The First Falling Domino in a Sinister Game




When one domino falls, the whole sinister game collapses. Ashford’s financial network
teeters on the brink of collapse, as Dar and her team weave a complex web of disinformation designed to create panic.
London – Ashford’s Office
The first domino fell.
Marcus Ashford stood in his Mayfair study, phone pressed to his ear, listening to dead air where Viktor Petrov’s voice should have been. The Russian financier had been a reliable conduit for nearly eight years—laundering funds through his network of shell companies, asking no questions, taking his percentage with mechanical efficiency. Now, twelve hours after Kozlov’s death hit the international news wires, Petrov had gone silent.
Ashford ended the call and immediately dialled another number. This one rang four times before connecting to voicemail. He didn’t leave a message.
The third number he tried was answered, but the voice on the other end was clipped and nervous. “I can’t talk right now.”
“We need to discuss—”
“I said I can’t talk. Don’t call this number again.” The line went dead.
Ashford set the phone down with deliberate care, his hand steady despite the icy dread spreading through his chest. He walked to the window overlooking the quiet street below, where morning fog clung to the pavement like a shroud. Somewhere in that fog, the walls were closing in.
He’d built his network carefully over two decades—each connection vetted, each relationship cultivated with patience and precision. The architecture was supposed to be resilient and compartmentalized. One death shouldn’t cause this kind of cascade.
But Kozlov hadn’t just been killed. He’d been executed. The news reports were sparse on details, hinting at a Russian organized crime hit, but Ashford’s sources had filled in the gaps: a coordinated operation involving multiple agencies, including the Chechens, evidence that appeared to materialize from nowhere, financial records that Kozlov swore he’d destroyed years ago suddenly resurfacing with damning clarity.
First Volkov, and now someone had reached into Kozlov’s world and pulled it apart from the inside.
He faced pursuit from that person.
His phone buzzed. A text from Heinrich Volker in Berlin: Need to postpone our arrangement. Indefinitely.
Another thread severed.
Ashford returned to his desk and opened his laptop, pulling up the encrypted communication platform he used for his most sensitive contacts. The interface showed a network map—nodes representing his various associates, lines connecting them in a web of mutual interest and shared risk.
Over the past twelve hours, seven nodes had gone dark.
He stared at the screen, watching the network fragment in real-time, and felt something he hadn’t experienced in years: genuine fear.
Hereford – Safehouse
She had braced herself for a sharp emotional blow when Kozlov died.
Instead, she felt the pattern change.
That was worse, perhaps.
Or better.
Dar no longer knew.
She stole a peek at Callum, who was standing by the office window, staring at the framed picture of Zoe on the wall. Though she longed to know his thoughts, asking him felt like a path she didn’t want to take. Not today.
They were good at different halves of the same thing. Dar could see the invisible architecture of pressure. Callum understood what pressure did to a man holding a weapon, a command, a secret. Between them, they could build a haunting. A fragile hope fluttered in her heart, like a butterfly’s wing, pondering whether it was even possible to nurture something more. She used to feel that way about Rhys, too.
She snapped back to immediate reality, quickly glancing at Callum as they heard the soft creak along the floorboards outside her office.
Silence had long since recoiled when the men had returned earlier from Wroclaw. Logan and Malik had poked their heads in for a quick greeting before they left to unpack and retrace all the steps they had taken to get ready for their mission.
Now Rhys stepped into the back hall, his boots as familiar in their echo as her own heartbeat. He carried exhaustion like a second skin, the weight of the mission still clinging to him. His dark wool jumper and tactical trousers hinted that while he’d shed his field wear, Rhys had ferried the mission home.
Behind him, Logan pillared through the doorway with his usual silent sweep of assessment before he settled on leaning against the office door frame and viewing the occupants. Malik came up from the basement, going to the kitchen, cracking open cupboards and clicking on the teakettle.
Logan’s gaze lingered on Dar, cataloguing her every line: breathing, steady; pulse, tethered; posture, unbroken. Then he drifted to the screens. “What did we miss?” he asked, voice low as the machinery.
Sean spun halfway around in his chair, laptop open on his thighs. “Dar built ghosts.”
Logan’s brow twitched.
“Don’t make it weird,” Sean added quickly. “It’s literally accurate.”
At Rhys’s arrival in full view, Logan stepped forward, folding his arms against his chest. His dark lenses glinted in the screen‐light. “Dar,” he said, “fill me in.”
Callum shifted back half a step, giving them the view.
Dar drew the sprawling network map onto the largest screen—a living fractal of lines and nodes. “Kozlov’s death rippled instability through Ashford’s web. Channels have snapped, meetings are vanishing, funds are flickering in and out of dormancy. Dormant accounts light up for a heartbeat, then flicker off. Transactions abort mid‐flight. The structure’s fracturing.”
Rhys leaned closer. “And Ashford?”
“Still at the centre,” Dar said, voice flat, “but weakened. Fewer hands reaching for him than there were hours ago.”
Logan’s arms tightened. “Meaning?”
“Meaning his contacts are nervous. Some are stepping back. Some are watching to see whether he’s contaminated.” Dar paused. “We’re encouraging that interpretation.”
Rhys looked at her then. “How?”
Dar inhaled, steady. “We shifted the narrative. Injected small, plausible misinformation around him—nothing overt, just enough to hint at rival factions circling after Kozlov’s fall.”
Sean lifted a finger. “Ghosts.”
Rhys said nothing as Callum elaborated: “Separate signals, varying styles, distinct delivery channels. No overlap that points back to us. We want Ashford believing that multiple predators see him as vulnerable.”
Rhys’s gaze flicked to Callum. “Your idea?”
Callum shrugged. “Dar designed the architecture. I helped ratchet the pressure.”
There it was again. The air tightened, like a wire drawn taut. Logan exchanged a look with Rhys, silent carriers of unspoken questions, and fell quiet. Rhys returned his gaze to the map. “What’s the payoff?”
Dar edged closer to the console. “Kozlov was a logistics anchor. His removal forces every contact to ask three questions: Was Kozlov targeted by his own enemies? Did someone unearth the broader network? Or was Ashford exposed himself?” She paused, letting each syllable settle. “We need Ashford obsessing over that third possibility. Not as certainty, but as a dangerous prompt. Certainty breeds defense; possibility breeds probing.”
Logan’s sunglasses seemed to darken. “Probe what?”
“Loyalty. Access channels. Exit routes. Leverage points.” She tapped on Ashford’s node, and three new disturbances bloomed around it. “This one questions the reliability of Kozlov’s transport channels. This one suggests that an old rival is tracing Ashford’s funds. And this one points at a lieutenant who already fears being sacrificed.”
Logan read aloud the last note. “He will trade you before he burns himself.” His voice was quiet. “Cold.”
Dar continued watching the screen intently. “It’s true.” No one contradicted her.
Rhys leaned one hand on the edge of the workstation. For an instant, his age seemed greater than it truly was. Not weak. Never that. Worn seams showing wear, suggesting something had been smoothed away overnight. “You’re trying to make Ashford rash.”
She nodded. “Enough to force direct contact with Volkov. Enough to spur money transfers. Enough to press someone he shouldn’t. Enough to expose his real backstop.”
Callum added softly, “Or push him to run.”
Rhys turned that over. “If he runs?”
“Then he reveals which door matters.” The room settled around that simple equation.
Logan’s gaze drifted back to Dar, not in fear, but in acknowledgment—he had viewed her as someone who endured what he couldn’t mend. Someone to shield, to armour, to stand between and the next impact. Now he was watching her work, and he finally understood that this was not her being dragged closer to violence. She stood where she’d always perceived things others didn’t.
Rhys straightened. “What’s the risk?”
Dar appreciated that he asked it. “Overfeed. If we press too hard, he sniffs out manipulation. If the ghosts coordinate, he’ll go dark. If they seem feeble, he’ll ignore them. We let him terrify himself, monitor every tiniest twitch, and only seed more if he stabilizes.”
“We let him scare himself,” Sean said.
Dar nodded. “Mostly.” She leaned back. “We monitor reactions. No more active seeds unless he stabilizes.”
“Callum?” Rhys asked.
Callum’s reply was immediate: “Agreed.”
Rhys held that gaze a moment too long before releasing it in a curt nod. “Sean, watch for chatter around the Chechen angle. Flag anything that challenges it.”
Sean tapped his earpiece. “On it.”
The order should have felt like permission; instead, Dar felt a brittle crack echo through the last twelve hours. She closed her eyes, recalling too many ways men could be foolish—some in uniform, some with ledgers, all convinced they could control more than they ever would.
She met Logan’s glance as he muttered something unkind about democracy and herded Malik out the door.
Rhys lingered, eyes fixed on the map, then finally spoke Dar’s name. “A word.”
Briefly looking up, Callum snatched an empty mug from the desk’s corner, Sean tailing him to the kitchen as if drawn by the promise of caffeine. Dar remained at the console, shoulders squared, refusing to look away from the glowing nodes.
When Rhys’s quiet voice came again, it caught her off guard. “You’re certain you can control this?”
Dar folded her arms, lips curling into a half-smile. “No one controls a panic once it starts. You shape the first push. After that, you watch what people reveal.”
“That isn’t comforting.”
“It isn’t meant to be.”
She could feel him studying her, that familiar line of concern etched into his brow—and she thought briefly of a time when she would have accommodated his concern, as his concern had once mirrored affection, and she had once placed her faith in that affection. Now she waited, letting the space between them speak.
Eventually, Rhys looked back at the monitors and nodded. “You’re getting good at this.”
It sounded like something close to grief. “I was always good at this,” Dar replied evenly.
He wished he could reply, express regret for his missed opportunity, but instead Rhys lowered his voice further. “I know.”
The tension in her shoulders was palpable, prompting him to lean forward, his hand touching the desk’s edge as he kept his eyes on the display, though his full attention was dedicated to her.
“I didn’t mean it like that.”
He finally looked over, his blue-grey eyes softer than usual, stripped of the command edge.
“Been a long few days. Just… watching you work.”
He straightened as Callum came back into the room, moving around Rhys and placing a fresh mug of tea in front of Dar and reminding them. “Debrief in two.”
“Callum understands the work,” Dar said.
“I didn’t ask.” Rhys stiffened, watching their interaction. A faint muscle moved in his jaw.
Dar momentarily considered that he might speak further. Something personal. Something badly timed and impossible to place. But Rhys, whatever else he was, understood battlefields. He knew when ground would not hold.
He nodded toward the monitor as it pinged with Veyr’s arrival. The others had returned like shadows to listen from the doorway.
The screen flickered, waiting, until Veyr’s stern figure filled the primary display at exactly 16:00, her white blouse a beacon against the dark grid. Her gaze, sharpened by distrust, bored into them. “Report.”
Rhys spoke first: Kozlov neutralized. Disinformation sown. No losses. No compromise. He spoke in clipped certainties; Veyr’s eyes barely flickered.
When he finished, she fixed on Dar. “Network changes?”
“None beyond earlier,” Dar said. “We continue to watch. Nothing critical yet.”
“Should Ashford move on Volkov,” Veyr’s voice slivered through their comms, “immediate escalation.”
Dar nodded, “Yes”.
“One more thing,” Veyr leaned in. “Kozlov’s fall opens other avenues—do not pursue them. You are not sweeping the entire board.”
Rhys said, “Understood.”
Dar did not answer. Veyr noticed that too.
“Sibyl?”
Dar looked at her. “Understood.”
Veyr lingered, as if weighing every breath. “Good.”
That single word slammed home like a verdict. Relief should have followed, but Dar tasted only the echo of their planted message—He will trade you before he burns himself—and she wondered how many in Ashford’s circle would recognize that as truth, not threat.
The debrief ended. The screen went black.
Silence reclaimed the space until Sean’s sudden exhale split the tension. “I almost miss when my biggest professional concern was whether someone’s seven iron was cursed.”
Malik looked at him. “Was it?”
“Oh, absolutely. Mrs. Bellamy’s swing had a demon in it.” Sean chuckled.
Even Dar permitted herself a laugh, delicate and unexpected, and Callum’s eyes warmed as relief rippled through him. Rhys noticed, of course he did.
An alert sounded suddenly on the left screen.
Dar straightened. “Movement.”
The room sharpened like drawn blades. Sean leaned in. “Which node?”
Dar magnified the feed: a contact two steps from Ashford had opened a clandestine link—a private London number, no bank routing, no traceable handshake. A single thread dropped into the dark.
Nearby nodes froze: one severed; another whispered funds. Callum’s voice was quiet at her elbow: “He’s testing his insurance.”
Dar stared at the bloom of that new connection, knowing Ashford had taken the bait. Somewhere in London, behind a number that shouldn’t have mattered, a door was yawning open—invitation or trap, she could not yet say, but she knew that when he stepped through, the ghosts would be ready.

