Title: Between the Lines of Midnight
Episode 16 — The Line They Crossed
Adeola’s hands shook as he held the note, the paper crumpling slowly under the pressure of his grip. Zion could see the shift in him — not panic, not fear… but something colder. Something lethal.
“Let me see it,” Zion said softly.
Adeola hesitated, then handed her the note.
The words were simple, written in bold black ink:
“We know where she works.
Tick. Tock.”
Zion felt her stomach drop. Her workplace — a place she walked into every day without thinking, without fear — suddenly felt like a trap.
Michael cursed under his breath. “This is getting insane. They’re moving too fast, too close.”
Adeola turned sharply. “That’s the point. They want control. They want me rattled.”
“And it’s working,” Michael shot back.
Adeola didn’t respond. He just paced, jaw clenched, chest rising and falling like he was fighting to keep himself from breaking something.
Zion stood slowly. “Adeola…”
He stopped.
She walked closer, gently placing her hand on his arm.
“You can’t fight them like this. Not with anger. Not alone.”
For a moment, Adeola closed his eyes — just feeling her touch. Grounding himself.
Then he turned fully to her. His voice was low, steady, but laced with a pain she wasn’t used to hearing from him.
“I thought keeping distance would protect you. I thought staying quiet would keep this away from you.” He swallowed hard. “But they already crossed the line. And they won’t stop.”
Zion stepped closer. “Then we face it together.”
Michael scoffed. “Together? Zion, this is not a movie. These people aren’t bluffing.”
“I know,” she said firmly. “But leaving Adeola to fight alone won’t help any of us.”
Adeola stared at her, something soft flickering behind the darkness in his eyes.
Michael rubbed his head. “Okay, fine. So what’s the plan? Because we have 71 hours left, and they clearly don’t mind pushing boundaries.”
Adeola took a deep breath, then walked to his laptop.
“I need to see what else is on that flash drive,” he said. “There may be clues.”
Michael leaned forward. “Or traps.”
“Either way,” Adeola replied, “we don’t have a choice.”
He opened the flash drive folder again. Aside from the video, there was another file — hidden in a subfolder.
A document named:
“PROJECT BLUE SPINE — MASTER RECORD.”
Michael frowned. “Blue Spine? That sounds military or government-level.”
Adeola clicked it.
The file opened to a list of names — influential businessmen, officials, underground operators, even two foreign investors. Every page was filled with transactions, secret assets, criminal deals, and coded communications.
Zion’s eyes grew wide. “You copied all of this?”
“I couldn’t let them hide it,” Adeola said. “I was supposed to design a system that would make these records disappear.”
Michael blew out a breath. “Bro… you’re holding the equivalent of a political bomb.”
Adeola nodded. “Which is why they want it back.”
Zion stepped closer. “But what do they want you to choose? You give this to them or… what?”
Adeola hesitated, then pointed to the last page.
At the bottom of the document was a handwritten line:
“Return everything quietly, or we remove the problem permanently.”
Zion swallowed. “The problem… meaning you.”
“And anyone close to me,” Adeola said quietly.
Michael shook his head. “Then we need help. Real help. Police, contacts, someone.”
“No police,” Adeola said sharply. “These people have reach. They infiltrated a hospital. They probably have officers on their payroll.”
“So what then?” Zion whispered.
Adeola’s eyes hardened.
“We disappear.”
Michael blinked. “Disappear where?”
“A safe house I haven’t used in two years,” Adeola said. “Off-grid. No digital trace. No cameras. No neighbors. They won’t find us easily.”
Zion stared at him. “You want me to leave my home… my job… just like that?”
Adeola stepped closer — eyes intense, voice low and trembling.
“I want you alive.”
Zion felt her heart twist painfully.
Before she could respond, a loud ping came from Adeola’s phone.
A message.
Unknown number.
No name.
Adeola opened it — and froze.
Michael leaned over. “What is it?”
Adeola turned the screen for them to see.
It was a picture.
A picture of Zion, taken that morning outside her compound.
Different angle. Close. Clear.
Zion stumbled back, her hand flying to her mouth.
“That’s… that’s from today. That’s from TODAY.”
Michael cursed loudly. “They’re already watching her. We need to move. NOW.”
Adeola closed the phone, grabbed Zion’s hand, and looked at her with a seriousness that sent shivers down her spine.
“Pack a bag,” he said.
“We leave in ten minutes.”
Episode 16 — The Line They Crossed
Adeola’s hands shook as he held the note, the paper crumpling slowly under the pressure of his grip. Zion could see the shift in him — not panic, not fear… but something colder. Something lethal.
“Let me see it,” Zion said softly.
Adeola hesitated, then handed her the note.
The words were simple, written in bold black ink:
“We know where she works.
Tick. Tock.”
Zion felt her stomach drop. Her workplace — a place she walked into every day without thinking, without fear — suddenly felt like a trap.
Michael cursed under his breath. “This is getting insane. They’re moving too fast, too close.”
Adeola turned sharply. “That’s the point. They want control. They want me rattled.”
“And it’s working,” Michael shot back.
Adeola didn’t respond. He just paced, jaw clenched, chest rising and falling like he was fighting to keep himself from breaking something.
Zion stood slowly. “Adeola…”
He stopped.
She walked closer, gently placing her hand on his arm.
“You can’t fight them like this. Not with anger. Not alone.”
For a moment, Adeola closed his eyes — just feeling her touch. Grounding himself.
Then he turned fully to her. His voice was low, steady, but laced with a pain she wasn’t used to hearing from him.
“I thought keeping distance would protect you. I thought staying quiet would keep this away from you.” He swallowed hard. “But they already crossed the line. And they won’t stop.”
Zion stepped closer. “Then we face it together.”
Michael scoffed. “Together? Zion, this is not a movie. These people aren’t bluffing.”
“I know,” she said firmly. “But leaving Adeola to fight alone won’t help any of us.”
Adeola stared at her, something soft flickering behind the darkness in his eyes.
Michael rubbed his head. “Okay, fine. So what’s the plan? Because we have 71 hours left, and they clearly don’t mind pushing boundaries.”
Adeola took a deep breath, then walked to his laptop.
“I need to see what else is on that flash drive,” he said. “There may be clues.”
Michael leaned forward. “Or traps.”
“Either way,” Adeola replied, “we don’t have a choice.”
He opened the flash drive folder again. Aside from the video, there was another file — hidden in a subfolder.
A document named:
“PROJECT BLUE SPINE — MASTER RECORD.”
Michael frowned. “Blue Spine? That sounds military or government-level.”
Adeola clicked it.
The file opened to a list of names — influential businessmen, officials, underground operators, even two foreign investors. Every page was filled with transactions, secret assets, criminal deals, and coded communications.
Zion’s eyes grew wide. “You copied all of this?”
“I couldn’t let them hide it,” Adeola said. “I was supposed to design a system that would make these records disappear.”
Michael blew out a breath. “Bro… you’re holding the equivalent of a political bomb.”
Adeola nodded. “Which is why they want it back.”
Zion stepped closer. “But what do they want you to choose? You give this to them or… what?”
Adeola hesitated, then pointed to the last page.
At the bottom of the document was a handwritten line:
“Return everything quietly, or we remove the problem permanently.”
Zion swallowed. “The problem… meaning you.”
“And anyone close to me,” Adeola said quietly.
Michael shook his head. “Then we need help. Real help. Police, contacts, someone.”
“No police,” Adeola said sharply. “These people have reach. They infiltrated a hospital. They probably have officers on their payroll.”
“So what then?” Zion whispered.
Adeola’s eyes hardened.
“We disappear.”
Michael blinked. “Disappear where?”
“A safe house I haven’t used in two years,” Adeola said. “Off-grid. No digital trace. No cameras. No neighbors. They won’t find us easily.”
Zion stared at him. “You want me to leave my home… my job… just like that?”
Adeola stepped closer — eyes intense, voice low and trembling.
“I want you alive.”
Zion felt her heart twist painfully.
Before she could respond, a loud ping came from Adeola’s phone.
A message.
Unknown number.
No name.
Adeola opened it — and froze.
Michael leaned over. “What is it?”
Adeola turned the screen for them to see.
It was a picture.
A picture of Zion, taken that morning outside her compound.
Different angle. Close. Clear.
Zion stumbled back, her hand flying to her mouth.
“That’s… that’s from today. That’s from TODAY.”
Michael cursed loudly. “They’re already watching her. We need to move. NOW.”
Adeola closed the phone, grabbed Zion’s hand, and looked at her with a seriousness that sent shivers down her spine.
“Pack a bag,” he said.
“We leave in ten minutes.”
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