Alea Dillard ducked her head as she slid out of the back seat. She wore a pair of faded, ill-fitting jeans, old coat and a thin cotton shirt that had seen better days. The sea breeze immediately whipped at her long, dark brown hair, tangling it across her face.
She pushed it back, and for a moment, her sharp green eyes took in everything. The manicured lawn stretching into the darkness, the glint of security cameras perched atop the stone walls, the precise angles of the sprawling villa beyond the gates. Her mind processed it all, building a mental map in seconds.
Alea's hand lifted, her fingers brushing a small, metallic clip tucked behind her ear. It was an unconscious gesture, a phantom itch, as she suppressed the coldness in her gaze and forced her shoulders to slump.
Officer Hayes pressed the buzzer on the intercom. A woman's voice, impatient and sharp, crackled through the speaker. "Yes?"
"NYPD," Hayes said, holding his badge up to the small camera. "I'm dropping off Alea Dillard."
There was a pause, then a loud buzz as the heavy gates began to swing inward. Alea deliberately hunched her shoulders, wringing her hands together as if terrified. She perfected the image of a girl from the Appalachian hollers, lost and overwhelmed by a world she didn't understand.
They walked up the long, gravel driveway. Before they reached the main entrance, the heavy oak door was thrown open. A man in a tailored suit, Eugene Dillard, rushed out, his face stretched into a mask of overjoyed surprise.
"Alea! My dear niece! You're finally home!" He spread his arms for an embrace, but froze mid-gesture. He caught a whiff of the cheap laundry detergent clinging to her clothes, and his arms dropped awkwardly to his sides.
A woman, Sheryl Dillard, followed close behind. She pressed a silk handkerchief to her nose, her eyes sweeping over Alea with undisguised disgust. She managed a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Welcome, dear."
Officer Hayes handed Eugene a folder containing the closed-case paperwork. He turned to Alea, his voice low. "You have our number. If you need anything, you call."
Alea nodded, her eyes wide and grateful. "Thank you, sir."
Hayes gave her a final, worried look before turning, walked along the gravel path toward the gate and walked back to his patrol car. As the red tail lights disappeared down the driveway, the warmth vanished from Eugene's face like a flipped switch.
"Martha," he barked at a nearby maid. "Take her to the guest room on the first floor. The one in the back."
His tone was cold, dismissive. Alea kept her head down, her expression meek, and followed the maid. She deliberately stumbled on the marble floor of the foyer, using the brief moment of clumsiness to scan the layout of the ground floor, noting exits and sightlines.
The maid led her down a long, dim hallway to a small, cramped room filled with discarded furniture and dusty boxes. She shoved Alea inside.
"Dinner will be brought to you," the maid said, her voice flat.
The door slammed shut. A key turned in the lock from the outside.
Alea stood in the darkness, listening. She heard the heavy footsteps of Eugene and Sheryl walking down the hall, the sound of a door opening and closing-the study. The moment they were gone, the frightened, lost girl vanished. Her posture straightened, her eyes turning sharp and dangerous.
She moved with a predator's silence, her worn sneakers making no sound on the hardwood floor. She pressed her ear against the wall, tracing it until she found what she was looking for: an old air conditioning vent. The grate was tarnished brass.
She knelt, placing her ear close to the metal slats. The Dillard's voices, muffled but clear, filtered through.
A crash, like a glass hitting a wall. Eugene's voice was a furious snarl. "Of all the times for that little stray to show up! We're weeks from filing for bankruptcy, and now we have another mouth to feed."
Sheryl's laugh was high and sharp, like splintering ice. "Don't be a fool, Eugene. She's not a burden. She's a solution."
"What are you talking about?"
"The Beaumonts are getting impatient," Sheryl said, her voice dripping with venomous glee. "Vicky refuses to marry that lunatic, Donny. But they need a Dillard bride. Any Dillard bride."
Alea's breath caught in her chest. Not from shock, but from a flicker of dark amusement.
There was a three-second pause. Then, the sound of Eugene's palm slapping the mahogany desk. "You're a genius, Sheryl. A complete genius. We'll send her. We get the Beaumont investment, and we get rid of her in one fell swoop."
Outside the vent, a faint, contemptuous sound escaped Alea's lips. "Hmph."
"She's a simple-minded country girl," Sheryl continued, her voice filled with disdain. "We'll tell her it's her duty. We can use her parents' things, the few trinkets we kept, to control her. She won't know the difference."
Alea stood up, brushing the dust from her knees. Their plan was pathetic, shortsighted. And perfect. It was the exact Trojan horse she needed to get inside the Beaumont fortress.
A squeaky wheel in the hallway announced the arrival of her dinner. Alea moved quickly, scrambling back onto the lumpy, moth-eaten bed in the center of the room. She pulled her knees to her chest and resumed her trembling, frightened posture.
The door unlocked and the maid entered, carrying a tray. She slammed it down on a chipped nightstand. It held a plate of congealed leftovers and a glass of murky water. The maid shot Alea a look of pure contempt before turning and locking the door behind her again.
Alea stared at the foul-smelling food. Her expression was placid. She picked up the plate, walked to the single, grimy window, and scraped the entire contents into the flowerbed below.
From a hidden compartment in her worn backpack, she pulled out a slim, silver tube. It was a high-concentration nutritional paste, military-grade. She squeezed the contents into her mouth, the tasteless gel providing all the energy she would need.
Hours later, when the house was silent, she moved to the door. From the sole of her shoe, she slid a thin, flexible piece of wire.
She inserted it into the keyhole. There was a soft, metallic click. Then another. In less than two seconds, the lock was open. She didn't open the door, only tested the mechanism. Freedom of movement was confirmed.
She re-locked it and leaned against the cool wood, closing her eyes. An image of Donny Beaumont from a dossier photo swam in her mind: the sharp jaw, the piercing blue eyes, the man they called a Wall Street tyrant before he supposedly lost his mind.
She let out a slow, controlled breath, banking the fires of her true purpose. Tomorrow, she would play their game. She would be the sacrificial lamb. And she would let them lead her straight into the lion's den.