be why everyone looks so tired.”
Behind the glass, the prisoner shouted again, spitting words fast enough to blur together.
Eliana translated without looking down.
“He says your mother traded herself for cigarettes, your tactical strategy resembles a dying raccoon, and he would like a lawyer.”
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Kane blinked.
The young operative coughed again, harder this time.
Eliana added, “I took some creative liberty with the raccoon part. His original metaphor was less flattering.”
Kane stared at her for another second.
Then gave a quiet, unwilling laugh.
That was when the room changed.
No alarm sounded.
No door slammed.
No one announced him.
The air simply tightened.
Every operative in the room straightened by half an inch.
The young one stopped coughing.
Kane’s almost-smile disappeared.
Eliana felt the shift crawl over her skin before she turned.
A man stood in the doorway.
Tall. Black tactical gear. Broad shoulders under matte armor. Dark hair damp from snow or sweat, falling carelessly across his forehead. A black tactical mask covered the lower half of his face, minimalist and brutal, molded close enough to look less like equipment than anatomy.
His gloves were black.
Not clean.
His eyes were steel grey.
That was the part no file had prepared her for.
They were not dead eyes.
Dead eyes were easy. Empty men were easy.
These eyes were awake in a way that made the rest of the room seem half-asleep.
Cold, yes. Controlled, absolutely. But underneath that control was something else—pressure, focus, exhaustion carved into bone.
He looked like violence taught itself patience.
Ghost.
Kael Vanth.
The man governments denied existing while secretly pointing toward impossible problems and saying, Send him.
Kane pushed off the console.
“Ghost. This is our translator.”
The masked man did not look at Kane.
He looked at Eliana.
Not politely.
Not curiously.
Clinically.
His gaze moved from her face to her hands. Her wrists. Her boots. The silver chain at her throat. The folder in her lap. The exit behind her left shoulder.
Good, she thought.
He noticed exits too.
That made two of them.
“Eliana Vale,” he said.
His voice was low. Rough around the edges, as if words were not his preferred weapon but he had learned to use them when required.
Eliana gave him her brightest professional smile.
“That is, in fact, my name. Excellent observational skills.”
No one moved.
Kane closed his eyes briefly, as if asking God for patience and receiving none.
Kael only stared.
The mask hid his mouth, but not the stillness around his eyes.
Eliana had learned a long time ago that still men were more dangerous than angry ones. Anger wasted energy. Stillness saved it.
Kael stepped into the room.
The overhead light caught the edge of his mask and the faint, pale line of a scar disappearing beneath his collar.
Knife wound, maybe.
Old.
Deep enough to matter.
The prisoner behind the glass began shouting again. No one paid him attention now.
Kael stopped beside Eliana’s chair, close enough that she caught the scent of cold air, gun oil, and smoke on him.
Not cologne.
Of course not.
A man like this would consider cologne evidence.
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“Your accent changed twice in the last five minutes,” he said.
Eliana tilted her head.
“Multilingualism does have that effect.”
“You softened the prisoner’s last statement.”
“I improved it.”
“You altered it.”
“He was repetitive. I have artistic standards.”
Kane made a strangled sound behind them.
Kael ignored him.
“Why?”
Eliana looked up at him through her lashes, letting mild confusion settle over her face like silk.
“Because if I translated every insult exactly, we’d be here until sunrise, and frankly, none of you seem emotionally equipped for that.”
A flicker.
Tiny.
Almost nothing.
But Eliana saw it.
At the edge of Kael’s eyes, something shifted.
Not amusement.
Not quite.
The ghost of a reaction buried so deep it probably required excavation equipment.
Interesting.
Very interesting.
Kael’s gaze dropped to her folder.
“Your file says you studied in Lyon.”
“It did.”
“And Beirut.”
“That too.”
“And Boston.”
“I contain multitudes.”
“Your file is too clean.”
Ah.
There it was.
Eliana felt her pulse give one careful tap against the inside of her wrist.
Not faster.
Never faster.
Faster got you killed.
She let her smile fade just enough to look tired, civilian, mildly offended.
“My file is clean because translators generally avoid war crimes as extracurricular activities.”
“You watched the door when I entered.”
“Everyone watched the door when you entered.”
“You watched the hinges.”
Damn.
Kane turned his head slightly.
The young operative stopped pretending not to listen.
Eliana looked at Kael for a long second.
She could lie.
She was very good at lying.
She could make herself soft, harmless, insulted. She could tremble if the role required it. Cry if someone truly deserved the performance.
But something about those grey eyes made the usual masks feel too flimsy.
So she shrugged.
“Old habit.”
“From translation school?”
“French professors are terrifying.”
Kane actually laughed that time.
Quietly.
Suicidally.
Kael did not look away from her.
The prisoner slammed his hands against the table again, screaming louder now.
Kael finally turned his head toward the glass.
“Continue the session.”
The operative near the door hesitated.
“You want her inside?”
Kael’s eyes returned to Eliana.
“Yes.”
Not bring her.
Not escort her.
Just yes.
Like a test.
Like a blade placed gently on a table between them.
Eliana rose from her chair, smoothing her coat with both hands. Cream blouse, dark trousers, understated necklace, soft civilian elegance carefully engineered to appear forgettable.
Kael watched the movement.
His eyes paused briefly at her left sleeve.
Where the seam concealed a ceramic blade.
She smiled.
He knew.
Of course he knew.
This was going to be inconvenient.
Kane stepped closer as she moved toward the interrogation door.
“Vale.”
She glanced back.
His expression had lost the humor.
“Word of advice? Don’t play games with Ghost.”
Eliana looked past him to Kael.
The masked man stood utterly still beneath the fluorescent lights, unreadable and impossible.
A weapon pretending to be a man.
Or maybe a man pretending too well to be a weapon.
Eliana turned the handle.
“Then he shouldn’t be so interesting.”
The door buzzed open.
Behind her, no one spoke.
But just before she stepped inside, Kael’s voice followed her across the room.
Quiet.
Flat.
Intimate in the worst possible way.
“Eliana Vale.”
She paused.
Slowly, she looked over her shoulder.
His grey eyes held hers.
Not questioning.
Not warning.
Recognizing.
Like he had already found the first loose thread in her carefully stitched life.
And sooner or later, he intended to pull.
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