Home The Maid's Deception Chapter 218 - 219: Aria has been kidnapped

The Maid's Deception

Chapter 218 - 219: Aria has been kidnapped
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Chapter 218: Chapter 219: Aria has been kidnapped

HAROLD’S POV — EARLIER THAT MORNING

He’d run the plan seventeen times in his head before authorizing it. Every contingency accounted for. Every variable controlled.

The hospital was the right location....public enough that it wouldn’t raise immediate suspicion, controlled enough that the right paperwork could get anyone almost anywhere. He’d spent three weeks studying Mont Senai’s transfer protocols. Three weeks identifying the corridors with the lowest camera density. Three weeks finding the staff rotations, the security checkpoints, the patterns.

He’d lost his company because of Aria Chen. His reputation. His freedom....or what remained of it, the lawyers buying him time while the noose of prosecution tightened around his neck.

Everything. He had lost everything.

And she’d walked back into medicine like it was nothing. Like destroying fifteen years of his work was a footnote in her life. Like Harold Ashford didn’t exist, didn’t matter, wasn’t sitting in his rented apartment counting down the days until a courtroom took whatever she’d left him.

She’d taken everything from him.

He intended to return the favor before she could testify.

His phone buzzed. A text from the team lead: Package secured. ETA to secondary location 40 minutes.

Harold set down his coffee and allowed himself one moment of satisfaction.

Then he got up and left for the warehouse.

He had a conversation to have with Miss Chen.

****

The first thing she became aware of was cold. Concrete under her, air that smelled of dust and metal and something chemical underneath.

The second thing was that her wrists were bound behind her.

She didn’t open her eyes immediately. She lay still and breathed and took inventory. Her head felt packed with cotton. Her neck ached precisely where the needle had gone in. Her legs were numb from the knees down....secondary sedative through the IV port, probably, while she was unconscious.

She was alive. She was breathing. Nothing felt broken.

Okay, she told herself. Okay. Think.

She opened her eyes.

Warehouse. Large, mostly empty, the kind of industrial space that cities forgot about. Skylights overhead showing afternoon light....she’d been out for hours then. Concrete floor. Metal walls. The distant sound of traffic, muffled enough to suggest significant distance from the main roads.

She was on the floor in the center of the space, wrists zip-tied behind her, ankles bound as well. A single utility light hung above her, throwing harsh illumination in a circle that made the edges of the warehouse feel darker by contrast.

She was alone.

And then she wasn’t.

Footsteps. Measured, deliberate, coming from somewhere beyond the light’s reach. A figure walking toward her with the unhurried confidence of someone who believed completely that they were in control of the situation.

He stepped into the light.

Harold Ashford looked like a man who had shed every social restraint he’d ever possessed. The polished executive she’d researched...the tailored suits and the manicured image...was gone. In its place was someone stripped down to something rawer and more dangerous. He was thinner than his photographs. His eyes had the specific quality of someone who hadn’t slept properly in weeks and had stopped caring about that particular problem.

He looked at her for a long moment.

She looked back at him, and she made sure her expression gave him nothing.

"Hello, Miss Chen," Harold said. His voice was almost pleasant. Conversational. The voice of a man sitting down for a business meeting rather than standing over a bound woman in an abandoned warehouse.

He tilted his head.

"Let’s talk about what you did to my company."

****

DAMIEN’S POV

He was in the middle of a board meeting when his phone buzzed.

He ignored the first one. Standard protocol....calls during board meetings went to voicemail unless flagged as priority. His executives were mid-presentation, walking through Q4 projections for the Southeast Asian expansion, and Damien had been half-listening, making mental notes, his fingers turning his pen slowly between his fingers the way they always did when he was processing multiple streams of information simultaneously.

The second buzz came thirty seconds after the first.

Then a third. Immediate. Back to back.

Priority override. Seb’s code.

Something cold moved through Damien’s chest. Seb never used priority override. In eight months of round-the-clock assignment to Aria, Sebastian Kaur had used priority override exactly zero times. He was the kind of man who could watch a building catch fire and communicate it with the measured calm of someone reporting mild weather.

Three consecutive calls meant something had already gone wrong. Something that couldn’t wait sixty seconds.

"Excuse me." Damien stood. The executives stopped mid-sentence. He was already walking toward the door, phone at his ear, before anyone had processed that the meeting was over.

The call connected on the first ring.

"Sir." Seb’s voice was flat. Professional. And underneath the professionalism, something tight and controlled that Damien had never heard from him before. "We have a situation."

"Talk."

"Miss Chen has been taken. Fake transfer team, three men, needle sedative in the corridor outside Bay 7. They had a vehicle waiting...ambulance, plates partially obscured. I was unable to prevent the extraction." A pause that lasted exactly one second. "I’m sorry, sir."

The words landed in Damien’s chest like something physical. Like a detonation that happened in complete silence.

He stopped walking. Stood in the middle of the corridor outside his boardroom with forty floors of Manhattan visible through the floor-to-ceiling windows, and he was absolutely, completely still.

"How long ago," he said. His voice didn’t sound like his own.

"Fourteen minutes. I’ve been trying to track the vehicle but they switched plates within the first six blocks....I lost visual confirmation at the intersection of 44th and Lexington. Last partial plate logged. I’m sending everything to Marcus now."

"Where are you?"

"Still at Metropolitan General. Waiting for your instructions."

"Stay there. Lock down everything....cameras, staff statements, the paramedics who were involved. Don’t let hospital security touch anything, don’t let them call the police yet, don’t let them contaminate the scene." Damien’s voice was steady. Completely, dangerously steady. "Tell me about the men."

"Three. Two presented as paramedics. One was staged in a supply alcove...I missed him on my sweep. That’s on me, sir." Another tight pause. "He’s the one who administered the sedative. Professional execution. This was planned. Significant planning, not improvised."

Harold.

The name crystallized in Damien’s mind with absolute certainty. Harold Ashford. The meeting Marcus had flagged, the fifty-thousand-dollar payment to an unidentified party, the ominous quiet of a man with nothing left to lose who had apparently been spending that quiet building something.

Richard’s warning from three nights ago echoed with nauseating precision: Men in that position become desperate. Dangerous.

He’d doubled her security. He’d reviewed the protocols. He’d told Marcus to accelerate the investigation into Harold’s recent activities.

It hadn’t been enough.

He turned and walked back toward his office. His hands were perfectly steady. His breathing was controlled. If anyone had passed him in that corridor they would have seen a man walking with purpose, nothing more. They would not have seen the thing happening underneath....the cold, absolute, consuming fury beginning to build in the place where his composure lived.

He held it. Contained it. Let it compress rather than expand.

He would need it later.

Right now he needed to function.

"Get me Marcus," he said into the phone as he pushed through the door into his private office. "Conference him in now."

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