Chapter 3: Meetings
Ideworld Chronicles: Alexa May [art magic, urban fantasy, cultivation, slice of life]
Lessons could have been great today. They always left me with something newânot just about the craft, but about myself. That was the quiet magic of art: even within the rigid walls of institutional learning, something raw and beautiful still managed to slip through.
But I didnât linger. I had to leave in a hurry.
Penrose had texted meâshort, sharp. No word from Honey since we last spoke. That alone said more than it should have.
It was bad.
She couldâve gone radio silentâmaybe trying to dodge the fallout from my last job. Or worse: maybe she was dead. Fifty thousand wasnât just the price of a necklace anymoreâit mightâve become the price of a life. A bad trade. All life should be priceless. Shouldnât it?
Her absence didnât just feel wrong. It felt dangerousâespecially for me.
Because if Honey had disappeared, then questions would come next. Accusations. Cleaning up loose ends. I knew how these things went. Iâd played too many parts not to recognize the shape of a tragedy before it unfolded.
And so I was on a bus again, heading toward the city center.
Despite all her secrecy, Miss Honey wasnât some shadow in the dark. She wasnât a thief. Not a spy. She was a businesswoman walking a razorâs edge in a world full of wolves. And that made her vulnerable. It also made her trackable.
She didnât know I had found her home months ago. Neither did Penrose. But I had followed her trail after our first meetingâdiscreetly, quietly. Just in case.
And today⦠that caution might save my life.
--
I was wearing both the face and hair of Jess Hare nowâmakeup hastily applied in the back of the bus, wig slipped on the moment I found shadow between two buildings. Miss Honey lived in one of those big apartment complexes with a concierge stationed at the front desk, the kind who thinks heâs the final boss of a fortress.
âGood afternoon, sir,â I said with a polite tone, warm but not overly familiar.
He nodded back, professional but not unfriendly. âGood afternoon. How may I help you, maâam?â
âIâm here because of Jason,â I replied sweetly. Sorry, Jasonâbut yours was the first name that popped into my head for this little performance.
âJason?â His brows furrowed. âJason who?â
âWhat do you mean, sir?â I blinked in mock confusion.
The concierge frownedâpart confusion, part secondhand embarrassment.
âIâm sorry, maâam, but I donât know who youâre talking about.â
âOh, Jasonâ¦â I sighed dramatically, leaning in slightly, like we were about to share a juicy secret. âI donât remember his last name. He was a good-looking fella. Wore a suit. At first, at leastâif you know what I mean.â I made a gesture that was just on the edge of vulgar.
He flinched, closing his eyes briefly, clearly disturbed. Bingo.
âHe told me heâd call, but of course, he never did,â I added, just loud enough for the discomfort to linger in the air. âThough, to be fair, I was the one who followed him first.â
That hooked him. He leaned in, despite himself.
âDo you have his number, maâam? Maybe it would be best to call him?â he asked, probably already knowing the answer.
âUnfortunately not. But when I followed him, I saw him meet another woman. Straight after he was done with me.â I let the words hang for effect, then brought my fist down lightly but firmly on the desk. âShe seemed like such a nice lady. I thought they might be lovers. Or married. I just want to warn her that heâs a scumbag.â
His expression shiftedâguarded curiosity now tinged with reluctant sympathy. âDo you know her name?â
âNo, but I know what she looks like and that she lives here. African-American, dreads dyed blonde. Full lips, dimples in her cheeks. Fuller-bodiedâreal curves, you know? That day she wore a sunny yellow suit, looked radiant. Like she lit up the sidewalk just by standing there.â
I watched his face carefullyâand there it was. Recognition.
I struck quickly: âI know you canât let me in. I respect that. But maybe you could call her? Tell her someone needs to speak with herâdownstairs, just for a minute?â
âI donât knowâ¦â he murmured, torn.
Time for the final push.
âIf someone you loved lied to youâcheated on youâwouldnât you want to know? She seemed so lovely. She deserves to know the truth.â
âWhy didnât you confront them right then?â he asked, still clinging to protocol.
âI gave him the benefit of the doubt,â I said, voice softening. âMaybe I hoped it was a misunderstanding. But then he ghosted me.â
He sighed, heavily. Then reached for the phone and dialed a number marked 419âfourth floor, apartment nineteen, if my guess was right.
After a few seconds, the line picked up. She was aliveâgreat fucking news for me.
âHello, Mrs. Holden.â Mrs.âso sheâs married then. Letâs hope Iâm not about to wreck a happy home. âThereâs a lady here whoâd like to speak with you, if thatâs possible.â
There was a pauseâshe was speaking on the other end.
âWell⦠pretty face, red hair, nicely but plainly dressed.â
Oh, thank you for that last part, Mr. Concierge. Always lovely to be fashion-reviewed in real time.
âIâll ask, Mrs. Holden.â He looked at me now, covering the receiver with his hand. âShe wants to know your name.â
I gave him a small, polite smile. âIâm Jess Hare.â
--
She walked down the stairsânot the elevator. Smart. She wanted an easy escape route if things went sideways. I respected that. Iâd have done the same.
She wore an African traditional dressâvibrant yellows, deep reds, warm brownsâit was striking, almost ceremonial, and absolutely stunning on her. But her face? It didnât match the colorful armor sheâd wrapped herself in. She looked tenseâscared, angry, and maybe even betrayed.
I was already seated on the corner lounge sofa near the entrance, a shadowy nook with no direct windows, which made it perfectâprivate, safer for both of us.
She didnât even bother with pleasantries.
âHow did you find me here, Ms. Hare?â
No greetings. That told me all I neededâprotocol was out the window, and panic had taken the wheel.
âI followed you here a while ago. Just in case.â
Her eyes narrowed. âThatâs a breach of trust. I never expected Mr. Penrose to stoop that low.â
âIt was my own decision. He had nothing to do with it. In fact, he still doesnât knowânot about this place, or this meeting.â
âThat might be true.â She didnât sound convinced. âOr it might not. Why are you here?â
âIsnât it obvious? You set me upâeither for failure or death.â
âI did no such thing, Ms. Hare.â Her voice was sharper now. âI gave you the information as it was given to me. Just like always.â
âWas the client a first-timer? Or have I worked for him before?â
âI canât tell you that.â
Of course. Of course she couldnât. This was getting old fast.
âMrs. HoldenâMs. Honeyâwhichever version you want to go by today, Iâm a patient woman. But I wonât let an attempt on my life slide. That clear?â
She sank into the armchair across from me, weighing her words like a woman balancing glassware on a rope.
âFirst-timer,â she said finally.
âThat why youâve been dodging calls now?â
Her expression cracked, fury bubbling just beneath the surface.
âWhat did you expect? This was supposed to be a clean jobâhe said that.â
A he. Narrowed it down to about half the world, but it was a start.
âYou said it too. And yet what did we get? A disaster. A shootout. Fire. Theft. FBI crawling around like rats in the walls.â Her voice had gone sharp and hushed, clipped syllables and trembling restraint. âAnd then your so-called exit plan? That went straight to hell too.â
âYou spoke to the buyer again, then?â
âNo.â She crossed her arms. âHe never called back. I found out about the mess through... other means.â
Other means? That sent up flags. Too vague. Too clean.
âAnd you didnât call me? Or him? Why?â
Her face darkened. âWhy?â Her voice cracked like a whip. âThat wasnât in the agreement. You were to bring me the necklace. I would contact the middleman. Then the deal. Thatâs it. Why would I call anyone when you never showed up?â
âI get that. But then why ghost Penrose? You made it nearly impossible for me to follow through. I have the necklaceâmaybe not on me right now, but itâs safe. I can still deliver it, same terms. But you are the one making it messy.â
âI went dark because I found out who the buyer really is,â she said, almost in a whisper. âAnd once I didâI needed to disappear for a while. To ride it out. The whole thing turned rotten, and to be honest?â She leaned forward slightly, her eyes locking with mine. âI was afraidâof him, and of you.â
âMe?â I asked, though I already knew where this was going.
âYes, you, Ms. Hare,â she replied, cold and certain. âI know you're capable of killing. So is Mr. Penrose.â
Not untrue. But not the whole truth, either.
Iâd never killed out of malice, and I never went in planning to. But if things turned badâreally badâI wasnât the type to roll over and die for someone else's mistake. As for Penrose? He could eviscerate a man, force-feed him his own intestines just to make a point, then return to his foie gras like nothing had happened. Iâd seen it.
âYou really thought Iâd come here to take revenge?â
âFrankly? Yes. I still do. Why else would you show up at my home?â Her fingers were tight against the fabric of her skirt now. âYou want to scare me, donât you? Force me to give you what I know? And donât sell me the story that Penrose doesnât know about this visit.â
It was the truth, but maybe I could use that line of thinking to shift the dynamic.
âI came to make sure you were alive,â I said, calm and deliberate. âWe still want the trade. Youâre the one making it difficult.â
âI had my reasons,â she snapped, more defensive than defiant.
âAnd now,â I said, slowly leaning forward, âyouâre going to set those reasons aside and organize the exchange like we agreed. Contact the buyer. I want this cursed necklace out of my hands.â
She hesitated. I saw the storm behind her eyesâfear and doubt and shame fighting for control. What a mess. The job had gone to hell, and now she was just another variable making it worse, tangled in her own fear like a fly in webbing she spun herself.
I had thought she was a professional.
âIâll call his man later,â she said, voice low. âWhen can you hand me the necklace?â
âOh no, Ms. Honey,â I said, folding my arms. âWeâre making a few changes to the agreement. I donât trust you anymore.â
âWhat?â Her reaction was immediate, offendedâgenuinely surprised, as if she couldnât believe Iâd say it aloud.
I stared at her. Was she seriously playing the victim now?
âYouâre going to call him now,â I said. âAnd youâre going to organize a meetingâall three of us. Make it somewhere public. A restaurant. A shitty pub. Hell, we could do it right here in the lobby if you prefer. But no more intermediaries.â
âI wonât agree to that.â Her tone dipped into alarm. âThatâs bad for business. Bad for... life.â
âThen maybe next time youâll make better decisions,â I said, evenly. âYou played this game and you forced my hand. Now make the call.â
âI canât do it here,â she protested, glancing toward the front desk.
Still playing. Still hoping she could squirm her way out. I slipped the pistol from my bag just long enough for her to see itâno theatrics, no threat spokenâthen let it disappear again.
Her breath caught. No more games.
âYou will make that call,â I said.
She stared at me. Her lips parted slightly, but no words came. Then she nodded. âOkay, Ms. Hare.â
She reached for her phone, hands suddenly more cooperative.
Funny, reallyâhow polite people become when they remember theyâre not the one holding the gun.
--
âYes, Ms. Hare would like to make an exchange,â she said when the man answered. I could hear his voice through the phoneâ Calm. Too calm.
âShe proposesââ she began, but I kicked her in the shin under the table.
âShe demands,â she corrected herself, eyes flashing at me, but she understood. âThat we meet directly. No intermediaries. Just the three of us.â
âI see no problem with that,â the man replied smoothly. âWhere?â
âThe Sleeping Bear, onââ
âI know where it is,â he cut her off. âWhen?â
She looked at me. I gave a nonchalant shrug. âAfter nine,â I said. âTonight.â I had to attend Jasonâs party firstâridiculous as that sounds, even in my own head.
There was a pause on the line. âNine?â he repeated. âCan you make a reservation at such short notice?â
Fair question. The Sleeping Bear wasnât a place you just walked into. It took months to book a tableâunless you knew someone. But she was the one who brought it up. Sheâd made her bed.
âYes,â she said, firm now. âReservation for three. You, me, and Ms. Hare.â
âFine. Iâll be there. Good day, Ms. Honey.â
âGood day,â she replied and hung up.
âSee?â I said, leaning back a little. âThat wasnât so hard.â
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She sighed, looking older in that moment. âYouâre too eager to celebrate, Ms. Hare. I think I made a terrible mistake getting involved with this man. With his boss.â
âYou mightâve,â I said. âWeâll find out tonight.â
She stood halfway, hesitated. âMay I go now?â
âYou can goâjust make that reservation. One last thing.â She froze again. âIn case you decide to disappear, which I strongly advise against⦠What does this man look like?â
She sat back down. âAsian. Young. Sharp. Always in a tailored suit. Black hair in a bun, goatee, small scar near his lip. Andâ¦â she hesitated, then added, âheâs missing half his little finger.â
Yakuza. Of - fucking - course.
âAlright,â I said. âGo.â
She stood, composed again but still shaken. I followed her with my eyes until she stepped into the elevator.
Then I walked over to the concierge. âThank you again for your help,â I said. It costs nothing to be politeâusually buys you more than a threat.
âShe looked really distressed,â he said, lowering his voice. âItâs good you told her about that man.â
âYes. Sometimes you have to cut off the rotting limb, even if your life wonât ever be the same without it.â
He swallowed and nodded, solemn. âI hope she makes the right choice.â
âI hope I did, too,â I said.
And then I left.
--
âItâs not a good idea, Alexandra,â Mr. Penrose said, handing me the necklace. His face was carved from stone, but his eyes flickered with something close to approval. âThough I didnât expect Ms. Honey to turn so⦠sour. Good instincts, following her.â
âDo you think sheâll show up?â I asked, slipping the necklace into the hidden pouch under my jacket. It nestled in like it belonged there. It was starting to feel like it did.
He paused. âBefore I knew sheâd gone underground, I wouldâve said yes. Now?â He shook his head. âI donât trust her at all.â
âSame,â I muttered. âStill going. I want this thing gone.â
âSheâs afraid,â he said. âPeople like her usually are. You and Iâwe donât get that luxury, do we?â
âNo. We donât.â
âYou need anything else?â
âYes, actually.â I leaned slightly on the edge of his desk. âIâm out of the blue sleeping pills. Used the last one during my daring escape. Thought I had a stash at home, butâ¦â I shrugged.
He opened a drawer, pulled out a small container, and handed it over. âTwenty. Should last you for a while.â
âAppreciated.â I weighed the bottle in my hand, then reached inside my coat againâthis time pulling the gun from the wreck. I flicked the safety off and leveled it at his forehead.
âGive me all my money.â
He didnât flinch. Didnât blink. Just looked at me as if Iâd told him the weather was turning.
âWhere did you find it?â he asked calmly, and reached out. I handed it over with a smirk.
âGuy who tried to kill me didnât need it anymore.â
He inspected it with a practiced hand, then flipped the safety back on. âStaccato 2011. Nine mil. Good choiceâclean recoil, light weight. You keeping it?â
âI was going to buy one anyway. This saves me the trip.â
He handed it back. âPractical. Anything else?â
Always so stiff. Like a butler who moonlights as a war criminal.
âNo, thank you.â
--
I still had time before Jasonâs party, so naturally, I went straight to The Sleeping Bear. A famous placeâfancy enough to charge you double for half a steak, but with just enough grit to keep the pose real. Mostly meat: steaks, burgers, ribs. Dressed up with gold flakes, truffle foam, or whatever was trending. I liked their confidence.
The building was tucked between two mid-rise apartment blocks, like a secret hiding in plain sight. A narrow alley led to a back entranceâtight, no fire escapes, no side doors. Just one big courtyard-like well in the middle of the surrounding buildings.
I spotted a service ladder and, of course, climbed it. Why wouldnât I?
The roof was a giftâflat and connected clean across several blocks. There were gaps here and there, but nothing serious. Some of them already had planks laid across, like someone before me had the same idea. The city always whispers to people like me if you listen close enough.
I went back down the same way and checked the back door of the restaurant. Locked, as expected. There were windows too. I peered insideâmenâs restroom. Unremarkable, but useful. The window was big enough and looked easy to pop from the inside. I made a mental note: in case of trouble, break for the toilet. Then either run out the alley or climb.
Not a bad setup. Quiet. Tucked away. Predictable escape routes. Could be worse.
I took out my spray cans and started painting on the wall opposite the toilet windows and the back door. If he decided to follow me out, this would be the first thing heâd see. A visual gut punch. Maybe enough to freeze him for a few secondsâand thatâs all Iâd need.
I painted a Ningyo. Learned about them in my Symbolism in Art class. Mermaid-like beings from Japanese folklore, but twistedâgrotesque, otherworldly. No Disney charm, just nightmare fuel wrapped in seaweed and myth.
I pushed hard into the horror, went all in. Oversized eyes, jagged teeth, hair like algae and wire. The kind of face that didnât haunt your dreamsâit shredded them.
When I was done, I ran my hand gently over the edge of its faceâa silent wish that it would do what I needed: be the most terrifying thing he had ever seen. Thatâs when it happened.
A warmth pulsed from my palm. A familiar tingling. Then the light againâsoft, strangeâslipping through my skin, clinging to the painting just for a moment before vanishing.
I blinked. Was I imagining it? The air felt still, thick, like the moment before a match is struck. Whatever it was, it didnât feel like nothing.
--
Jason had organized his party at the Alpha Kappa something fraternity house. He was either a member or just a close friendâdidnât really matter. What mattered was that he was the real driving force behind all their best parties. The so-called "alpha" guys? Useless at organizing anything without him. But credit where itâs due: their building looked nice. Big, clean yard, plenty of grass and just enough trees to give the space a touch of privacy.
I arrived with Sophie and Peter. It didnât take long before someone pointed us toward Jason and the usual crowd. All smiles and noise and the illusion that everything in the world was just fine.
A few guys manned stone grills, flipping meat and laughing too loudly. Four long tables hugged the building walls, piled with cold snacks. Drinks flowed freelyâalcoholic, non-alcoholic, and whatever sat in between.
âIâm gonna go make myself look busy. Have fun, guys.â And just like that, Sophie drifted off toward the other girls from her course.
Elena was already knee-deep in some animated conversation, gesturing wildlyâprobably reenacting a plot from another rom-com. She noticed Sophie, lit up, and hugged her. The other girls offered a few lazy hellos.
Peter watched her go too, sighed, then turned to me with as much subtlety as he could muster. âWhy did I come here again?â
âOh, come on, Pete. You always fit in just fine.â
It was true. Despite all my crafted personas and tactical charm, he was naturally better at this. No effort, no false smilesâjust honesty, and people loved him for it. He was tall, built like someone who swam every day of his life, with soft brown hair, ocean-blue eyes, and a spatter of freckles across the bridge of his nose. Not full-faced like mineâjust enough to be disarming. He was handsome in a way that made people trust him before he even spoke.
âI might,â he said, âbut Iâd still rather be doing something else.â
âListen to me, pool boy.â
He looked at me, sharp and focused.
âJasonâs a fool, but heâs right. Youâve got to put yourself out thereâlet the vultures circle, evenâjust for the chance to meet that one girl you could actually spend your life with. You get me?â
âI have to?â He gave me that look. âWhat about you, sis?â
Damn. I donât have time for boys. Not with everything Iâve got going.
âYou know Iâve got... extra-curriculars. Stuff that takes time, Pete.â
âDo you have to have them? Donât you already have enough money?â
He leaned in. âHeâs still paying you every month, right? For at least three more yearsâjust to balance out the money you made him. Even if you stopped now.â
Well. He wasnât wrong.
Penrose canât just dump the whole sum in one go. Would raise eyebrows, bring the tax hounds sniffing. The money has to be laundered, layered, trickled down. That pipeline got bottlenecked a while ago. But stillâwhy am I doing this?
My body still hurts from the last job. I have a Yakuza meeting after this party.
But the truth is simple: I like it. I like the thrill. Itâs been half my life, and Iâm good at it. How do you quit something that feels like part of who you are?
âYouâre right, I could stop. But I like it, Pete. And Iâm good. Iâd stop if I found anythingâor anyoneâI liked just as much.â
He sighed. He got it.
He loves swimming the same way. Competing. Heâs damn good, Olympic-tier.
âI get it,â he said quietly. âIâll try tonight. For three reasons.â
âOh yeah? Hit me.â
âFirst, as an incentiveâfor you to try someday.â
I rolled my eyes.
âSecond, to shut Jasonâs mouth.â
I clapped. Standing ovation. Solid reason, probably the best.
âThird,â he said, and paused, âbecause I feel like it. Iâm tired of always thinking about you, Lex. I worry every time you step out the door. I need someone else to worry about. Someone a little more... grounded, you know?â
That one hurt.
But I understood it.
I nodded, no smile this time. He didnât mean to hurt meâhe just meant it.
Then he flipped the mood. Hopped a few times in place, like a boxer loosening up before a bout, smiled and said,
âIâm heading toward that group.â
He pointed at a small circle of five girls nearby. A few guys had already tried their luck over there, only to be casually deflected. I really hoped Peter would fare betterâhis mood might take a hit if this went sideways.
âYou coming with me?â
âSure. Letâs go.â
I was curious to see how itâd go for himâat least at the start.
We made our way over. I didnât recognize any of the girls. There was a chubby, radiant Black girl with a warm energy that practically shimmered. Two others stood like twins fused at the shoulder, whispering into each otherâs earsâbad habit in bigger crowds. Another was a tall ginger with freckles like mine but built more like a willow tree. And then there was the mystery.
Plain clothes. Hoodie. Cap. Slim. A little taller than me. But with the setting sun and shadows, her face was hidden.
âHi, girls,â Peter said, bold voice on full display. âIâm Peter. Would love to spend some time with you tonight.â
The two whispering girls didnât even glance at him.
It was the faceless one who stepped forward. She pulled her hood down and tilted her head up toward us.
Blonde hair, high ponytail swaying with the breeze. One hand around her drink, the other idly twirling her straw.
âOh?â she said. âAnd what would you want to do with that time, Mister Peter?â
Peter blinked. âSorry... I didnât catch your name.â
âIâm not mad about it,â she said.
The group giggled, entertained.
Damn. That probably made Peterâs courage wilt just a little.
âIâd be happy to be the butt of your jokes,â he replied, recovering like a champ.
Smooth boy. Told you you had it in you.
She set her drink down on a nearby table, pulled off her cap, and folded her arms.
Peter froze. I did too.
Her face was straight out of a dreamâsoft cheeks and dimples, full lips, and eyes so blue they looked like winter paused just to admire her. She smiled slyly.
âLucky for you, Iâm not cruel enough to do a public dissection. Lead the way, Mister Peter.â
She held out her arm. Peter, still blinking, offered his with the grace of a slightly stunned gentleman.
âI canât keep up with your pace. Where are we going?â he asked.
Behind them, the two girls whispered again. Then the warm-skinned one spoke up, voice amused:
âDonât torment the poor guy. Heâs the first one to walk over and be polite, and youâre already grilling him.â
âOh, Peterâs taking me on a stroll,â the blonde said, unfazed. âA stroll where he tells me about himself, and I decide if Iâll tell him about me.â
I kind of liked her. She had style.
Now I really wanted to see how this would play out, but she took Peter away from the group. So I did the next best thingâstarted talking with her friends.
âHi, Iâm Alexa May. I study Art. What about you guys?â
The willowy one answered in a slightly awkward tone, âComputer sciences. We all do.â
The chubby girl nodded. The two conjoined-at-the-hip girls just gasped and moved away without a word. Rude as hellâbut honestly, it tracked. Didnât sting nearly as much as they mightâve hoped. Not when youâre used to dodging bullets and having tea with gangsters.
âMy name is Lily,â the willowy one added.
âIâm Pamela,â said the chubby girl, offering a warm smile. âBut everyone calls me Peaches.â
âI go by Lex. Nice to meet you guys.â I gestured vaguely in Peterâs direction. âSo... was my boy just kidnapped for sacrifice, or does he have a shot at making it back?â
âYour boy?â Peaches asked, raising her brows.
âI meant as a friend. More like a brother. We lived in the same orphanage.â
âSorry to hear that,â Peaches said, voice softening. Lily just looked down, clearly unsure how to respond to that kind of revelation.
âHe should be fine,â Peaches added after a beat. âTo be honest, Iâm surprised. Zoe usually doesnât do stuff like that. Sheâs... pretty reserved when it comes to boys.â
Is that so? Maybe they are made for each other. Damn.
We talked for about half an hour. Lily was a bit of a closed book, but Peaches was a joyâopen, curious, and sharp as hell. She was working on an AI that generated images, so I guess she was a kind of artist too. A very digital one. We actually had a few ideas in common.
Jason stopped by at one point with a plate of grilled meat, trying his usual charm. I introduced him to the girls and made sure to scare him off right afterâdidnât want Lily getting caught in that nonsense. I saw the way he looked at her already.
At some point, I lost track of Peter. He was still with Zoe, walking and talking, heads close together. No dramatic gestures, no laughterâjust quiet words, lost to the wind. I hoped heâd tell me about it later. More than that, I hoped it was going well.
Eventually I said my goodbyes to the girlsâafter exchanging numbers with Peaches, of course. She was as sweet as her nickname promised. And her skills could be useful for my studies, too. Always good to make friends. Even better to make smart ones.
--
Unfortunately, I had to leave before Peter came back from his stroll.
At home, I changed into Jess Hare.
I put on my silver sport suit firstâsleek, flexible, built for movement. Over it, I slipped into a short red dress and layered it with my iceberg jacket. Silver and redâsharp, vivid, commanding. The kind of palette that said donât get in my way without raising its voice.
Then I packed my medium-sized handbag with the essentials.
Mask, makeup kit, blonde wig, sleeping pills, wallet, keys and pistol.
I stood for a moment, staring at myself in the mirror. I wonderedâwas there even one other girl in this city walking around with a kit like mine? Somehow, I doubted it.
When I arrived at the Sleeping Bear, I stayed back for a while, just out of sight, keeping watch. The man from Honeyâs description arrived firstâyoung, sharp, in a tailored suit. Sleek black hair in a bun, a goatee. Yakuza, no doubt.
He went in. A few minutes later, Honey followed.
I let a breath out, straightened my shoulders, and stepped forward.
Time to go in.
--
I was politely led to my table by the sweet boy at the front. He guided me with care, weaving us between packed tablesâeach one bursting with chatter and the scent of sizzling meat.
The smell was intoxicating. Herbs, smoke, fatârich and savory, the kind that made your mouth water without permission. It was the kind of scent that made you forget everything else.
But not me. I couldnât forget. Not now.
Because just as easily, I could have been led to slaughterâsame as whatever poor creature once walked around before ending up on these plates.
They were already seated.
Honey, wrapped in a well-tailored, pompous evening gownâfresh grass green, flowing, too elegant for someone in her position.
The man beside her, sharp and composed, in a suit tailored like a second skin. Sleek black hair tied in a bun, goatee perfectly trimmed. He didnât slouch. He didnât smile.
And then there was me.
Red dress, iceberg jacket, silver sport suit underneath that clung like yoga gear. I looked like I was ready to go to a gala and then run a triathlon halfway through.
I sat down. Smiled.
First at Honey. Then at him.
âKonichiwa,â I said to the man.
âIâm an American. Born here,â he replied. âBut thank you for your consideration, Ms. Hare.â
Every word was measured. Like every breath. The kind of deliberate control you only see in martial artists or professional killers.
âGood evening, Ms. Honey,â I added politely. I didnât see a future in our cooperation anymore, but good manners cost nothing.
âIt seems Iâm on uneven ground here,â I said. âYou know my name, but I donât know yours.â
âYou may call me Shiroi.â
âWhite?â
âOh? You know Japanese after all?â
âEnough words to go by,â I answered with a slight bow.
âI apologize for breaking up this pleasant conversation,â Honey cut in, visibly uneasy, âbut can we conclude our business firstâand then come back to the pleasantries?â
So serious, Honey. Canât play a little?
Still, I decided to indulge her.
âI donât mind either way,â I said. âWhat do you say, Mr. Shiroi?â
âJust Shiroi. No âmisterâ needed.â He smiledâsly and smooth. âIâd prefer to eat first. Last time I was here, I could only watch.â
So we waited.
When the waiters arrived with our food, I was surprised. The portions werenât as tiny as Iâd expectedâstill fancy, still expensive, but plenty on the plate. It smelled incredible. I didnât eat much, though. Never liked running on a full stomach, and I always planned for the possibility of running.
Honey, meanwhile, cleared her plate like a woman on the edge.
Stress eater. That would explain the slightly puffed cheeks and the way she kept wiping her fingers, even though they were spotless.
Shiroi ate like he talked. Every cut deliberate. Every bite savored. Chewed slow, eyes never quite leaving me.
âYou wonât finish that?â he asked, pointing at my steak with his knife.
âNo. Iâm a small girl. Iâm already full.â
âFull of shit.â
So, not as subtle as I thought. But observant. Very observant.
âArenât we all?â I said.
He laughed. A low, honest one.
âI like you, Hare. Jess. May I call you Jess?â
âSure thing.â
âJess, then. Do you have the necklace?â
âYes. Do you have the money?â
âOf course.â
He reached inside his jacket and slid a thick envelope across the table. I didnât touch it. Instead, I pulled the necklace from my hidden pouch and placed it down beside the cash.
Under the candlelight, the gem caught the flame and shimmered.
It looked alive.
âThis thingâ¦â Ms. Honey said suddenly. She looked shakenâsweating heavily now.
ââ¦this thing is full of authority.â
"Authority?" What the hell does she mean by that?
âYouâre a seer, Ms. Honey?â Shiroi asked, genuinely surprised. âThat is an unexpected development.â
Okay. Iâm definitely in the dark here. Just stay calm. Be cool. Read the room.
Honey turned toward me, eyes wide. âWhat is this necklace?â she asked, inching her chair slowly back from the table. Shiroi clocked the movement. He sighed.
And just like thatâhis entire posture changed. Calm gave way to quiet resolve.
Shit. Shit. Shit.
This is about to turn ugly. He wouldnât make a move in public, would he?
âMs. Honey,â Shiroi said gently, reaching out and taking her hand.
His grip locked. Her eyes locked on meâterrified, pleading.
âIt wonât hurt,â he said. âFor what itâs worth.â
And then it happened.
No warning. No chant. Just a slow purple glow.
She unraveled.
Thereâs no better word for it. Where he touched her, her skin came apartâthreads, fibers, strandsâunspooling like a pulled seam. It raced across her body. Skin. Muscles. Bones. All of it. In seconds, she was nothing but a slow-settling pile of silken strings on the restaurant floor.
Fuck this. Iâm out.
I left the cash. Left the necklace. Shoved the table hard into him, plates and silver clattering in protest. People around us gasped, shouted, froze.
For a heartbeat, Shiroi was caught off guard. But then the table crumbledâsplinters to dust, dissolving like sand in the wind.
I was already halfway to the restroom.
He followed.
Between stunned waiters and a pair of angry men coming out of the toiletsâshouting about âwrong bathroomâ and whatever elseâI didnât stop.
Get bent, all of you. Iâm trying not to die.
I slammed a window open, hauled myself through in seconds. As I pulled myself out, Shiroi entered the restroom. A glance backâ
He walked through the wall.
The bricks crumbled, mortar unspooled, dissolving around him like melting sugar.
What the hell is this man?!
A strange purple glow shimmered around him before vanishing. It looked⦠familiar. Like something Iâd seenâfeltâbefore.
I climbed the fire escape, desperate, feet slipping on the metal. Almost to the second floorâ
He stopped.
He was staring at my painting on the wall.
The grotesque, fishlike creature with the face of a deformed old manâits jaw open, as if mid-scream.
He just stood there, transfixed.
I felt something tingle inside me.
The painting responded.
Whatever connection I had to that thingâit bought me seconds.
I vaulted off the ladder just before he touched it. As his fingers reached the metal, it unraveled beneath my hands.
But Iâd already launched.
I flew over himâlanded hard, rolled, came up running.
âNice acrobatics!â he shouted behind me, laughingâuntil he grabbed my jacket sleeve.
Shit. Thatâs it. Iâm done.
But thenâhe hissed in pain.
He pulled back, clutching his hand. Frost covered his skin where he touched me.
âWhat the fuck? She was a seer and you are a mage!?â
What is he talking about?
I didnât wait to find out.
I reached into my bag, yanked the pistol free, aimedâand fired.
The shot rang out, deafening in the alley.
He staggered, hit clean through the chest, and fell.
I turned and ran.
Down the alley, out the back.
And I didnât stop.
--
When I finally made it home, I collapsed onto the couch.
I needed to call Mr. Penrose. Tell him the exchange went sideways. Tell him Ms. Honey was deadâshot by that man.
Wait.
Was she shot?
In the middle of the restaurant?
My thoughts swam. Everything felt heavy, like trying to recall a name you know well but just can't place. It had only been an hour ago. Maybe less. But the memories already felt distant, warped, like something from a dreamâor a nightmare.
I gave up trying to piece it together. My head throbbed.
Instead, I grabbed my phone and dialed.
âAlexandra. Good to hear you,â Penrose answered smoothly on the other end.
âHello,â I said, voice flat. âThe exchange was a bust. That guyâShiroiâhe killed Ms. Honey. Tried to kill me too. I shot him and ran.â
He didnât speak right away.
âLet me handle the clients for now,â he said at last. âItâs better if Ms. Hare disappears for a while. Did you recover either the money or the item?â
âNo.â
A beat.
âAnd to be honest, Mr. Penrose⦠I canât even remember why I didnât. I think I mightâve been drugged. I canât remember much from the meeting. Itâs like smoke in my brain.â
âThatâs an interesting development,â he said, tone tightening slightly. âDo you feel drugged now?â
I took a moment to scan myself.
âMy mindâs foggy, but physically⦠I feel fine.â
âIâll ask around,â he said. âLet Ms. Hare rest. Keep her quiet. No noise for a few days.â
âUnderstood. Good night, Mr. Penrose.â
âGood night, Alexandra.â