LOGINJulian came to his office on a Tuesday.
He didn’t knock. He never knocked—a lifelong, petty provocation that Alistair had long since ceased to react to. Reacting to Julian was like reacting to bad weather: exhausting, predictable, and entirely without outcome.
"The grid audit came back completely clean," Julian said, dropping into the leather chair across the mahogany desk with the aggressive, unearned sprawl of a man claiming territory. "Seven weeks of searching, Alistair, and your high-priced security teams have found absolutely nothing. Not a heat signature, not an anomalous transaction, not a single stray pixel of digital activity. The woman has vanished." He let the pause breathe, watching Alistair's face for a twitch. "Maybe she’s dead."
"She’s not dead," Alistair said, his voice flat, not looking up from the shipping contracts spread across his desk.
"You don't know that."
"I know Hex." Alistair turned a heavy page, the crisp paper snapping in the quiet room. "Hex doesn't die. Hex disappears. There is a categorical difference, Julian, and the fact that you cannot perceive it is the exact reason I don't ask for your operational input."
Julian’s jaw tightened, the smugness souring. "The board is asking questions, Alistair. The marriage was the compliance mechanism for the inheritance clause. The board verified the certificate, yes, but they’ve also noted that the new Mrs. Thorne is entirely absent from the estate. She’s missing from public events, missing from the registries—"
"The board will receive a formal statement explaining that my wife is receiving private medical care for a sudden illness," Alistair said, his voice dropping into a register that signaled immediate danger. "It is legally accurate. It answers the question. Move on."
Julian was quiet for a moment. Then he leaned forward, resting his elbows on the polished wood, his eyes glittering with the specific, feral nastiness of a man who believed he had finally found a wound to press his thumb into.
"She’s pregnant, isn't she." It wasn't a question.
Alistair’s fountain pen did not pause. The ink flowed across the signature line, perfect and unwavering.
"The medical timeline fits," Julian whispered, a mocking smile curling his lips. "The specific prenatal supplements you had Dr. Harrison prescribe. The hormonal optimization protocols. I found Harrison's draft intake notes in the subsidiary medical server—don't look at me like that, I have access keys too. If she’s carrying your heir and she’s missing, Alistair, that’s not a domestic inconvenience. That’s a board emergency. If she delivers that child outside of Thorne oversight—"
"Julian."
Alistair set his pen down with a quiet, deliberate click. He looked at his stepbrother with the particular quality of unblinking attention that had forced three international CEOs to walk out of negotiations over the past year.
"If you take a single independent action regarding Evelyn’s whereabouts, her condition, or her safety—if you make a single unauthorized call, send a single instruction to a contractor, or hire a single private eye without my explicit, written authorization—I will bury you in this company so deep and so completely that even your mother won't find the pieces. Are we clear?"
The smile evaporated from Julian’s face, leaving him looking hollowed out.
"Crystal," he spat. He stood up, knocking his chair back a fraction, and left.
Alistair sat frozen for a long moment after the heavy oak door clicked shut. Then he stood, abandoning his paperwork, and walked to the floor-to-ceiling glass that overlooked the Veridian Sea. The water was a flat, slate grey today. It looked calm, but it was the deceptive calm of things capable of tremendous, crushing violence.
She’s pregnant.
He had known. He had known since the morning he’d found her prenatal schedule buried in Harrison’s clinical intake form, and he had felt the weight of that knowledge settle into his chest like iron ballast—heavy, immovable, fundamentally rearranging his internal balance.
He had told himself it was just a strategic variable. He had told himself the tightness in his chest was about the inheritance clause, the board metrics, the corporate timeline. He was very good at telling himself things.
He pressed his palm flat against the freezing glass, looking out over the endless grey waves.
Come back, he thought, a sudden, desperate ferocity tearing through him that caught him completely off guard. It wasn't a corporate command. It was raw, bleeding, and entirely outside any professional category he possessed.
Come back so I can tell you something I don't have the words for yet.
The sea gave him nothing back. The sea never did.
A year.Renner confirmed the timeline on a bitter Monday morning, laying the annual security ledger on his desk as if Alistair hadn't spent every single morning of the last three hundred and sixty-five days counting the seconds."She’s gone, Alistair," Renner said simply. "The Oakhaven grid signature we've been monitoring as background noise—the minor power fluctuations near the old server farm—dropped to absolute zero three days ago. Our ground team confirmed the space has been completely cleared. No prints. No hard drives. She even took the lightbulbs."Alistair stood up, walking to the floor-to-ceiling glass. "She was six hundred meters from my perimeter sweep in month one," he said, his voice dropping so low it barely registered against the glass."She was," Renner admitted, his head down. "The digital mask she built around the cellar's power consumption was flawless. If she hadn't turned the main breaker off when she left, we wouldn't have known she was there for another year."A
The overland crossing into the Ecotopia Corridor took eleven exhausting hours.They went by regional rail—three separate train connections, two frantic platform transfers, and a two-hour delay at the Corenne interchange that Evelyn spent sitting on a wooden bench, nursing Serafine while memorizing surgical pharmacology formulas from a crumpled printout she kept in her jacket pocket.The children were, against every mathematical probability, miraculously manageable. Cael slept with the disciplined, total efficiency of a tiny soldier, allocating his energy cycles precisely between feeds. Lyra sat by the glass, her small face pressed against the pane as her eyes tracked the gray factories of Solaria blurring into the green, high meadows of the alpine foothills. Remy made his vocal displeasure about the cramped second-class carriage known for twenty minutes, then promptly exhausted himself against Kai’s shoulder and snored for three hours.Serafine didn't sleep at all. She lay in the cent
She walked the district alone the night before they left. Kai had offered his coat and his shadow, but she had said no; she needed one hour to look at the ruins of her childhood before she buried them for good.It was late spring. The air was cold, smelling of the salt from the Veridian Sea and the wet grease of the iron foundries along the canal. Oakhaven was quiet at midnight, its streets empty of everything but the low hum of distant power stations.She walked down the gravel road where she used to ride her rusted bicycle to the local school. She stopped in front of the shuttered, dark storefront of Marceau Tech Electronics. A heavy, rusted padlock hung from the door handles, and the blue liquidation notice—bearing her father’s name in that tiny, sterile font used by court baliffs—was peeling away under a year of rain and sea fog.She pressed her palm against the cold glass of the display window. Inside, the workbenches where her father had taught her how to solder her first microc
He was infinitely persistent when he felt slighted, and he had a hound’s sense for where dirty money lived. But his impatience was a disease; he could never resist digging up the seed to see if the tree was growing, which meant he routinely exposed his own operations before they were mature enough to survive Alistair’s sight.He found the Voss paper on a rainy Friday afternoon because he had spent six months running an illicit, parallel keyword filter through a private data security contractor in Geneva. Alistair had locked down the internal Thorne Global monitoring teams, but Julian didn't trust Alistair’s metrics anymore.He read the thirty-two pages of the Journal of European Biochemical Research entry twice. He wasn't a scientist—the chemical equations on page fourteen looked like high-level gibberish to him—but he understood the language of corporate destruction perfectly. The paper didn't just analyze Vael’s clinical trials; it targeted the exact shipping manifest codes used by
Three words and a low-resolution image file.still here. thinking of you.The image was a grainy photograph of the limestone arch above the eastern gate of the Solaria Institute of Technology. In the upper left corner, a specific, zigzagging fracture ran through the stone, shaped exactly like the delta of the Oakhaven canal system.Evelyn stared at the screen, a sudden, sharp ache blooming in her throat. She remembered standing under that arch during her first week at SIT, terrified, her shoes worn through at the soles, while Nina Belacourt—wearing a tailored wool coat that cost more than Evelyn's father earned in a year—had pointed at the crack and laughed. “Look at that, Evie. Even the architecture here is trying to break under the weight of these old men.”They had been inseparable from that afternoon.Nina was the second daughter of the Belacourt banking dynasty—one of Veridia's five founding families, old money so deep it didn't need to look impressive because it owned the land t
It looked like a ledger from a dead century."The Vance Medical Research Trust," Renner said, laying a faded manila file over Alistair's corporate metrics. "Registered in 1998 within the Solaria municipal commercial registry. It’s been dormant for fifteen years, Alistair. No assets, no filings. Then, eight months ago, it executed an anonymous institutional endowment to the Solaria Medical Center's private cardiac wing."Alistair didn't touch the file. "The beneficiary.""Robert Marceau," Renner said. "Currently in private care. He had a secondary valve failure four months ago, but the Trust covered the specialist surgeon from the capital. He is stable, recovering, and his account has a rolling credit that will last another two years."Alistair sat back, the leather of his chair creaking in the quiet room. He had pulled the Thorne Global compliance clause from Robert’s medical account eight months ago, assuming Evelyn would notice the data drop. He had known she would try to fix it; sh







