An image flashed in her mind: her adoptive father, Leland Ruiz, his eyes as cold as the marble in his foyer. And her uncle, Bennet, with a smile that never reached his eyes. This wasn't an accident. It was a disposal.
A figure emerged from the downpour, tall and broad, wrapped in a black rain slicker. In his hand, he held a pistol, a suppressor screwed onto its barrel.
Alicia's breath hitched. A raw, hopeless sound. She tried to scramble backward, dragging her broken leg, but the pain was a white-hot anchor, pinning her to the asphalt.
The man stopped in front of her. He crouched, his face a blank canvas in the intermittent glare of the car's dying hazard lights. "The Ruiz family sends their regards," he said, his voice as empty as the storm.
He raised the gun, the black circle of the muzzle aimed squarely between her eyes.
Alicia closed her eyes. A single tear escaped, tracing a clean path through the grime on her cheek. Then, her heart stopped.
And the world stopped with it.
Raindrops hung suspended in the air, perfect glass beads. The hitman was a statue, his finger frozen a millimeter from pulling the trigger.
Inside Alicia's still body, a flicker of gold ignited. It spread through her veins like a sunrise, knitting bone, sealing wounds, pushing out the last vestiges of a short, tragic life.
She opened her eyes again.
The fear was gone. In its place was an abyss of calm, an ancient, star-dusted indifference.
The Arbiter was online.
Arrival coordinate: Earth, Sector 7. Vessel: Alicia Ruiz, deceased. Mission: Correct anomaly.
Time snapped back into motion.
The hitman's finger completed its squeeze. A soft phut from the suppressor.
But the bullet never fired.
"Alicia's" hand, moving faster than a human eye could track, had clamped around the gun's slide. She squeezed. The hardened steel crumpled like a soda can.
The hitman's professional calm shattered. His eyes widened in disbelief. He tried to yank his hand back, but her grip was like a vise.
She rose to her feet. The broken bone in her leg slid back into place with a sickening click that was audible even over the rain. She stood tall, the water plastering her simple dress to a body that was, impossibly, whole.
Her gaze fell on the man's soul, a flickering, dirty light only she could see. Record: Sin value 7.8. Exceeds reclamation threshold. Verdict: Immediate liquidation.
The hitman opened his mouth to scream, but no sound came out. His body was no longer his own.
She raised her other hand, extending a single, delicate finger, and touched his forehead.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then, the man's body dissolved. Not into blood or gore, but into a small, shimmering cloud of dust that the rain instantly washed away.
All that remained was an empty black rain slicker and a mangled pistol on the wet ground.
An internal notification chimed in her consciousness. Liquidation of a soul marked with extreme sin is permitted by cosmic law, temporarily bypassing local physical restrictions. An exception, not the rule.
The memories of the original Alicia flooded her consciousness. The betrayal. The public humiliation. The arrival of the "true heir," Breonna.
"Childish mortal squabbles," she murmured to herself, her new voice a low, even tone. "But since I've borrowed this vessel, taking out the trash is a required courtesy."
She looked at the overturned Porsche. It was an eyesore, a complication. She extended her hand, focusing a sliver of cosmic energy, intending to deconstruct it atom by atom.
Nothing happened. A faint tingle in her palm was the only result.
Energy output restricted. The physical laws of this planet are robust, offering strong resistance to direct matter deconstruction. However, they are far more pliable when it comes to influencing probability, energy, and the fragile consciousness of its inhabitants. Manipulation is easier than brute force.
"A more... physical solution is required," she said.
As if on cue, the sound of another engine cut through the storm. A pair of bright, steady headlights sliced through the night.
A black Bentley Continental GT purred to a stop a dozen yards away.
The driver's door opened. A man in an impeccably tailored suit stepped out, his silhouette sharp and confident. He opened a large black umbrella, shielding himself from the deluge.
He walked toward her, his expensive leather shoes making no sound on the wet pavement. He stopped a few feet away, his gaze sweeping over the scene. He took in her blood-soaked clothes, the wrecked car, the empty rain slicker on the ground.
He looked at her, standing unharmed in the middle of it all. His eyes, deep and intelligent, showed no fear. Only a calm, unnerving curiosity.
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