Mag-log inEVELYN
Three days into marriage, and I had already learned the sound of a silent lie.
It lived in the spaces between sentences. In the pause before I'm fine. In the way I rolled to face the wall every night before Oscar's breathing slowed, so I could let my face do whatever it needed to without him seeing.
He was a good man. He deserved better than a wife who lay beside him thinking about someone else. The problem was, I couldn't stop.
* * *
The first message came on day two. Unknown Number: We need to talk. I blocked it. Within sixty seconds, another number.
Unknown Number: Blocking me won't make this go away. My fingers typed before I could think about it.
Me: Stop.
The dots appeared. Disappeared. Then…
Eden: Seven days, Evelyn.
My stomach dropped.
Me: Seven days for what?
Eden: For you to remember who you are.
I put the phone down. Picked it up. Put it down again. Then I threw it onto the other couch and stood in the middle of my living room with my arms crossed, furious at myself for the fact that my heart was hammering.
I was married. I was married. I was married.
I said it three times, like a spell.
It didn't work.
* * *
Mia came over that evening. She brought food she hadn't cooked and flowers she'd clearly grabbed from the shop on the corner, still in the plastic wrapper. She dropped onto my couch, kicked off her shoes, and pulled me down beside her like everything was normal.
For a while, it was.
We ate. We talked about nothing. She made me laugh twice about something the florist had said at the wedding. I almost felt like myself.
Then she said it.
"He's back, isn't he."
Not a question.
I looked at her carefully. "You saw the news."
"I did." She kept her voice light. Too light.
"He messaged me," I said.
"Ignore it."
"I did. He found a new number."
"Block that one too."
"Mia.."
"Eve." She turned to face me fully. "He's dangerous for you. Not because he's a bad person, but because of what you become when he's near you. You worked too hard. You came too far. Don't let him undo that."
I studied her face. The certainty in it. The sharpness.
"How did he know about the wedding?" I asked slowly.
She blinked. "What?"
"I didn't post the date publicly until three weeks ago. I kept the venue off social media completely. So how did he know where to show up? With a contract ready. With documents. How?"
Mia's mouth opened. Her phone buzzed on the table between us. I looked down.
Just for a second, But a second was enough. The name on the screen read: Eden. She grabbed the phone so fast she nearly knocked over her glass.
The room went still.
"Why," I said, very quietly, "does Eden Blackwood have your number?"
Mia set the phone face-down on her knee. She didn't speak.
"Mia."
"It's not, it's complicated, Eve."
"Start simple."
She exhaled. Long. Unsteady. "He contacted me before the wedding. Months ago. He wanted to know about you. If you were okay. If you were really in love with Oscar or just .."
"What did you tell him?"
"That you were happy. That you had moved on. That he was too late." She looked at me with something painful in her eyes. "I was protecting you."
I should have stopped there.
I should have accepted that and moved on.
But something in her voice, some small, wrong note, made me stay.
"Seven years ago," I said carefully, "when Eden left. I called him. Over and over. He never answered." I paused. "But you knew his number, Mia. Because he gave it to you, didn't he?"
Her silence was the loudest thing I had ever heard.
"He asked me to pass a message," she whispered. The floor moved beneath me. Or maybe I just felt it move.
"What message?"
Her eyes filled. "That he was coming back. That he had gone to build something. That he needed you to wait."
"And you didn't tell me." My voice was barely a sound. "You sat across from me while I fell apart. You held me while I cried. You told me he had probably met someone else. You told me to let go." The words came out one by one, each one heavier than the last. "And you were holding his message the entire time."
"I was eighteen," she said. "I thought I was helping. I thought if you waited, it would destroy you. I thought.."
"You thought you knew better than me." I stood up. "About my own heart."
"Eve…"
"Don't." I held up my hand. "Just. Don't."
She was crying now. Real tears, and I believed they were real, and somehow that made it worse — because how do you stay angry at someone who genuinely believed they were saving you from drowning when they were the one who had thrown you into the water?
My phone lit up on the couch.
Eden: You know now, don't you? I read the message. Then I read it again.
He had known she was there. He had known she was going to tell me tonight. Which meant he had spoken to her today. Which meant this conversation, this whole, devastating, relationship-splitting conversation, had been arranged.
He hadn't just come back. He had come back with a plan. And I had walked straight into the middle of it.
CHAPTER 25 – THE NAME SHE WAS NEVER MEANT TO SEEEVELYNThe first thing I noticed was the smell.Smoke.Not strong enough to choke me anymore, but enough to remind me that only hours ago, flames had swallowed Oscar's office.I opened my eyes slowly.White ceiling.Hospital.A dull ache pulsed behind my temple."You scared us."I turned my head.Mia sat beside the bed, her eyes swollen from crying."You've been unconscious for six hours."I tried to sit up."My..."Pain shot through my ribs."Evelyn, don't.""Where's Oscar?"The question escaped before anything else.Mia lowered her eyes.No answer.That silence was worse than any words.I swallowed hard."Eden?""Outside.""And Detective Harris?""They're talking to the police."My heart refused to slow.Everything had happened too fast.The explosion.The masked figure.Oscar's recording.Nothing made sense anymore.The door opened.Eden walked inside.His suit was wrinkled.A small cut crossed his forehead.For the first time since
EVELYN"I want everyone out."My voice was so quiet that even I barely recognized it.Detective Harris looked at me for a long second before nodding.Within moments, the officers filed out of Oscar's hidden room.Only three people remained.Me.Eden.Detective Harris.The walls still stared back at me.Hundreds of photographs.Years of my life pinned to corkboards like evidence.Some had dates.Some had locations.Some had handwritten notes.My knees nearly gave way."This isn't possible."I walked toward one of the photographs.It had been taken outside the hospital the day my grandmother died.I remembered crying until I couldn't breathe.Oscar had arrived fifteen minutes later and wrapped his coat around my shoulders.He had told me he came because Mia called him.Now...This picture proved someone had been watching me long before Oscar arrived.The note beneath it read:Subject emotionally vulnerable. Continue observation.I covered my mouth."No..."Detective Harris stepped close
EVELYN"Where is Oscar?"The question came out before I realized I was speaking.Eden didn't answer immediately.His eyes stayed fixed on the road as he drove through the rain, one hand gripping the steering wheel, the other clutching the bloodstained envelope resting on the passenger seat between us.Behind us, sirens wailed.The abandoned church was disappearing into the distance.But the image of the woman collapsing onto those stone steps refused to leave my mind.Her last words echoed inside my head.Your father...What about my father?He had died when I was twelve.Or at least...That was what I'd been told."Where is Oscar?" I repeated.This time Eden looked at me."I don't know.""Don't lie to me!""I'm not."I laughed bitterly."You expect me to believe that? Five minutes after someone kidnaps my husband, you suddenly appear like some kind of hero?"His jaw tightened."I wasn't following you.""Really?""No.""Then how did you know where I was?"Silence.I already knew the a
EVELYNBy the fourth anonymous message, I stopped telling myself it was coincidence.Someone wasn't trying to scare me anymore.They were leading me somewhere.The latest message appeared just after noon.Unknown: If you want the truth about Eden, come alone.Attached was an address.An abandoned church on the outskirts of Manhattan.No signature.No explanation.Only one final sentence.Come before someone dies.Every sensible part of me knew I shouldn't go.Oscar was at work.Mia hadn't answered any of my calls since yesterday.Eden had texted three times.I ignored all of them.For some reason I couldn't explain, I drove to the address anyway.The church looked forgotten.Broken stained-glass windows.Peeling paint.Dust covering every wooden pew.The silence inside felt unnatural."Hello?"My voice echoed.Nothing.Then..."I knew you'd come."I spun around.A woman stepped out from the shadows.She looked to be in her early thirties.Beautiful.Elegant.But exhausted.As if she h
CHAPTER 21EVELYNThe worst thing about secrets was not discovering them.It was realizing how long they had been sitting beside you, quietly breathing, while you lived your life pretending everything was normal.I stared at the envelope on my kitchen counter for almost ten minutes before touching it.No name.No address.Just my name written across the front.EVELYN WILLIAMS.Not Mrs. James.Not Evelyn James.That alone made my stomach tighten.Someone wanted me to remember exactly who I was before the wedding.Before Oscar.Before everything became complicated.I looked toward the window. The city lights blurred through the glass, beautiful and distant.My life had become a strange collection of things I couldn't trust anymore.My memories.My marriage.My friendships.Even my own heart.Slowly, I opened the envelope.Inside was a photograph.My fingers froze.It was old.Seven years old, maybe.But I knew the people in it.Me.And Eden.We were sitting on the steps outside his old
CHAPTER 20EVELYNThere was a strange thing about betrayal.The person who hurt you the most was rarely the person you expected.I had spent seven years blaming Eden.Seven years replaying every moment.The goodbye that never happened.The calls that were never answered.The silence that destroyed me.I had built an entire story in my head.Eden left.Eden forgot.Eden moved on.But now I was standing in my childhood home, holding a file that connected my mother, my father, Eden, and the man who had been trying to destroy him.And I didn't know what story was real anymore."Did my mother know Eden?"My father looked at me.A long, painful silence passed."Yes."My throat tightened."How?"He sat down slowly."Your mother worked with Blackwood Industries before we got married."I frowned."My mother was never in business.""Not publicly."I stared."Then who was she?"My father's expression changed.Like he was looking at someone who wasn't there anymore."Your mother was brilliant, Ev







