Chapter 277 Not Too Personal
Mated To An Enemy
âSo, she bugs the system for months, almost destroys it, and then conveniently she has the only way to fix it? Did I get that all right?â Ashleigh asked not, bothering to hold back her irritation.
âI mean itâs a little more nuanced than all that,â Nessa said, âbut yea, basically.â
Ashleigh looked back and forth between Caleb, Galen, Fiona, and Nessa.
âAm I seriously the only one that sees a problem in this?â she asked.
âI understand where you are coming from, and I donât like it either,â Fiona replied.
âThank you,â Ashleigh sighed.
âBut,â Fiona sighed, âit does seem like our only option.â
âThe amount of work we would lose⦠itâs not insignificant,â Galen said. âJust in the research weâve gathered about the strange rogue attacks and the Fae in Winter⦠if we can save it, we need to.â
Ashleigh shook her head.
âGalen, you of all people I expected to agree with me. You didnât trust her before you even knew what she had done.â
âThatâs true,â Galen admitted. âAnd I donât trust her now, but itâs not about whether I trust her or not, itâs about what is best for Summer.â
âThere is no way this was done without some kind of backdoor trick for her to gain even further access to our systems,â she said. âThere is a war coming, and you guys want to just open the doors and let Alice, a spy, who has already almost destroyed us once, waltz right in?â
âAsh, itâs not that simple,â Caleb said..
âSeems like it is, we just donât do what she wants. Simple.â
âGalenâs right, we would lose a lot of very important research if we did a full system wipe to remove the bugs,â Caleb said. âNot to mention, it would take time, and during that time, a lot of our everyday jobs, tasks, and quality of life would be affected. Our people would suffer.â
âBut Caleb, she cannot be trusted!â Ashleigh growled.
âNo one is saying that we trust her,â Caleb said, grabbing her shoulders gently. âNessa will look at every line of code, double check everything, she will run tests, set up securities. But, we will do everything we can to make this a secure decision.â
âYou guys thought you got all of her bugs out before, and they were there for months. So what makes you think this will be different.â
âWell⦠I mean, I found them pretty quickâ¦â Nessa said quietly. âI wasnât here beforeâ¦â
Ashleigh sighed.
âAsh,â Caleb called her attention back to him, lowering his voice for only her to hear. âYou said that Lian told you that it is important that you discover what my father learned.â
Ashleigh nodded.
âA system restore will wipe everything,â Caleb said. âIncluding his partition.â
Ashleigh swallowed. She handed thought about that. She assumed that they had already lost the files that Clara was able to access, it was unfortunate, but it wasnât the end of the world.
They never cracked the partition, so in her mind, it wasnât part of what was at risk now.
She sighed.
âIf we use what Alice gave us, it keeps the partition safe, and it also restores the files we already lost,â Caleb said.
âBut how do we know she wonât corrupt, alter, or steal the partition once itâs openâ¦â Ashleigh asked. âHow do we know that the partition isnât her ultimate goal. Maybe she sent this âsolutionâ when she realized that the partition hadnât been cracked yet.â
Caleb sighed.
âWe donât know,â he said. âAny number of things could go wrong if we do this. But we do know what will go wrong if we donât.â
âIf it helpsâ¦â Nessa said softly. âOnce we implement the fix and systems are all in the green⦠I think I can secure the partition away from the network just in case there is anything left hunting for it.â
âHow?â Caleb asked. âMy understanding is that it is buried within the network. So you wouldnât be able to move it without first accessing it, and once youâve done that, assuming there is a bug, it will have access too.â
âSort of. Itâs hidden within the network, but if I can find it first, I can move it still completely locked down into a mirror system. They would only need to be connected during the transfer. Once itâs moved over, I can run a full security sweep and kill any little tag along if necessary before I get to work cracking that safe.â
âBut how would you find it?â he asked.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Nessa smiled proudly.
âWith my new pet.â
***
Axel sighed and leaned back in his chair, rubbing his temples.
He had been in talks with the Alpha of Frostbite for two days already, and they didnât seem to be getting any closer to a resolution.
There was so much hostility in the room they were barely able to have a proper conversation, much less a negotiation before one side or the other started making threats.
Frostbite was a pack of wolves that, much like Broken Crag, leaned heavily to one-half of themselves. The wolf.
They were known to spend every full moon entirely shifted from sunset to sunrise. Giving in completely to the whims and urges of their wolf.
In their human form, many members of the pack had taken to filing down their teeth and growing their nails into sharp points, giving them a feral and aggressive appearance. Their tempers were short, and their diplomacy was almost nonexistent.
But even knowing all of that before they sat down at the table, Axel was having a hard time not simply jumping across and wringing their throats.
âCan I get you anything, my Alpha?â Saul asked.
âPlease, just call me Axel,â he sighed.
âCan I get you anything, Axel?â
Axel took a deep breath.
âPatience, tolerance, if weâre out of those, maybe just a flamethrower⦠that seems good⦠Iâll take a flamethrower.â
âApologies, I think I left that in my other bag,â Saul smiled, offering Axel a cup with steam rising. âI can offer you hot chocolate instead.â
âHot chocolate?â Axel questioned. He looked down at the cup, sniffing the sweet scent.
He leaned his head back and saw the golden flecks in her chocolate eyes sparkling back at him. A soft smile spread across his lips. Followed shortly by a heavy sadness.
âWhat made you think to offer me this?â he asked, taking the cup in his hand. âWouldnât it normally be a coffee or a tea?â
âPerhaps,â Saul said. âBut I have known you your entire life. You are not a coffee or tea drinker. On the contrary, chocolate is your calming taste.â
âMy calming taste?â Axel laughed.
âYes,â Saul replied. âFor me, itâs garlic.â
âGarlic?â Axel asked with surprise.
âYes,â Saul smiled softly, taking a sip of his tea. âWhen Pearl was a pup, her grandmother taught her to bake bread. But the only kind she was ever interested in making, was garlic bread. Her grandmother tried different kinds of sweet breads or different flavors of breads. But it didnât matter. Each time, little Pearl would just make her garlic bread. A habit she continues to this day.â
âSo, itâs her that calms you, not the garlic,â Axel said.
âOf course,â Saul replied. âBut the scent of garlic, makes me think of her. Even if I am exhausted, hurt, stressed, that smell calms my heart.â
Axel smiled and nodded. Taking a sip of the sweet warmth.
âI am curious about something,â Saul said. âIf itâs not too personal a question.â
âWhat is that?â Axel asked.
âThe chocolate,â he said. âHow did the kindness of one little girl leave such an impression on you?â
âWhat?â Axel asked, his eyes widened, and his heart quickened. How did Saul know about Alice? âWhat do you mean?â
âIâm sorry,â Saul said, looking away. âI didnât mean to pry.â
âNo, itâs fine⦠Iâm just not sure I know what youâre talking about,â Axel said. âWhat little girl?â
Saul tilted his head and narrowed his eyes for a brief moment.
âDo you really not remember?â he asked.
Axel shook his head.
âAfter your⦠accident,â Saul began, referring to Axelâs scars. âYour parents ensured you always had a guard at the hospital. So the morning after, I was that guard.â
Axel remembered being in the recovery room at the Blood Moon. There wasnât much to remember. Mostly just in and out of consciousness, seeing his parents, and always someone standing at the door.
âA little girl came to the recovery room. She seemed to have been a patient as well, she said that she had met you briefly, that you were her friend. I wasnât going to let her in, but she said she just wanted to leave you something sweet, to forget the sadness.â
Axel clenched his jaw, as he saw the little girl he had met, his Alice, approaching his bedside. Crutches under her arms, bandages littered over her arms, and face.
âI was touched by her kindness, so I allowed her to place a candy bar beside your bed. It was from then on, that chocolate seemed to have become a source of comfort for you.â
âSweet dreams, sweet boy,â Little Alice whispered. âIâll find you again someday.â