LOGIN"The journal is leading somewhere," Aria said.Damien looked up from the kitchen table, his mother's letters spread before him like fallen leaves. The morning light caught the edges of the paper, illuminating years of secrets. "Where?""To the east wing. There's something I haven't found yet." She touched her temple, pressing against the ache that had settled there. "A memory. A room. A filing cabinet I saw once but never opened."Damien stood, crossing to her. "When did you see it?""In the vision. The one where I discovered your father's crimes." Aria's voice dropped lower. "I walked past it. I was too scared to look inside. But I knew it held the truth about Victor's father. About why he really died."---They drove to Blackwood Tower in silence.The building loomed against the grey sky, glass reflecting clouds that threatened rain. Aria walked through the lobby without looking at the security desk. Marcus was gone now. Arrested. The new guard nodded as they passed.The elevator ro
Aria woke to sunlight streaming through unfamiliar curtains.For a moment, she forgot where she was. The bed felt softer than her own, the pillows fluffier, the sheets smoother against her skin. They smelled like lavender and something else – something she couldn't name, something that reminded her of childhood. Then she remembered. The drive home. The conversation with her mother. The promise of truth that had been buried for three years.She sat up slowly, her body heavy with exhaustion. The room spun slightly before settling. Her head ached from too little sleep and too many thoughts.Elena stood in the doorway, a cup of coffee in her hands. Steam rose from the surface, carrying the familiar scent of dark roast. "You're awake. I was beginning to worry.""I didn't sleep well." Aria rubbed her eyes. "Every time I closed them, I saw Victor's face. Heard his voice.""Neither did I." Elena crossed the room, her steps hesitant, and handed her the cup. "We have a lot to talk about. Things
"We need to go back to the beach," Aria said.Damien looked up from the journal, his mother's handwriting still fresh in his mind. The leather cover felt worn beneath his fingers, the pages yellowed with age. "Why? We already found what we needed there. The proposal memory. The ring. Victor watching from the dunes.""I need to see it differently. Now that I know about the gala. About your father. About the contract." She tucked the journal into her bag, careful to protect its fragile pages. "The proposal memory is still incomplete. I saw Victor watching, but I didn't see everything. There's a gap. A space where something else happened."Damien stood, crossing the room to stand beside her. His hand found her shoulder, warm and steady. "You think there's more?""I know there is." She met his eyes, her gaze unflinching. "Your mother left that journal for a reason. She wanted me to understand the full picture. And the full picture includes what happened on that beach. What my mother did t
"We need to go back," Aria said.Damien looked up from the motel room table, maps and documents spread across its surface like a battlefield. "Back where?""The charity gala venue. Where we met." She touched her temple, pressing against the spot where the headaches always started. "Something about that place. The memory is still blocked, but I feel it. Like a door that won't open all the way. Like something important is waiting behind it."He studied her face, his eyes searching for any sign of distress. "You think visiting the location will trigger it? Bring back what's missing?""I think I need to stand where I stood when I first saw you." She crossed the room, taking his hand. His fingers felt warm against hers. "I've remembered the proposal. The beach. The fall. But not the beginning. Not why I chose you over Victor when he was already there."Damien's fingers curled around hers. "Then we go tonight. We walk through that door together and see what comes out."---The gala venue sa
"Police! Hands in the air!"The shout shattered the silence of the farmhouse. Aria spun toward the front door as agents poured through the entrance, weapons raised, vests marked with federal insignia. Victor's men scattered, caught off guard by the sudden assault. One reached for his waistband, but an agent tackled him before his fingers found the weapon.Agent Vasquez led the charge, his face set in hard lines. "Victor Harrington, you are under arrest for kidnapping, conspiracy, and attempted murder. You have the right to remain silent."Victor's smile never wavered. "You're making a mistake. A very costly one.""I don't think so." Vasquez grabbed his arm, twisting it behind his back. "We have your confession on tape. Marcus Webb's testimony. Enough evidence to put you away for life without parole."Aria watched as they cuffed Victor. His composure remained intact, his eyes fixed on her with an intensity that made her skin crawl. "This isn't over, Aria. You know that deep down.""It'
"I'll do it," Aria said.Damien looked up from his phone. The motel room's single lamp cast shadows across his face. "Do what?""Wear the wire. Meet Marcus alone." She held his gaze without flinching. "Victor won't talk if he sees you. He'll only speak freely when he thinks I'm desperate and isolated.""That's exactly what he wants you to feel." Damien stood, crossing the room in three quick strides. His hand found her arm, gentle but firm. "Desperate people make mistakes. He's counting on that.""Then I'll make him think I'm making one." Aria pulled the device from her pocket. The recorder sat cold and small against her palm. "Marcus called. He said Victor wants to meet. Just me. No backup.""Where?""The Half Moon. Where this all started." She clipped the wire beneath her shirt, positioning it carefully. "He wants to watch me walk into that bar alone. He wants to see if I'm brave enough or stupid enough to come."Damien studied her face. His jaw tightened. "You're both. That's why I
Victor Harrington found her in the lobby.Not by accident. Aria knew that immediately. He was standing by the security desk, dressed in a charcoal suit that cost more than her degree, holding two cups of coffee like an old friend waiting for a delayed train.He smiled when he saw her.Not Damien's
Aria lasted four hours before she realized something was wrong.Not with the job. The job was straightforward—emails, scheduling, a filing system so organized it felt almost obsessive. Lydia had trained her efficiently, answered every question, and disappeared exactly when Aria stopped needing her.
The car stopped in front of a building Aria didn't recognize.Not a home. Not yet. The sign above the entrance read Blackwood Enterprises in letters that caught the morning light like they were carved from something precious. She had never seen this place before. She had never heard this name befor
The silk beneath her fingers was the first warning.Aria's eyes snapped open before her mind caught up. Gold ceiling. Crystal chandelier. Sheets that cost more than her monthly rent. Nothing in this room belonged to her. Nothing in this room belonged to anyone she knew.She sat up fast. The sheet p







