The silence in the alley was comforting, yet Ethan's heart raced. Gunfire still echoed in the distance. Natalie looked at him with calmness in her piercing eyes, as if assessing just what kind of man he really was.
"You're lucky I found you first," she began. "They cared about the ring. Had they snatched it, you would have already been dead."
Ethan's eyes slipped down towards his pocket. The Phoenix Ring glittered softly in the sunlight, reminding him of a vague life he never chose.
"I didn't even know who they are," he voiced.
"Then it is time for you to know," said Natalie. "With Victor Vale's fall came the power vacuum. The ones he kept in check — the gangs, the corporations, the politicians — they all want what he built. That ring means you are his heir."
Ethan reclined against his seat. "I am not anyone's heir. All I want is my life back."
She smiled weakly. "In Eastbridge, you don't get your old life back. You just build a new one — on the ashes."
Those words pierced him deeper than he would ever admit. He turned his eyes to the city again, where neon headlights streamed, glass towers soared, and citizens marched so hurriedly — as if running from something.
He understood that feeling.
The car rode through a narrow back street until the constant dull roar of traffic faded from behind them. Finally, they'd parked right in front of an abandoned warehouse beside the docks. It looked like a ruin until Natalie pulled open a side door. What Ethan saw were cameras, motion sensors, and steel reinforcement concealed behind old bricks.
"Welcome to our safehouse," she said, walking inside. "You can rest here for a while."
Ethan followed her in. The place smelled of dust and metal. It also contained armaments hanging on the wall, screens showing real-time footage of various streets, and a single desk piled up with files.
"You live here?" he asked.
She shook her head. "No one lives here. We just use it when the city gets dangerous."
"Seems like it's already dangerous," Ethan muttered.
Natalie turned back to him. "You don't understand yet, Ethan. You're not a ghost from the past anymore. You're a threat. The people who shot at you weren't just some random hitmen. They work for the Locke Group."
Ethan froze. "Damian Locke?"
"Yeah," she said. "Your ex-fiancée's new boyfriend. His family business runs deep connections with the same underworld Vale once ruled. And now you are free, they think you are coming for what is theirs."
He gave a dry laugh. "I wanted coffee. Now there is a death squad after me."
"At least you know what you are dealing with," Natalie said. "They won't stop until you either surrender that ring or use it."
Ethan cast an eye over the Phoenix symbol again, recalling the words of Vale: "When the fire dies, light it again."
Maybe the old man had foreseen this. Maybe he had meant for Ethan to rise, not hide.
Hours turned into a fashion show, and Ethan sat on the metal cot, at the very corner of the room, watching the tiny screen of an old television. The news broadcast was on mute, announcing the gala by the Locke Group hosted by—himself. A sharp beam of white, Claire's face was plastered beside his—a smile shared for the camera.
His heart sank. He had given up everything for her—his freedom, his family's respect, his peace, and here she was, standing beside the man who wanted him dead.
Natalie entered and held a cup of coffee. "Still watching her?"
Ethan still couldn't avert his eyes. "She's involved. She knew."
"Maybe. Maybe not. But either way, she's on the wrong side now," Natalie said. "You want to survive? You need allies. And skills."
Ethan raised an eyebrow. "You think I didn't learn in prison?"
She smirked. "You learned to fight. I'm talking about how to win."
That tone of hers—confident and possibly challenging. And for the first time in years, within him ignited a tingle—a feeling neither of anger nor pain but rather of focus.
"Then teach me," he demanded. "If Vale trusted you, I will too."
Natalie nodded once. "Training starts tomorrow. But tonight—"
She paused, looking at the security feed. "You might want to see this."
The surveillance screen showed the outside view of the warehouse. Two black cars had stopped across the street, men wearing suits exiting weapons in hand.
"Already?" Ethan asked.
"They're faster than I thought," Natalie said as she picked up a pistol from the table. "Looks like Damian really wants that ring."
Ethan's jaw clenched. "Then let us give him a reason to regret it."
They moved swiftly—Natalie turned off the lights, Ethan slid behind a steel beam. The sound of approaching footsteps rang heavy and sharp; a metallic click pierced the air, the sound of a gun being cocked.
The first three men had entered. Ethan waited for the three to pass, then swung his metal bar into the man's ribs with all his force and a cry fell from his lips. Natalie shot the second man before he even had time to deploy his weapon.
The last man turned to aim—Ethan leaped, gun firing wildly into the ceiling as they crashed down onto the floor. He sank his fist into the man's jaw. Once. Twice. With a third punch, hard.
The man became limp.
Ethan stood, panting. His knuckles were pouring blood, yet, he hardly felt it. Had he really been ignorant of how strong he had become, or how much that rage still burned inside him?
"Not bad," said Natalie, lowering the gun. "Looks like prison has made you tougher than I thought."
Ethan peered at the men lying unconscious. "It made me smarter, too. They'll send more."
"Then we move," she said. "I'm going to find a place uptown. Somewhere they won't expect."
As she packed up the weapons, Ethan grabbed his duffel bag and took one last look at the darkened screens.
Claire's face flashed again on a news clip—her perfect smile hiding the knife in her hand.
He muttered under his breath, "You wanted me gone, Claire. But I'm back."
Natalie turned. "What did you say?"
"Nothing," he replied, forcing a faint smile. "Let's go before they wake up."
They slipped out the back exit into the night air. The city lights shimmered far away like bright candles, unattainable—like everything he'd once lost.
As they walked into the shadows, Ethan looked down at the Phoenix Ring in his hand. The metal pulsed faintly with warmth, like a heartbeat.
He didn't believe in destiny. Yet something about this felt like the start of one.
Somewhere deep inside Eastbridge, someone was already whispering his name again. The Phoenix has returned.