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(Okay, perfect, that'll work perfect!!)
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Isla woke to the soft buzz of her burner vibrating against the nightstand, the sound cutting cleanly through the shallow sleep she’d been trapped in. She lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, waiting for the familiar spike of dread to settle into something manageable before she reached for it. A message. Coordinates. A location tag attached to a name she didn’t recognize—at least, not consciously. She exhaled through her nose and sat up, swinging her legs over the side of the bed. The apartment was quiet, sterile in the way all her places were. Temporary. Forgettable. She dressed quickly, muscle memory guiding her hands as she checked her gear, her weapon, the false ID already waiting in her jacket pocket. Only when she opened the encrypted file did she pause. A restaurant. Popular. Busy. Basement safe house. Intercept a message. Low risk. Clean job. Simple. Her eyes skimmed the final line, the one that listed operational overlaps—other assets in the field, unnamed, compartmentalized. She didn’t know why her chest tightened. Isla shut the file and slid the phone back into her pocket, shaking off the feeling. Coincidences happened. Cities were large. Assignments crossed all the time. There was no reason to think— She stopped herself before the thought could finish. This wasn’t about him. It couldn’t be. Still, as she locked the door behind her and headed out into the waking city, there was a strange, familiar sense of pressure in her ribs, like the quiet before something went wrong. Just another job, she told herself. But somewhere deep down, she had the unsettling feeling that this one wouldn’t stay simple for long.
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Adrien packed his things. He'd hadnt been given a new name for this one, but he was told to just use Ghostline, his codename. No one but the agency knew his real name, and it would stay that way. He waited until nightfall before slinging his bag over his shoulder and leaving his apartment. He called an Uber, and the driver brought him to a club down the street, he entered, but made his way out the backdoor and to the alleyway. He walked the block to the restaurant under the covers of darkness. Behind the restaurant, he knelt, uncovering the manhole in the street, climbing into the sewer and sealing the manhole shut above him. He then turned to the vault sealed door and entered the combination and watched as the bolts slid open. He pushed the heavy door open and stepped in, swinging it shut behind him and locking it from the inside. The space was decently large, yet dimly lit and grimy. Each person would have their own room, but they would share a dining area, bathroom and kitchen. Adrien sighed. He was the first one here. There would be 5 of them in total.
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Isla watched the restaurant from across the street, posture loose, attention razor-sharp. She didn’t enter right away. Instead, she lingered at the corner, hood pulled low, eyes tracking the rhythm of the place—the smokers ducking out back, the delivery truck idling too long, the subtle shift of shadows near the alley. When the timing felt right, she moved, slipping down the side street and toward the rear of the building with practiced ease. The alley smelled like damp stone and old oil. She paused just long enough to make sure she was alone, then knelt and lifted the manhole with controlled effort, lowering herself into the sewer and sealing it behind her. The darkness swallowed her instantly, familiar and oddly comforting. She followed the path she’d been given, boots splashing softly through shallow water until the vault door came into view. Unlocked. Someone was already inside. Her hand hovered near her weapon as she keyed in her own portion of the combination, slipping through the door and locking it behind her. The space beyond was dim, grimy, utilitarian—safe house in every sense of the word. Functional. Forgettable. Isla took in the layout quickly: shared kitchen, dining area, bathroom. Five rooms. Four still empty. One occupied. She didn’t announce herself. Instead, she set her bag down near one of the far rooms and leaned lightly against the wall, listening. Footsteps. Controlled breathing. The subtle sounds of someone who knew how to exist quietly. Professional. She felt it again—that faint, unwelcome tightening in her chest. Ridiculous, she told herself. She didn’t know who the other asset was. Codename only, if that. That was how it always worked. Still, as she straightened and finally spoke, her voice calm and even, there was something just a little more alert beneath it. “Looks like I’m not the first one here,” Isla said into the low light. “Guess that makes us early.” Her gaze flicked toward the occupied space, sharp but unreadable, unaware that the man on the other side of the room was Ghostline—or that the quiet hum in her ribs wasn’t coincidence at all.
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Adrien stiffened as he heard another person enter the underground safehouse. He glanced over at the figure, quickly realizing it was her. Verity. He stood, kind of in shock. He took a few paces before he stopped, his face now visible in the light. "Hello, Verity,'' he dipped his head respectfully.
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Isla froze the moment he moved. Not just because someone had stepped into the light—but because she recognized the way he held himself before she ever saw his face. The stillness. The restraint. The way his presence seemed to pull the room tighter around him. Then the light caught his features. Her breath caught, sharp and quiet, before she could stop it. James. Nikolai. Ghostline. A dozen masks layered over the same man she’d danced with, planned with, trusted just enough to survive a night that should’ve killed them both. She straightened immediately, walls snapping back into place, her expression smoothing into something cool and professional even as her pulse betrayed her. Of all the people it could’ve been… of course it was him. “James,” she said automatically—then corrected herself just as quickly. “—or… Ghostline,” she amended, her tone measured. She took a step forward, then stopped herself, folding her arms loosely instead. Her eyes searched his face, not soft, not hostile—assessing. As if confirming he was real, and not just another ghost her mind had invented over the last few weeks. “Well,” Isla exhaled quietly, a faint edge of disbelief slipping through despite herself. “Either this assignment has a cruel sense of humor, or someone upstairs knew exactly what they were doing.” Her gaze held his for a beat longer than strictly necessary before she inclined her head in return—professional, controlled. “Didn’t expect to see you again,” she said honestly. “Especially not down here.”
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Adrien nodded faintly. "Yeah, well, you never know in this business," he hummed lightly. "Yeah, me neither," he said honestly, holding himself up tall, confident. He hoped she didn't know he tried to find her. And well, he did, just didn't find the right her.
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Isla watched him closely as he spoke, catching the easy tone, the practiced calm—and the honesty tucked beneath it. She recognized that balance now. She’d worn it herself more times than she could count. “Mm,” she murmured in agreement, lips quirking just slightly. “Coincidences like this usually mean trouble.” She shifted her weight, boots quiet against the concrete floor, her posture relaxed but alert. There was a part of her that wanted to ask questions—too many of them—but instinct reined it in. This wasn’t the place. This wasn’t the time. And this line of work punished curiosity when it crossed the wrong line. Still, her gaze lingered on him for a moment longer than professionalism strictly allowed. “Guess we both survived,” she added softly, almost wry. “That counts for something.” Her eyes flicked briefly around the safehouse, taking in the empty rooms, the low lighting, the sense of waiting in the air. Then back to him. “So,” Isla said, tone settling back into business, though something unreadable lingered beneath it. “Looks like we’re teammates again—whether we like it or not.”
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Adrien nodded, "They never are good, hm?" he hummed, sitting back down, but still facing her as he spoke. "Yeah, must be good for something," he hummed. "Yep, along with the other three. They should be here shortly," he explained, checking his watch quickly. "So, Verity, what name are you going by for this mission?" he asked politely.
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Isla let out a quiet breath through her nose, something between a huff and a laugh, as she eased further into the room. She didn’t sit yet—just leaned lightly against the edge of the table, arms folding loosely as she regarded him. “Yeah,” she agreed, dry. “If it were good news, they wouldn’t send people like us.” Her gaze flicked briefly to his watch when he checked it, mentally clocking the timing herself. Three more operatives meant more variables. More eyes. More masks to wear. At his question, she paused—not long enough to look suspicious, just long enough to choose carefully. “For now?” Isla replied, tone casual, practiced. “I’m going by Iris Hale.” A beat. Her eyes lifted to meet his again, sharp but calm, studying his face for any flicker of recognition—or anything else. “And you?” she asked, head tilting slightly. “Still Ghostline to everyone in the dark, or do you get a cover the rest of us can use without raising eyebrows?”
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