The hallway was dark as Qiao Ren moved through it slowly, his footsteps deliberate and controlled.
His weight shifted from heel to toe with each step, minimizing sound as he made sure that the floorboards didnât creak.
The house had settled into its night rhythm. Most of the doors were closed. A few voices murmured behind themâlow, indistinct. Someone coughed in one of the upstairs rooms. The sound faded.
He passed the bathroom. The kitchen. The living room entrance.
His breathing was steady as he climbed the flight of stairs up to the second floor. He made sure to keep each inhale and exhale even as his hands hung loose at his sides.
Walking down the long hall, he stopped at the last door on the left.
Rouxiâs room.
The door was closed, no light showed beneath it. The gap at the bottom was dark, uninterrupted.
He stood there for a moment, listening.
But there wasnât a single sound.
His pulse was calm but presentâa low, steady rhythm in his chest. Sheâd been too bold. Too defiant. The knife stabbed into the table at breakfast like she owned the place. Like she was untouchable. The way sheâd looked at himâdismissive, unimpressed, like he was nothing.
Beautiful, though.
Heâd noticed that immediately. The soft lines of her face. The way she movedâcontrolled, confident, dangerous in a way that made his skin prickle with anticipation.
She needed to learn.
His hand moved to the handle. His fingers wrapped around it slowly, his grip firm but not tight. He turned it.
Locked.
The handle resisted, stopping halfway through its rotation. He released it carefully, letting it return to its original position without sound.
His right hand moved to his pocket. His fingers slipped inside and withdrew something smallâmetal, thin. He held it between his thumb and forefinger, angling it toward the lock.
He inserted it into the keyhole. The metal scraped slightly against the interior mechanism. He adjusted the angle, his wrist rotating fractionally. His other hand steadied against the doorframe.
The pick moved deeper. He applied pressure, testing resistance. The lockâs internal pins shifted. He felt the give, the small click of metal against metal.
His breathing stayed controlled.
He withdrew the pick slightly, repositioned it, inserted it again at a different angle. His fingers moved with precisionâsmall adjustments, careful pressure. Another click. Softer this time.
The lock turned.
He pocketed the pick and gripped the handle again. This time it rotated fully. The latch disengaged with a quiet snick.
He pushed the door open.
Slowly.
The hinges didnât creak. The door swung inward, revealing darkness. He slipped inside, his body moving through the narrow opening. His shoulder brushed the doorframe. He turned, gripping the edge of the door, and pulled it closed behind him.
The latch clicked into place.
The room was dark. Completely dark. No light from the windowâthe curtains were drawn. No ambient glow from electronics or charging devices. Just blackness.
He stood still, letting his eyes adjust.
Shapes began to emerge. The outline of furniture. A dresser against the far wall. A chair near the window. The bed.
Rouxi was on it.
Her shape was visible nowâa darker mass against the lighter fabric of the sheets. She was lying on her side, facing away from the door. Her breathing was inaudible from where he stood.
Not moving.
He waited for a moment to make sure that she was asleep, but there was still nothing.
His heartbeat picked up slightlyânot fear, anticipation.
She had been asking for this. The way she sat there eating cereal like she had every right. The way sheâd rolled her eyes when heâd brought down the weapons. Like she wasnât afraid. Like she didnât understand what he could do.
She would, though.
His right hand moved to his waistband. His fingers found the handle of the knife tucked there. He drew it slowly, the blade sliding free without sound. The weight settled into his palmâfamiliar, balanced.
He moved forward.
One step, his foot touching down softly, his weight distributed evenly across the ball of his foot before settling into his heel. The floor didnât shift beneath him.
Another step brought him closer. His breathing stayed controlledâin through his nose, out through his mouth, quiet and measured.
The bed was three feet away now.
Two feet.
He could see her more clearly now. The curve of her shoulder beneath the blanket. The line of her spine. Her hair spread across the pillow in dark waves that caught what little ambient light filtered through the curtains.
Still not moving.
One more step brought him to the edge of the bed.
He stood there, the knife held low at his side. His eyes moved across her form, tracking the rise and fall of her breathing. It was shallow. Steady.
Asleep.
His pulse thrummed in his ears nowâlow, insistent. He thought about her waking up. About the moment sheâd realize what was happening. About the fear that would replace that arrogant confidence. About how heâd make her understand exactly where she stood.
Sheâd learn to keep her mouth shut.
Sheâd learn her place.
He shifted his weight forward. His knee touched the mattress, and the bed dipped slightly beneath the pressure. He leaned in, his other hand moving to brace against the mattress beside her hip.
The knife rose.
His grip tightened around the handle. His arm tensed, preparing. His breath caught in his chestâanticipation coiling tight in his stomach.
Now.
She moved.
Fast.
No warning.
Her body rolled toward him in one fluid motion, her arm sweeping up in a tight, vicious arc. Metal flashed in the darknessâher own blade, already in motion, already committed.
It drove into his shoulder.
Deep.
The impact was immediate and absolute. The blade punched through fabric, through skin, through muscle with brutal efficiency. It sank in to the hilt, the force of her strike driving it between bone and tendon, splitting tissue and severing vessels.
He screamed.
The sound tore out of himâraw, uncontrolled, loud in the confined space of the room.
Her hand was still on the knife, her grip firm and unwavering as she yanked it back.
Hard.
The blade ripped free and blood sprayed everywhere.
It erupted from the wound in a hot, pulsing arc. The first spray hit her faceâacross her cheek, her jaw, her lips. Warm and wet and immediate. The second hit her neck, running down in thick rivulets that soaked into the collar of her shirt. The third splattered across her chest, dark droplets spreading across the fabric in an expanding pattern.
Dark droplets scattered across the white sheets, across the pillow, across the wall behind the bed. The arterial spray pulsed with his heartbeatâonce, twice, three times in rapid succession, each burst weaker than the last but still forceful enough to paint the room.
He screamed again, louder this time.
His hand went to his shoulder, his fingers pressing against the wound in a desperate attempt to stem the flow. Blood poured between them, hot and slick and unstoppable. It ran down his arm, soaking his sleeve, dripping from his elbow onto the bed.
His knife fell from his other hand, hitting the floor with a metallic clatter that echoed in the small room.
The spray continued and his scream didnât stop.
It filled the room, echoing off the walls, spilling out into the hallway beyond the closed door.
And the blood kept coming.