LOGIN"Get in the SUV."
Lucian's voice cut through the sidewalk noise like a blade. No room for argument.
I tried to stand. My knees had other plans.
The concrete tilted and I grabbed at air. Gavin caught me before I hit the ground, one arm sweeping under my legs, the other locking around my back.
"Put me down," I said.
"No." He did not even look at me.
"I have a shift tomorrow morning. If I miss it, I don't get paid. If I don't get paid, I lose my apartment." My voice cracked on the last word. "So I need you to put me down."
"You're not walking."
My landlord did not care about my medical emergencies. He cared about the fifteenth of the month.
Zane pulled the SUV door open. Gavin ducked inside with me still in his arms. I had no choice but to let him.
Lucian was already in the driver's seat, jaw locked, eyes on the mirror. The doors sealed shut. Cold air conditioning hit my face like a wall and I felt my nausea flatten just slightly.
The silence lasted four seconds.
"Explain," Lucian said.
"I already told you everything."
"You told us three words. Try again."
I pressed my back against the seat. Zane sat too close on my left, close enough that his shoulder pressed against mine. His eyes kept dropping to my stomach like he was trying to do math he could not solve.
"My IUD failed," I said. "My doctor confirmed it last week. Triplets. All viable. Twelve weeks."
Nobody spoke.
Say something, I thought. Fight each other. Accuse me. Do something I can predict.
"Have you eaten today?" Zane asked.
I blinked. "What?"
"Today. Food. Have you had any?"
"A protein bar at six this morning."
His expression went flat in a way that scared me more than anger would have.
Gavin's hand moved from the seat and settled on my thigh. Heavy and warm and completely uninvited.
"Don't," I said.
He did not move it.
This was wrong. All of it. I had braced for a war between them. I had built my whole plan around surviving whatever blowup happened and walking away to handle this alone. Keep the mascot job. Keep the access. Get my scoop, sell it, rebuild everything Derek took from me.
Instead they were sitting here like a unit.
Like something had already been decided without me.
"We're going to my place," Lucian said.
"Nobody asked me," I said.
"No." He pulled into traffic. "We didn't."
Lucian's building had a private elevator and no lobby staff who would ask questions. The penthouse door opened with a biometric scan. Inside, everything was steel and glass and controlled light, the kind of apartment that cost more per month than I made in a year.
The door locked behind us with a heavy, final click.
I stood in the center of the room and watched all three of them spread out around me. No posturing between them. No territorial sniping.
Just three large men forming a wall, with me at the center of it.
My pulse hammered.
Lucian stopped in front of me. Those gray eyes locked onto mine and did not move.
"Whose are they?" he asked.
The question landed like a stone.
I had rehearsed an answer for this. Something that bought me time, something deflecting. It dissolved completely under the weight of his stare.
"I don't know," I said.
The room did not explode. No one moved.
Then Gavin stepped forward. He walked until my back hit the wall and he was close enough that I had to tilt my chin up to see his face. His tattoos curved along his forearms. His eyes were completely calm.
That calmness was the most frightening thing in the room.
"It doesn't matter," he said. Quiet. Final.
"Gavin."
"They are ours." He held my gaze without blinking. "You are ours."
He let that land.
"And you are never leaving."
The skids touched down and the rotor wash flattened the grass in a perfect circle around the helicopter.Dawn was happening all at once. The kind of light that comes up fast over open water, gold and total, hitting the white stone of the estate like it had been waiting all night for permission. The building was enormous and low and built into the landscape like it had grown there. Armed perimeter visible at the tree line but quiet. Disciplined.Safe.I knew it in my body before my mind caught up. Some animal part of me that had been running on cortisol and adrenaline for eighteen hours registered the stillness and simply stopped.My legs gave out when the door opened.Gavin caught me before I reached the ground. He made no comment, asked no question. He simply lifted me with one arm under my knees and one across my back and carried me across the landing pad toward the entrance like the decision had already been made and he saw no reason to revisit it."I can walk," I said."I know," h
Eli laughed.Not the laugh of a man with a gun against his skull. Something colder than that. The sound of someone who had already decided how the story ended and found the journey genuinely amusing."You are going to shoot me," he said. "In front of her. In front of those babies." He let the silence sit for a moment. "Go ahead, then."Lucian did not move."Webb does not want the empire," Eli said. His voice was completely conversational, like he was discussing a trade deal. "He never did. Franchises can be bought and sold. Money can be replaced." He tilted his head forward a fraction, the barrel following. "He wants the bloodline. Those three children are Morgan heirs. The trust structures, the international holdings, the generational assets. Whoever controls the children controls all of it until they come of age." Another pause. "He has attorneys ready. All he needs is a viable custody claim and three men in federal prison to make it stick."The room went very still.Whoever control
The keypad on the other side of the door made a sound like a quiet conversation. Small electronic tones, methodical, patient.He had done this before.I pressed my back against the far wall and forced my voice to come out level. The intercom button was cold under my thumb."Why didn't you find me sooner?" I said. "If you have been watching since Ohio, why wait?"The tones paused."I needed you to be ready," he said. "You were not ready.""Ready for what?""To understand that the people around you were the danger." A brief silence. More tones. "You always trusted too easily, Mali. Even when we were small. I had to remove the variables."My skin went cold."What variables," I said."The job. The city. The man." Another pause. "Derek did not find that evidence on his own. He needed guidance. Direction. Someone to show him where to look and what to build." The tones continued, unhurried. "I gave him the architecture. He supplied the ambition."The room tilted.Derek had not manufactured t
"Tell me what you are walking into."All three of them turned at once.Three weapons dropped to their sides in the same motion, angled down and away, and I watched them perform the fastest controlled stand-down I had seen yet. Lucian stepped in front of the island. Not to block my view. The blueprints were already visible. He just moved toward me the way he always did, putting himself between my body and whatever the threat was, even when the threat was information."You should be in bed," he said."Tell me," I said. "All of it."A pause. The three of them exchanged the look.Then Lucian told me.Webb had been at the fire. Not as a witness. Webb's family had owned the property adjacent to ours and the fire had not been accidental, something investigators had quietly buried when the insurance company involved turned out to share a board member with Webb's first holding company. Eli had not died. He had been pulled from the wreckage by Webb's private security team, taken off the record,
"The triplets are stable."Three words and the room exhaled.Dr. Reyes pressed two fingers to my wrist one final time, checked the portable monitor, and looked up over her glasses with the specific calm of someone who delivered difficult news for a living and had learned to lead with the good."Stress-induced uterine contractions. Significant, but not progressive." She looked at me directly. "The babies are fine. You are not, however, if you continue at this pace."She issued the rest of her instructions to the room at large. Strict bed rest, forty-eight hours minimum. No elevated heart rate. No emotional spikes if avoidable. A prescription called in before she reached the elevator. She said the words and packed her bag and left with the efficiency of someone on permanent retainer who understood that certain households ran differently than others.The door clicked shut.The three of them stood around the bed and for the first time since the sidewalk, since the boardroom, since any of
The bedroom door came off its frame with a single kick.Gavin went through first, weapon up, clearing left. Zane took the right side of the room in two strides. Lucian kept himself between me and the doorway with one arm extended back, holding me in the corridor until they called it."Clear," Zane said."Closet," Gavin said.I watched through the doorway as Gavin hit the closet handle and pulled it open in one motion, already angled to the side with his weapon raised.Nothing came out.No movement. No ambush.Gavin stared into the closet for a long moment and then lowered his arm slowly.I moved into the doorway.The closet was empty except for the clothes I had hung three days ago and one addition that had not been there this morning. A laptop, slim and expensive, sitting open on the top shelf, positioned precisely between two folded sweaters like it belonged there. The screen was active. Bright.It was showing a live feed.High definition, three camera angles split across the screen







