Chapter 375: Chapter 375 Detonator
They moved like ghosts.
Dickson’s shoes scuffed the marble. His breaths were loud in his own ears. Vanessa was a shadow at the rail, eyes narrowing. She peered over the floor like a predator. The main hall looked abandoned. Chairs lay tipped. A lone table canted on its side. Light from the broken chandelier painted jagged patterns on the floor.
No hostages. No guards.
Nothing but silence.
"Where the hell are they?" Dickson mouthed, low. He hated how small his voice sounded. He hated that his hands were shaking.
Vanessa didn’t answer. She slid down the bannister and dropped the last few feet, landing cat-quiet on the marble. Her mask hid most of her face, but not the way her jaw worked. Not the way her fingers tightened around the small knife at her hip.
Static crackled.
It started soft. Then it filled the hall like a cold whisper.
Both of them looked up in the same heartbeat. A thin black speaker had been mounted high on the wall — tucked behind a decorative molding, invisible until the speaker spoke.
"Hmm," the voice said. Male. Languid. Tired. "I can’t believe it. Two people. Two little pests. Nearly cleaned out half my team."
Dickson’s brain did math. Bad math. Wrong math. His stomach dropped. "Half his team?" he said, because sometimes saying the words kept the panic from rising.
Vanessa stayed still. Her eyes scanned the columns, the balconies. She counted invisible things. "More than we thought," she said flatly. "Good. Great. Fantastic."
"You serious?" Dickson forced a laugh that sounded like a cough. "We just took out ten. Ten was—"
"—Not half," Vanessa finished. "Not even close."
The voice chuckled on the speaker. It sounded almost amused, like a man watching ants clean up a picnic. "You did well," he said. "Impressive. Shame you’re out of time."
Vanessa’s first instinct was to answer. To pull a comm, to yell a threat, to blink toward Lilith’s car and call in backup.
There was no mic. Nothing to talk back to. Just the speaker and the man’s voice, luxuriating.
Vanessa glanced at Dickson. He was pale, and for the first time she actually saw how young he still was when fear found him. She stepped closer.
"This just got more complicated," she said, honest and short.
He nodded. "How many more? We don’t even know their layout."
She tightened her grip on the knife. "We don’t know if they have powers. We don’t know their patrols. We don’t know anything. We got lucky. Luck won’t keep us steady forever."
Another crackle. The voice returned, and the amusement had a sharpened edge. "No, luck won’t," he agreed. "So let’s make things clear."
Vanessa’s eyes went cold. She did not like having things made clear by strangers hidden behind walls.
The voice paced the room with sound. "You two will listen. You will follow my instructions to the letter. For every one you deviate, for every attempt to surprise me... one hostage dies. Simple. Efficient."
A bead of sweat rolled down Dickson’s temple. He swallowed hard. "You can’t—"
"Yes I can," the voice interrupted cheerfully. "Please don’t make this harder. There’s a camera in the chandelier, in the vase. There are mics in the potted plants. You’re not the first clever rats to think the ceiling was empty."
Dickson’s eyes flitted to a vase on the far ledge. He hadn’t noticed it earlier — a simple decorative piece, but the old man’s hand had been right. He pointed with a choking whisper. "There. There — beside the vase."
Vanessa tracked to it without hesitation. Her gloved fingers brushed the ceramic. A small black iris twitched under the glaze. Camera.
She forced herself to breathe like she wasn’t drowning in static. Her voice came out controlled. Low. Quiet. "You want to play a game? Fine. Rules?"
"Rules," the voice purred. "Simple. I will give you instructions. You complete them. You do not deviate. You do as I say when I say it. The hostages live. You disobey, and—"
He made a noise that sounded like a knife being sharpened. "One dies. You hear the thump. The blood. That will be your music."
Vanessa felt something cold move under her ribs. She imagined a dozen nameless people, curled and blindfolded somewhere within the bank, a hand clamped over a mouth, a pulse beating under skin. She imagined the crack of a skull. The sound of a body dropping.
And she imagined, worse, that their fool of a driver was going to try something stupid. She had to keep him steady.
She turned to Dickson. Up close his face was raw—his lashes wet at the corners, his breath shallow. "Listen to me," she said fast. "You stick to me. You do exactly what I tell you. No hero shit. No improvising. Got it?"
He blinked like he was waking. "Got it," he said too fast. "Got it. I—yeah. I got it."
The speaker clicked, like a mouth closing. The voice brightened. "Good. You look like competent pets."
Vanessa’s jaw twitched.
"We will start with something small." The voice’s tone shifted, meticulous and clinical. "You, the lady, will go to the east vault. There’s a small safe behind the third deposit box. You’ll remove the blue case and hold it. You will stand under the balcony and not move. Then the dude, you will go to the teller’s lobby and switch the generators off. You will cut the lights. You will not stop once you begin."
Vanessa’s mind chopped the command into actions. East vault, blue case, under the balcony, hold. Nice and simple. "Why?" she asked, because the why mattered. "Who are you?"
There was a pause — the kind that said the man liked the question. "A businessman," he said finally. "Someone who buys things. Think of me as a collector. This city will owe me a favor. These men will recoup what they’ve lost. You and your friend, will exit clean and unbloodied."
Vanessa didn’t trust a man who used the word ’clean’. She opened her mouth. The speaker barked, cutting her off with a single instruction. "Move. Now. Your first mistake will be fatal."
She looked at Dickson. His face had gone steel. He pushed out a breath and then began to move like a man in a trance.
They split—clinical, necessary. Vanessa traced the route toward the east wing; her boots made no sound. Dickson disappeared into the darker throat of the teller area toward the generator room.
———
Vanessa froze under the low vault light.
The east vault was a mess.
Locks torn. Hinges bent. Deposit boxes swung open like dead mouths. Money was scattered across the floor in slick, greasy piles. Footprints crisscrossed through crisp bills. Someone had sprinted through here, and hard.
She forced her breath steady. Camera angles. Microphones. All the things that let a control-mad man laugh at you through a speaker.
There, behind the third deposit box.
The safe.
Small. Matte-blue. Out of place on a bed of greenbacks.
Her hand went out before her brain fully caught up. She could feel the speaker’s voice in her teeth — the threat still humbling the air.
The safe sat where the man had said it would. The world narrowed to that cube.
Vanessa crouched. She scanned now with the kind of fast, trained eye that lived in the bones: seams, tamper marks, a faint smear of grease on the underside. The lock was off.
Someone had opened it for them.
Wrong—wrong sequence. Wrong set-up. The flicker in her gut turned hard. This wasn’t the neat plan on the speaker’s timetable anymore. It was a scramble someone else had orchestrated.
She slid her fingers into the safe anyway. Cool metal. Something small. She felt for shape. She found plastic. Buttons. A small, rigid rectangle that hummed under her palm.
She froze.
She should have kept her hand out, maybe even lifted it up and shown the camera. Maybe that would’ve earned a round of sarcasm and nothing more.
Then—BAM.
The shot ripped through the bank like a cleaver. It was close. Too close. Glass shattered near the teller cages. The sound tracked up her spine and the world snapped raw.
Screams. A single, thin sound that kept folding into itself. Someone in the back of the lobby started to cry. Another voice started yelling. Metal clanged—one of the deposit boxes slamming open.
Her hand tightened around the rectangle.
"Pick it up, girl!" the voice snapped, cold with amusement. "If you don’t hurry the next bullet goes into a person’s head."
Vanessa’s mouth went dry. Her training—police training, years behind a badge—kicked like muscle memory. Think. Move. Do. Breathe. The rest was show for other people.
The lights died.
Pitch black.
The bank folded into sudden night. The emergency panels not turning on. The chandelier just a ghost. The only sound was static, and each man’s breath.
She almost dropped the object because her brain wanted to run. Her other hand found the rail of the vault lip and held it like a lifeline. She could not see her own fingers.
"Don’t even try to hide," the voice said, amused again. "I can see you just fine."
Night-vision. They’d set cameras with infra.
Vanessa swallowed. Her pulse beat hard under her jaw. She steadied her forearm and pushed her hand deeper into the safe until the rectangle sat fully in her palm.
It was not a case. Not what she expected. No file. No cash bundle. No simple mechanical key.
It looked like a phone from the outside—blocky, old-school. But whoever made it had bolted it down with screws and wires that would not have been put there for decoration.
It was warm.
The device beeped once. A soft, measured sound that felt like a countdown heartbeat.
She held it up, small as a sacrament. It felt heavy as a brick.
"Nice," the voice breathed from the speaker. "You found it. The trigger. The main switch. Congratulations."
She looked at the blue box, at the wires snaking into its belly, at the single red button at the top. Her finger hovered over it like a diver over a ledge.
The speaker chuckled. "Oh, don’t worry. I don’t want you to push it. I could, at any time. The power’s also in my hand. I just like you holding it. It’s more fun."
Vanessa’s knuckles went white.
The voice leaned into the static, as if savoring her pause. "People like to know they have a choice. They like the illusion."
She forced a dry laugh. "What do you want? Money? A plane? Security?"
"You’re blunt. I like that." The man spoke slowly, each syllable measured like a scalpel. "No. Money is messy. I collect favors. Information. Control. But that’s not the point. The point is compliance."
Vanessa felt the device pulse lightly, as if a tiny muscle inside it flexed.
"Here’s the truth, girl—you’re holding the detonator for every wired package I hid in this building. All of them linked to that button you’re clutching. These bombs are the insurance. The bargaining chip. You hold it, you feel I own this whole room even if you can’t see me.
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Chapter 375
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