I didnât even wait for ARIA to finish her analysis. My thumb was already speed-dialing Charlotte.
"Peter? Whatâsâ"
"Weâre going to Miami. Lincoln Heights Airport. Forty minutes. Donât ask questions, donât bring anyone else, and for the love of God donât fucking tell anyone."
"Peter, is this about the compaâ"
"Forty minutes. Move."
Click. Call ended. Because in warfare, you donât waste time on Q&A. You compartmentalize. You control the narrative. And you sure as hell donât let an emotional heiress spiral into a TED Talk on feelings when the bullets are already flying.
I moved through my room like an algorithm designed for violence. Black pants. Dark gray henley. Boots that could sprint, kick, or stomp depending on the level of foreplay required. This wasnât a boardroom negotiation. This was a hunt.
Quantum earbud firstâARIAâs invisible little miracle. Neural interface, thought-to-thought link, her voice whispering straight into my skull like a sexy ghost haunting only me.
"Neural link established, Master," ARIA purred. "I can see through your eyes and process in real-time."
Perfect. If I was Batman, she was Oracleâexcept hornier and with fewer ethical restraints.
Passport next. Redundant since Charlotteâs Gulfstream G650 made TSA obsolete, but paranoia kept you alive. Two phones: one clean for "hi mom" calls, one dirty and packed with ARIAâs cyber-warfare toys. Laptop tooâcustom rig, ARIA full combat intelligence suite ready to hijack satellites or crash Wall Street if I sneezed too hard.
Then I headed downstairs where my family sat marinating in shock from todayâs Madison revelations. Reality TV couldnât script this better.
"Iâm going to be away for a few days," I announced, dropping my voice into that register that made people instinctively shut up and listen. "Charlotte needs help with company business."
Mom looked up from stress-organizing like she was about to interrogate me with Homeland Security authority. "Peter, what kind ofâ"
"The kind that pays for this house," I cut in. Not cruel, not softâjust final. Conversation closed.
Before anyone could stall me with inconvenient morality, I reached for Madisonâs hand. "Come on, princess. You wanted the full ride? Showtime."
Her eyes lit up like Christmas had come early and the gift was danger wrapped in leather. Sheâd been begging for thisâraw, unfiltered Peter Carter and Eros, not just the cleaned-up stories after.
Emmaâs voice followed us, thin with worry. "Be careful..."
Cute. But careful was a word other people lived by.
*
Madisonâs BMW purred down the street, her hands steady even though she could feel the heat coming off me like a barely-leashed wildfire.
"So," she said with that forced, flirty calm she used when adrenaline made her brave. "Are we about to commit crimes?"
I smirked, leaning closer, letting my voice drip with the kind of menace that doubled as foreplay. "Weâre about to prevent them." Beat. "But Madisonâlisten closely. Charlotte doesnât know whatâs really happening. She canât. Family on the line makes people stupid. Emotional. Weak. And weakness gets people dead."
Her knuckles whitened on the wheel. "So whatâs really happening?"
I looked at her thenâmy proud little cheerleader, eyes blazing like she thought she was ready for the main stage.
And I almost laughed.
Because if she really wanted to know what was happening, she had no idea just how dark the script was about to get.
I kept my voice low, like a hitman doing TED Talk. "They iced her father. Not natural causesâmanufactured stress, systematic pressure until his heart clocked out. Three ex-CIA rejects are stalking her mom Margaret in Miami. Theyâll bag her, wave her around like a coupon, and make Charlotte hand over her shares."
Madisonâs hands clenched on the steering wheel so tight I thought the BMW was about to file an abuse complaint.
"And Charlotte doesnât know?"
"She doesnât need to know until itâs over. Emotional people make bad calls. Tears and tactics donât mixâunless youâre in a soap opera, and spoiler: weâre not."
"Whatâs our play?"
"I hunt the hunters. You babysit Charlotte."
Madisonâs smile? Pure shark. Victoriaâs Secret catalog if they started a Predator Drone division."I can work with that."
Lincoln Heights wasnât an airportâitâs Beverly Hills with runways. Commercial flyers are basically peasants compared to the oligarch circus here. Private jets lined up like expensive toys, security guys built like they were drafted from an NFL farm team, and enough Botox in the lounge to paralyze an army.
Charlotte was waiting inside, pacing like a coked-up tiger in a designer pantsuit that cost more than most peopleâs student loans. Normally sheâs ice-princess perfect. Tonight? Makeup cracking, stress-frizz in her hairâbasically Vogue cover girl doing her first DUI mugshot.
"Peter! Thank God youâre here. Whatâs going on?"
"Company crisis," I said, slicing through her panic like Gordon Ramsay with a vendetta. "We handle it in person."
Her eyes ping-ponged between me and Madison. "Why is Maddie here?"
"Because she understands corporate warfare," I said. Translation:
Because you panic like a freshman at her first frat party, and Madison plays chess while eating men alive for breakfast.
Madison swanned forward, voice dipped in venom and honey. "Charlotte, baby, Peterâs got this. You? Just breathe pretty."
Hierarchy established: Charlotte = client. Madison = power broker. Me? The nuke in human skin.
*
Her jet sat on the runway like a Bond villainâs side pieceâsleek, arrogant, begging to be Instagrammed. $75 million of airborne flex. "QUANTUM TECH" written down the side in the kind of font that screams
Daddy built an empire, and I inherited it with matching heels.
Walking up the stairs felt like entering Versailles with turbulence. Inside? Cream leather seats that smelled richer than most families, wood polished so hard I saw my sins in it, and carpet so thick it probably had its own mortgage.
Fourteen seats, each a personal suite. Legroom that could host a yoga retreat. The conference table practically whispered
boardroom threesomes.
The galley? Five-star restaurant disguised as a kitchen. Wine rack deeper than my patience for Charlotteâs meltdowns. Coffee machine that probably requires a PhD in engineering just to press "brew."
But the real flex was the tech suite. Satellite comms, multiple screens, secure networks. Basically, a war room wearing Gucci.
Once we were airborne, I cracked open my laptop and jacked into the jetâs systems. Couldâve lit the cabin with raw intelâtargets, patterns, their digital fingerprints. But no. I played it soft. Boring financial projections on the screens, because Charlotte wasnât ready for
Jason Bourne: The PowerPoint Edition.
She didnât need truth. She needed calm. And calm meant lies.
I shut my eyes and letting the system combat flow in me. Floor plans, weapons specs, exit routesâit was like Pornhub for psychopaths, except instead of naked people it was blueprints and suppressed MP5s.
"ARIA, give me Margaretâs status."
"Target currently lives at the Fontainebleau Miami," ARIA purred in my head, like Siri if sheâd done black ops. "But right now sheâs attending Amanda Kellermanâs engagement party. Second marriage. Very exclusive. Amandaâs in the rooftop venue, being watched by Ellis, Samuel Sloane, and Oliver Kaneâthree ex-CIA clowns LARPing as professionals, blending into the hotel like herpes at Coachella."."
"Timeline?"
"Theyâll wait until the party at night. Grab her during champagne chaos. Too many people drunk-dancing to Dua Lipa to notice one rich mom getting bagged."
Charlotte was frowning at the display in front of her, scanning what she
thought
were quarterly reports. Poor girl thought she was doing homework while I was quietly planning homicides.
"Peter, these numbers look... actually better than expected. Is this really crisis mode?"
"The crisis isnât what you
see
," I said, voice wrapped in silk but sharpened like a shiv. "Itâs whatâs happening behind the curtain. Competitors, spies, threats you donât see until your throatâs cut."
Translation:
Stay in your Barbie dream boardroom, honey. Daddyâs doing the real work.
Madison flicked me a subtle nod. She got it. She always got it. Keep Charlotte pacified with spreadsheets while the adults sharpen the knives.
"So whatâs our strategy in Miami?" Charlotte asked, her tone all MBA-case-study serious.
"Intelligence gathering," I said smoothly. "Meet allies. Eliminate threats before they eliminate us."
That last part made her blink. Madison, though? Her lips curved in a smile like sheâd just been handed a live grenade and thought,
finally, some fun.
"Peter," Madison whispered to me softly, studying me like she could see the shadows flexing behind my eyes. "What exactly are we about to do in Miami?"
I opened my eyes. Whatever softness Iâd been wearing for Charlotte vanished like makeup in a hurricane. Gone was Boyfriend Peterâ˘, Empire Builder Peterâ˘, PR-friendly golden boy. Sitting there was something else entirelyâsomething that didnât negotiate, didnât flinch, didnât blink.
"Weâre going hunting," I said, voice calm enough to freeze champagne mid-pour. "And weâre about to remind some ex-spooks what happens when they aim at the wrong family."
The Gulfstream hummed south, a luxury missile carrying three very different archetypes: the heiress cluelessly reading fake spreadsheets, the queenpin smiling like she already owned the war, and meâthe main event, the nightmare with better hair.
And through it all, one thought burned like gasoline in my skull:
These washed-up CIA dickheads had no idea theyâd just signed up for my reality show.
Spoiler alert: nobody leaves with all their limbs.