LOGIN"He thought she was a pretty cage. She was the lock, the key, and the woman who'd burned the whole prison down."
View MorePrologue
Seraphina POV 2:47 a.m. and the data is talking to me again. Not in words — it never works in words. It works in patterns. In the shape of a number sitting three degrees le! of where it should be. In a routing sequence that almost makes sense but not quite, the way a lie almost sounds like the truth until you've heard enough of both to know the difference. I've been doing this long enough that I feel it before I can name it. Something wrong lives in these files. I just have to find the room it's hiding in. Three monitors. one runs the passive scrape three shell companies I've been unspooling for six weeks, each one a ghost nested inside another ghost nested inside a Delaware LLC that exists only on paper and in the particular imagination of someone who is very good at not being found. The center screen runs my mapping so!ware. I built it myself at twenty-two because the existing tools were too slow and I don't like tools I didn't build. %e right screen runs feeds-ports, financial indices, encrypted channels I monitor because information is the only currency that compounds without a ceiling. My father thinks I spend my nights reading. That’s not entirely a lie. Just not books. This room is mine in a way no other room in this house is mine. The rest of the townhouse is my mother's taste — warm and beautiful and expensive, every surface chosen to project exactly the image the Conti family wants projected. My room looks like the inside of my head. Whiteboards on two walls, half of them network maps, the other half cipher keys I've already cracked. A punching bag in the corner worn to gray leather at center mass. Gun cabinet beside the closet — three weapons, combination lock. My father knows about two of them. I find the thread at 3:12 a.m. A routing number. Buried six layers deep, shuttling money through a Cayman subsidiary into an account in Queens. An account belonging to a man who has been dead for four years. Someone is feeding money into a ghost. And ghosts only exist when someone very much alive needs them to. I sit back. Press my fingers to my mouth. I need two more pieces before I'll be certain, and I don't move without certainty I've built myself. That’s how mistakes happen. I can't afford mistakes — none of my family can, but me least of all, because the thing about being underestimated is that it only protects you as long as no one notices you're dangerous. The moment they notice, all that invisibility becomes a liability. I save the file, encrypt it under a name that means nothing to anyone — RECIPE_tiramisù_v4.doc — and close the screens. Dawn in two hours. Breakfast table by eight. Back to being my father's quiet daughter — the one who smiles and says very little and will someday be handed to whoever he decides is useful enough to deserve her. I pull the elastic from my wrist and tie my hair back. I haven't decided yet whether I'll let him.D e c l a nI’ve been told the dress is red. Siobhan told me, because Siobhan tells me everything eventually,usually delivered with the specific energy of someone who has information they know you want and has waited for maximum impact before deploying it. "Red," she said. "You're welcome. You owe me." She didn't tell me anything else. I didn't ask for anything else. Some things are better walked into without preparation. I'm standing at the end of the aisle in a church that the Conti family has attended for four generations, in a suit that cost more than most people's cars, and I am for the $rst time in recent memory actually nervous. Not about the alliance. Not about the marriage as a strategic structure. Not about any of the things I've spent three months planning around.About her. The doors open. The entire room exhales. I feel it — that collective shi! of attention,I’ve hundred people all turning at once. And then I see her and every thought I've had in the last ten seconds d
S e r a p h i n a✦Four women in a bridal atelier on the Upper East Side and only two of us are actually getting married, which means the power dynamic in this room is not what the staff assumes. My mother has an agenda: something classic, something long,something that will photograph well and signal the correct things to the correct people. She communicates this agenda nonverbally throughthe selection of gowns she steers me toward — all of them beautiful, all of them white or ivory or the palest possible blush, all of themcommunicating exactly nothing about who I actually am. Maeve Callahan sits in the armchair with a glass of champagne shehasn't touched and watches everything. She doesn't offer opinions until she has something worth saying. I respect that about herconsiderably. She and I have something in common that neither of us has acknowledged aloud: we are both very good at watching.Siobhan is a disaster. A delightful, extremely useful disaster. She has pulled three gown
Seraphina My mother has been waiting her entire life for thismoment and I am not going to survive it.It started the morning a!er the engagement dinner. A single phone call at 8 a.m. — which is my mother's version of a polite hour -andby nine she had a notebook, a color-coded timeline, the private numbers of four Manhattan venues, and a vision board. An actualvision board, assembled from magazines she apparently keeps specifically for this purpose. I did not know she kept magazines for this purpose. I should have known. I should have planned better.Within forty-eight hours, Elena Conti had absorbed the wedding planning in the manner of a beautiful, elegant, completely unstoppable force of nature. Maeve Callahan — who I expected to resist, because she seems like a woman who resists most things —arrived at our townhouse on a Tuesday afternoon, sat down across from my mother at the kitchen table, and in approximately fourminutes they had determined between them that this wedding wo
DeclanShe's already there. 6:45 when I arrived. Full circuit of the Reservoir path, every entry point clocked, every sightline measured. There is exactly one bench in Central Park that makes tactical sense for a private conversation between two people who need to see every approach from everydirection — good angle east and west, water behind, open ground south. I came to it and she was sitting on it in a dark coat with her hair down, looking out at the water with the settled patience ofsomeone who got here before I did by enough margin that she'd already run her own circuit.She ran the same variables. She got here before six forty-five. I need to recalibrate how underestimated she has let herself be this entire time. I sit beside her. Cold morning. She looks more real today than she looked at dinner — less performed, less constructed. I don't know ifthat's deliberate or if she just didn't have the energy this morning to be the other version of herself. “You didn't ask which park,






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