Current location: Novel nest The Enemy in My Arms Chapter 16:The Basement

"The Enemy in My Arms" Chapter 16:The Basement

Valentina started noticing the smell three days after the shooting range.

Not everywhere.

Only in the east wing of the Moretti estate.

Bleach.

Industrial-strength bleach layered heavily over something darker underneath.

At first she assumed it came from renovations. The estate employed contractors constantly—electricians, cleaners, landscapers, security technicians. Large houses always needed maintenance.

But the smell lingered too consistently.

And certain staff members had started avoiding that hallway altogether.

That mattered.

People in wealthy households learned how to move naturally around secrets. The servants never asked questions directly, but fear changed behavior in obvious ways.

Eyes lowered faster.

Conversations stopped earlier.

Doors remained closed longer than usual.

Valentina noticed all of it.

Especially after Caterina’s funeral.

Especially after realizing dead wives might not be coincidences anymore.

By Friday evening, curiosity had become obsession.

Luca was away meeting Russian contacts downtown, and Adrian had left earlier with part of the security team after an issue at the docks. The estate remained quieter than usual beneath heavy rain and rolling thunder outside.

Perfect timing.

Valentina moved silently through the mansion shortly after midnight wearing black silk pants and one of Luca’s oversized sweaters she’d stolen years ago. Barefoot again. Easier to move quietly that way.

The east wing lights remained dimmed low as she passed old paintings and locked guest rooms toward the lower service corridor near the wine cellar.

That smell hit stronger immediately.

Bleach.

Rust.

Something metallic beneath both.

Her pulse slowed instead of quickening.

Fear sharpened her now.

The lower hallway ended at a reinforced steel door she had never seen open before.

Interesting.

The keypad beside it glowed faintly blue beneath security cameras mounted overhead.

Too much security for storage.

Valentina crouched slightly near the lock and examined the fingerprints smudged against the keypad surface.

Frequent use.

Recently cleaned.

The storm outside rattled distant windows while thunder rolled softly through the estate.

She studied the keypad carefully for several moments before noticing it.

The numbers four, seven, and nine carried slightly more wear than the others.

Human beings repeated habits carelessly.

Especially men convinced nobody was watching.

Valentina entered the first combination slowly.

Wrong.

Second attempt.

Wrong again.

Her jaw tightened.

Think.

Luca favored dates connected to himself. Birthdays. Anniversaries. Victories.

Then it hit her.

July 1947.

The year his grandfather founded the Moretti organization officially.

Valentina entered the numbers carefully.

The lock clicked open.

Cold spread slowly through her chest.

Because part of her suddenly wished it hadn’t.

The steel door opened inward with a low mechanical sound, revealing concrete stairs descending beneath the estate.

No wine cellar.

No storage rooms.

Just darkness.

And that smell.

Stronger now.

Valentina stepped downward slowly, one hand brushing the cold concrete wall while dim emergency lights flickered farther below. The deeper she descended, the colder the air became.

Then she heard it.

A sound.

Faint.

Human.

Her body froze instantly.

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Not voices exactly.

Whimpering.

The realization hit hard enough to make her stomach twist.

No.

No, Luca wouldn’t—

Except she already knew he would.

The staircase opened finally into a long underground corridor lined with reinforced doors.

Cells.

Jesus Christ.

Real cells.

Some stood empty.

Others did not.

Valentina moved slowly through the hallway while horror crawled steadily beneath her skin.

A man sat motionless inside the first occupied room, wrists chained to a steel chair beneath fluorescent lighting. Bruises darkened his face almost beyond recognition.

Another cell farther down contained two younger men speaking quietly in Russian.

Weapons crates lined the far wall near surveillance monitors and interrogation equipment.

This wasn’t temporary holding space.

This was infrastructure.

Planned.

Organized.

Professional.

The truth settled into her bones with sickening weight.

Luca hadn’t become dangerous recently.

He had always been this dangerous.

A weak sound came from the final room near the end of the corridor.

Valentina turned slowly toward it.

The cell door stood partially open.

Inside, a woman sat curled against the corner mattress beneath dim lighting.

Young.

Maybe twenty-two.

Dark hair tangled around a bruised face.

The girl looked up sharply the second Valentina appeared.

Fear exploded instantly across her expression.

“No,” the woman whispered hoarsely. “Please—please don’t let them take me upstairs again.”

Valentina’s heartbeat stopped.

Upstairs.

Oh God.

She stepped into the room slowly. “Who are you?”

The woman stared at her silk clothes and diamond necklace with confused desperation. “You’re not staff.”

“No.”

“Then why are you here?”

Good question.

Valentina crouched carefully several feet away. “What’s your name?”

“Eva.”

“How long have you been here?”

The girl’s eyes filled instantly with tears she looked too exhausted to cry properly anymore.

“I don’t know.”

Cold rage spread slowly through Valentina’s chest.

The bruises along Eva’s arms looked recent.

Some older.

Some not.

“You need to leave,” Eva whispered suddenly. “If Luca finds you down here—”

The sound of footsteps echoed sharply somewhere above them.

Valentina’s blood turned ice cold instantly.

Someone was coming downstairs.

Fast.

Eva recoiled immediately into the corner like an abused animal hearing its owner approach.

“Go,” she whispered frantically. “Please go.”

The footsteps grew louder.

Male voices.

Security.

Valentina stood immediately and moved toward the hallway, pulse pounding hard now as panic finally caught up to her.

Too slow.

She’d stayed too long.

The corridor lights flickered faintly just as shadows appeared near the staircase entrance above.

Then a familiar voice cut sharply through the underground silence.

“Valentina?”

Adrian.

Relief hit so violently it almost hurt.

He appeared at the bottom of the stairs seconds later wearing a dark coat soaked from rain, expression already tense before his eyes found her standing outside the open cell.

Then he saw the hallway.

The cells.

The prisoners.

And for the first time since meeting him—

Valentina watched Adrian Volkov lose control of his expression completely.

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