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Chapter Three: Eli

last update publish date: 2026-05-12 04:48:17

The wrought-iron gate of St. Jude’s Academy buzzed, a mechanical hum that vibrated through the steering wheel as Selene cut the engine.

It wasn’t a prestigious name for a prestigious institution. It was a modest, private primary school buried three blocks deep into their residential neighborhood, characterized by sunshine-yellow stucco walls and a courtyard that perpetually smelled of damp rubber matting and other people's children. Selene had selected it with surgical precision for the sole reason that it occupied a universe Damien Voss did not know existed. No multi-generational legacy admissions. No board members whose profiles graced the pages of the Financial Times. No intersecting lines that could cause their trajectories to accidentally collide.

She had accounted for every variable. She forced herself to account for every variable, every single day, because the alternative was a luxury she couldn't afford.

Mrs. Adeleke, the receptionist whose round, pleasant face had never once betrayed curiosity as to why Selene arrived in a vehicle that exceeded the school’s annual administrative budget, waved her through the security door with a sympathetic nod.

"He's down in the clinic, Ms. Voss. He’s been very brave about the whole thing."

"He’s always brave," Selene said, her boots clicking against the linoleum. "That’s the flaw in his design."

Eli was sitting on the edge of the narrow cot in the nurse's station, his small canvas shoes fastened onto the wrong feet. He always did that when he dressed himself, a habit she had long stopped correcting because the sheer, unshakeable confidence with which he marched around on reversed arches was frankly admirable. He was cradling a small paper cup of water with both palms as though it were a sacred artifact.

His chin lifted the moment she cleared the frame.

"Mama."

Just the one syllable. But the specific, shuddering exhale of relief wrapped inside it—the way his entire small frame instantly uncoiled and oriented itself toward her—did what it always did. It dismantled the armor. It rebuilt the foundation. All in the fracture of a second.

"Hey, bluebird." She dropped into a low crouch before him, pressing the cool back of her hand against his forehead. Warm, but not burning. "Mrs. Adeleke tells me you handled this like a professional."

"I threw up," Eli informed her, his voice carrying the absolute gravity of a surveyor reporting a structural failure.

"So I heard."

"Twice."

"Impressive stamina."

He parsed this seriously, his small brow furrowing. "Is it?"

"In terms of dedication to the craft? Absolutely." She helped him slide off the high mattress, smoothing down his cotton collar while deliberately ignoring the reversed shoes. "Can you manage the corridor, or are we carrying?"

He evaluated his resources with genuine thoroughness. Eli approached every choice this way—a methodical weight-testing that had been mildly terrifying in a two-year-old and was now, at four, simply the texture of his personality.

"Carry," he ruled. “But only to the car."

"Agreed. Deal."

The boy was asleep before the car's tires cleared the first intersection.

She managed the weight all the way up the apartment stairwell—all twenty-three pounds of him, his head a heavy, radiating warmth against her shoulder, one small fist loosely hooked into the hollow of her collarbone. She laid him into the center of his mattress, eased the canvas shoes off his feet, and drew the quilt up to his chest.

For a long moment, she remained frozen in the doorway, tracking the slow rise and fall of his ribs. It was an inventory she took every night. A visual confirmation. A verification of safety.

He had Damien’s jaw.

The realization had first struck her when Eli was roughly six months old—that specific, stubborn squareness that would only sharpen into an architectural ledge as the years added up. She had spent seventy-two hours trying to convince herself it was an optical illusion before simply choosing to stop looking for it. It altered nothing. A bone structure was just a bone structure.

But today, with the residue of the forty-second floor still bitter in her mouth, the resemblance was undeniable.

He possessed the jaw, and he possessed the deep, ink-dark eyes, but he had inherited absolutely none of Damien’s frozen internal climate. Where Damien was opaque to the point of clinical detachment—every emotion categorized, filed, and stored behind tempered glass—Eli was an open pane of glass. Every passing shadow moved across his face instantly: joy, confusion, quick indignation, total tenderness. He had accepted the physical scaffolding of the Voss line and discarded the iron plating entirely.

She didn't know yet whether that absence of armor was a profound gift or a lethal vulnerability.

She pulled the bedroom door until it caught on the latch, leaving it cracked an inch, then walked into the kitchen. She stood against the marble counter for a long time, her hands flat on the stone, staring at the unheated kettle.

He saw the name on my phone.

She knew precisely what Damien was doing at this exact interval. She knew because she had spent three years cataloging the specific circuitry of his intellect—the seamless, mechanical transition from observation to calculation to execution that he applied to every threat. He was sitting somewhere right now—his office, the rear of his town car, somewhere with clean light—and he was running the arithmetic again. More deliberately this time. With a fountain pen and a legal pad, most likely. Damien always reverted to ink for the things that carried actual weight.

Four and a half years old.

They had separated—no, she corrected herself, separated was a diplomatic lie for what he had actually done—exactly five years and four months ago.

He was a monster, but he was not an idiot.

The phone on the counter vibrated, a harsh rattle against the stone.

Unknown Number. She let it run its course. Twenty seconds later, the same sequence started again. Same digital signature.

She picked it up, her thumb sliding across the glass. "Speak."

"I need to talk to you."

His voice. Low. Even. The specific, strained cadence of a man holding a very heavy lid over something white-hot.

"You had your forty minutes, Damien. The meeting is adjourned."

"That wasn't—" A sharp pause over the wire. She could hear him filtering his words with uncharacteristic friction. "That was Mercer and Voss. This is separate."

"I don't recognize the distinction."

"Selene." The way he articulated her name changed—the professional distance dropping away, replaced by a raw, uncalibrated pressure. "The boy. Eli. I need the truth."

The kitchen grew entirely quiet. Outside, three floors down, a distant siren rose and fell. The refrigerator held its low, monotonous hum.

"You need the truth," she repeated, her tone conversational.

"Yes."

"You need it." She said it a third time, not as an interrogation, but simply setting the words out on the counter like cold instruments so he could see what they looked like. "Five years ago, you left an executed divorce decree on my pillow, a check for five thousand dollars, and a corporate memo informing me I lacked the pedigree to survive your circle. And now you need to know."

Silence stretched over the line, heavy and toxic.

"That is remarkably interesting," she said, "to me."

"I didn't—" Damien cut himself off, his breath catching as he tried to find a foothold. It was a sound she knew intimately—the micro-recalibration of an executive who had prepared for one negotiation and realized he was sitting in an entirely different court. "I didn't know."

"No," she agreed smoothly. "You didn't. Because you didn't stay long enough to find out."

"Selene—"

"I'm going to ask you not to call this number again, Damien." Her voice remained perfectly flat, an even, disciplined cadence she had rehearsed across half a decade—not for this specific call, but for the version of herself required to survive it without fracturing. "Whatever debt you think you are owed, you haven't earned this. Not from me. And certainly not from my son."

She disconnected the call.

She placed the device face-down on the counter.

Standing in the center of her kitchen, draped in an Italian-cut blazer that cost more than his initial estimate of her entire net worth, she focused on her lungs. In. Out. Four counts each way. It was the precise grounding exercise her therapist had drilled into her during that brutal second year—back when Eli was eighteen months old, and she had woken up at dawn so hollowed out by exhaustion she couldn't remember why she was fighting so hard to build an empire in the first place.

She found her purpose now. She pulled it forward, the way she always did.

You did not build the foundation just to let him shake the walls.

From the end of the dark hallway, a small, sleep-graveled voice drifted into the kitchen. "Mama? My stomach feels empty."

The absurdity of it almost forced a laugh from her throat.

She pushed off the counter, unbuttoned the slate-grey blazer, and hung it over the back of the dining chair with the meticulous precision of someone who understood that small, orderly rituals were their own form of defense. Then she went to see about toast, honey, and a four-year-old who had cleared his system twice and was already demanding his next meal.

This was her life.

This was the life she had pulled out of the dirt.

It was enough.

It was more than enough.

The only complication was that Damien Voss had never, in the entire history of his ledger, proven capable of relinquishing an asset once he convinced himself his name belonged on the title.

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