Dylan Clemons sat with her back rigid against the plush seat. She wasn't looking at him. Her attention was locked on the tablet resting on her knees, the cold aluminum case seeping a chill through her thin, oversized denim jeans. She picked it up, the cold metal grounding her adrenaline.
Her finger hovered over the screen. The dossier was titled: Clemons Family - Net Worth Analysis.
She swiped. A photo of Firman Clemons appeared. His smile was tired in the picture, the lines around his eyes deep valleys of exhaustion. Dylan's chest tightened, a physical squeeze around her heart that made her breath hitch. He was the only reason she was going back. The only reason she was subjecting herself to this.
She swiped again. Glyn Clemons. Her father. Or rather, the man whose DNA she unfortunately shared. His face was flushed, arrogant, eyes too close together.
A wave of nausea rolled in her stomach. Her jaw clenched so hard her teeth ached. She looked at the numbers below his face. Liabilities exceeding assets. Liquidity crisis imminent.
"Parasite," she whispered. The word felt like gravel in her throat.
The train announcer's voice crackled overhead, static breaking the silence. "Ladies and gentlemen, we are approaching a security checkpoint. Please have your identification ready."
Dylan tapped the power button. The screen went black, leaving only her reflection. Dark circles bruised the skin under her eyes. Her hair was pulled back in a messy, friction-heavy bun. No makeup. Just a plain, exhausted face that everyone in that family liked to call "forgettable."
She reached into the battered duffel bag at her feet. Her hand brushed past a change of clothes and wrapped around the familiar, cold steel of a compact SIG Sauer P320. The stippled grip felt like an extension of her own hand.
Suddenly, the cabin door slid open.
It wasn't a gentle slide. It was a desperate, forceful shove.
Dylan didn't scream. Her heart didn't even skip a beat. Her body went into a state of hyper-focus, her pulse dropping as her pupils dilated to take in the threat.
A man stumbled in. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and smelled of iron and expensive sandalwood cologne. He clutched his side, his fingers stained crimson. Blood. Fresh and flowing.
He looked up. His eyes were a hazy, stormy gray, clouding over with pain, but the sharpness behind them was undeniable. He raised a blood-smeared finger to his lips.
Shhh.
Heavy footsteps thundered down the corridor outside. Fast. Aggressive.
The man tried to move toward the blind spot of the door frame, but his legs gave out. He stumbled forward.
Dylan moved.
She didn't think; she reacted. She was out of her seat in a blur, catching him before he hit the floor. He was heavy, dead weight, but she absorbed the impact with her knees, pivoting on her heel. She shoved him into the seat opposite hers and kicked the cabin door shut.
She locked it in one fluid motion.
The handle jiggled violently from the outside.
"Federal Marshals!" a gruff voice bellowed through the metal. "Open up!"
Before they had even knocked, she had already aimed her tablet's camera at the door, a custom thermal imaging app revealing two armed figures without any corresponding federal transponders. Lies. Federal Marshals didn't run like that. They didn't smell like panic.
Dylan threw the wool blanket from the overhead bin over the man, covering the bloodstain spreading on his shirt. She reached up, messing her hair further, pulling strands loose to frame her face in chaotic disarray.
She unlocked the door and opened it a crack, putting on the face she wore best: the annoyed, tired, nobody girl.
Two men in dark suits stood there. They were too big for the narrow hallway. The lead man pushed against the door, trying to force his way in.
"We're searching the train," he growled.
Dylan blocked the gap. She wasn't big, but she held the door with a surprising, rigid strength. She rubbed her eyes. "Do you have a warrant? Or just a lack of manners? I was sleeping."
The lead mercenary looked past her. He saw the shape under the blanket. He saw the expensive leather shoe poking out.
His hand went to his jacket. He was reaching for a weapon.
The sleepy girl vanished.
Dylan's demeanor shifted. The air in the cabin seemed to drop ten degrees. She didn't wait for him to draw. She slammed the heavy sliding door onto the lead man's wrist.
There was a sickening crunch. Bone snapping.
The man gasped, his mouth opening in a silent scream. Before he could recoil, Dylan stepped out into the corridor. She struck his throat-a precise, calculated jab to the windpipe. He gagged, eyes bulging, and crumpled silently.
The second man lunged.
Dylan ducked under his swinging arm. She swept his leg, her boot connecting hard with his ankle. He lost his balance, crashing into the narrow wall of the train car with a heavy thud.
She grabbed the collars of both men and dragged them, straining with the effort, into the utility closet across the hall. She jammed the handle with a pen from her pocket.
She stepped back into her cabin, locked the door, and dusted off her hands. That was when the man on the seat finally registered what had happened, his shock palpable. And that was when she sat back down, picked up her tablet, and spoke.