Adrienne POV
The Greyhound bus smelled of stale sweat and shattered dreams, a fitting perfume for the girl I was pretending to be.
When I stepped out into the chaotic pick-up zone of the Port Authority Bus Terminal, I spotted Harlon Holcomb immediately. He didn't bother getting out of his rented black sedan. He simply rolled down the window, his eyes raking over my frayed hoodie and scuffed canvas sneakers with undisguised disgust.
"Get in the back," he barked, his voice tight with the anxiety of a man drowning in debt. "And try not to rub your poverty stink into the leather."
I shrank into myself, hunching my shoulders as I slipped into the backseat. I kept my eyes glued to my lap, a textbook display of a cowed, indebted niece. Harlon didn't say another word as we drove out of the city, his eyes darting to the rearview mirror only to monitor me like a volatile commodity whose value might drop at any second.
The grimy city streets eventually gave way to a secluded private road. The Romero Estate loomed ahead, protected by towering wrought-iron gates and relentless security cameras. We bypassed the grand main entrance, pulling into a cold, utilitarian service driveway.
Brenda and Cammie were already waiting. The moment I stepped out of the car, Brenda grabbed my arm, her manicured nails digging painfully into my flesh. She squeezed, her face twisting in revulsion.
"Skinny as a plucked chicken," she sneered to Harlon. "The Romeros are going to think we brought them a corpse."
Cammie crossed her arms, a malicious smirk playing on her lips. "Better her than me. Let's see how long the rust-belt rat lasts before the monster tears her apart."
They marched me into a windowless, gray waiting room that felt more like an interrogation cell. The air was sterile and freezing. Harlon shoved a thick document against my chest, forcing a pen into my hand.
"Time to pay us back for keeping you alive," he ordered. "Sign it."
Brenda leaned in, her cheap perfume suffocating. "You're marrying Emiliano Romero. *The Ghost.*" She spat the name like a curse. "If you don't, the Enforcers will fit our entire family for cement shoes in the Hudson by midnight."
I forced my eyes to widen, letting my lower lip tremble violently. "A-a monster?" I stammered, letting a tear slip down my cheek.
Cammie laughed, tossing a faded, threadbare dress at my face. "Wear this to your funeral, cousin."
I took the pen with shaking fingers and signed my life away. They thought they were sacrificing a helpless lamb to a madman to save their own skins. They had no idea they had just handed me the keys to the kingdom.
An hour later, a sympathetic maid shoved a tray of cold food into my sparse servant's room and locked the door.
The moment the deadbolt clicked, the terrified girl vanished.
I rolled my shoulders, my spine snapping straight. My gaze swept the cramped room-the squeaky iron bed, the small table, the cracked window overlooking a distant Manhattan skyline. Clear.
Sitting on the edge of the mattress, I pried open the false sole of my left sneaker. I extracted a micro-SIM card, slipping it into the disposable burner phone hidden in the lining of my hoodie.
My thumbs flew across the keypad. *Package delivered. Handlers are desperate, low-level Associates. The Ghost is the target. Infiltration successful.*
I hit send, waited for the delivery confirmation, and immediately snapped the SIM card in half, burying the pieces back in the shoe.
I stood up and slowly changed into the ragged dress Cammie had thrown at me. The silence of the estate was heavy, but I knew the Holcombs too well. The night was far from over, and Cammie's twisted jealousy wouldn't let her sleep without coming to claim one last victory over the rat.