LOGINSophia's POV
I was out of the car before Damien finished saying wait. He caught my arm. Not rough. Just firm and certain and immovable in the specific way of someone who had decided this. "Sophia." "That's my aunt in there," I said. "I know," he said. "Which is exactly why we don't run in blind." He looked at the house. Then at the car two houses down. Then back at me. "Give me thirty seconds." I gave him thirty seconds because he was right and I hated that he was right and standing on a pavement at two in the morning outside my aunt's house with every light blazing and the door open was not the moment to stop listening to the person who thought clearly when everything was urgent. He texted Zane. Four words. Sent his location and the word now. Then he looked at me. "Here's what we know," he said quietly. Fast and clear. "Someone is in that house or was recently. The car down the street has been running. The door is open which means either Mei left it open deliberately or someone came through it in a hurry." He paused. "None of those things definitely mean she's hurt." "But they don't definitely mean she isn't," I said. "No," he said honestly. "They don't." I looked at the house. My aunt Mei who had waited five years for me to call. Who had picked up on the first ring wide awake like she had been expecting it. Who had said are you safe Sophia with the specific weight of someone who had been asking that question internally for a very long time. She had known this was coming. She had known it and she had stayed anyway because whatever my mother had left with her was something she had decided was worth staying for. "I'm going in," I said. "Yes," Damien said. "We both are." He didn't argue. Didn't try to leave me at the car or suggest I wait outside or do any of the things that would have made sense from a purely tactical standpoint and would have been completely wrong from a human one. We went in together. The front door opened into a narrow hallway. Lights on everywhere, as I had seen from outside. A coat rack with jackets on it. Shoes lined up neatly by the door. The smell of tea and something floral that landed somewhere in my memory before I could name it. My mother had smelled like that. I pushed the memory down and kept moving. Living room. Empty. But a cup of tea on the coffee table was still steaming faintly which meant it had been made in the last fifteen minutes. Kitchen. Empty. Back door closed and locked from the inside. "She's upstairs," I said. Something is pulling me toward the staircase, instinct or memory or both. Damien was already at the bottom of it. We went up. The second door on the left was open. Mei was sitting on the edge of her bed with her hands folded in her lap and her back straight and the expression of someone who had been sitting exactly like that for a while, composed and deliberate and waiting. She was alone. I exhaled a breath I had been holding since the car. "Sophia," she said. Like I had simply come for tea. Like it was a reasonable hour. Like there was nothing unusual about any of this. "Mei." I crossed the room and sat beside her and she put her arms around me and held me the way she had at the funeral, complete and certain, and I pressed my face against her shoulder and let myself be nineteen again for exactly ten seconds. Then I sat back and looked at her. She was smaller than I remembered. Older. But her eyes were my mother's eyes, sharp and warm and seeing everything at once. She looked past me at Damien in the doorway. "You must be the Black boy," she said. "Damien," he said. "Which one are you," she said. "There are several." "The youngest," he said. She looked at him for a long careful moment. The specific look my mother used to deploy when she was deciding something about a person. "Sit down," she said. He sat in the chair by the window without argument which was the right move and I could see Mei note it. "Someone was here," I said. "Before us." "Yes," she said. "Who?" She looked at her hands. "A man. He said he was from a legal firm. He had documentation claiming the items your mother left with me were Vale family property and he was there to retrieve them." She paused. "I told him I didn't know what he was talking about." "Did he believe you," Damien said. "No," she said. "But he left anyway. Because I told him my niece was on her way and she had Black family lawyers and if he wasn't gone in two minutes he could explain himself to them." She looked at me. "I assumed that was true." "It's true," I said. "Good." She stood up and went to the wardrobe and opened it and moved three boxes on the top shelf aside and reached into the back and brought down something I hadn't expected. A laptop. Old. The kind that had been sitting untouched for five years. And beside it a small envelope with my name on it in handwriting I recognised immediately. My mother's handwriting. I stared at it. "She gave these to me two weeks before the accident," Mei said quietly. She sat back down beside me and put both items on the bed between us. "She said she had found something. Something inside the Vale family's financial structure connected back to us. To our family. She said if anything happened to her I should keep these safe until you were ready." She looked at me. "She also said you'd know when you were ready because you'd stop being afraid to ask." I looked at the envelope. Five years. My mother had known something was coming five years ago and she had prepared for it and she had trusted her sister to hold it and she had trusted me to eventually find my way to the right question. I picked up the envelope. My name in her handwriting. Sophia. The way she wrote it with the slightly looped p that was specific to her and nobody else. I opened it. One page. Handwritten. My mother's voice was so present in every line that the room went slightly blurry for a moment and I had to breathe through it. Sophia, If you're reading this then I wasn't able to tell you myself and I'm sorry for that more than I can say. I need you to know first that everything we did was for you. The company, the trust, all of it. We found out what Victoria Vale was doing with the offshore accounts three years ago. We had evidence. We were going to use it. Then they found out we had it and everything moved very fast. The laptop has everything. Every document, every transfer record, every communication we intercepted. It's encrypted. The password is the thing I always said when you were small and scared of the dark. You'll remember. One more thing. The company. Chenworth Analytics. It was never just a trust asset. It was built for you. Your father and I registered it in your name eighteen years ago. You are the sole director. You have been since you were six years old. You own it, Sophia. You always have. Whatever they told you about where you came from and what you were worth. None of it was true. We love you. We always will. Mum. I sat with the letter in my hands and the room was very quiet and Mei had her hand on my back and Damien was in the chair by the window not saying anything not moving, just there, present and steady in the specific way of someone who understood that some moments required presence not words. I breathed. Then I looked at the laptop. "The password," Mei said gently. "Do you know it?" I thought about being small and scared of the dark. About my mother sitting on the edge of my bed. About the thing she said every single time without fail, the same words, the same voice, the same absolute certainty in them. I reached over and opened the laptop. The encryption screen loaded. I typed the password. You are enough exactly as you are. No spaces. All lowercase. Exactly the way she would have said it. The screen unlocked. Files. Hundreds of them. Organised in dated folders going back eight years. Communications, transfer records, intercepted emails, and financial documents with Vale family letterhead and numbers that made the Ponzi scheme Zane had found look like a rough draft. This wasn't just evidence. This was everything. "Damien," I said quietly. He was already beside me. I hadn't heard him move from the chair but he was there, looking at the screen over my shoulder, and I felt him go very still. "This is enough to end them," he said. Quiet and certain. "All of them. Victoria, Marcus, Diana's connection to the Vale accounts, the offshore structure." He paused. "This is everything Elijah needs." "My mother built this," I said. "For eight years she built this and she kept it and she trusted Mei to keep it and she trusted me to find it." "Yes," he said. I closed the laptop and held it against my chest and sat in my aunt's bedroom at two forty in the morning and thought about a woman who had smelled like flowers and said you are enough exactly as you are every single night without exception. And had apparently also been quietly dismantling a criminal empire in her spare time. "She was extraordinary," I said. Not to anyone specific. Just to the room. "Yes," Mei said softly. "She really was." I looked at Damien. He was looking at me with that expression. I still loved that expression. I was going to keep loving it. That was a decision I had made somewhere between the kitchen and this bedroom and I was not unmade it. "We need to go," I said. "Yes," he said. I stood up and hugged Mei properly, both arms, the full version, and she held me back and said, " Your mother would be so proud and I believed her completely. "Come and stay with us," I said. "At the estate. Tonight. It's not safe here." Mei looked at me. Then at Damien. "Is it safe there," she said. "Safer than here," Damien said. "And we have better tea." Mei considered him for a moment. "Fine," she said. Like she was doing us a favour. She packed a bag in six minutes which told me efficiency ran in my family. We went downstairs. The front door was still open. The car two houses down was gone. I looked at the space where it had been and thought about whoever had been sitting in it watching the house and felt the particular cold of knowing someone had been that close and left when they chose to rather than when we made them. They had what they needed. Or they knew we had what we needed and had gone to tell someone. My phone buzzed. Elijah. I picked up. "The injunction," he said. "I've been pulling the filing apart for the last hour and I found something." A pause. "The witness Marcus cited. The Vale night staff member. Her name is on the document." "Who is it," I said. "Her name is Linda Marsh," Elijah said. "She's been on the Vale staff for eleven years. But Sophia. Her employment records before the Vale family." Another pause. "She worked for a private security firm for six years before that." "Which firm," I said. "The same firm Victoria hired to retrieve you by force," Elijah said. "The same one Zane flagged weeks ago. She's not just a member of staff. She's been placed there. Long term. As an asset." I stood in Mei's doorway and looked at the empty street. "Elijah," I said. "How long has she been in that house?" "Eleven years," he said. Eleven years. Before my marriage. Before any of this. Before I had ever heard the name, Vale. Someone had placed an operative inside the Vale household eleven years ago. Not Marcus. Not Victoria. The timeline was wrong for both of them. "Elijah," I said slowly. "Who was running that security firm eleven years ago?" The pause on the other end lasted exactly long enough to tell me the answer was going to change everything. "Diana Black," he said quietly. "She founded it. Six years before she made contact with Carter. Six years before the Monaco company. Before any of it." He paused. "Sophia. Diana has had someone inside the Vale family for eleven years. She wasn't recruited by Victoria. She recruited Victoria." I stood very still. Damien was watching my face. I lowered the phone and looked at him. "Diana didn't find Victoria four years ago," I said quietly. "She built Victoria. She's been running this from the beginning. The Vales, the Blacks, my parents, all of it." I looked at him. "We've been fighting the wrong war." Damien looked at me for a long moment. Then he took out his phone and called Dominic. One ring. "We need everyone in the main room," Damien said. "Right now. Tonight." A pause. "Because everything we thought we knew about Diana Black is wrong and we have about six hours before she figures out that we know it." He hung up. Mei appeared behind me with her bag over her shoulder looking at us both with my mother's sharp eyes. "Well," she said mildly. "This is certainly a family." Despite everything I almost laughed. Damien looked at Mei. Then at me. "Let's go," he said. We walked to the car. And somewhere in the city Diana Black was moving and we were six hours behind her and the laptop under my arm contained enough to end everything she had built. If we could get to her first. And if we could trust everyone in that room we were driving back to. Because Diana had been inside the Vale family for eleven years as a woman nobody had looked at twice. Which meant she was patient enough and clever enough to have done the same thing somewhere else. Somewhere closer. I got in the car and held the laptop on my lap and looked at the city going past and thought about Linda Marsh and eleven years and long games and the specific terrifying patience of someone who planned in decades. And thought about the Black estate. And everyone in it. And wondered which one of them had been there long enough.Sophia's POVRichard Black was smiling.That was the detail that broke something open in the room. Not the threat. Not Mrs. Park standing beside Diana with the calm of someone who had finished a job well. The smile.A man whose sons believed he had been controlled, manipulated, removed from his own life by a woman he had never stopped loving. Standing there. Smiling for the camera.I looked at Damien's face.He was looking at the photograph the way you look at a wound you didn't know you had until someone pointed at it."He's not a hostage," Dominic said quietly. "He's a participant.""Maybe he's performing," Remy said. "Maybe she's making him smile.""Look at his eyes," Zane said. He had already enhanced the image on his screen, sharpened it, pulled it apart pixel by pixel the way he did everything. "Nobody forces that. That's relief."Nobody said anything for a moment."Bring the girl," Dominic read again. "Come alone."He looked at me."No," Damien said before anyone else could spe
Damien's POVThe drive back was twenty minutes of silence and thinking.Mei sat in the back with her bag on her lap looking out the window like someone taking in a city she had decided to assess rather than admire. Sophia sat beside me with the laptop against her chest and her eyes on the road and her mind somewhere I could see but not reach.I let her have it.At the fifteen-minute mark she said "Miss Chen."I glanced at her."Linda Marsh," she said. "She's been in that house for eleven years. She would have been there when I arrived. When I left. Every dinner, every argument, every conversation I had with Marcus and Victoria in that house for three years." She paused. "She knew everything about me before I knew anything about myself.""Yes," I said."Diana built a file on me," she said. "Before the marriage. Before any of this." She looked at the laptop in her hands. "She's had eyes on me for three years and I never knew.""She didn't count on you ending up here," I said."No," Soph
Sophia's POVI was out of the car before Damien finished saying wait.He caught my arm. Not rough. Just firm and certain and immovable in the specific way of someone who had decided this."Sophia.""That's my aunt in there," I said."I know," he said. "Which is exactly why we don't run in blind." He looked at the house. Then at the car two houses down. Then back at me. "Give me thirty seconds."I gave him thirty seconds because he was right and I hated that he was right and standing on a pavement at two in the morning outside my aunt's house with every light blazing and the door open was not the moment to stop listening to the person who thought clearly when everything was urgent.He texted Zane. Four words. Sent his location and the word now.Then he looked at me."Here's what we know," he said quietly. Fast and clear. "Someone is in that house or was recently. The car down the street has been running. The door is open which means either Mei left it open deliberately or someone came
Chapter 18Damien's POVCarter.I said his name once in my head and let it sit there and felt the shape of it change from an " ally to a question mark in the space of about four seconds.Sophia was already thinking it. I could see it in her face, that quiet focused recalibration she did when something shifted and she was updating every prior conclusion in real time."It might not be him," she said."It might not be," I said.Neither of us believed that."Who else was in that estate tonight," she said. "Walk me through it. Everyone.""Us. Remy. Carter." I paused. "The portrait of Victoria's grandmother but I'm ruling her out."Sophia's mouth did the thing that was almost a smile even when everything was terrible. I filed that away because I was apparently filing everything about her now without meaning to."The staff," she said. "Were there staff in the building?"I stopped.The Vale mansion ran a skeleton night staff. Two people minimum. We had moved through the building focused enti
Sophia's POVI didn't sleep.Not because of Diana or the email or Marcus or any of the things that should have been keeping me up. Those I could compartmentalise. I had spent three years in the Vale mansion learning to compartmentalise things that would have broken most people before breakfast.I didn't sleep because of what Damien had said outside the gate.Especially me.Two words. Said quietly and completely and with the specific certainty of someone who didn't say things they didn't mean. I had been lying in the dark turning them over for two hours and they kept landing the same way every time.Heavy. Warm. Terrifying.I got up at one in the morning and went to the kitchen because that was what I did and I was done pretending otherwise.The lights were already on.Damien was sitting on the counter, not on a stool, actually on the counter, with his laptop open and a coffee that had clearly been there long enough to go cold and his hair doing the thing it did when he had been runnin
Sophia's POVThey were outside.I stared at the photograph on Remy's screen and felt my brain do that thing it did when information arrived faster than it could be processed. A kind of white static behind the eyes that lasted exactly two seconds before everything sharpened.Two seconds.Then I was moving."How old is this photo?" I said, taking Remy's phone."Timestamp says four minutes ago," Remy said.Four minutes. Which meant while we were standing in Victoria's study feeling like we had won something, Diana and Richard Black had driven up to the front of the estate we had just left and were currently standing outside it like they owned it.Which technically, if the will clause went unchallenged, they might."Zane," Damien said into his phone. He had made the call before I finished my second sentence. "Lock down the estate. Full perimeter. Nobody gets through that gate." A pause. "I don't care how they got there. Don't let them in."He hung up and looked at me."We need to go back
Sophia's POVThe dress I was wearing cost more than the car I’d been forced to leave behind at the Vale estate.It was a deep, shimmering emerald silk that clung to every curve like a second skin. Dominic had picked it out himself, claiming it was the color of envy."Perfect for tonight," he’d said
POV: DamienI tossed the quarterly reports onto the center of the table. The sharp smack made the head of acquisitions flinch in his expensive suit."This is garbage," I said, leaning back in my chair. "You actually call this a projection?"The guy stammered, frantically wiping sweat off his forehe
Sophia's POVHoly fuckity fuck. There was no way you could call the Black estate a house. It was a whole fortress made of glass and steel, the whole building reeled of intimidation.Dominic’s driver took my cracked suitcase like it was a lump of dirt and disappeared into the shadows of the foyer. D
Sophia's POVThe rain wasn't stopping. If anything, it got louder, mocking me with every heavy drop that hit the plastic roof of the bus stop.I stared at my phone's screen blankly. As though staring at it continuously was going to make a single dollar pop up.How was I supposed to even get a bus?







