LOGINGarrett's file arrived at midnight.
Damien sat at his home office desk, door locked, the rest of the penthouse dark and silent around him. He had waited until he was certain Vivienne was asleep before opening his laptop — a precaution that would have seemed absurd to him three years ago and now felt entirely necessary. He opened the email. The file was thorough. Garrett was good at what he did and charged accordingly, and every cent was visible in the quality of what sat in front of Damien now. Twelve pages. Photographs. An address. A employment history. A life reconstructed from the careful, deliberate distance of a woman who had clearly not wanted to be found. He started at the beginning. *Subject relocated to Calloway approximately three years ago. Currently employed as senior consultant at Varden Legal Group. Performance record indicates two promotions in eighteen months. Regarded by colleagues as exceptional.* Damien read that twice. He wasn't surprised. Mara had always been exceptional. That had never been the problem — or rather, he was beginning to understand that it had never been a problem at all and he had simply been too blind and too certain of himself to recognise what he had. He kept reading. *Subject resides in a two-bedroom apartment on Selwyn Street. Lease held under the name Mara Ellis-Ward.* Ellis-Ward. Her mother's name added like a wall built specifically to keep him out. He noted it without feeling anything he was prepared to name. *Subject maintains a low profile. No active social media presence. Limited public footprint. Social circle appears small and carefully selected.* He could picture it exactly. Mara moving through a new city with that quiet deliberate efficiency she applied to everything — building only what she needed, trusting only who she had earned the right to trust, leaving no loose edges for anyone to pull. She had always been better at self-preservation than he gave her credit for. He turned the page. And stopped. The photograph was taken from a distance, clearly without her knowledge — Garrett had that kind of discretion. It showed Mara outside what appeared to be a primary school, crouching down to zip up a small child's jacket. A boy. Dark hair. Small serious face. A backpack that was slightly too big for his frame. Damien leaned forward. The next photograph was closer. The boy looking up at Mara with an expression of complete uncomplicated trust, the kind that only existed between very small children and the people they loved most in the world. Damien's chest did something he didn't have an immediate explanation for. He told himself the child could be anyone's. A nephew. A neighbour's son. Mara had always been warm with children in a way he had noticed without ever properly appreciating. It didn't have to mean — The third photograph stopped that thought completely. It was a candid shot outside a coffee shop. The boy was laughing at something, head thrown back, completely unguarded. And in that unguarded moment, with his face fully visible and his features caught cleanly in the morning light — Damien recognised his own jaw. His own eyes. His own particular way of holding completely still in the middle of movement, like a child who had learned early to observe before reacting. He sat back in his chair. The office was very quiet. Outside the window the city hummed its indifferent nighttime hum and somewhere in the building a lift chimed softly and somewhere in the bedroom Vivienne slept the uncomplicated sleep of a woman with no conscience to disturb her. Damien looked at the photograph for a long time. He thought about the morning at the breakfast table. Mara's hands — so steady, so deliberate, so carefully controlled. He had read it as coldness at the time. Indifference. The confirmation that she had never loved him the way he told himself she hadn't. He understood now that he had been watching a woman hold herself together by sheer force of will while carrying something he didn't even know existed. She had been pregnant. She had signed those papers knowing she was pregnant. Had looked at him across that table, and said *I hope she makes you happy,* and walked out carrying his child without saying a single word. The steadiness of it — the absolute iron-spined composure of it — landed in his chest like something physical. He closed the laptop. Opened it again immediately. Picked up his phone and called Garrett. It rang twice. "Mr. Cross." "The boy," Damien said. His voice came out quieter than he intended. "How old is he?" A pause. The brief careful pause of a man who had already done the calculation and was deciding how to deliver it. "Three years and two months, sir," Garrett said. "Give or take." Damien said nothing. "Mr. Cross" "Book me a flight to Calloway," Damien said. "First thing tomorrow." He hung up before Garrett could respond. Then he sat in the dark for a very long time, looking at nothing, while everything he thought he knew about the last three years quietly rearranged itself into something he was only beginning to understand the shape of.Vivienne found out on a Friday.Not from Damien.From someone else.She always did.Over the years, she'd learned that secrets rarely stayed hidden.People talked.You just had to know who enjoyed talking the most.This time, it was Marcus Webb.He mentioned, almost casually, that Damien had asked him for the name of a private investigator a few weeks earlier.Marcus hadn't thought anything of it.Vivienne had.One phone call became two.Two became four.By Friday afternoon, she knew Damien hadn't gone to Calloway for work.By Friday evening...She knew why.She sat alone in the penthouse living room, staring out over the city.A child.Damien had a child with Mara.For several minutes, she said nothing.She simply let the information settle.She had spent three years believing Mara had disappeared.That she'd accepted the divorce.Moved somewhere quiet.Started over.Instead...Mara had built an entirely new life.A successful career.A son.And somehow...Damien had found both.Vivi
Damien asked if they could meet without the lawyers.Mara didn't answer right away.She already knew what she was going to say.Still, she waited two days.Not because she was unsure.Because she'd learned something about Damien over the past few weeks.Whenever she answered too quickly, he took it as hope.As if a fast reply meant the door had opened a little wider.It hadn't.On Wednesday evening, after Lucas was asleep, she finally sent a message.Thursday. Noon. Birch Lane Café. One hour.When she arrived, Damien was already there.Of course he was.He hadn't been late once.She'd started to notice that.Being on time had become his way of saying the things he couldn't put into words.I'm trying.I won't let you down again.She understood.It still didn't change anything.She ordered her coffee and sat across from him.She kept her coat on.A small decision.An important one.She wasn't settling in.She wasn't staying longer than she'd planned.She could leave the moment the conve
The second visit felt different.Not by much.But enough.This time, when Damien reached the park gate, Lucas spotted him first."You came back."There wasn't any surprise in his little voice.Only quiet satisfaction.As if he'd expected Damien to keep his promise."I did."Damien smiled."I said I would."Lucas nodded once.Then grabbed his hand."Come on."Just like that.No hesitation.No awkwardness.Simply the unquestioning trust of a little boy who believed people should do what they said they would.Damien followed him into the park.For the next two hours, they chased pigeons, counted squirrels, and debated whether clouds looked more like dragons or dinosaurs.When the visit ended, Lucas waved happily."See you soon.""I'll be here.""I know."The words stayed with Damien long after he got home.---Later that afternoon, he joined a video call with his lawyer.Most of it was routine.Schedules.Paperwork.Future visits.Then one sentence made everything else disappear."The le
That night, Damien couldn't sleep.The small gray-green stone Lucas had given him sat on the bedside table.He picked it up.Turned it over in his hand.Set it down.Then picked it up again.His thoughts kept returning to Mara.Not because of anything she'd said.Because of what she hadn't.If he was honest...He'd expected her to break.Not in some dramatic way.He hadn't wanted to see her cry.He hadn't wanted revenge.But somewhere inside him, he'd believed that seeing him again would shake her.That she'd hesitate.Lose her composure.Show him that, somewhere beneath the calm, she was still carrying the weight of what he'd done.She hadn't.Not once.She wasn't pretending to be okay.She was okay.That realization was strangely difficult to accept.For three years, she'd rebuilt her life without him.She wasn't surviving anymore.She was living.And she'd done it so completely that there was no place left where he naturally belonged.He leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes
Claire Obi moved quickly.By Monday, the lawyers were talking.By Wednesday, there was a draft agreement.By Thursday, Mara had returned it covered in notes.Eleven changes.Damien accepted every single one.His lawyer thought he was making a mistake.Damien didn't argue."Send it back," he said."If that's what she wants, then that's what we'll do."The first visit was scheduled for Saturday.Two hours.At the park.Neutral ground.Damien knew exactly why Mara had chosen it.If Lucas felt uncomfortable, he could run, play, or stay close to his mother.Nothing about the meeting would make him feel trapped.It was another reminder that Mara thought about Lucas first.Always.Damien arrived eight minutes early.He stayed across the street until the agreed time.Only then did he walk over.Mara was already there.Lucas sat beside her on a bench, both of them studying something in his little hands with complete seriousness.When Mara noticed Damien, she stood.Her expression settled into
Garrett found Damien a serviced apartment by Thursday.It overlooked a small park.At the time, Damien hadn't thought much about it.Now, standing by the window with a cup of coffee that had already gone cold, he realized exactly which park it was.The one from Garrett's report.The one Mara brought Lucas to almost every Saturday.He stared outside for a long time.He wasn't going.That was the plan.He wasn't going to sit in a park watching from a distance like a stranger.He wasn't going to make things harder for Mara.He'd already done enough damage.At half past nine...He put on his coat.Some promises were easier to make than keep.He found a bench near the edge of the park.Far enough away not to attract attention.Close enough that he could see the playground and the main walking path.He told himself he'd leave if they came.He stayed.A little after ten...He saw them.Or rather...He heard Lucas first.The little boy's excited voice carried across the park long before Damie







