Se connecterEliza's POV
Lara Chen didn't look like a dragon slayer.She looked like someone's favorite aunt—soft curves, silver-streaked hair pulled into a loose bun, reading glasses perched on her nose. She wore a cardigan the color of oatmeal and held a porcelain teacup with both hands. Her office smelled like lavender.I'd done my research. Lara had taken down a sitting senator accused of harassment (he resigned), saved a tech CEO from cancel culture (she's still running herEliza's POV The plane touched down at JFK at noon. New York was gray, cold, the sky pressing down like a weight. Adam sat beside me, his hand on my knee. Across the aisle, Marcus stared out the window, his reflection tense. Reyes had stayed behind to handle Vera's interrogation, but she'd sent two agents to meet us at the bank. The vault was in a building on Wall Street. Old stone, brass doors, the kind of place where wealth had been hiding for centuries. I stood on the sidewalk, the key in my pocket, and tried to remember how to breathe. "You don't have to do this," Adam said. "I do." He took my hand. "Then let's go." The Bank The lobby was marble and silence. A woman in a tailored suit met us at the desk. "Ms. Sterling. We've been expecting you. Please follow me." She led us through a series of doors, each one heavier than the last.
Eliza's POV The first name dropped three days later. Senator Elizabeth Crane, a fifty-year-old grandmother from Ohio, was arrested at her home. The charges: bribery, conspiracy, and accessory to human trafficking. The evidence from the vault had been enough to hold her without bail. I watched the news on the kitchen television, Clara beside me, Adam standing in the doorway. The senator's face was pale, her eyes hollow. She didn't look like a monster. She looked like someone's mother. "Are you okay?" Clara asked. "I don't know." "You did the right thing." "I know." But knowing didn't make it easier. The Calls My phone started ringing immediately. Reporters, lawyers, strangers who'd somehow gotten my number. Reyes had warned me this would happen. "The names in that vault are connected to powerful people. They'll come after you
Eliza's POVThe cemetery was quiet.We came at dusk, when the shadows were long and the gates were about to close. Adam drove. Marcus sat in the back, silent. Reyes had a team hidden in the trees, watching for anyone who might be following.I hadn't been here since my mother's funeral. The headstone was simple, weathered by decades of rain and wind.Clara Sterling. Beloved mother. Rest in peace.I knelt in front of it. Touched the cold stone."I'm sorry," I whispered. "I should have come sooner."Marcus stood behind me. "The key is buried beneath the headstone. My father dug a small compartment. He said it was the only place the Collective would never look."Adam brought a small shovel. I didn't let him dig. This was my mother. My penance. I took the shovel and started to dig.The earth was soft. The work was hard. My hands blistered, but I didn't stop.Ruth watched from the car, her daughter a
Eliza's POVThe gate didn't creak anymore.Adam had fixed it years ago, replaced the old hinges, reinforced the latch. But I still heard it sometimes. A ghost sound. A reminder of all the people who'd walked through, hesitant and hopeful, afraid to believe they belonged.Clara stood beside me now, her hand on the wood."You're sure about this?" I asked."I've never been more sure."She pushed the gate open.On the other side, a woman waited. Young, maybe twenty five. A baby on her hip. A suitcase at her feet."Clara Sterling?" the woman asked."Clara Thorne now. But yes."The woman's eyes filled. "I'm Lydia. I think I'm your cousin. My mother she was one of the lost ones. She died before she could find this place."Clara stepped forward. "You're not lost anymore."Lydia stepped through the gate.The garden was full of light.The New GenerationI watc
Eliza's POVThe garden was full.Ninety three siblings. Their children. Their partners. Clara with Marcus. Adam beside me. Eleanor in her chair beneath the tree. Chloe at the edge of the crowd, laughing at something Sarah had said.We'd gathered to mark the day. Not an anniversary. Not a birthday. Just a day the day when the last lost sibling had come home. The day when the circle had finally closed.I stood at the plaque on the wall, my mother's photograph in my hands."Thank you," I said. "All of you. For coming. For staying. For believing that a dead woman's dream could be real."The garden was quiet."My mother wrote in her journal that she hoped for a place where all her children could come home. She didn't live to see it. But I did. Because of you."I looked at Daniel. At Sarah. At James. At Rebecca. At Michael. At Thomas. At Maria. At Elena. At Samuel. At every face that had appeared at the gate over the
Eliza's POVSamuel arrived on a Sunday.The garden was quiet. The women were at brunch. Clara was folding cranes at the kitchen table. Adam was reading on the porch. I was standing at the gate, watching the road, waiting for a brother I'd never met.His car appeared at noon.Small, blue, dust covered from the long drive across the country. It pulled to a stop at the gate. The engine cut. The door opened.He was younger than I expected. Thirty-eight. Dark hair like Daniel's, eyes like my mother's. He stood beside the car, looking at the garden, the tree, the plaque on the wall."Samuel.""Eliza.""You came.""I've been driving for three days. I couldn't stop."I opened the gate. "You don't have to stop. You just have to come in."He stepped through.The TreeI walked him to the bench beneath Clara's tree.He sat slowly, like someone who'd been holding his brea
Adam's POVThree days.That's how long Eliza had been inside.Three days of silence. Three days of watching my phone for messages that never came. Three days of pacing this apartment like a caged animal, running through every scenario, every possibility, every wors
Adam's POVI stood in the doorway, frozen.Eliza was sitting up in bed, hair tousled, eyes still heavy with sleep. She looked beautiful. She looked trusting. She looked exactly like the woman I'd fallen in love with.And now I didn't know if any of it was real.
Eliza's POVDawn was breaking over the city when I finally walked through the apartment door.Adam was waiting. He always was. Three steps and I was in his arms, breathing in the familiar scent of him, letting the steady beat of his heart slow the racing of my own.
Adam's POVI'd spent my whole life reading people.It was a survival skill, learned young. My father's moods shifted like weather—sunny one moment, violent the next. I learned to watch for the signs. The tightening of his jaw. The way his eyes went flat. The seconds of sile







