Current location: Novel nest The Ash Queen: A Debt of Vengeance Chapter 7

"The Ash Queen: A Debt of Vengeance" Chapter 7

Chapter 7: Nighttime Conspiracies

The night was a shroud of velvet and shadows, perfect for those who moved with secrets tucked against their ribs like daggers.

Seraphina drifted through the neon-drenched backstreets of the city, her footsteps deliberately rhythmic, a lure cast into the dark.

She could feel him behind her; Caelan’s presence was a jagged, amateurish itch at the base of her neck, a pathetic attempt at stealth.

He had been tailing her for three nights, his obsession with finding her secret patron consuming whatever meager intellect he possessed.

She ducked into an abandoned transit hub, the air stagnant with the smell of wet concrete and discarded dreams.

Caelan followed, his breathing heavy, his hand clutching a burner phone that he hoped would be his golden ticket.

He believed he was hunting a ghost; he did not realize he was being herded into the belly of a leviathan.

Seraphina rounded a corner into the blind spot of a surveillance camera, stopping dead and melting into the darkness of a support pillar.

A moment later, Caelan stumbled past, his eyes darting frantically, his composure fraying with every wasted second.

"I know you are here!" he hissed, his voice cracking with a mixture of terror and unearned bravado.

"I know about the Valerius connection, Seraphina; I saw you at his gala, and I know exactly what you are selling."

He pulled out the phone, his thumbs hovering over the screen, ready to leak the information to the highest bidder in the criminal underworld.

"You think you are smart, do you not?" he sneered, spinning around, unaware that he was standing under the red light of a sensor.

"You think you can play the King of Ashes, but he will kill you the second you are not useful anymore."

Seraphina stepped out from behind the pillar, her movement so silent that Caelan shrieked, stumbling backward into a tangle of rusted cables.

"You are right, Caelan," she said, her voice smooth and devoid of any tremor, echoing in the hollow silence of the transit hub.

"Adrien is a dangerous man, and his patience for idiots is notoriously thin."

Caelan straightened, pulling a small, cheap handgun from his waistband, his aim wavering as he struggled to control his panic.

"I have the proof, Seraphina," he shouted, his finger twitching on the trigger. "I will destroy you both, I will take it all back!"

Seraphina did not look at the gun; she looked at the red dot now dancing steadily over Caelan’s chest, invisible to his panicked eyes.

"You have nothing," she whispered, taking a step toward him, forcing him to retreat deeper into the kill zone.

"You have a stolen life, a hollow bank account, and a pathetic need to blame others for your own hollow soul."

She reached into her coat, pulling out a small, sleek device that pulsed with a soft, blue light—a counter-surveillance jammer she had tuned earlier.

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"You have been tracking me, Caelan," she said, her smile sharp and cold, "but you never stopped to think about who was tracking you."

Caelan faltered, his eyes widening as he looked around, finally sensing the sudden, oppressive stillness of the room.

"What did you do?" he whispered, his bravado dissolving into the whimpering realization of a child in the dark.

"I gave you exactly what you wanted," she replied, tilting her head with predatory grace. "I gave you a target."

At that precise second, the side door of the transit hub swung open, and the silence was shattered by the rhythmic, heavy tread of armored boots.

Sylvia and two of Adrien’s men stepped into the light, their weapons leveled with the casual indifference of men who performed executions for breakfast.

Caelan turned, his gun dropping from his limp fingers as the reality of his situation crashed into him like a tidal wave.

"Wait!" Caelan gasped, his voice a pathetic squeak. "I have information; I can trade!"

"The King does not trade with vermin," one of the men growled, his voice a gravelly monotone that promised no mercy.

Seraphina did not watch the next few seconds; she did not need to see the way they moved or hear the muffled thud of a man losing his fight.

She walked past them, her stride steady, her focus already shifting toward the final piece of the puzzle she had left on Julian’s desk.

Before she left, she had planted the evidence of Caelan’s failed smuggling run—the one that had actually been tied to the private military firm.

Julian would find it within the hour, and in his rage, he would realize that his own son had been the one to guarantee their ruin.

She climbed the exterior fire escape of the transit hub, the iron rungs biting into her palms as she ascended toward the rooftop.

The city was a sprawling tapestry of lights beneath her, a kingdom of glass and lies that she was systematically dismantling.

She reached the roof and stood at the edge, the wind whipping her hair around her face, her eyes fixed on the distant, flickering lights of the Valerius estate.

Below her, she saw a sleek, unmarked black sedan pull up to the rear entrance of the transit hub.

Two men pulled Caelan out of the building, his head hung low, his struggle silenced by a swift, efficient blow to the solar plexus.

They shoved him into the back of the car, the door slamming shut with a sound of definitive, inescapable finality.

Adrien’s men did not kill him here; they were taking him to the one place where he would truly understand the price of his greed.

Seraphina watched the sedan peel away, the taillights fading into the chaotic, unfeeling expanse of the city streets.

"He is yours, Adrien," she murmured, a faint, cold smile touching her lips as she felt the shift in the city’s power.

"I hope you enjoy the interrogation; he has been waiting a long time to confess to someone."

She leaned against the parapet, feeling the cold air fill her lungs, a sensation of absolute, intoxicating freedom.

The pieces were moving exactly as she had predicted, a machine of vengeance that was now running on its own momentum.

Her phone buzzed in her pocket—a notification from a burner line she had set up for Julian.

She pulled it out and saw a message from her ex-husband, his words frantic, garbled, and drenched in a newfound, blinding terror.

"I found it, Seraphina. I found the ledger. Caelan did it; he betrayed us. Tell me where you are."

She deleted the message without a second thought, the screen going black, reflecting the cold, empty look in her own eyes.

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