تسجيل الدخولAdrian's POV
I don't trust coincidences. Never have. My father taught me that before he taught me anything else about business, about money, about the weight of a name like Holt. He said coincidences were just patterns that hadn't introduced themselves yet. You pull the thread and something always unravels. So when I sat in my office at midnight with a glass of scotch I hadn't touched and a woman asleep three floors above me who had appeared at my altar wearing another woman's dress and saved my grandmother's life with another woman's medical knowledge... I pulled the thread. I'd had Darius on it since the reception ended. My head of security was former military, former intelligence and entirely without sentiment, which made him the most useful person I employed. I gave him a name and a face and twenty-four hours. He knocked at twelve-seventeen and placed a single folder on my desk without a word. I opened it. Naomi Bridges. Twenty-six years old. Born in Lagos, Nigeria. Relocated to London at fifteen following her mother's remarriage to a British national. Secondary school records unremarkable. University enrollment confirmed, King's College London, Faculty of Medicine, two years completed and then a full stop. No withdrawal paperwork. No transfer. No disciplinary record. No explanation of any kind. Just a clean, hard stop at twenty years old, like someone had reached into her life and pressed pause. Her employment history after that was scattered. Short contracts across four cities. Nothing that added up to a career. Nothing that added up to a life, really. More like a person moving fast enough that the ground never got a chance to remember their footprints. Her current address was a flat above a dry-cleaner in Peckham. Her next of kin field was blank. And her surname... I leaned forward. Her surname was her mother's maiden name. Grace Adaeze Bridges. Dead four years. Naomi had taken her mother's surname name after she died and quietly buried the one she was born with, the one on her original birth certificate that Darius had spent most of the night tracking down through Lagos civil records and a contact who owed him a favour. I read the name on that birth certificate slowly. Then I sat back in my chair and looked at the ceiling for a long moment. NAOMI COLE. Cole. As in Vivienne Cole. As in the woman who was supposed to be standing at my altar yesterday morning. As in the real bride. The same surname was not a coincidence. Nothing about this was a coincidence. I looked at Darius. "They're connected." "Half sisters," he said. "Same father. Different mothers. Reginald Cole. He left Naomi's mother when Naomi was an infant and built a second family in London. Vivienne was raised in that family. Naomi was not." "Does Naomi know?" "Unknown. But there's more." He reached into the folder and produced a second document. A photograph, printed from security camera footage. Timestamp in the corner. Thirty-one hours before my wedding. A hotel car park. Grey concrete. Poor lighting but clear enough. Vivienne Cole standing beside her car with a suitcase at her feet. A figure stepping out of the shadows at the far end of the car park. Vivienne taking one step back, then another. The figure closing the distance. And then the frame ended. The next frame in the sequence showed only an empty car park and one abandoned suitcase and the kind of stillness that meant something had gone very wrong very quickly. My jaw tightened. "When was she found?" "She hasn't been," Darius said. "Her family reported her missing this morning. Police located her vehicle an hour ago. They're treating it as a missing persons case pending investigation." He paused. "It won't stay that way." "No," I said. "It won't." I set the photograph down with more care than the action required, which was my body's way of managing what my face refused to show. Vivienne and I had not been in love. Ours was an arrangement, a practical solution to the inheritance clause that suited both families. But she was a person. She was twenty-four years old and she had laughed easily and worn too much perfume and argued with me about wine and she did not deserve whatever that car park had given her. I stood and moved to the window. The grounds were dark below me. Security lights marked the perimeter. Above me, on the third floor of the east wing, a light was still on. I could see from the security system on my phone. Naomi. Awake again, I guess. She slept badly, I'd noticed. Not that I'd been paying attention. I simply noticed things. It was a habit that had made me a great deal of money and occasionally made me difficult to be deceived. I noticed the way she'd walked down that aisle yesterday with borrowed flowers and a dress that fought her at every seam, like she was daring the room to say something about it and had already prepared the response. I noticed the way she'd sat at my mother's table and eaten every single bite of her dinner slowly and without apology. I noticed the way she'd hit her knees on that carpet this afternoon without looking around first, without performing for an audience, without calculating how the moment might benefit her. She hadn't known anyone was watching. That was the part I couldn't put down. People who are running a con always know when they're being watched. They can't help it. Their eyes move. Their timing shifts. Something in them is always tracking the room. Naomi's eyes hadn't moved. She'd looked at my grandmother and nowhere else. She's the girl. Eleanor's voice had been sitting in the back of my head since she'd said it and Eleanor did not say things carelessly. She was eighty-one years old and she had outlasted three generations of Holt family drama through a combination of sharp instinct and strategic silence. If Eleanor recognised something in Naomi, there was something to recognise. I turned back to the desk. The connection between Naomi and Vivienne meant one of two things. Either Naomi had been placed at that altar deliberately as part of whatever had been done to Vivienne, which made her a threat I needed to neutralise carefully. Or she had been chosen precisely because of her bloodline, used by whoever orchestrated this without her full knowledge or consent, which made her something far more complicated than a threat. It made her a target. My phone lit up on the desk. Unknown number. I stared at it for one ring, two rings and then picked it up. No voice. Just a video file transferred directly to my screen. I pressed play. The footage was sharp. Professional quality, nothing like a phone camera. A hotel corridor, cream walls, gold numbered doors. Vivienne stepping out of room two-fourteen in a coat and heels, pulling a small suitcase, clearly mid-departure. A figure appearing at the end of the corridor. Vivienne stopping. Saying something I couldn't hear. Taking one step back and then another. The figure moving closer with the patience of someone who already knew exactly how this ended. The footage cut to black. White text appeared on the dark screen, clean and unhurried. Ask your wife who sent her. I set the phone face down on the desk. What was happening?! Outside, Naomi's light was still on. I reached for my jacket, picked up the folder and walked out of the office and toward the stairs because whoever had sent that video wanted me to look at Naomi and see a conspirator. Which meant the most important thing I could do right now was look at her clearly. And decide for myself.Naomi's POVI got in the car.I cannot fully explain why. There was no good reason to get in the car. There were several excellent reasons not to get in the car, starting with the fact that the man inside it had orchestrated the situation that had put me at an altar in a dead woman's dress and ending with the fact that Adrian had specifically said stay inside the manor and this was considerably outside the manor.I told myself it was because I needed information.That was partially true. I did need information. But it was not the whole truth and I was honest enough with myself to know it. The whole truth was that this man had said the words I am your father and something ancient and stubborn in me needed to look at him. Needed to sit across from him in an enclosed space and take a proper inventory of what sixty years of living had made of the man who had walked away from my mother before I was old enough to remember his absence.The driver did not look at me. The car pulled into tra
Naomi's POVThe agreement was simple.Celeste continued. We continued. Nothing changed visibly. Darius tracked every communication, every contact, every digital footprint she left while she was in or near the manor. We fed her the information we had selected for her to have and we watched where it went.Simple in theory.Considerably less simple when the person you were performing normalcy around was sitting across from you at eleven in the morning with a coffee cup and a smile and the specific sharpness of someone who had been very good at reading rooms for a very long time.★★★Celeste stayed for two hours that first evening.She was charming throughout. She asked questions that were reasonable and warm and designed with the precision of someone who understood exactly which questions produced the most useful answers without appearing to be useful questions at all.How was I finding London. Did I have friends in the city or was I rather isolated. Had I had a chance to explore the Fou
Adrian's POVI sat with it for forty-seven minutes before I told Naomi.She was across the desk from me in the study, having followed me from the hallway without asking questions, which I was beginning to understand was characteristic. She did not demand information before it was ready to be given. She waited with the patience of someone who understood that rushing a thing rarely improved it.I appreciated that more than I intended to.I had the file open in front of me. Darius had sent everything through in the twelve minutes between the phone call and us reaching the study. Bank records. Payment histories. Dates. Amounts. The particular paper trail of someone who had been careful but not careful enough, which was the only kind of trail that eventually got found.The payments were consistent. Monthly. Eighteen months of them. Not large enough to attract immediate attention. Large enough, over time, to constitute a significant arrangement.All of them to a single account.Celeste Va
Adrian's POV I have sat across negotiating tables from some of the most strategically capable people in British business. I have watched men with forty years of experience attempt to dismantle deals I had spent months constructing. I have been in rooms where every person present was working against my position and I was required to hold it anyway. I have read people professionally and personally for thirty years and I am, without false modesty, exceptionally good at it. I had never watched anything quite like what Naomi did at that breakfast table. ★★★ I had known within four minutes of Diana and Rosalind's arrival what they were. My mother had not told me about this. She had sent a message the previous evening about a formal breakfast and dress accordingly and I had assumed it was one of her periodic attempts to impose structure on a household that had become considerably less structured since Saturday. I had not assumed it was an ambush. I had underestimated her. That was m
Naomi's POV.I woke up thinking Eleanor's smile at the door last night, small and specific and slightly wicked.Be ready.I got up. I washed my face. I looked at myself in the mirror with more than four seconds this time because today apparently required a fuller assessment. Lily had brought more clothes the previous evening, a quiet knock and a folded stack left on the chair without ceremony, and I had gone through them with the same careful attention I had given the first set.Someone with access to significant resources and a good eye had selected these. They fit. Not approximately. Precisely.I chose a deep green dress today. Structured. The kind that said I dressed with intention this morning and the intention was that you should take me seriously. I put my hair up. I put on the shoes that had come with yesterday's delivery because they were the best shoes I had ever worn and I was not going to pretend otherwise.I looked at myself.Grace's daughter, Eleanor had said.Right. I t
Naomi's POVThe study meeting had ended at half past ten.Adrian had dismissed me with three words. Get some rest. Not unkindly. But with the finality of a man who had processing to do that required privacy and had decided that the processing would go better if I was not in the room watching him do it.I understood. I left.What he was sitting with was significant. The silver-haired man with the ring who had attended his father's funeral and sat in the front row and been to this house many times.Celeste photographed beside him eight months ago, three weeks before Mrs. Patel's agency appeared. The shape of something that had been in his world for years, quietly and patiently, waiting for the right moment to move.I could not imagine what it felt like to be Adrian Holt right now and I did not try.I went back to my room.I sat at the desk. I turned my mother's photograph face up for the first time since I had placed it face down the night before.Grace Bridges. Young. Smiling. Complete







