Page 17 of Operation: Wingman


Font Size:

“I want you to trust me.”

Trust. The one currency neither of us has offered. I lean closer. Close enough that she feels my breath.

“If I trust you,” I say, “you tell me what’s inside the diamonds.”

Her eyes flicker just once. And I know I’ve hit the seam. She doesn’t answer. But she doesn’t look away either. And that tells me everything.

“It isn’t jewelry,” she says at last.

I don’t move. “Go on.”

“The diamonds are real,” she continues evenly. “But they aren’t the point.”

I study her face. She’s not improvising.

“What is?” I ask.

“The certification infrastructure. The transport chain. The private exchanges.”

That tracks. High-value goods move quietly.

“And?”

She holds my gaze.

“And something moves with them.”

The cabin feels smaller.

“Illegal?” I ask.

“Yes.”

“Arms?”

“No.”

That answer comes too fast.

“Technology,” she says instead.

The word lands heavier than weapons would.

“What kind?”

“The kind that isn’t supposed to cross borders without clearance.”

I think of the gala. Of buyers with diplomatic immunity and shell companies. The forced elevator recall.

“If you don’t return?” I ask.

“It clears,” she says.

That word again — clears.

“They assume the shipment is uncontested. The handoff proceeds.”

“And if you do return?”