THE WAITRESS ONLY TOUCHED THE DYING MAFIA BOSS TO STOP HIM FROM BLEEDING OUT IN HER DINER, BUT THE MOMENT HIS BLOOD HIT HER SKIN, HE DISCOVERED THE ONE SECRET SHE HAD SPENT HER WHOLE LIFE HIDING

THE WAITRESS ONLY TOUCHED THE DYING MAFIA BOSS TO STOP HIM FROM BLEEDING OUT IN HER DINER, BUT THE MOMENT HIS BLOOD HIT HER SKIN, HE DISCOVERED THE ONE SECRET SHE HAD SPENT HER WHOLE LIFE HIDING

Blood ruined linoleum.

That was Naomi’s first thought when they dragged the dying man into Sullivan’s Diner.

Not the guns.

Not the shattered glass.

Not the fact that two soaked, panicked men in ruined tailored suits had just burst in from the freezing autumn rain with blood all over their hands and terror in their eyes.

Her first thought was the floor.

That sticky, metallic mess spreading across the cheap tiles. The kind that got into every crack, every seam, every place a mop could not reach. The kind that left a smell behind no amount of bleach could erase.

Then his blood touched her skin.

And everything Naomi had spent her life hiding came alive.

The real nightmare did not begin when the men came through the door.

It began when the dying man grabbed her arm.

Sullivan’s Diner had been half-dead long before that night. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead with a weak, sickly flicker, throwing a jaundiced glow across cracked red vinyl booths and tabletops scarred by cigarettes, coffee rings, and years of angry elbows. The place smelled like burned filter coffee, industrial bleach, old grease, and the damp rot that rose from the city drainage system every time heavy rain pushed the streets past their limit.

Naomi was working the graveyard shift, the shift nobody wanted unless they were desperate, invisible, or both.

She stood behind the counter with a putty knife in her hand, scraping at a stubborn patch of dried grease that had fused itself to the surface sometime between midnight and whatever awful hour this was. Her shoulder ached from the repetitive motion. Her cheap orthopedic shoes stuck slightly every time she shifted her weight. The floor beneath her had that permanent tackiness diners like Sullivan’s wore like a second skin.

Outside, rain hammered the windows.

Inside, time moved slowly.

Then the glass shattered before the door chimes ever had the chance to ring.

Wind tore through the diner, cold and wet, carrying sheets of rain and the sharp, unmistakable bite of cordite. Two men stumbled through the broken doorway, boots slipping across the wet tile, breathing hard, moving with the frantic urgency of men who had run out of options.

They were not junkies. They were not drunks looking for warmth. They were not the usual sad parade that wandered into Sullivan’s after midnight.

These men wore tailored wool suits, expensive once, now soaked through, torn, and darkened by rain and blood.

Between them, they dragged a third man.

Naomi did not scream.

She simply let the putty knife fall from her hand.

The sound it made against the floor was small, almost ridiculous, compared to the storm suddenly standing inside the diner.

Gun violence was not rare in this neighborhood. It lived in the alleys, the parking lots, the corners where streetlights flickered out and nobody asked questions. But it usually stayed outside. It usually stayed on the pavement. It did not come crashing through her door in Italian wool and expensive shoes.

“Lock the door,” the taller man barked.

His voice cracked on the command. Panic did that to people. Even dangerous people.

Blood coated his hands like dark gloves.

Naomi did not move toward the door.

She looked at the man they were carrying.

He was already almost gone.

His head lolled forward, his chin resting against a chest that was no longer really a chest at all. White cotton had been shredded open and soaked red. Blood bubbled from the torn fabric in wet, ugly pulses. His skin had gone waxy gray, the color Naomi had seen before on people who were leaving their bodies behind.

He was drowning in his own fluids.

Every breath came shallow and wet, a rattling wheeze that made Naomi’s own lungs tighten.

“I said lock it, you stupid—”

The second man, shorter and built like a cinder block, lifted a black handgun and aimed it directly at her chest.

His hand was shaking.

That was what bothered Naomi most. Not the gun. The shaking. A steady gun was bad enough. A terrified man with a gun was worse.

“Don’t shoot the only person who knows where the clean towels are,” Naomi said.

Her voice came out flat. Dry. Almost bored.

It was not bravery. It was exhaustion wearing the mask of nerve.

She raised her hands just enough to show them she was not reaching for the silent alarm, then moved slowly behind the counter and grabbed a stack of faded rough cotton rags from underneath.

The men dumped the dying man into the nearest booth.

The red vinyl squeaked under his weight. He slid sideways, his head knocking against the window with a dull thud that made Naomi’s stomach tighten.

“Press these on the wound,” she said, tossing the rags onto the table. “I’ll call an ambulance.”

“No cops. No ambulances,” the taller man snapped.

He leaned over the dying man and shoved both hands down against the wound, putting his full weight into it. The rags soaked through almost instantly. Dark red spilled over his knuckles and down his wrists.

“He needs a doctor,” Naomi said.

“Finn, call the butcher.”

“The butcher is thirty minutes away, Ethan,” the shorter man shouted back, pacing the narrow aisle with the gun still in his hand. “Tristan ain’t got three minutes.”

Tristan.

So that was his name.

Naomi watched him from behind the counter. His eyes fluttered open. Pale blue. Glassy. Unfocused. Rolling back like they were trying to look at something on the other side.

Then the smell reached her.

Not just blood.

That copper tang was already everywhere, thick enough to taste. This was something worse. Sour. Acidic. Deeply wrong. A punctured organ. A gut wound. The kind of wound that turned a body against itself.

Messy.

Fatal.

“Get over here and hold this,” Ethan yelled. “My hands are slipping.”

“I’m not a nurse,” Naomi said, stepping back.

“Get over here or I blow your kneecaps off,” Finn screamed, swinging the barrel of the gun toward her legs.

Naomi swallowed hard.

The anger came first, because it always did. A tired, bitter anger that had kept her alive through landlords, bosses, night shifts, and men who thought fear was a language everyone should speak fluently.

But anger did not stop bullets.

She walked around the counter.

Her shoes made soft, tacky sounds against the floor.

She stepped into the booth, squeezing past Ethan’s broad shoulder, and placed her hands over his. The rags beneath them were useless. Warm blood pushed through the fabric in steady pulses, each one weaker than the last.

“Move,” Naomi muttered.

Ethan pulled his hands away.

Naomi pressed her palms directly against the ruined mess of Tristan’s chest.

The heat shocked her.

His blood slid between her fingers, slick and thick, soaking into every crease of her skin. She pressed hard, trying to pinch the torn flesh together, trying to do only what anyone would do with a gun pointed at them and a dying man under their hands.

Then Tristan convulsed.

His eyes snapped wide open.

For one terrifying second, they were no longer empty. They were sharp with the animal horror of a man who had just realized he was dying.

Before Naomi could pull away, Tristan’s hand shot up.

His fingers clamped around her bare forearm.

His grip was impossible. A vise made out of desperation, blood, and the last violent surge of a body refusing to surrender.

Naomi gasped.

Not because of fear.

Because something inside her opened.

No.

Not again.

She tried to yank her arm free, but Tristan held on. His bloody nails dug into her skin. The transfer did not care about her permission. It never had.

The power surged up from the soles of her feet, hot and sickening, like electricity dragged through bone. It flooded her legs, her spine, her chest, her arms. It tasted like ozone and battery acid at the back of her throat.

It was not a gentle miracle.

It was not light and warmth and angels.

Healing was violence.

Naomi felt her own energy rip loose and funnel through her skin into him. It tore out of her so fast her vision flashed white. Under her palms, the ruined flesh of Tristan’s chest began to move.

It was horrifying.

It felt like worms beneath the rags.

Muscle fibers snapped, stretched, and stitched themselves together with wet, popping sounds. Cartilage fused. Torn tissue pulled tight. The bleeding did not merely slow.

It reversed.

Severed veins closed in seconds. The body beneath her hands fought its way backward from death with a brutality that made Naomi want to scream.

Tristan did scream.

Or almost.

The sound that came out of him was lower, rougher, a guttural roar of absolute agony that filled the diner and seemed to rattle the glass still clinging to the broken doorframe.

Heat poured from his chest, unnatural and intense, until the blood-soaked rags began to steam.

Finn and Ethan stumbled back, shouting, but Naomi could no longer hear their words. There was only static in her ears. Her vision narrowed to a pinprick. Nausea struck so hard it felt like someone had punched straight through her stomach.

Then, with a sickening squelch, a distorted, blood-dark piece of lead forced itself out of the closing wound.

It hit the linoleum with a sharp, heavy clink.

And just like that, the hole was gone.

Beneath Naomi’s shaking hands there was no torn chest, no bubbling blood, no open path into death. There was only hot, angry, unblemished skin.

Silence fell.

Heavy.

Suffocating.

Rain battered the windows. Somewhere above them, fluorescent lights buzzed like dying insects. Tristan panted in the booth, each breath rough but alive.

Naomi ripped her hands away as if she had touched a stove.

She stumbled backward, hit the edge of the opposite table, and lost her balance. Her knees buckled. She did not even try to stop herself.

She hit the floor hard.

Then she rolled onto her side as her stomach violently rejected the cheap coffee she had forced down hours earlier. She dry heaved over the linoleum, shaking from a bone-deep cold no coat could have fixed.

The toll was always the same.

Migraines.

Vertigo.

A hollow, scraped-out feeling in her marrow.

And the terrible certainty that every time she did it, every time she forced another body to live, something was taken from hers to pay the price.

She wiped her mouth with a trembling, bloodstained hand.

Pennies and bile coated her tongue.

Above her, the booth squeaked.

Tristan sat up.

He did not move like a man who had been dying a minute earlier. He moved carefully, stiffly, like a predator waking from anesthesia and deciding whether the room around him was dangerous.

He looked down at his ruined shirt and pulled the blood-soaked fabric apart.

Where a bullet had torn through him, where death had opened its mouth inside his chest, there was only a raw red patch of skin. It looked more like a severe sunburn than a fatal injury.

He pressed two fingers into the smooth flesh, hard, as though expecting the illusion to break and his hand to sink into his own organs.

It did not.

Ethan and Finn stood frozen.

Finn’s gun hung uselessly at his side, pointed at the floor.

“What?” Ethan stammered, looking from the bullet on the floor to Tristan’s chest, then to Naomi, who was shivering by the table legs. “What the hell was that?”

Tristan did not answer.

He turned his head.

His pale blue eyes locked on Naomi.

The glassy, dying look was gone. In its place was something far worse.

Clarity.

Cold, sharp, terrifying clarity.

It was the look of a man who did not see miracles as holy. He saw them as resources. Opportunities. Weapons. Things to own before someone else could.

Naomi dragged herself upright, using the table for support. Her head throbbed in time with her heartbeat.

“You’re done bleeding,” she rasped. “Now get out of my diner.”

She expected them to run.

That was what normal people did.

They crossed themselves. They backed away. They looked at her like she had become something unnatural in front of them and then they disappeared from her life, which was exactly how she liked it.

But Tristan did not look afraid.

He swung his legs out of the booth and stood.

Blood crusted his trousers. His shirt hung open. The skin at his chest was still angry and red. He tested his weight, rolled his shoulders, and grimaced faintly as newly formed muscle stretched inside him.

Then he stepped over the puddle of his own blood and came toward her.

Naomi backed up toward the kitchen doors.

“You did this,” Tristan said.

It was not a question.

His voice was low and rough from screaming, but steady.

“I pressed a towel to your chest,” Naomi said. “You got lucky.”

The lie was pathetic. They both knew it.

“Leave before the cops come.”

Tristan kept coming.

He smelled like rain, expensive vetiver cologne, and the iron stink of slaughter.

“I was cold,” he said quietly, stepping into her space. “I felt my lungs stop. And then you burned me.”

He reached out and grabbed her wrist.

Naomi flinched and tried to pull away, but his grip was iron.

Not the desperate grip of a dying man anymore.

This was different.

This was possession.

“Let go of me,” Naomi snarled.

For the first time, real panic broke through her flat, bitter calm. She hated that he was strong. Hated that he was standing there full of life, fueled by something he had taken from her without understanding the cost.

Tristan studied her face.

The dark circles under her eyes.

The cheap stained uniform.

The way she swayed on her feet.

A mob boss did not survive by ignoring miracles.

He survived by weaponizing them.

A woman who could pull a man back from death was worth more than money. More than guns. More than product. More than any doctor he could threaten or buy.

“Bring her,” Tristan ordered, still looking at Naomi.

Finn blinked, finally shaking himself out of shock.

“What? Boss, the cops—”

“I said bring her.”

Tristan released Naomi’s wrist.

Only because he had men to do the grabbing for him.

Naomi did not wait.

Survival instinct kicked in, ugly and fast. She snatched the heavy ceramic sugar dispenser from the nearest table and swung it with everything she had left.

It cracked against Finn’s jaw.

He barked in pain, staggered sideways, and dropped the gun.

Naomi bolted for the kitchen.

She made it less than three steps.

Her foot hit the slick puddle of Tristan’s blood. Her legs flew out from under her, and she slammed into the floor, her already injured knee taking the worst of it.

Pain exploded bright and white.

Before she could scramble away, Ethan was on her.

He did not use the gun. He did not need to. He grabbed a fistful of her uniform collar and hair and yanked her brutally to her feet.

Naomi thrashed.

She kicked backward with her orthopedic shoes. Her elbow slammed into Ethan’s ribs. It felt like hitting a wall.

The healing had drained the fight out of her marrow.

“Stop moving, lady, or I’ll put you to sleep,” Ethan grunted, pinning her arms behind her back.

Tristan watched with clinical detachment.

He bent, picked up Finn’s dropped gun, wiped a smear of blood from the barrel with his thumb, and tucked it into the waistband of his ruined trousers.

“You can’t do this,” Naomi screamed as Ethan dragged her toward the shattered front door. The cold wind bit into her wet skin. “I saved your miserable life.”

Tristan stepped out into the rain.

The downpour flattened his dark hair instantly.

“Which is exactly why you’re coming with us,” he said.

They shoved her into the back of a black SUV parked half-crooked at the curb.

The shift from the diner to the vehicle was brutal. One second she was in the bright, ugly, blood-slick chaos of Sullivan’s, and the next she was sealed inside darkness and rich leather and gunpowder.

The door slammed.

The engine roared.

The SUV tore away from the curb, leaving the broken diner behind in the rain.

Naomi collapsed against the seat, chest heaving, her body shaking too hard to hide it.

She stared at the back of Tristan’s head in the passenger seat.

And slowly, the realization settled in her gut like stones.

She had not saved a life that night.

She had signed away her own.

Silk sheets felt like a threat against her bruised skin.

When Naomi opened her eyes again, she was not in the diner. She was lying rigid on a mattress that probably cost more than she made in ten years, staring at a vaulted ceiling in a room too quiet to be safe.

The air smelled of lavender wax, old mahogany, and the sharp chemical bite of industrial cleaners.

The kind used to scrub away sins.

Her head pounded with relentless, rhythmic agony. Every joint ached. The marrow in her bones felt hollowed out with a spoon.

Healing was never a gift.

It was a transaction.

And her account was overdrawn.

Naomi pushed herself up and nearly fell sideways as vertigo tilted the room. Heavy velvet curtains covered the windows, trapping the space in a false twilight. No streetlights. No neon diner sign. No rain-blurred cars rushing past outside.

Just silence.

Expensive silence.

She swung her legs over the edge of the bed. Her bare feet sank into a plush handwoven rug. She looked down and realized her diner uniform was gone.

They had stripped the blood-soaked clothes off her while she was unconscious.

Now she wore men’s gray cotton sweatpants and an oversized black T-shirt that smelled faintly of expensive detergent and ozone.

Naomi limped toward the heavy oak door.

She did not bother testing the handle at first. Men who abducted waitresses did not leave guest rooms unlocked. Instead, she pressed her forehead to the cool wood and listened.

Nothing.

No traffic.

No shouting cooks.

No clinking coffee mugs.

No life.

Only the insulated hush of wealth.

Then a heavy lock clicked.

Naomi stumbled backward, pulse spiking.

The door opened.

Tristan stepped inside.

He did not look like a man who had been coughing up blood eight hours earlier. He wore a crisp white dress shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, dark slacks, and polished shoes. Ink and muscle marked his forearms. His posture carried only the slightest stiffness.

At his unbuttoned collar, Naomi could see the unnatural smooth pinkness of new skin.

That was the only evidence that he had been dead under her hands.

He carried a silver tray.

He set it on a glass-topped side table. Steam rose from a porcelain bowl of broth. Beside it sat thick toasted bread and a glass of water.

“Eat,” Tristan said.

His voice was different now.

No death rasp. No wet struggle. No torn edge.

It was smooth, heavy, and filled with the expectation of obedience.

Naomi stood in the middle of the room, arms crossed tight over her chest to hide the fact that she was shivering.

“I want my clothes,” she said. “And I want to go home.”

“Your clothes were a biohazard. They were burned.”

He leaned against the doorframe, watching her.

“As for going home, that isn’t on the itinerary.”

“You can’t just keep me here.”

Her voice wavered. She hated herself for it.

“People will notice I’m missing. My landlord. My boss.”

Tristan reached into his pocket, pulled out a silver lighter and a crushed pack of cigarettes.

“Your landlord is a slumlord who receives cash in an envelope slipped under his door,” he said. “Your boss is missing a waitress who was working off the books. Neither will file a police report.”

He lit the cigarette and took a slow drag.

“You don’t exist, Naomi. It’s why you were working the graveyard shift in a neighborhood that regularly swallows people whole.”

The truth hit harder because it was not dramatic.

It was practical.

Cold.

Accurate.

Naomi had built her life around disappearing. She had kept her head down, avoided attachments, avoided questions, avoided anyone who might notice too much. She had done it to hide what she could do.

Now that same invisibility had become the lock on her cage.

“What do you want from me?” she whispered.

The fight drained out of her, replaced by something heavier. Dread. Not the sharp kind. The slow kind.

Tristan exhaled gray smoke and crossed the room.

He stopped close enough that Naomi could smell tobacco and vetiver on him.

“I run a business where the mortality rate is inconveniently high,” he said. “I have surgeons on payroll. I have safe houses stocked with trauma kits. But a bullet to the heart or a severed artery doesn’t care about a surgical degree.”

He reached out.

His fingers brushed her jaw.

Naomi snapped her head away, but the brief contact sent a strange electric shock through her system.

The echo of the conduit.

She felt his heartbeat.

Not metaphorically.

Not emotionally.

Literally.

A steady, powerful rhythm moving beneath his ribs. The heartbeat she had restarted. The life she had forced back into him.

The intimacy of it made her stomach turn.

“You aren’t a doctor, Naomi,” Tristan said. “You’re insurance.”

Her blood went cold.

“You’re going to keep me alive,” he continued. “You’re going to keep my key men alive. In exchange, you get to live.”

“I can’t just do it on command,” Naomi snapped. Anger burned through the fear, hot and desperate. “It kills me a little every time. It drains my energy. It makes me sick. It takes days to recover. If you bring me half a dozen bleeding gangsters, I’ll die trying to fix them.”

Tristan studied her.

Not with compassion.

With calculation.

Like a mechanic learning the limits of a rare machine.

“Then we’ll manage your output,” he said simply.

He gestured toward the tray.

“Starting with calories. Eat the food. I need my insurance policy operating at full capacity.”

He turned and walked out.

The door shut.

The lock slid into place with a final metallic thud.

Naomi stood trembling in the center of the room.

She looked at the steaming broth.

Her stomach cramped so hard it nearly folded her in half. Her body knew what the healing had cost. It wanted fuel. It wanted salt, fat, heat, anything that might begin to replace what had been taken.

She crossed to the tray.

Her vision blurred with furious tears as she picked up the spoon. Her hand shook so badly the broth spilled back into the bowl.

She hated him.

She hated the calm, calculating monster who looked at her and saw a medical supply. She hated that he had found the exact weak point in her life and pressed his thumb into it. She hated that he was alive because of her.

But as she forced the rich broth down her throat, another thought came creeping in.

Darker.

More frightening than hatred.

When her hands had been pressed into his ruined chest, when his life force had tangled violently with hers, Tristan had looked at her differently than anyone ever had.

Not just like a tool.

Like a god.

And for a woman who had spent her life scrubbing grease, taking graveyard shifts, keeping her head down, and being invisible, the sheer gravity of that look was not something she could easily forget.

Four days passed.

Four days inside the velvet prison.

Four days of locked doors, silent meals, and Tristan’s short, scrutinizing visits.

He never stayed long, but he always looked at her as if he were taking inventory. Her color. Her hands. Her appetite. The steadiness of her legs. The way her eyes followed him. The way she moved when she thought nobody was watching.

Naomi regained strength slowly.

The marrow-deep ache finally faded. The nausea eased. The migraines loosened their grip. But recovery brought no peace.

Only restless pacing.

She walked the room until she knew every inch of it. The heavy curtains. The expensive rug. The side table. The locked door. The walls thick enough to swallow noise.

She thought about escape until the word lost meaning.

Then one night, gunfire cracked through the estate.

At first, through the soundproofed walls, it sounded almost harmless.

Thick bubble wrap popping somewhere far away.

Naomi woke with her heart hammering.

She sat up, listening.

There it was again.

Pop. Pop. Pop.

Then louder.

Faster.

Not bubble wrap.

Automatic weapons fire.

Shouts echoed in the hallway, muffled but frantic. Naomi scrambled out of bed, bare feet slapping against the hardwood floor. She ran to the oak door and pressed her ear against it.

The estate was under attack.

A distant explosion shook the floorboards.

Fine plaster dust drifted down from the ceiling.

Panic flooded Naomi’s mouth, sharp and coppery.

If Tristan’s enemies breached the house, they would not pause to ask who she was. They would not care that she was a prisoner. They would see a woman locked in the boss’s estate and shoot her like everything else in their path.

Footsteps thundered toward her room.

Keys jingled wildly.

The lock snapped open.

The door burst inward.

Ethan stood there with his suit jacket gone, white shirt streaked with soot and blood. He had an assault rifle in one hand.

“Move,” he barked.

He grabbed Naomi by the bicep and dragged her into the hall.

The air outside her room was thick with smoke and the metallic stench of fresh blood. At the far end of the corridor, two men lay motionless, bodies twisted at unnatural angles.

Naomi’s bare feet nearly slipped.

“Where are we going?” she yelled over the gunfire rattling from below.

“Panic room,” Ethan grunted. “Rival syndicate got past the perimeter. It’s a bloodbath down there.”

He dragged her toward the heavy oak staircase.

They never reached it.

A figure rounded the corner at the end of the hall.

Tristan.

He moved fast, firing a handgun blindly over his shoulder before ducking behind a marble pillar. Drywall dust smeared his face. His hair was disheveled. His breathing came hard.

And he was bleeding.

A dark stain spread across the side of his pristine white shirt.

It was not the catastrophic chest wound from the diner.

But it was bad.

A clean shot through the lower abdomen.

“Boss!” Ethan yelled, shoving Naomi behind him and lifting his rifle.

Tristan waved him off, teeth clenched, forearm pressed against his side.

“Hold the stairwell,” he said. “Don’t let them up here.”

He stumbled toward them, using the wall for support.

His eyes found Naomi.

For the first time since the diner, the cold, calculating boss was gone. What stood in front of her now was something stripped down and raw. A cornered predator running on adrenaline and failing biology.

He collapsed against the wall opposite her and slid down until he hit the floor.

His breathing was shallow and fast.

“Get over here,” Tristan gasped.

Naomi froze.

For a moment, the whole world muted.

The gunfire. Ethan’s shouting. The smoke. The screams below. It all receded until there was only Tristan on the floor and the blood pooling beneath his hand.

This was her chance.

The thought came clean and sharp.

If she let him bleed, the men who kept her caged would lose their leader. The syndicate would fracture. In the chaos, she could run. She could vanish back into the machinery of the city. She could become invisible again.

All she had to do was nothing.

“Naomi,” Tristan wheezed.

It was not an order this time.

It was an acknowledgment.

He saw her hesitation.

He knew exactly what she was weighing.

A bitter, bloody smirk touched his mouth.

“Do it,” he said. “Walk away.”

Even dying, he was arrogant enough to challenge her morality.

Naomi took one step back.

She looked toward the stairwell. Ethan was firing bursts into the smoke, holding the line, giving her a path if she was willing to take it.

She could leave.

She could let the monster die in his own house, in his own blood, surrounded by the violence he had built.

But her hands began to burn.

Not from heat.

From memory.

A phantom sensation crawled beneath the skin of her palms. An aggressive itch. A pull. The conduit waking up before she wanted it to.

Tristan’s life force was fading, and the tether between them knew.

The bond from the diner had not been only in her mind.

It was physical.

Demanding.

A gravity that bent her toward him.

Naomi remembered the rush of pulling him back. The terrible power. The violent high of standing at the edge of death and dragging someone away from it.

She hated that she remembered.

She hated that part of her wanted it again.

Cursing him, herself, and whatever cruel thing had made her this way, Naomi dropped to her knees beside him.

“You are the worst thing that has ever happened to me,” she snarled.

Her voice shook with rage and terror.

“I know,” Tristan whispered.

His eyes fluttered shut.

Naomi grabbed his blood-soaked shirt and ripped it open, ignoring his groan of pain.

This time, she did not hesitate.

She slammed both bare hands onto the jagged, bleeding entry wound in his stomach.

The connection snapped into place like a car crash.

Naomi gasped.

Her back arched as energy tore out of her core.

It was worse than before.

So much worse.

She was not just healing flesh. She was forcing the miracle through a body still recovering from the last one. Her vision tunneled instantly. The smell of smoke and blood vanished beneath the overwhelming stink of ozone.

Under her palms, Tristan’s body began to obey.

Muscle fibers twisted and snapped together. Torn vessels closed. Blood reversed its path. Tissue pulled tight and sealed in hot, angry waves.

Naomi felt his pain.

A white-hot agony ripped through her own abdomen like a ghost bullet. She screamed, raw and guttural, but a nearby explosion swallowed the sound.

Tristan did not scream this time.

His hand shot out and grabbed the back of Naomi’s neck.

His grip was bruising. Desperate.

He anchored himself to her, pulling her down until her forehead rested against his shoulder.

He was absorbing her life.

Drinking it in.

A parasite clinging to its host.

The bullet forced its way out through his back, tearing through his jacket before clattering to the floor.

The wound sealed.

Only angry red skin remained.

Naomi collapsed against his chest.

She could not move.

Her arms were dead weight. Her lungs burned. The hallway spun in sickening circles.

She was empty.

Completely empty.

Then Tristan’s arms closed around her.

He did not shove her away. He held her tightly against him as his breathing steadied and his heart began to pound strong and thunderous beneath her ear.

That heart.

The one she had restarted.

The one she had kept beating again.

“Ethan!” Tristan barked.

His voice vibrated through his chest and into Naomi.

“Clear the floor. We’re moving.”

“Boss, you’re hit—”

Ethan glanced back from the stairs and stopped.

He stared at the intact skin where a bullet hole had been seconds before. Then he looked at Naomi slumped against Tristan, trembling and broken.

Something passed over Ethan’s face.

Fear.

Awe.

Understanding.

He swallowed.

“Yes, boss.”

Tristan shifted, sitting up and pulling Naomi with him. She was dead weight now, eyes half-lidded, fighting to stay conscious.

He scooped her into his arms as if she weighed nothing.

Naomi’s cheek rested against his chest.

“I hate you,” she mumbled.

The words slurred together.

Tristan looked down at her.

His thumb brushed a streak of his own blood from her pale cheek.

The clinical detachment was gone.

In its place was something darker. More possessive. More dangerous.

She was not just his insurance anymore.

She was his blood.

His breath.

His violent miracle.

“I know, little bird,” Tristan murmured over the smoke and gunfire. “But you’re never leaving me.”

Then he carried her down the hallway, stepping over bodies, past smoke and blood and shattered wealth, holding the woman who had his life in her hands.

Behind them, the estate burned with violence.

Ahead of them, there was only darkness.

And Naomi knew, with the last clear thought she had before exhaustion dragged her under, that the blood could be wiped away.

The wounds could close.

The bullets could be forced from flesh.

But what had opened between them in that diner could never be undone.