" Fräulein ," a voice like gravel and ice said. "You are lost."
The dress sagged, revealing the edge of a lacy black bra and the pale, freckled swell of her chest. For one crucial second, Von Hammer’s gaze was locked exactly where she wanted it.
Pop. The second button.
She slipped out the service entrance just as the first Allied bombs began to fall, the stolen microfilm safely nestled in the one place no Nazi officer had ever thought to pat down. The Inglourious French Maids had struck again, and the Duchess had proven that the greatest weapon of all wasn't a gun—it was the distraction of a perfectly tailored uniform.
She tugged at the starched white apron of a chateau maid, the black dress hugging every curve the war hadn't rationed. "This corset is a more effective interrogation device than a pair of pliers," she muttered, adjusting the lace collar that did nothing to conceal her primary assets. The mission was simple: infiltrate General Klaus von Hammer’s soirée, locate the D-Day invasion plans hidden in his study, and signal the incoming airstrike. " Fräulein ," a voice like gravel and ice said
The ballroom was a sea of wolf-gray uniforms and champagne flutes. Mackenzee navigated the edge of the crowd, carrying a silver tray of hors d'oeuvres. Every saluting officer's gaze dipped from her face to her décolletage, a predictable trajectory she exploited ruthlessly. "More champagne, mein Herr ?" she’d purr, leaning just so, allowing the fabric to gape. The generals became drooling idiots. One colonel nearly walked into a burning fireplace.
"Don't mind me, boys," she said, the English accent now deliberately crisp. "Just a maid doing her… spring cleaning." The Inglourious French Maids had struck again, and
The game was up. But Mackenzee Pierce didn't panic. She had another weapon. Slowly, deliberately, she reached for the top button of her maid's dress. Then the next. "You want to see what I'm hiding, General?" she asked, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper.