登入(Keyla POV)
The other side of the bed had already gone cold. I noticed it before I was fully awake, before I understood why the room felt wrong — that specific absence, the kind you register in your body before your brain catches up. I sat up. The space beside me was empty. Near the door, something pale caught my eye. A scrap of white lace had caught on the door bracket, its torn edge hanging loose. The rest was gone. Keyla was gone. My watch read 5:22 a.m. On the nightstand, one cufflink remained where I had left two. The keycard she had arrived with was gone. So was my robe. The whiskey glass still sat untouched, the ice melted to water. I sat there longer than I allowed myself to. Then I got up, dressed, and called Marcus. He answered on the second ring, which meant he hadn’t been sleeping either. “Where are you,” I said. “Lobby. Been here since two.” A pause. “I heard the wedding didn’t happen.” “Come to the security office. Don’t use the main elevator.” I picked up the piece of veil on my way out, folded it once, and put it in my jacket pocket. The hotel security chief was a man named Garrett, the hotel’s security chief, had worked Churchill properties for eleven years. He understood discretion was part of the job, whether anyone said it aloud or not. Coffee was waiting when I arrived. Marcus had called ahead, already three steps forward before I’d even hung up. The security room smelled of recycled air and old carpet. Six monitors lined the desk, with keycard access logs running on a separate terminal. An incident report folder sat unopened beside Garrett’s keyboard. He looked at me the way he always did when he thought I’d done something that was going to cost us — not accusatory, just measuring. “Footage,” I said to Garrett. He pulled it up. Main corridor, Floor 27, timestamped from 11:30 p.m. through 6 a.m. I watched Keyla appear at 11:52 — white dress, one hand against the wall for balance, the keycard in her other hand. She stopped at my door. It opened. She went in. “Service corridor,” I said. Garrett clicked through. The Floor 27 service corridor showed normal footage until 5:03 a.m. Then the image went grey. The timestamp kept running, which meant the feed had been cut, not lost. It came back at 5:10 a.m. Empty corridor. “Seven minutes,” Marcus said from the wall. Not a question. “How,” I said to Garrett. The man shifted in his chair, which told me he already knew the answer and didn’t like it. “The interruption came from an internal access point. Someone with backend credentials cut the feed manually and restored it after.” He paused. “That’s a level of access that shouldn’t be available to most staff.” “But is available to someone.” “Yes, sir.” I looked at the blank seven minutes on the screen. Keyla had walked out through that corridor during exactly those seven minutes. Which meant someone had known she would, or had been watching for her to move and acted fast enough to cover it. Either way, someone had moved before I did. I had arranged for her to find Adrian. That part was mine. The seven-minute gap wasn’t. Someone else had moved tonight, and I didn’t know yet whether they had protected Keyla or used her. “The main corridor footage,” I said. “The part showing her arriving on this floor.” Garrett hesitated. “I can make that file difficult to locate in the archive. It wouldn’t be deletion, just—” “Do it.” I looked at Marcus. “And I want the access log for whoever cut that service feed. Full timestamp, credential ID, the terminal it came from.” Marcus pushed off the wall. “I’ll need an hour.” “You have forty minutes.” I turned back to the monitors. On the monitor, Keyla’s face remained frozen at 11:52, just before she came through my door. She looked exhausted, furious, and barely held together. Garrett cleared his throat. “Sir, about the bride. The family requested an incident report, and Mrs. Churchill senior has already asked the floor manager to—” “No report gets filed without my review first. Nothing goes to Mrs. Churchill until I’ve seen it.” I picked up the incident folder from his desk, which ended that conversation. “The keycard access timestamps for all of Floor 27. Tonight.” He nodded and started typing. Marcus appeared beside me, lowering his voice. “I can bury the footage,” Marcus said quietly. “Finding her is harder. She pulled her SIM. Her last network ping died around 5:15, somewhere between here and the east side.” He looked at me. “She knew what she was doing.” “She always did.” He looked at me sideways at that, but didn’t comment on it. That was the thing about Marcus — he catalogued information and filed it and came back to it later when the timing was better. There would be a later conversation about tonight. Not now. “So,” he said. “What do you actually want me to do?” I still held the incident folder. Garrett kept typing. On the monitors, Floor 27 looked untouched. I thought about the torn veil in my pocket. The missing cufflink. The seven-minute gap that someone else had cut into the record before I’d even known to ask for it. Marcus waited. “Do you want me to find the bride,” he said, “or bury the footage?” My fingers closed around the folded veil in my pocket. “Both.”(Keyla POV) The smile was already there before she spoke. Vivienne smiled at me like the wedding night had never happened, either she'd forgotten, or she expected me to. I heard her heels before I saw her. She'd found me in the garden corridor during the half hour between meetings — the passage that ran along the back of the house, open to the garden on one side, with windows onto the frost-killed hedgerows and a runner that had been there long enough to show paths in it. More to avoid thinking than because I expected an immediate reply. I'd been checking my phone, waiting for a response from Priscilla about the afternoon's legal schedule. Vivienne appeared from the far end with the unhurried pace of someone who'd timed the encounter. She didn't call my name right away. "Keyla." Warm. Genuinely warm-sounding, which was the thing about Vivienne — She'd always known exactly how much warmth to put into her voice with enough technical accuracy to delay the moment of recognition. Her e
(Keyla POV) I looked up when the shadow stopped outside the door. He found me in the small sitting room off the east corridor, which I'd been using as a base between meetings because it had a door that closed properly and a window that faced the garden rather than the driveway. It was the only room that didn't make me feel like someone was about to walk in. Leo was in the hallway with Nora — Leo's voice drifted in from the hallway before I saw either of them. I could hear him through the wall, asking her something about whether the carpet pattern meant anything. It almost made me smile. The way he asked about most patterns. I'd left the door ajar specifically so I could hear him. As long as I could hear his voice, I could breathe. The door opened before I could call out. Draxler came in without knocking, which told me he'd been waiting for a moment when I was alone. He'd chosen this moment carefully. The paper slid across the table without a sound. He set Augustus's note on the tab
(Draxler POV) The study Holt led us to wasn't Augustus's — I'd only ever been brought here when something was about to change, it was one of the smaller working rooms on the east side of the house, a room that had always felt like a holding space between decisions rather than a place where decisions were made. Two chairs. A writing desk. Outside, the kitchen garden had already begun turning brown along the edges Marcus came in behind me. Holt placed the folder carefully on the desk, "I'll give you some privacy." He excused himself. I couldn't tell whether he was being polite or making sure whatever came next happened without witnesses. Then I opened the folder. The first document was a search report. It was a search report — the one Marcus had commissioned eighteen months ago through the private investigative network we used for sensitive matters. I recognized the layout immediately, the specific layout of the header, the reference numbers in the upper right corner. It had been m
(Keyla POV) I felt the change in the room before I saw where everyone was looking. Not dramatically. It happened quietly enough that someone outside the room might have missed it. But the attention moved, all of it, like water finding the lowest point, and somehow Leo noticed it before I did. He looked up from where he'd been examining the stitching on the arm of his chair and found four adults looking at him, and he did what he always did under unexpected scrutiny: he went very still and looked back. His fingers stopped playing with the stitching. By the time I realized what I was doing, my arm was already around him.. My arm went around him and he came without resistance as if he'd been waiting for permission. I kept my hand on his shoulder while Holt quietly rearranged the documents and the silence settled into something heavier. Holt adjusted the top page before speaking, "To clarify the language," Holt said, "and I should note that this is the limited language I'm authorize
(Keyla POV) Holt glanced once around the room before opening the folder in front of him "Before the will can be read," Holt said, "we must confirm all named parties are present." Nobody answered. A chair creaked somewhere to my left. The room he'd chosen for the preliminary meeting was the small sitting room off the library — which was probably deliberate. Nobody would mistake this room for somewhere people came to win arguments.. There were eight chairs arranged in a loose formation, a side table with water, and no flowers, which made it feel more like a boardroom than a house. The room had been stripped of anything that might soften what was about to happen. Eleanor had arrived first and taken the chair that communicated she'd arrived first. She sat with the quiet certainty of someone who expected everyone else to arrange themselves around her. Adrian was beside her, still performing grief in the slightly overworked way he'd been performing it all morning, the expression too cont
(Keyla POV) Holt had asked for everyone in the outer sitting room before the formal reading — family and any guests named in the estate proceedings, which meant Keyla was required to be there, which meant Leo was with her, and which meant the first time Draxler approached Leo directly, it happened under fluorescent lighting with a solicitor's assistant hovering in the doorway. I saw him coming before he reached us.. I'll give him that. Not the way someone moves when they're entitled to a space, but the careful, deliberate approach of a person who was aware they could be asked to leave. He stopped a respectful distance away before lowering himself to Leo's level.. Leo had been standing slightly in front of me, partly because that was where he'd decided to stand and partly because Leo had strong opinions about geometry and this was where the geometry made sense to him. He watched Draxler descend to his level with the expression he gave everything he was still deciding about. Withou
(Keyla POV) "You understand reputation collapse better than anyone we've hired." If he'd known why I understood it so well, he probably wouldn't have called it a compliment. The client said it at the end of the call, in the tone of someone delivering a compliment they'd arrived at through experie
(Draxler POV) "What would you do," "if I had?" Augustus said. He wasn't denying it. That was the part that mattered. The dining room had been cleared after breakfast but not reset for lunch, the table bare except for the water glasses Eleanor's staff left out of habit. Augustus was at the far e
(Keyla POV) "I found her." The lack of greeting told me more than the words had. He was standing in my office doorway at nine in the morning with his tablet already open. Whatever he'd found, he hadn't wasted time packaging it. I put down what I was reading. I was already on my feet before I rea
(Keyla POV) Leo ran into the room ahead of us and stopped in the middle of it. Nobody would've mistaken it for a large bedroom — small enough that the toy chest and the single bed we'd ordered would take up most of the floor space, the window looking out onto a courtyard rather than a wall, at le







