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THE HOUSE THAT DOESN'T FORGET

Author: Amira Lords
last update publish date: 2026-07-07 00:34:18

CHAPTER FIVE:

The east wing had a lock on the outside of the door.

Lyra found it on her third pass through the hallway, running her fingers along the doorframe the way her father had taught her to read a room — not with your eyes, he'd said, with your hands. Your eyes lie. Your hands don't. She'd thought he meant it as a life lesson. She was beginning to think he'd meant it as a survival skill.

The lock was new. The brass was unscratched, the keyhole clean. Someone had installed it recently — within weeks, maybe days. Which meant someone had known she was coming before she'd known herself.

She stood in the hallway for a long moment, her hand flat against the wood, and thought about what it meant to be prepared for.

Her room was at the end of the corridor, separated from the east wing by a sitting room she hadn't been invited into and a door that had been left open just enough to seem like an accident. The room itself was large and quiet and smelled faintly of cedar. A window looked out over the rose garden. Fresh flowers on the nightstand — white, odorless, chosen by someone who understood that fragrance was a preference and they didn't know hers yet.

That detail unsettled her more than the lock.

A housekeeper named Rosa had shown her upstairs. Late fifties, careful eyes, the particular stillness of someone who had worked in a house with secrets long enough to become one herself. She'd pointed out the bathroom, the wardrobe, the call button by the bed, and had not once referred to Lyra as Mrs. Voss.

Lyra hadn't decided yet whether that was kindness or instruction.

She sat on the edge of the bed and called June.

"Are you okay?" June answered before the first ring finished. Sixteen and already fluent in dread — Lyra hated that she'd taught her that.

"I'm okay. I'm in." She kept her voice even. "How's Theo?"

"Asleep. He cried for a while but then I put on the nature documentary and he went out." A pause. "Lyra. Is it bad?"

Lyra looked at the white flowers. At the window. At the garden below where a man in a dark coat was walking the perimeter with the slow, deliberate pace of someone who was not enjoying the fresh air.

"It's complicated," she said. "But you're coming here tomorrow. Both of you. Pack for a while."

"How long is a while?"

"Pack for a while, June."

After she hung up she sat in silence and let herself feel it — the full weight of the day, the courthouse, the ring, the car, the gates. She pressed her palms flat on her thighs and breathed the way she'd learned to breathe after her mother left, after her father started drinking, after she'd become the person in the family who held things together by refusing to fall apart in front of anyone who needed her.

Then she stood up, smoothed her dress, and went to find out what kind of house she was living in.

The study was on the ground floor, at the end of a hallway lined with framed photographs she paused to examine. Not family portraits — she'd expected family portraits, some dynasty display, generation after generation of hard-faced men. These were landscapes. The same mountain ranges from different distances, different seasons. Winter, bare and white. Summer, impossibly green. Autumn burning at the edges. The same mountain, over and over, like someone returning to a place they couldn't leave alone.

She didn't know what that meant yet. She filed it away.

The study door was ajar. She knocked once, mostly out of habit, and pushed it open.

Dimitri was at his desk with his jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow, and for a moment — just a moment — he looked like a different person. Someone younger. Someone who got tired. He looked up from whatever he was reading and the shutters came down so fast she almost missed that they'd been open at all.

"You should be resting," he said.

"I don't rest well in strange houses." She stepped inside without being invited. "I have questions."

"You'll have many. That's understandable."

"I want answers to these specific ones."

He set down his pen. Leaned back. Watching her with that unreadable patience that she was already learning to distrust — not because it was hostile but because it was practiced. Nobody got that still by accident.

"The lock on the east wing door," she said. "The outside lock. Who is it for?"

Something moved behind his eyes. "Precaution."

"Against what?"

"Against people who might try to reach you through your siblings."

The room went very quiet. Lyra heard her own heartbeat, measured and slow, the way it always got when she was most afraid. Her body had learned, somewhere in the last three years of holding everything together, to go quiet when it needed to be sharp.

"Someone has done that before," she said. "Used by someone's family."

He didn't answer. Which was its own kind of answer.

"Who are these men?" she said. "The ones who killed my father. Who sent the message."

"People I've been looking for a long time."

"That's not—"

"That's what I can tell you tonight." His voice didn't harden. That was the worst part — it stayed even, almost gentle, like he was rationing the truth in doses he'd decided she could handle. "There are things you'll need to know. I'll tell you when the time is right."

"You'll tell me." She let that sit. "On your timeline."

"Yes."

"I'm your wife."

"You are."

"Then I'm not a guest you manage. I'm not a problem you've contained." She crossed to his desk and put both hands flat on the surface, close enough that he had to look up at her. Close enough that she could see the small scar along his jaw she hadn't noticed before, pale and old, the kind that came from something deliberate. "My father died six days ago. Someone used his death to get to me. I am living in your house, wearing your ring, and I have two children arriving tomorrow who I have promised will be safe here. So I need you to understand something." She held his gaze. "I will find out what's happening. I will find all of it. You can tell me, or I can find it myself — but I will not sit in that room and wait for you to decide I'm ready."

For a long moment he didn't move.

Then he reached into the desk drawer and set a photograph on the surface between her hands.

A man she didn't recognize. Dark coat, silver at the temples, standing outside a building she did recognize — the back entrance of Donnelly's restaurant. Her restaurant. Taken at night, the timestamp in the corner reading four months before her father's death.

"His name is Calder Mace," Dimitri said quietly. "He's the one who pulled the trigger. And he wasn't there for your father." His eyes met hers. Dark and entirely certain. "He was there to find out what your father had already given me."

Lyra stared at the photograph.

"What did he give you?" she whispered.

Dimitri's jaw tightened. The first crack, she realized, she had seen in the wall.

"Something," he said, "that could bring down every powerful man in this city. And something that has your name on it." He paused. "A name your father put there himself. Before he knew what it would cost."

The white flowers on her nightstand. The lock on the door. The mountain in the photographs, returned to again and again by someone who couldn't let go.

Lyra straightened slowly.

Her father hadn't just

owed Dimitri Voss a debt.

He'd trusted him with one.

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