Page 24 of His To Claim


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Tomorrow, I’d go.

I took one last look at the river, at couples leaning into each other, at life continuing without hesitation.

“Okay, Rose,” I murmured softly. “I’m coming.”

Tomorrow, I would start with the clinic.

6

KANE

Iwoke to a hand on my shoulder.

The attendant stood over me, apologetic, speaking softly in accented English. "Monsieur, we have landed. Your car is waiting."

I blinked, disoriented.

I'd slept.

Through the entire flight. Through descent. Through landing.

When was the last time that had happened?

Never. Not since the military. Maybe not before. I always woke when planes touched down, when engines shifted pitch, when anything changed. Vigilance didn't have an off switch.

Except, apparently, it did now.

I sat up slowly, noting the empty whiskey glass on the tray table, the cabin silent except for auxiliary power humming. My body felt rested in a way I didn't trust.

"Thank you," I said, voice rough.

She nodded and retreated.

Outside, Paris greeted me with cool air and overcast skies. The private terminal was minimal—discreet security, people paid not to ask questions.

A man in a dark suit stood near the exit. No sign. No gesture. He simply looked at me.

I looked back.

"Mr. Black."

I nodded.

He gestured toward a blacked-out SUV. "This way."

The vehicle was anonymous, designed to blend. He opened the rear door and I slid inside, duffel beside me.

No conversation. No music. Just the engine's hum as we merged onto the highway.

The driver handled the vehicle like he'd done time in a combat zone.

Not erratic. Efficient. Smooth lane changes, constant mirror checks, positioning for exit options. The kind of driving you learned when vehicles became weapons.

Former operator, maybe.

I didn't ask.

Forty minutes later, after two long stints in Paris traffic, we turned onto a quieter street.