LOGINThe words left my mouth before I could stop them.
"I want a divorce."
I watched her face shift through a dozen micro-expressions she thought she was hiding expertly.
The truth is, she was never as good at hiding her emotions as she believed.
Seraphina sat perfectly still for a long moment, and then, her chest moved with a breath she had been holding.
"Why?" she asked.
Her voice was steady, but I could sense a tremor in her breathing.
I exhaled slowly and stood up, making my way to the window. Morning light cut across the room but I didn't turn to look at her. Looking at her made this harder.
"This isn't sudden," I said. "You know that."
Her laugh was quiet and humorless. "No. What's sudden is you finally saying it out loud."
I turned then. I had to see her. Her eyes met mine. Dark. Guarded. Hurt she was trying to bury.
"Is this because of Celeste?" she asked.
The question hit exactly where she aimed. I felt my eyes flicker before I could stop it.
"No," I said. Too quickly. I heard it even as I said it.
She kept watching me. Reading me. That was the thing about Seraphina—she'd spent ten years learning my tells. Boardroom instincts. Negotiation micro-expressions. She'd learned them by watching me with everyone else, never realizing I'd let her see them on purpose.
"You don't have to lie," she said softly. "You've never been good at lying to me. Just distant."
My jaw tightened. "This is not about Celeste."
"But she came back… And suddenly you want out."
I looked away. What could I say? That Celeste's return was a catalyst but not the cause? That I'd been thinking about this for years? That every time I walked past Daniel's room and saw her reading to him, every time I watched her eat breakfast alone because I was already gone, every time I came home late and found her asleep with the lights on, I knew that I had made a mistake that we were both paying for?
I couldn't say any of that.
"Edward's death made me realize something," I said, still not looking at her. "Life is short… too short to waste on a mistake."
The word hung in the air, and I regretted it immediately.
"A mistake," she repeated.
"Yes."
I heard her stand up, and when I finally looked, her face was pale but her eyes were blazing.
"So Daniel was a mistake too?"
My head snapped toward her. "Don't you dare."
"I'm not doing anything. I'm asking."
She had me, and she knew it. If our marriage was a mistake, then everything that came from it, including our son, was tainted by association.
She'd cornered me with logic and I hated her for it. Hated myself more.
I didn't answer.
She took a step closer. "If you want a divorce, fine. But Daniel stays with me."
"Absolutely not." The words came sharp and fast out of instinct.
"He's my son."
"He's my heir. You think I'll just hand him over?"
"He's a child, not a succession plan."
"He's a Blackthorne. And a Frostbane by blood. He belongs here."
"He belongs with the parent who actually raised him. With me."
My temper flared. "You had help. Nannies. Tutors. Everything money could buy."
"And where were you?" Her voice rose, cracking at the edges. "Boardrooms. Flights. Europe. Anywhere but home. You can't buy presence, Kieran. You can't buy a father's love."
Silence slammed down between us.
She was right. God, she was right. I'd given Daniel everything except what mattered. I'd given Seraphina everything except what she needed.
I had nothing to say.
"I want full custody," she continued, forcing herself calm. "I don't want alimony. I don't want the house. I don't want anything else. Just my son."
I stared at her. She meant it. Every word.
"You're not thinking clearly."
"I've never been clearer."
"This will be a war. You know that."
"I know." She met my eyes. "And I'm ready to fight."
Something twisted in my chest. She looked fierce– broken but fierce. Like a wounded lioness that would still defend her cub to death.
I studied her face. The dark circles under her eyes. The set of her jaw. The hands clenched at her sides spoke of the ten years of this woman waiting for me to choose her… ten years of me not knowing how.
And now she was done waiting.
"Fine," I said.
The moment I spoke, confusion flickered across her face.
"What?"
"You can have custody. Full custody."
She blinked. "You're agreeing? Just like that?"
"Yes."
It was too quick. Her eyes narrowed. "Why?"
I stepped closer. Close enough to see the wariness in her expression. "Because Daniel will be safer with you."
The truth, at least the partial truth. "And for some reason I don't understand, I don't want to fight you."
That part was a lie. I understood perfectly. Fighting her meant destroying her. And despite everything, despite the resentment and the distance and the ten years of silence, I couldn't do that. Not to her.
"I'll delay filing," I added. "Until after the funeral. No need to make this harder than it already is."
Pity flickered through me. For her. For us. For everything we'd never been.
She recoiled like I'd struck her.
"Don't," she said. "Don't soften it now. You never softened anything else in this marriage. Don't start now."
I said nothing. What was there to say?
"You never chose me." The words poured out of her, raw and bleeding. "I was an obligation. A solution. A consequence. You married me because I got pregnant. Not because you loved me."
I didn't argue, couldn't. Because she was right. That was how it started.
But she didn't know the rest. Didn't know that somewhere in the ten years of silence, something had changed. That I'd started watching for her car in the driveway. That I'd begun noticing when she laughed at something Daniel said. That I'd caught myself wanting to be the reason for that laugh.
She didn't know because I never told her. Because I didn't know how. Because by the time I figured it out, the distance between us had become a chasm.
"Leave," she said, her chest heaving. "I want to be alone. After everything, I deserve that much. Leave, Kieran."
I hesitated. Wanted to say something. Anything. But what words could bridge ten years?
I turned and walked out.
Seraphina’s POV
That night, I lay in the dark, staring at the ceiling. The house was silent… and for the first time, it felt too big. Too empty.
I cried, using my pillow to muffle the sound of my cries. I cried for my father, my marriage, and the life I had held together alone for ten years.
And for the truth I could no longer ignore.
None of it had ever been mine.
But Daniel was. Daniel would always be.
And I would burn this city to the ground before I let them take him.
Mara opened the gate through the system.None of us spoke while Kieran crossed the small distance from the sidewalk to the brownstone steps. His footsteps sounded through the monitor before they sounded at the door. Lucian positioned himself near the entrance, not in front of me, but close enough to move if needed. Mara stood beside the door, already holding herself like a courtroom. Evelyn remained by the couch, pale and rigid.When the knock came, it was controlled.Three firm knocks.Lucian opened the door.Kieran stood there with a cream envelope in one hand.His eyes moved over the room quickly.Mara.Lucian.Me.Daniel behind my side.Evelyn.His attention stopped there.For all his control, the moment changed him.He looked at Evelyn the way a man might look at a mirror brought from a house he had never entered. Recognition was impossible. Blood, perhaps, made a quieter argument. She had Arthur’s eyes. I saw it now. I had not before. The shape was different, the expression soft
“He froze everything,” Evelyn said in response after a moment. “He locked Daniel’s records behind private instructions, changed the trust to give Daniel protection independent of Kieran, and created a trigger clause in case anyone attempted to access, exploit or challenge Daniel’s medical history or inheritance position. He also added my standing because he believed I was the only person outside the immediate Blackthorne household who had both a blood connection and no financial dependence on the family.”I frowned. “Arthur trusted you?”Evelyn’s mouth moved into a small, sad smile. “Arthur trusted no one fully. He trusted incentives. He believed I had less reason to lie than everyone else.”“That sounds like him,” Mara said.Evelyn nodded. “It was very Arthur.”Daniel looked at her. “Did you like him?”The question surprised Evelyn again. Daniel kept doing that. He kept dragging the conversation out of legal fog and back into the human center of it.“Yes,” she said after a moment. “S
Evelyn continued before I could ask. “Arthur already had Armitage on retainer for another matter. When Daniel’s early records crossed his desk through the foundation, Arthur noticed a marker in the evaluation. It was subtle. A pattern tied to a rare inherited neurological trait.”Daniel stiffened beside me.Lucian spoke before I could. “Careful.”Evelyn looked at Daniel, then nodded. “It was not a disease in the way most people think of illness. It was a trait. A predisposition. It could mean nothing. It could explain certain sensitivities, certain patterns of focus, certain developmental differences. Arthur had seen it before.”“Where?” Mara asked.Evelyn’s fingers tightened around her cold cup of tea. “In my records.”The room went quiet.I stared at her.“You?”“Yes.”Daniel’s eyes widened slightly. “You had the same thing?”Evelyn’s expression softened. “Something similar.”“That means we are related?”The question arrived without fear. Curiosity first. Then caution.Evelyn did no
For a long moment, nobody asked Evelyn what Arthur had found.The question was obvious but nobody reached for it. Perhaps we all understood that once she answered, we would not be able to return to the ordinary version of the day. We would not be able to pretend that Daniel was simply a child caught between parents, or that Kieran was merely a powerful man losing control of his old family, or that Arthur Blackthorne had been nothing more than a dead patriarch whose money still moved through trust documents and sealed rooms.Daniel sat beside me with Storm Captain pressed into his lap, but his eyes were fixed on Evelyn. He had stopped fidgeting. That frightened me. Daniel always did something with his hands when he was processing. He tapped, drew, folded paper, adjusted his bridge, or traced imaginary structures in the air. Now, he only watched.Lucian stood near the fireplace, arms folded, his face steady in a way I had learned meant he was actively holding anger behind his teeth. Mar
Daniel looked from face to face while trying to follow. Trying to catch up. Trying to understand why everyone suddenly looked uncomfortable.Finally he asked, "Uncertain about what?"Nobody answered immediately. Then Lucian spoke."Whether Arthur was Kieran's biological father."Daniel blinked. "Oh."A pause. Then: "Oh."The second one carried understanding. It was not complete understanding but it was enough.Children learned quickly. Sometimes too quickly.Evelyn nodded. "Arthur discovered the letter decades later.""Why didn't he ask Vivian?" Mara said.A sad smile appeared. "Arthur did ask."My stomach tightened.Of course he did.Of course Arthur Blackthorne confronted problems directly.The man treated life like a negotiation.Evelyn continued. "Vivian denied it."The room became quiet again. Then she added: "Arthur believed her."I frowned. "Then why investigate?"That was the obvious question.If he believed her, why spend years digging?Why create trust amendments?Why launch
Evelyn Byrne sat in my living room holding a cup of tea that had long since gone cold.Nobody seemed interested in drinking anything anymore.The conversation had moved far beyond comfort.Far beyond hospitality.Far beyond anything I had expected when I woke up that morning.Daniel sat beside me on the couch with Storm Captain tucked against his side. He wasn't leaning into me the way he had when he was younger. The habit had faded over the years. Yet I could feel him watching me from the corner of his eye every few seconds, checking that I was still there.Checking that the world still made sense.Checking that the ground beneath him hadn't disappeared.I understood the feeling.Mine had disappeared several times already.Evelyn had just informed us that Arthur Blackthorne had spent part of his final years investigating whether Kieran was actually his biological son.The statement felt absurd. Impossible. Cruel.And yet every revelation over the last twenty-four hours had arrived ca
The penthouse was too quiet. It was just quiet in the way expensive places became quiet when the people inside had stopped living in them.I found Kieran exactly where I expected. He was standing in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows with a glass of whiskey he hadn't touched.His suit jacket was
Mara’s voice remained calm but I heard the anger beneath it as she spoke, “They are trying to shift the ground. Since the result does not help them, they are suggesting the way you handled it may be harmful.”Daniel whispered, “But I asked.”My heart cracked open and I turned to him immediately. “I
Good news had a sound.I did not know that before.I thought good news was a sentence. A result. A fact placed on a table with enough certainty to quiet the room.But that morning, good news sounded like Daniel laughing through tears. Like Seraphina saying “our baby” as if the words were both praye
The call came at 2:17 a.m.I remember the time because I stared at my phone for a full five seconds before answering it, my heart already pounding like it already knew something I didn’t want to hear. Why did it feel like the universe was about to come for me? I wondered as I looked around. The ro







