You can live in a palace and still feel like you’re being hunted.
The halls of Blackwood Estate echoed louder after that painting arrived. The servants whispered when they thought I wasn’t listening. Doors creaked closed just a little faster. Security doubled, but I didn’t feel safer. I felt like prey. Lucien’s silence said more than his words ever could. He hadn’t spoken to me since the necklace. Since I saw the initials carved into the clasp like a secret hiding in plain sight. R.B. Reagan Blackwood’s signature on my throat. I kept thinking about my mother wearing it. Was it a gift or a threat? A trophy? A promise? My thoughts felt like cracked mirrors—distorted, dangerous, never quite true. I hadn’t seen Lucien in thirty hours. Not since the hallway. Not since the way he looked at me like I’d betrayed him, even though I didn’t understand how. I’d worn a necklace given in good faith. But maybe faith had no place in a house built by deception. That morning, I woke to find my reflection smeared across the mirror. Lipstick. Smudged across the glass like blood. SILENCE IS A KINDNESS. No initials. No fingerprints. Just the taste of fear, cold and metallic, on my tongue. Lucien finally emerged from the shadows that evening. He didn’t say hello. Didn’t ask if I’d slept or eaten or breathed in the last day and a half. He just looked at me—really looked at me—and said, “I know where he is.” I blinked. “What?” Reagan. Lucien stepped closer, his eyes fever-bright. “He has a safe house in Montauk. Coastal surveillance picked up a figure matching his height and gait. The security team cross-referenced it with footage from our old summer estate. He’s there.” I should’ve felt relief. Or triumph. But all I felt was a tightening in my chest. “Then what are you waiting for?” I asked. Lucien’s expression was ice. “I’m not waiting. I’m preparing.” He turned, heading for the war room again—his version of a chapel. Where battles were waged in contracts and bloodlines. I followed. Not because I was ready to fight. But because I needed answers. And Reagan had made me the battlefield. The walls of the war room were covered with maps. Family trees. Estate blueprints. There was a full whiteboard dedicated to Possible Motivations for Reagan Blackwood. Beneath it were scrawled words like: Revenge. Disinheritance. Margot Sinclair? I stopped cold at my mother’s name. Lucien didn’t look up. “I told them not to include her. But they think she’s the key.” “Maybe she is.” He turned. “Do you believe she knew what she was doing? Wearing his necklace? Carrying his child?” I flinched. “You think he’s my father?” “No,” he said instantly. “No, Ivy. That part I believe. You’re Victor’s. The DNA confirms it. But Reagan… he might’ve claimed her before Victor ever did.” The air left my lungs. “What are you saying?” “I’m saying this might not be about me.” His voice was quieter now. “It might be about you. About finishing what he started.” That night, Lucien didn’t go to Montauk. He stayed. With me. In silence. We lay in the same bed like strangers sharing a secret neither of us asked for. I stared at the ceiling while he stared at the shadows crawling up the wall. “He’s making me choose,” Lucien said at last. “Between what?” “Between protecting my legacy… and protecting you.” The sheets felt too heavy. I turned to him. “I don’t need protection. I need the truth.” He looked at me like that was the cruelest thing I could’ve asked. “I watched him drag my mother by the arm across this hallway when I was eight. I watched her sob into the sink while my father poured whiskey and whispered, ‘This is the cost of inheritance.’ I learned young, Ivy. This family doesn’t forgive. It devours.” I reached for his hand. “Then let’s stop pretending it’s a family.” The next morning, a package arrived addressed to The Second Son. Inside was a cassette tape. Lucien had it digitized and played through the library’s sound system. At first, just static. Then—two voices. One I didn’t recognize. A woman. My mother? And another. Smooth. Smoky. “You think he’ll protect you, Margot?” Her voice cracked. “You promised you’d leave him alone.” “Oh, I will. But I didn’t say anything about your child.” I felt the blood drain from my face. Lucien hit pause. I stared at the speaker like it had slapped me. “That was him,” I whispered. Lucien nodded. “He threatened her. Before she disappeared.” “And you think—what? That he killed her?” Lucien’s jaw flexed. “Or made her disappear.” My hands curled into fists. This wasn’t about boardrooms anymore. This was about blood. Mine. Hers. Ours. That night, I found Lucien at the pool, fully dressed, staring into the still water. He didn’t hear me come in. “I can’t win this, Ivy.” I stepped beside him. “Then don’t try to win. Try to survive.” He laughed bitterly. “Do you know what Reagan always said? That silence was the weapon of the privileged. That we bury our sins under marble and call it elegance.” “Then let’s stop being elegant.” He looked at me, something wild flickering in his eyes. “We have to go to Montauk,” I said. “No.” “Yes.” He shook his head. “It’s a trap.” “Of course it is. But you said yourself—he’s making this personal.” Lucien turned to me, and for a second I didn’t see the billionaire. I saw the boy who watched his world fall apart one scream at a time. “If we go there, we don’t come back the same.” I took his hand. “We already aren’t.” We left before sunrise. No convoy. No announcement. Just us. I wore the necklace again—not as a symbol, but as a dare. Lucien drove. No music. Just tension. The road to Montauk was lined with dying trees. The ocean loomed like an open mouth. By noon, we reached the estate. It had been abandoned for years. Ivy strangled the fences. Windows shattered. The gate still bore the Blackwood crest, half burned. “This is where you summered?” I asked. Lucien didn’t smile. “This is where I buried pieces of myself.” Inside, dust and memory clung to every surface. A child’s piano. A broken lamp. A framed photo of a woman with Lucien’s eyes. And in the center of the foyer: A table. And on it—a single envelope. Lucien picked it up. His hands didn’t shake. He opened it. Read the letter. Then slowly turned it toward me. One line. “He’s not your enemy. She is.” Lucien looked up. “What the hell does that mean?” I stared at the words. And whispered, “It means he’s not trying to kill you.” Lucien’s breath hitched. “He’s trying to turn you against me.”Some things don’t end with fire.Some endings arrive with silence.The kind that coats your skin like frost. That makes your breath hitch in your throat even when nothing is choking you.The kind of silence that says someone is watching.That was the silence inside the evac pod as we descended from HALCYON.Wren curled against my side, her eyes open but unseeing, her mind still echoing with frequencies not meant for flesh. I held her tighter than I should have, as if squeezing hard enough could keep her soul tethered to this world.Clara flew.Fast.Reckless.And for once, I didn’t yell.Because the stars were wrong.They blinked like eyes now.Twelve of them.Clara didn’t speak until we broke Earth’s gravity field and connected to our cloaked ground base buried beneath the Icelandic ashline.She turned in her seat, face pale, voice sharp.“Ivy.”I nodded. “I saw them.”“Twelve. Same broadcast frequency. Same neural wave signature. All activated simultaneously.”I leaned forward, hea
They say power comes in threes.Three strands to every story—what is, what was, and what should never be.But no one warned me what would happen when those three collided.Not in a whisper.Not in a scream.And certainly not with the voice that fractured the air inside HALCYON’s glass cathedral.A voice that didn’t belong to Rhea.Or to Wren.Or to any human thing.The lights above us dimmed, not like a power failure, but like obedience. As if something greater had entered the room—and even the stars outside dared not look in.And then, it spoke.“She was only ever the opening note.”My breath caught in my throat. My body froze, chilled beneath layers of engineered heat-skin. The words weren’t heard so much as felt—vibrating in the marrow, crawling beneath the skin, brushing against thought itself like fingers sliding across piano wire.Lucien stepped in front of me instinctively, shielding me with his frame. But I saw the tension in his neck. The way his spine straightened. That sou
They say the sky broke that morning.It wasn’t a storm.It was her voice.Not the soft lilt of a child.Not even the cold steel of a machine.It was both.And neither.The voice that echoed across Earth’s satellites, hijacked every comm link, and burned itself into the atmosphere was unmistakably hers.“I am the Architect Reborn.Welcome to the Age of Design.”I dropped the comm pad as if it had burned me.Lucien stood frozen beside me, eyes fixed on the trembling screen as transmission after transmission bled into every corner of human communication.She was everywhere.She had become omnipresent.Clara’s call came in seconds later.“She’s in everything, Ivy.”Her voice shook. That alone chilled me.“She’s overridden six national firewalls. Our own synthetic defense grids are standing down. All because of her voiceprint. She carries your neural map. And the Architect’s. Combined.”“She’s speaking through her?”“No,” Clara breathed. “She is her now.”I didn’t know if I wanted to
They say the human mind has a defense mechanism—one that wraps trauma in shadows, tucks it into a corner, and builds a door you forget how to open.But what happens when the lock unpicks itself?What happens when you remember the girl who disappeared?And realize she was you all along?The storm had crawled across the horizon long before the rain started falling.I stood at the edge of the balcony, Lucien’s coat wrapped tight around my shoulders even though the wind didn’t bite. The sky above HALCYON Base was a blistering bruised violet, lit by data surges rather than lightning. The whole station thrummed with energy. Alive. Too alive.Behind me, Wren slept. Or pretended to.She hadn’t spoken since the last transmission.The one that whispered my name in a voice that wasn’t human.I pressed my palms against the cold steel railing.What scared me most wasn’t what the voice had said.It was that it knew me.Not the woman I had become.But the girl I used to be.I closed my
IvyClara didn’t knock.She burst into my quarters, breathless, holding a blinking holopad like it was a live grenade. Lucien was already on his feet, his hand instinctively reaching for the sidearm he no longer carried. Wren—still asleep, her tiny frame curled beneath the folds of a weighted blanket—stirred but didn’t wake.Clara’s voice cut through the dim room like frost.“They found her.”The chill in my chest spread instantly.I stood. “Who?”She turned the holopad around.A glowing sigil blinked on the screen: the V inside a fractured circle.VIRELLA.“They initiated Recovery Protocol,” Clara said. “Silent fleet. No comms. No pings. No signatures. But I intercepted a ripple in our satellite shell when their cloaking failed for 0.4 seconds.”“How long?” Lucien asked.“Two hours, maybe less.”Lucien swore.I crossed the room and picked up Wren.She didn’t stir.My voice was raw. “They’re not taking her.”We moved fast.Lucien rerouted the shuttle’s trajectory, aiming for a de
There are six of them.Six children born of my blood, forged from fragments of a genome I never consented to share. And one of them—one—now carries the ghost of a woman I thought I had finally buried.The Architect.She didn't die in me.She escaped.Now she’s somewhere inside them.I stood in the observation chamber as their stasis pods hissed softly, lined like sleeping angels beneath cool blue light. They looked peaceful. Fragile. Too small to carry something so monstrous.Lucien stood beside me, his arms folded tightly across his chest, every muscle drawn tight like a loaded weapon.Clara’s voice broke the silence: “We scanned every neural feed. No anomalies. No spikes. But it’s in there. I can feel it. A whisper in the code.”“How do we find out which one?” I asked.Clara hesitated. “We can’t. Not without risking full awakening.”“So we’re blind.”“Not blind,” she said. “Just... uncertain.”Lucien’s jaw clenched. “We should isolate them.”“No,” I said instantly.He