He didn't respond. He took a long drag, the end of the cigarette glowing brighter, briefly illuminating the sharp angle of his jaw and the utter detachment in his eyes. He was looking past her, out the window at the distant, glittering lights of Port Sterling.
She broke the silence, her voice a low purr that still held the roughness of their recent activities. "This feels good, doesn't it, Damon?"
A noncommittal grunt was his only answer. The air between them was thick not with intimacy, but with evaluation. She could feel his mind working, cataloging her, assessing her. It was exactly what she wanted.
A small laugh escaped her lips. She pushed herself up on one elbow, the cheap cotton sheet pooling around her waist. Her gaze met his in the dim light, direct and unflinching.
"Let's get married."
The motion of his hand, bringing the cigarette to his lips, froze. A flake of ash, long and fragile, fell onto the sheet, a tiny gray stain on the white. His head turned slowly, and for the first time since they'd finished, his eyes focused entirely on her. They were sharp, like chips of flint, and they tried to peel back her skin to see what lay beneath.
She didn't flinch. She held his gaze, letting him look.
"Tomorrow," she added, her voice even. "City Hall. Quick and clean."
He crushed the cigarette out in the overflowing ashtray on his nightstand. The room plunged back into near-total darkness, the silence pressing in on them. She could practically hear the gears turning in his head, the rapid calculation of risk and reward. A wife was a perfect cover. But this woman... this woman had appeared out of nowhere, all heat and intensity, and now this. It was too easy. It was a trap.
Or it was an opportunity.
A slow, humorless smile spread across his lips, visible even in the gloom. It was a smile that mocked himself as much as it did her.
"Why not?"
The speed of his acceptance sent a flicker of genuine surprise through her, a tiny tremor she immediately suppressed. She had expected a negotiation, a dismissal, at least a series of questions. His immediate agreement was a deviation from her projections. She leaned forward, closing the small distance between them, and pressed her lips to his. It wasn't a passionate kiss, but one of sealing a deal.
"Nine a.m.," she murmured against his mouth. "Don't be late."
He accepted the kiss but didn't deepen it, his hands remaining flat on the mattress. He gave her back a perfunctory pat. "Right now, I need to sleep. I've got work in the morning."
She pulled back without complaint, sliding down to lie on her side of the bed, her back to him. The space between them felt like a mile-wide canyon. Two predators, lying side-by-side, each dreaming of their own hunt.
When Damon woke to the gray light of dawn, she was gone. The other side of the bed was cold. The only evidence she'd been there at all was a cocktail napkin on his nightstand. Scrawled on it in lipstick was a simple message: 9 AM, City Hall.
He stared at the napkin for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he picked up his phone, a cheap, untraceable burner. He typed out a short, encrypted message.
Phase two initiated. Asset secured.
An hour later, he was pulling his beat-up Ford pickup into the lot of "The Garage Crew," a sprawling, greasy auto shop on the industrial side of town. The smell of oil, gasoline, and burnt coffee hung heavy in the air. The clang of metal on metal was the only music. It was a world away from the woman who had been in his bed.
His coworkers, a motley crew of men with grease permanently etched into the lines of their hands, saw him and started with the usual chorus of whistles and jeers.
"Look what the cat dragged in!" shouted a burly man named Sal, wiping his hands on an already-filthy rag. "Heard you left O'Malley's last night with a real firecracker, Damon. Finally decided to live a little?"
Damon just grunted, grabbing a wrench from the wall. He bent over the engine of a vintage Mustang, the conversation fading into the background noise of the shop.
Sal clapped him on the shoulder, leaving a greasy handprint on his shirt. "So? How was she? Don't leave us hanging."
Damon straightened up slowly, wiping a smear of oil from his cheek with the back of his hand. His face was a mask of indifference. He looked at Sal, then at the other expectant faces around him.
"I'm getting married," he said, his voice flat. "Today."
The rhythmic clatter of the garage came to an abrupt halt. A wrench dropped to the concrete floor with a loud clang that echoed in the sudden, profound silence. Every single man in the shop was staring at him as if he'd just announced he was flying to the moon.
Damon ignored their collective shock. He glanced at the grimy clock on the wall. It was almost eight. "I'm taking a half-day."
He tossed the wrench into a toolbox, grabbed his jacket, and walked out, leaving a storm of disbelieving chatter in his wake.
Across town, Caroline sat in a small cafe, a laptop open in front of her. The screen didn't show a social media feed, but a grid of security camera feeds from the surrounding streets. She sipped her black coffee, her expression calm and focused.
A tiny, almost invisible earpiece in her ear crackled to life. "Nyx, target has left his place of employment. En route to your location."
"Copy that," she murmured, her lips barely moving. "Radio silence."
She closed the laptop, sliding it into her worn leather backpack. In an instant, her entire demeanor shifted. The focused, calculating agent vanished, replaced by a woman buzzing with nervous energy. She checked her reflection in the dark screen of her phone, fluffing her hair and biting her lip. She smoothed down the simple sundress she wore, a picture of hopeful, romantic impulsiveness.
When Damon's truck parked at the corner, he didn't get out right away. His eyes scanned the street, the rooftops, the faces of the people walking by. It was a habit so ingrained he didn't even notice he was doing it. He saw her through the cafe window, a splash of color in the morning sun, looking for all the world like a girl waiting for her boyfriend. For a split second, the hardened shell of his suspicion cracked. Maybe, just maybe, this was exactly what it looked like: a crazy, impulsive woman dragging him into a crazy, impulsive marriage.
He got out of the truck. His boots hit the pavement with a solid, determined sound.
Caroline saw him coming. Her face lit up with a smile so brilliant it could have powered the city. She jumped up from her table and met him on the sidewalk, linking her arm through his as if they'd been doing it for years.
His body tensed at the contact, a brief, reflexive stiffness. But he didn't pull away.
Together, they walked up the grand stone steps of Port Sterling City Hall, a perfect portrait of a couple in love. Each with a heart full of secrets.
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