Current location: Novel nest Liar, King, Kneel Chapter 9

"Liar, King, Kneel" Chapter 9

Chapter 9: The Siege

The silence that had draped over the penthouse like a shroud for hours was abruptly annihilated. A concussive blast blew the service entrance off its hinges, sending metal shards screaming through the air like jagged shrapnel.

Max didn't move from the floor, his back still pressed against the study door, his eyes dazed and unfocused.

He had been so consumed by his own internal collapse that the world of consequences, embodied by the relentless Detective Elias, had finally found its way inside.

Elias Thorne stepped over the threshold, his tactical team fanning out with silent, deadly efficiency. The detective’s gaze swept the room, landing finally on the broken man huddled in the hallway.

"Draken!" Elias shouted, his weapon leveled. "Hands in the air, now!"

Max didn't look up, his posture one of complete, terminal defeat. He had spent his life commanding, and in the end, he found he had no desire to ever hold power again.

Inside the study, the heavy door swung open, and Kaelen emerged, his face still a mask of cool, surgical detachment. He surveyed the tactical team with the calm of a man who was observing a minor architectural inconvenience rather than an armed raid.

"You’re late, Detective," Kaelen said, his voice cutting through the adrenaline-fueled tension of the room like a scalpel.

Elias narrowed his eyes, his finger tightening on the trigger. "The game is over, Volkov. We have the logs, we have the witness statements, and we have the body of Julian Thorne."

Kaelen didn't blink, his eyes shifting to Max, who was still slumped on the floor. For a fleeting second, the cold mask fractured, replaced by a dark, simmering irritation that Max had become a piece of debris in his path.

"It’s not over," Kaelen replied, his voice dropping to a dangerous, low register. "It’s merely changing hands."

Chaos erupted as one of the tactical officers lunged forward to secure the perimeter. A shot rang out—a sharp, high-pitched crack of gunfire that ricocheted off the marble floor and sent a cloud of dust into the air.

Max’s eyes snapped open, his instincts, dormant and broken, suddenly surging to life with a desperate, primal clarity. He saw the trajectory of the bullet intended for Kaelen, the path of the lead designed to end the very thing that had defined his existence.

Without a second of deliberation, Max lunged, his body moving faster than his damaged mind could process. He threw himself into the path of the bullet, his chest meeting the cold, hard weight of the metal with a sickening thud.

The force of the impact spun him around, and he crumpled to the floor, his vision darkening as a searing, white-hot agony blossomed in his side. He hit the ground hard, the cold marble biting into his skin, his breath coming in shallow, ragged hitches.

"Max!" Kaelen’s voice, for the first time in their entire existence, held a note of pure, unadulterated panic.

ADVERTISEMENT

The ice-cold detachment had vanished, replaced by a raw, jagged desperation that Max had never dared to dream of. Kaelen was on his knees, his hands pressed frantically against the entry wound, his fingers turning dark and slick with blood.

"Don't do this," Kaelen whispered, his face hovering over Max’s, his features twisting in a way that looked dangerously like grief. "You are not allowed to leave me in the middle of this."

Max looked up at him, a weak, blood-stained smile playing on his lips. He realized, with a strange, floating lightness, that this was the first honest thing Kaelen had ever done for him.

"You cared," Max rasped, the words bubbling up through the blood in his throat. "I knew... I knew there was something underneath all that ice."

Elias stood over them, his gun lowered, his face a mask of shock as he watched the two predators descend into this final, tragic intimacy. "Call an ambulance! Now!"

Kaelen didn't look at the detective; his eyes were fixed on Max, his pupils dilated with a frantic, animalistic intensity. He began to apply pressure to the wound, his touch no longer clinical or detached, but desperate and bruising in its urgency.

"Stay with me," Kaelen repeated, his voice a broken command. "Do you hear me, Max? You stay here."

Max’s vision began to flicker, the edges of the room blurring into a soft, grey haze. He felt the weight of his own existence slipping away, and he found he was finally, truly, unafraid.

He had built a tower of lies, he had murdered his own soul, and he had worshipped a ghost—and in his final moments, the ghost had finally held him. It was a trade he would make a thousand times over, a bargain signed in his own blood.

Kaelen’s expression transformed, his face hardening into a mask of pure, lethal intent. He stood up, his movements no longer fluid or precise, but jagged, aggressive, and entirely, terrifyingly savage.

He snatched the weapon from the nearest officer, a move so fast that the man didn't even have time to scream. Kaelen began to move through the room like a whirlwind of destruction, his eyes glowing with the dark, hungry fire of a man who had finally lost his reason.

He became a killing machine, his shots precise, his movements efficient, and his intent singular. He cleared the room of the tactical team, his focus centered entirely on the man who had dared to spill Max’s blood.

"You," Kaelen growled, his voice a guttural, inhuman sound, as he turned his sights on the shooter. "You had no right."

Elias retreated, his eyes wide as he realized that the man he had been tracking was not a criminal mastermind, but a force of nature that had just been unleashed. He ducked behind a pillar as Kaelen shredded the remaining team, his focus entirely on the protection of the broken body on the floor.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kaelen returned to Max, his gun discarded, his hands once again pressing against the wound. The room was silent now, save for the sirens wailing in the distance and the labored, wet sound of Max’s breathing.

"I won't let you leave," Kaelen whispered, his voice broken, his forehead resting against Max’s. "I won't let you take this away from me."

Max felt the cold begin to seep into his limbs, a gentle, welcoming embrace that promised an end to the noise. He reached up, his hand fumbling until it rested on Kaelen’s cheek, his skin pale and already turning blue.

"It’s okay," Max whispered, his eyes closing as the room seemed to stretch and drift away. "It’s finally okay."

Kaelen held him tighter, his body shielding Max from the world, from the law, and from the reality of the destruction they had wrought. He looked like a statue mourning its own ruin, a man who had lost his purpose and found, in the carnage, the only thing he had ever truly possessed.

Max’s hand fell from Kaelen’s face, his heart rate slowing to a steady, rhythmic cadence that was fading into the distance. The king was dead, the empire was dust, and the silence was finally, perfectly, complete.

Elias approached slowly, his weapon raised, his eyes fixed on the scene of utter, senseless tragedy. He saw Kaelen kneeling in the blood, the man who had been the architect of so much suffering, now holding a broken man as if he were the only thing in the world that mattered.

"Volkov," Elias said, his voice soft, his own sense of justice suddenly feeling heavy and hollow in his chest. "It’s over."

Kaelen didn't turn; he simply tightened his grip on Max, his face hidden in the dark, blood-soaked fabric of Max’s coat. He was no longer the mastermind, he was no longer the assassin, and he was no longer the ghost.

He was a man broken by the weight of a choice he had never realized he was making. Max had offered his life, and in return, Kaelen had finally discovered the one thing that could never be stolen, bought, or broken.

He had discovered his own heart, and it was currently bleeding out on the cold marble floor of a room that no longer mattered. Kaelen closed his eyes, his breath hitching, a single, silent tear trailing through the blood on his skin.

The sirens grew louder, the lights of the city flooded the room, but the only thing that existed was the cold, quiet weight of the man in his arms. The siege was over, the tower was falling, and in the darkness, the truth was finally allowed to breathe.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: