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"The Ghost Who Loved Me" Chapter 13

Chapter 13: The Red Thread of Clues

The phantom melody was still vibrating in her ears when Alex breached the safehouse’s secondary airlock.

She didn't drop the chemical duffel bag. She slammed it onto the stainless-steel island, her hands moving with a frantic, uncharacteristic desperation as she ripped her secure terminal from her leather jacket.

Sebastian was there instantly.

He emerged from the armory like a rising tide, his ice-blue eyes sweeping over her pale face, tracking the tremor in her fingers and the raw, blown-out dilation of her pupils.

"You went outside," he stated, his dark baritone dropping into a heavy, dangerous register.

"The grid is flashing, Alexandra. Torres is—"

"Look at the screen," she choked out.

Her voice was a ragged, broken thing. She jammed the terminal into the docking port of his primary mainframe, bypassing his defensive firewalls with a brute-force script she had coded in the alleyway.

The blocked call had left a ghost packet in the local routing cache. It wasn't a standard voice signal; it was a deeply embedded data trigger designed to look for her specific biometric signature.

The moment her thumbprint hit the glass, a high-frequency connection opened, downloading a massive, highly encrypted shadow drive from a decentralized server network.

"The whistling," Alex whispered, her amber eyes wide and glazed with an ancient horror as she stared at the progress bar.

"It was his melody, Sebastian. My father's."

Sebastian stepped up behind her, his massive frame instantly crowding her against the console. He didn't chide her for leaving. He didn't lecture her on the grid footprint.

His eyes locked onto the screen, his mechanical brain analyzing the incoming files at a terrifyingly rapid velocity.

"The encryption is a standard multi-tiered ledger," Sebastian murmured, his hand settling flat against the steel island beside hers, his muscles rigid.

"But the routing tags... these are old Foundry logistics."

The progress bar hit one hundred percent. The screen flashed, opening a massive directory of digitized banking records, wire transfer slips, and encrypted art procurement invoices dating back ten years.

Alex’s fingers flew across the keyboard, tearing through the data layers with the precision of a surgeon dissecting a tumor.

She followed the red thread of clues, her mind tracking the financial numbers through shell corporations in Zurich, Panama, and Milan.

She was looking for the specific contract code that had funded the hit on Mateo Cruz five years ago.

She found it under an invoice labeled Restoration Project: The Fallen Crown.

The money had been routed through Mendoza’s gallery loops. It had paid for the specific tactical team that breached her childhood home.

But as Alex traced the ultimate source of the funds, the original account holder’s name finally emerged from the decrypted code.

The keyboard beneath her fingers went completely silent.

The safehouse air turned to solid ice.

Alvaro de Silva.

The name burned against the blue light of the terminal in cold, digital typography.

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Alvaro.

The elegant, grandfatherly art mentor who had taken her in after her father's murder.

The man who had taught her how to hold a restoration brush, how to read the microscopic layers of Renaissance masters, how to survive in the high-society art underworld.

He hadn't been her savior.

He was a high-ranking coordinator for The Foundry. He was the lethal wolf in sheep's clothing who had targeted her father for execution because Mateo Cruz had stumbled upon the syndicate's financial ledgers.

Alvaro had murdered her father, and then he had reached out his bloody, velvet-gloved hand to raise her as his prize pupil, keeping his favorite variable under his absolute, watchful gaze.

Alex didn't scream. She didn't move.

But the emotional structural collapse inside her was absolute. Her entire life—her vengeance, her grief, her survival—had been a beautifully curated lie orchestrated by the man she trusted most.

A sharp, ragged gasp tore from her throat.

Her knees buckled, her balance completely failing her as the sheer weight of the betrayal crushed her skeletal structure. She didn't hit the slate floor.

Sebastian caught her.

His massive arms wrapped around her waist from behind, hauling her up against his chest with a sudden, desperate strength. He spun her around in his grip, his long fingers locking into her wild caramel curls to pull her face directly into the starched white linen of his shirt.

And for the first time in her life, Alexandra Cruz broke.

She clutched at his shoulders, her fingernails tearing into the expensive fabric of his shirt as a violent, gut-wrenching sob erupted from her chest.

She wept with a raw, primal agony that shook her entire delicate frame, her hot tears soaking through his linen, washing against the calloused skin of his chest.

Sebastian held her. He didn't freeze. He didn't treat her like an operational defect.

He locked his strong arms around her ribs, crushing her smaller body against his mass until she was entirely anchored by his weight.

He buried his face into her damp curls, his chest heaving against hers, letting her pour her grief and her ruin directly into his marrow.

He became her monolith, the only unyielding thing left in a world that had completely disintegrated around her.

For three long, agonizing minutes, the only sound inside the brutalist bunker was the shattered, breathless weeping of the restorer and the rhythmic, heavy thumping of the machine’s wild heart against her cheek.

Slowly, the violent tremors in her shoulders began to subside.

The grief didn't vanish; it mutated. It turned into a cold, terrifying alchemy that crystallized the fluid amber of her eyes into twin shards of solid, unyielding flint.

Alex pulled back from his chest, her hands lingering on his shoulders for balance. Her face was pale, her skin smudged with the raw tracks of her tears, but her jawline was set in a mask of terrifying, predatory calm.

She looked up into Sebastian’s piercing, silver-flecked blue eyes.

"Alvaro," she whispered, her voice entirely stripped of human warmth, dropping into a pitch-black, lethal register.

"He didn't just order the hit, Sebastian. He kept me as a trophy. He watched me grieve for five years while he laundered the money that paid for my father's blood."

She took a slow, deep breath, her chest rising against his.

"I want to burn his empire to ash," Alex said, her amber eyes burning with a chaotic, unhinged devotion to absolute ruin.

"I want to dismantle everything he has ever touched, every canvas, every account, every drop of his old-money blood. I want him dead."

Sebastian didn't blink. He reached out his bare, scarred hand, his long fingers gently cupping her jaw with a heavy, possessive pressure that anchored her gaze to his.

A cold, deadpan smirk touched his chiseled lips—the look of a demon who had finally found his purpose.

"I'll buy the gasoline," Sebastian replied.

His dark baritone was a absolute, comforting promise of destruction spoken into the cold safehouse air.

He didn't care about Alvaro's rank. He didn't care about The Foundry's retaliation. She had claimed his ruin, and now he was going to claim her vengeance.

Behind them, the auxiliary monitor chirped a secondary warning.

The digital footprint grid was flashing yellow. Inspector Torres’s surveillance detail had just moved their physical perimeter two blocks closer to their sector.

The countdown was hitting its final seconds, but the two ghosts didn't look at the threat. They were already looking at the war ahead.

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