MasukLillian heard the laughter before she understood why it startled her.It floated through the open windows of Bloom House on a warm afternoon, light and unrestrained, the kind that carried no awareness of being overheard. She paused mid movement, scissors resting loosely in her hand, listening as the sound rose and fell again.It did not tighten her chest.It did not summon memory.It simply existed.She stepped outside, drawn by curiosity rather than reaction. Across the street, a small group had gathered near the fountain. A child darted between adults, shoes flashing, laughter spilling freely as someone chased him half heartedly.Henry.He skidded to a
Oliver learned that balance was not something you achieved.It was something you negotiated daily, sometimes hourly, without resentment when the scale tipped.For years, he had lived inside precision. Numbers aligned. Timelines held. Variables were controlled or eliminated. Naomi had entered his life as another variable at first, brilliant and disruptive in ways that refused containment.That refusal had scared him.Now, five years later, it steadied him.They worked in adjacent fields but never overlapping roles, a boundary Naomi had insisted on early.“I don’t want us to become a closed loop,” she had said. “That’s how blind spots form.”
Marcus woke before dawn out of habit, not necessity.For years, early mornings had meant vigilance. Checking routes. Reviewing reports. Anticipating threats that might never materialize but had to be treated as imminent. Sleep had been shallow by design. Rest was something you earned later, after everyone else was safe.Now, the city lay quiet beyond his window, undisturbed.Marcus sat up slowly, listening.Nothing.No alarms. No distant engines idling too long. No messages waiting to be decoded for urgency. The absence was not unsettling anymore.It was confirmation.He made coffee and stood by the window, watching the first light touch the rooftops. Aure
The call came just after dusk, when Bloom House Floral had gone quiet and the street outside softened into evening ritual. Lillian was sweeping fallen leaves near the threshold when her phone vibrated in her pocket. One look at the screen tightened her chest.
Catherine did not call in tears this time.That was how Lillian knew it was serious.She arrived at Bloom House Floral just after noon, the bell over the door chiming once before settling into silence. Her posture was rigid, her face carefully composed, as if she had rehearsed this moment and decid
Nathaniel Crosswell disliked being surprised.He disliked it more when the surprise involved a loss of control he could not immediately reclaim.Celestine Heights had been quiet when he arrived. Too quiet. The estate always announced itself through motion. Staff gliding with purpose. Advisors waiti







