Mag-log inI spend the first hour of the gala being exactly who Isabelle Renaud is supposed to be.
Charming. Informed. Strategically interested in the right people. I ask questions that make people feel smart. I remember details they mentioned earlier in the conversation, circling back to them in ways that signal attention and care. I laugh at jokes that aren't particularly funny and look impressed by accomplishments that aren't particularly impressive. It's not exhausting — I've been doing this long enough that it's become automatic, a second language I speak more fluently than my native one. I collect two business cards and one invitation to a smaller dinner next week, which I accept with the warmth of someone who finds these things pleasantly inevitable. The dinner is hosted by a media executive who clearly believes himself to be more influential than he actually is — but the guest list includes three people I need to meet, so I smile and say yes and file the date in my mental calendar. I do not approach Celeste Laurent. This is intentional. The worst thing I could do tonight is go to her. People approach Celeste — you can see it, the way they drift toward her orbit, the slight squaring of shoulders as they prepare their opening lines. They approach her with prepared remarks and calculated compliments and questions designed to demonstrate their own intelligence. They approach her the way you'd approach a throne — with deference, with hope, with the desperate desire to be acknowledged. She receives these approaches with consistent, unreadable politeness. She listens. She responds. She gives nothing. And then she moves on, and the person who approached her is left standing there, uncertain whether the interaction went well or poorly, unable to read any signal in the perfect blankness of her expression. Her conversational presence is the equivalent of a very expensive, very locked door. You can knock. You might even get a response — a voice through the intercom, a polite acknowledgment of your existence. But you're not getting inside. I want to be the person she comes to. This requires patience. It requires the willingness to be invisible while others compete for her attention. It requires the confidence to believe that if I'm patient enough, if I position myself correctly, if I'm interesting enough in the right way at the right time, she'll notice me on her own. I'm deep in a conversation about AI regulation with a German legal consultant — a woman named Klara who clearly knows her subject deeply and is slightly surprised to find someone who can keep up with her — when I feel it. The specific awareness of being watched by someone who is very good at not appearing to watch. I don't look up. I finished my sentence. I let Klara respond to the point I've just made. And then, casually, as if I'm simply talking in the room, as if I'm just letting my gaze wander while I wait for her to finish speaking, I glance in the direction the feeling is coming from. Celeste is twenty feet away, speaking to two men in finance. Her attention is correct, professionally on them. The older man is saying something that requires her focus — or at least, that's what her posture suggests, the slight forward tilt of her head, the attentive stillness of her body. Except that it isn't, quite. There is a dimension of her attention — small, tucked away, perfectly concealed to anyone not specifically looking for it — that is pointed at me. I can feel it. The weight of it. The way her awareness has expanded to include me without disturbing the surface of her interaction with the finance men. She's listening to them — I'm sure she is, her mind is probably processing everything they're saying while simultaneously doing seventeen other things — but part of her, some small part, is paying attention to where I'm standing and who I'm talking to and how I'm holding myself. I look away before she can catch me catching her. My heart is beating faster. I ignore this. I turn back to Klara and nod as if I've been listening to her the whole time, which I haven't, and say something that sounds like agreement. A server appears at my elbow with a fresh glass of champagne on a silver tray. He's already turning away before I can respond, already moving to his next task, the tray balanced perfectly on his fingers. "Excuse me," I say, touching his sleeve lightly. "I didn't order this." "Compliments of Ms. Laurent," he says, and disappears into the crowd before I can ask anything else. I look at the glass. It's identical to the one I've been holding — same champagne, same crystal — but it feels different now. Weighted. Significant. The condensation on the outside is cool against my fingers. Then, slowly, I look across the room. Celeste is still in conversation with the two finance men. She has not looked at me. She shows no sign of having just done anything at all. Her attention is exactly where it should be, her expression exactly as composed as it's been all evening. But the corner of her mouth — barely, barely, barely — moves. It is not quite a smile. It's too small for that, too controlled. It's the suggestion of a smile. The ghost of one. The shape that a smile would be, if she were the kind of person who let herself smile at strangers at galas. A flicker of something that might be amusement or might be interesting or might be simply acknowledgement — I see you, it says. I see you noticing me noticing you. My stomach does something complicated. I pick up the champagne glass. I take a sip. The champagne is excellent — crisp, dry, the kind of vintage that people who know about these things would be able to name and date and probably appraise. I don't know anything about champagne. I know about people. And what I know, at this moment, is that Celeste Laurent has just done something deliberate. From twenty feet away, without turning toward me even a fraction, without shifting her posture or her expression or her attention from the men she's speaking to, Celeste Laurent inclines her head by approximately three degrees. It's the smallest movement. Anyone not watching for it would miss it entirely. But I'm watching for it — I've been watching for it since the champagne glass arrived — and I see it. Acknowledged, it says. You're interesting. Let's see what you do with that. I feel, for the first time in years, something that takes me a mortifying three seconds to identify. Nerves. Actual, physical nerves — the kind I haven't felt since my first operation, the kind that belong to beginners and amateurs. My palms are slightly damp. My pulse is elevated. There's a tightness in my chest that I can't quite breathe through. I press them flat immediately. I've spent years learning to control my physiological responses — to lower my heart rate, to steady my breathing, to override the body's automatic reactions with the force of trained will. I do it now, consciously, methodically. Breath in for four counts. Hold for four. Out for four. I set the glass down — my original glass, not the one she sent. I finish my conversation with Klara, excuse myself gracefully, and find the bathroom, where I stand in front of a mirror for ninety seconds and remind myself who I am. I am Daphne Vega. I have conned a shipping magnate in Hong Kong, a pharmaceutical executive in Zurich, and a sitting member of three separate governments — though that operation was so classified I can't even think about it without a small part of my brain raising alarms. I once talked my way into a classified research facility using nothing but a borrowed lanyard and a confident walk, and I walked out forty minutes later with photographs that three intelligence agencies had been trying to obtain for eighteen months. I am not undone by a woman who sent me a glass of champagne. I check my makeup. I smooth my dress. I steady my breathing one more time. I go back to the gala. I am extremely, absolutely undone by a woman who sent me a glass of champagne. ---The autumn storms came early that year.Rain lashed against the whitewashed walls of our Portuguese house, drumming on the roof tiles, turning the garden into a swamp of mud and fallen lemons. Lucky refused to go outside. The small white poodle had taken up permanent residence on Celeste's lap, trembling dramatically whenever the wind rattled the windows."The dog is afraid of the weather," Celeste observed."The dog is sensible. The weather is dangerous.""Rain is not dangerous.""Lightning is. Thunder is. The way the Atlantic throws itself against the cliffs—that's dangerous." I curled deeper into the couch, pulling a blanket over my legs. "We should move somewhere with better weather. The Caribbean. The Maldives. Somewhere the sun shines all year."Celeste looked at me over the top of Lucky's head. "You hate the sun. You're always complaining about the sun.""I hate extreme weather of all kinds. Is that so wrong?"She laughed—a sound that had become more frequent over the past mont
Vienna was grey in February.The kind of grey that seeped into your bones, that made the old buildings look older and the new buildings look desperate. Celeste and I stood outside the courthouse, watching the journalists gather like crows on a telephone wire. Cameras. Microphones. Voices raised in a dozen languages, all of them asking the same question.Are you afraid of going to prison?We didn't answer. Our lawyers had advised us not to speak to the press—not yet, not until the cooperation agreements were finalized and the first round of hearings was complete.But the cameras kept clicking. And the questions kept coming.Ms. Laurent! Is it true you'll be testifying against Aris Thorne?Ms. Vega! How does it feel to be granted immunity after years of evading justice?Are you two still together?That last question came from a young woman with a French accent and hopeful eyes. Celeste paused. I looked at the camera. Look at me.Then she took my hand and walked into the courthouse witho
The sirens grew louder, then deafening, then softened into the organized chaos of an arrest. Swiss federal police flooded the estate—blue lights spinning across the marble floors, radios crackling, voices barking orders in German and French and English.I watched them take Aris Thorne away.He didn't struggle. Didn't speak. Just walked between two officers with his cuffed hands and his bleeding shoulder and his eyes fixed on something none of the rest of us could see. Fifteen years of running. Fifteen years of building empires on bones. It ended not with a bang or a whimper, but with the quiet efficiency of men who'd done this a thousand times before.Celeste stood beside me, her gun confiscated, her hands trembling slightly. She'd been interviewed already—three officers in rapid succession, each one more deferential than the last. The cut on her cheek had been cleaned. The bruise on her jaw was darkening."You're staring," she said."You almost died.""I almost killed someone. There'
We drove away from Innsbruck with the address burning a hole in Celeste's pocket.The road curved through the Alps, heading east toward Vienna. Hana drove with her usual focus, but I could see the tension in her shoulders—the same tension I felt in my own chest. The address was a gift. But gifts from desperate men often came with strings attached."Kane could be lying," Emilia said from the back seat. She'd been quiet since we left the hotel, her face turned toward the window, watching the mountains slide past. "Thorne could have told him to give us that address. Could be leading us into an ambush.""Kane wasn't lying." Celeste's voice was certain. "I've known him for fifteen years. I've seen him lie to boards, to investors, to regulators. He's good at it. But today—he was telling the truth.""Fear makes people truthful," I said. "And Kane was terrified.""Of Thorne. Not of us." Celeste pulled out the paper. I looked at the address again. "The estate belonged to Thorne's grandmother.
We didn't sleep that night.Instead, we gathered around the table like generals planning a war. Maps spread across the wood. Laptops glowing. Coffee cups emptying and refilling in an endless cycle. Hana had brought in a second operative—a woman named Kaelen who specialized in tracking fugitives through digital footprints."Thorne is offline," Kaelen reported, her fingers flying across the keyboard. "No credit card usage. No phone pings. No social media activity. He's gone dark completely.""He had help," Emilia said for the third time. "Someone met him at the river. Someone with a boat and a vehicle and a plan.""Then we find the helper." Celeste leaned over the map. "Someone in Thorne's inner circle who wasn't at the summit. Someone who stayed in the shadows."Mireille pulled up a list on her laptop. "I've been cross-referencing Thorne's known associates with travel records from the past 48 hours. Twelve people left Switzerland within six hours of the broadcast. Most of them have ali
The chalet felt different after Emilia left.Larger. Emptier. The kind of silence that pressed against your ears and made you strain for sounds that weren't there. Celeste sat at the table with a cup of coffee that had gone cold hours ago. Mireille had claimed the armchair by the fireplace, her bruised face half-hidden in shadow. Hana stood by the window, her phone in her hand, waiting for a message that might never come.I paced.It was the only thing I could do. Pace and check my phone and imagine every possible way Emilia's mission could go wrong. The tracker was active—a small device embedded in her coat collar, broadcasting her location to Hana's laptop in real time. Right now, she is moving east. Toward Liechtenstein. Toward Thorne."How long until she makes contact?" I asked."Four hours, if she follows the plan." Hana didn't look up from her phone. "She'll reach the dead drop at dawn. Leave a message using the old codes. Then she waits.""And if Thorne doesn't respond?""Then
Sofia is three when she asks where babies come from.Not the biological question — she's not there yet. She wants to know where she came from. The story we've told her, the one about a young mother who couldn't care for her, about a hospital room and a social worker and a long drive home.Celeste h
Sofia says her first word on a Tuesday.Not "Mama" — that would be too expected. Not "Dada" — also expected. She's sitting on the kitchen floor, surrounded by wooden blocks, when she picks up a red square and holds it toward Celeste."Oak," she says.Celeste freezes.The dog has been gone for over
The house feels different after Lucas leaves.Not empty — just expectant. Like the pause between heartbeats. Celeste moves through the rooms slowly, touching things — the edge of the crib we set up in the guest room, the stack of baby blankets folded on the dresser, the small stuffed rabbit that Lu
The house is too quiet after Oak.I notice it in the mornings most of all — the absence of his soft breathing from the corner of the bedroom, the missing weight against my leg when I make coffee, the way Celeste still turns to look at the spot on the couch where he used to curl. Grief is like that.







