로그인Liam
The clock on my wall has not moved in an hour or maybe it has. Maybe time has stopped altogether, frozen in the moment Zoe walked out the door with a lie on her lips and a secret in her pocket. I need some air, she said. I will be back in an hour. That was two hours ago. Marcus is outside the café. He texted me twenty minutes ago: She met someone. An older woman. They talked for five minutes. She left with something in her hand. I did not ask what. I am afraid of the answer. The city sprawls beneath my window, a wound of glass and steel. The sun is high, but the light feels false – a gold paint slapped over a rotting wall. I press my palm against the cold glass and watch my breath fog the surface. Tick-tock, the sound is in my head, not a clock but a warning. I call Marcus again. "Describe the woman." "Gray hair. Sixties. Dressed in black. She walked with a limp." "A limp?" "Left leg. Old injury. She moved like someone who has been running for a long time." I close my eyes. A face surfaces from the fog of memory. Eleanor. My father's secretary. The woman who disappeared the night he died. The woman everyone assumed was dead. "Did Zoe see you?" "No. I stayed in the car. But I saw her face when she came out." Marcus pauses. "She was pale. Shaking. She put something in her pocket." "A flash drive?" "Could be. She kept her hand over it the whole walk back." I hung up. The phone is hot against my ear. I want to throw it against the wall. I want to drive to the café and find Eleanor myself. I want to shake Zoe until she tells me the truth. But I wait. Because waiting is what I do. Waiting is what my father taught me. Patience is a blade, he used to say. You sharpen it in silence, and you strike when the enemy sleeps. The enemy is not sleeping. The enemy is everywhere. The door opens at noon. Zoe walks in, and I see it immediately – the crack in her armor, the fissure behind her grey eyes. She is holding herself too straight, walking too carefully, like someone who is afraid of breaking. "You were gone for two hours," I say. "Traffic." "Marcus said you met someone." She stops. Her hand drifts to her pocket. A reflex. A tell. "An old woman," she says. "She mistook me for someone else." "And what did she give you?" "Nothing. She was confused. I left." The lie sits between us like a third person in the room. I can taste it – metallic, bitter, the same flavor as her first lies, the ones she told when she walked into my office wearing a dead woman's name. "Zoe." "Liam, I am tired." She walks toward the bedroom. "I need to sleep." She disappears into the shadows of the hallway, and I am left standing alone in the living room, my hands empty, my chest hollow. I do not follow her. I pour whiskey and sit on the couch, staring at the wall. The flash drive Eleanor gave her is burning a hole in my imagination. What is on it? Evidence? A trap? A confession? I think about my father. About the night he died. About the phone call I received at 3 AM, the voice on the other end telling me to come to the morgue, to identify the body, to sign the papers. Your father was a good man, the detective said. But he made enemies. The word is a blanket that covers everything. Evelyn. Victor. The faceless men at the top of the file. And now Eleanor – a ghost risen from the grave, carrying secrets in her wrinkled hands. I finish the whiskey and pour another. The clock ticks. She comes out of the bedroom at dusk. Her hair is wet. She has showered. She is wearing my shirt again – the white one, the one that falls to her thighs. She stands in the doorway, her arms crossed over her chest, her eyes red. "I am sorry," she says. "For what?" "For lying. For not telling you about the woman." I set the glass down. "Who was she?" "Eleanor. Your father's secretary." Zoe walks toward me, her bare feet silent on the floor. "She gave me a flash drive. She said it is the real file. The one Victor did not have. The names of the people at the top." My heart stops. "Where is it?" She pulls it from her pocket and holds it out. Her hand is shaking. "I did not look at it," she says. "I wanted to. But I was afraid." "Afraid of what?" "Afraid that if I opened it, I would lose you." The words land like stones dropped into still water. Ripples. I take the drive from her hand. It is small, black, unmarked. The same as the one Victor gave me. The same as the one Evelyn wanted. But this one feels heavier. This one feels like a grave. "Liam." Zoe touches my arm. "Whatever is on it, we face it together." I look at her – at the woman who was sent to destroy me, who became my ally, who became something I do not have words for. "Together," I say.I plug the drive into my laptop. The files opened, names, dates and transactions the same as before, but deeper, darker, reaching higher. I scroll through page after page, my stomach tightening with each new revelation. And then I see it. A photograph. My mother. Standing next to a man I do not recognize. Her hand is on his arm. She is smiling. The caption beneath reads: Eleanor Park, aka Margaret Vance. Location: Unknown. Status: Alive. My blood turns to ice. "Zoe," I say. "Look at this." She leans over my shoulder. Her breath catches. "That is my mother," she whispers. "But her name is Margaret. Not Eleanor." I zoom in on the photograph. The woman's eyes are grey – the same grey as Zoe's. The same grey as the woman I have been sleeping beside. "Zoe." My voice is barely a whisper. "Your mother. What is her real name?" She does not answer. The clock ticks. And somewhere in the shadows of the city, another player is waiting. Tick-tock and the game has just become personal.Zoe The wedding is three weeks away, three weeks to plan a ceremony that will probably be interrupted by gunfire and three weeks to find a dress, a venue, a caterer who does not ask questions. Three weeks to pretend that the world is not burning. Liam wants a small wedding. Just us. Just the lake house. Just the people we trust.I agree. The guest list is short: Marcus, Eleanor if she can come, a few of Liam's trusted colleagues. My father is not invited. He will watch from his cell if he watches at all. The flowers are tulips – red and gold, the same ones we planted. The rings are simple bands of gold. The vows are our own.I write mine in the mornings when the light is soft and the lake is still. I cross out words. I start over. I cry. I promise to love you, even when the world is dark. I promise to stand beside you, even when the bullets fly. I promise to be your partner, your lover, your home.Liam writes this at night, when the city is asleep and the shadows are long. I have not
Liam The sun sets over the lake, and I watch Zoe sleep. She is curled on the couch, her head on a pillow, her hair spread across the fabric like dark water. Her lips are parted. Her chest rises and falls in a slow, steady rhythm. She looks peaceful – younger than her years, softer than the woman who walked into my office with a lie on her lips and a gun in her heart. I do not deserve her. I know this. I have known it since the moment I kissed her the first time – for the camera, for Evelyn, for the performance. But the performance became real, and the real became something I could not name. The file is on the table. I have not opened it in days. The names are still there – the generals, the ghosts, the men who have been hiding in the shadows for decades. I should be hunting them. I should be burning them down. But all I want to do is stay here. "Liam." Zoe's eyes are open, and she is watching me. "You are staring," she says. "I am admiring." She smiles. It is a small smile, tired
ZoeThe bullet hits the desk, and splinters of wood rain down on us like shrapnel. Liam shoves me behind the overturned conference table. His body is a wall between me and the masked man. I can not see the gunman, but I hear his footsteps – slow, deliberate, the pace of someone who knows he has already won. "The file," the distorted voice says again. "Give it to me, and the girl walks away."Liam's hand finds mine. His palm is warm, steady. "The file is not here. I moved it."Liar."Check the safe. It is empty." A pause. Footsteps move toward the wall. The safe door creaks open. Silence. "You are clever," the man says. "But clever men die just as fast as fools."I peek through the gap between the table and the floor. The man is tall, broad-shouldered, wearing black tactical gear. His mask is a skull – white bone, hollow eyes. He holds the gun like an extension of his arm."Who sent you?" Liam asks. "No one. I am here for myself."The file is worthless without the key. And the key is not
Zoe I wake to the smell of him. His arm is draped across my waist, his chest warm against my back, his breath slow and even on my neck. The morning light is pale and golden, slipping through the cracks in the curtains like a secret. For a moment, I forget. I forget the warehouse, the gunshots, the look in my father's eyes when they led him away. I forget the file, the names, and the clock that will not stop ticking. Then I remember. My mother is gone. Witness protection. A new name, a new face, a new life that does not include me. My father is in a cell, waiting for a trial that will send him away for the rest of his life. Evelyn is in prison, but her words still echo in my skull: There are generals above me. The war is not over. But his arm is warm, and his heart is steady, and for this moment, I let myself pretend. "Zoe." His voice is a rumble against my back. "You are thinking too loud." I turn in his arms. His dark eyes are open, soft, the sharp angles of his face softened b
Liam The lake house is quiet. I stand on the porch, watching the sun rise over the water. The sky is the colour of a bruise – purple and gold and grey. The mist rises from the lake like smoke from a dying fire. Zoe is still asleep. She has not slept in days. Neither have I. The file is on the kitchen table. Every name. Every account. Every secret that has been festering in the dark for twenty years. I have not opened it. I am afraid that if I do, I will lose what is left of myself. Liam." I turn. Zoe is standing in the doorway, wrapped in a blanket, her hair wild, her grey eyes soft. "You should be sleeping."So should you." She walks toward me, her bare feet silent on the wooden boards. She stops beside me and leans her head on my shoulder. "What happens now?" she asks. "Now we live." "Just like that?" She laughs – a soft, broken sound. "You make it sound so easy." "Easy?" I turn to face her. "Zoe, I have been hunting ghosts for two years. I have lost sleep, blood, and years of my
LiamThe warehouse is cold, dark, and smells like rust and regret. I stand in the centre of the room with an empty flash drive in my hand. The concrete floor is cracked, stained with oil, and something darker. The lights flicker overhead, buzzing like trapped insects. Somewhere in the shadows, I know Liam is watching, Marcus is watching, and the police are watching. But all I see is Evelyn.She stands across from me, her grey suit immaculate, her hair pulled back so tight it stretches her skin into a mask. Two guards flank her – large, silent, their faces carved from the same blank stone. "You have it?" she asks. I hold up the drive. "The real file. Every name. Every account. Everything your boss has been hiding for twenty years."Her eyes gleam. "Give it to me."Not until I see my mother." Evelyn smiles. It is a thin, cold thing – a crack in a dam that holds back a sea of teeth. "Your mother is safe. She is in the car. Waiting." "Let me see her." She snaps her fingers. A guard disappe







