Chapter 12: The Ghost’s Gamble
The click of the heavy revolver’s hammer echoed in the shattered boardroom like a judge’s gavel.
Maya froze, her chest heaving as she stared down the massive, dark barrel of Silas’s gun. The fixer’s pale face was slick with sweat, a dark crimson stain spreading rapidly across his ribcage from a previous firefight. But his hand was dead steady.
“I said drop the weapon, Vance,” Silas repeated, his voice raspy but dripping with arrogant authority. “Kick it across the floor. Slowly.”
Julian did not immediately comply. His dark eyes darted from the barrel of the revolver to the bloody wound on Silas’s side.
“You’re bleeding out, Silas,” Julian said, his voice entirely devoid of panic. He sounded like a man negotiating a minor real estate transaction. “You took a hollow-point to the liver. You have maybe four minutes before your blood pressure bottoms out and you collapse.”
“I only need four seconds to put a hole through her head,” Silas snarled, his finger whitening on the trigger. “Kick the gun!”
Julian slowly crouched, setting his matte-black pistol on the carpet. With a gentle nudge, he slid it across the room. It stopped near Silas’s expensive leather shoes.
“Now step away from her,” Silas commanded.
“I can’t do that, Silas,” Julian said smoothly, rising to his full height. He took a deliberate step closer to Maya, completely ignoring the gun pointed at them.
“Julian, stop,” Maya whispered, her heart hammering wildly against her ribs. “He’s going to shoot.”
“No, he isn’t,” Julian replied, not taking his eyes off the fixer. “Because Silas is a mercenary. And mercenaries only pull the trigger when they know the check is going to clear.”
Silas let out a wet, rattling laugh. “Mr. Sterling pays me very well, Vance. He’s paying me double for your head.”
“Sterling’s accounts are frozen,” Julian stated, taking another calculated step forward. “I know this, because I am the one who froze them. I seized the offshore ledgers. I zeroed out the Caymans. I locked the Swiss safety deposits.”
Silas’s smug expression faltered for a fraction of a second.
“You’re lying,” the fixer hissed.
“Am I?” Julian challenged, his voice rising, filling the boardroom with overwhelming command. “You are a smart man, Silas. Richard Sterling is sitting in a penthouse right now, completely unbothered, while he sends you into a skyscraper full of heavily armed syndicates to die. He told you he would wire the money tomorrow, didn’t he?”
Silas swallowed hard. The gun trembled, just a millimeter, but Julian saw it.
“He’s bankrupt, Silas,” Julian pressed, delivering the psychological kill shot. “The money is gone. The Sterling empire is dead. And you are standing in my building, bleeding to death, about to commit a murder for a check that is going to bounce.”
“Shut up!” Silas screamed, the panic finally breaking through his polished exterior.
“I will make you a counteroffer,” Julian said, his tone suddenly dropping into a low, terrifying calm. “Drop the gun. Walk out to the elevator. I will let you live, and I will wire two million dollars into your private account before you even hit the lobby.”
Maya watched the exchange, utterly spellbound by Julian’s absolute mastery of the room. He wasn’t just fighting with bullets; he was dismantling the man’s mind.
“You think I’m stupid?” Silas sneered, though the gun barrel lowered by an inch. “I shoot you both, and Sterling pays me in physical assets. Real estate. Art.”
“If you shoot her,” Julian’s voice turned demonic, cold enough to freeze hell itself, “I will not die immediately. And in the three seconds I have left, I will cross this room, and I will tear your throat out with my bare hands.”
The silence that followed was suffocating.
Silas looked at Julian’s terrifying, blood-splattered face. He looked at Maya, standing tall and defiant despite the bruises on her neck. He realized, with sudden, crystal clarity, that Julian Vance was not bluffing.
“Two million,” Silas breathed heavily, coughing up a spatter of blood. “Unmarked.”
“Wired to your Zurich account,” Julian confirmed.
Silas slowly, painfully, lowered the revolver. He uncocked the hammer and let the gun slip from his bloody fingers. It hit the carpet with a dull thud.
Julian didn’t hesitate. He crossed the room in a blur, driving his fist directly into Silas’s jaw. The fixer collapsed instantly, out cold.
“You lied,” Maya gasped, her knees finally buckling.
Julian caught her before she hit the floor, pulling her tightly against his chest.
“I never lie about a bounty,” Julian whispered, pressing a fierce, desperate kiss into her hair. “But I also never said I wouldn’t hit him first.”
When a loaded gun is pointed at someone you love, would you try to physically fight the attacker, or would you use psychological warfare to break their mind?