LOGINTime, Aurora realized, had finally stopped acting like an enemy.For the better part of a year, time had been a countdown. A ticking clock on a high-risk pregnancy. A sentence handed down by a judge. A deadline for a deposition.But for the last six months, time had become a river. It flowed. It carried them forward, gentle and steady, smoothing the rough edges of their trauma into something that looked, remarkably, like a normal life.Aurora stood in her office at Vale-Cross Global. It was 4:45 PM on a Tuesday in October. Outside, the autumn sun was turning the Hudson River into a ribbon of hammered copper.She packed her bag. Tablet. Sketchbook. A half-eaten bag of goldfish crackers that had somehow migrated from her purse to her desk."Heading out?" Claire asked from the doorway.Claire was the COO now, officially. She wore authority as easily as she wore her tailored blazers."I am," Aurora said. "Ethan has a science fair project due tomorrow. We're building a volcano.""Vinegar a
The courtroom didn't smell like fear this time. It smelled of floor wax and optimism.Liam Cross sat at the plaintiff’s table, but he wasn't a plaintiff. He was a petitioner. Beside him sat Aurora, wearing a soft cream dress that caught the morning light filtering through the high windows.On his lap sat River.River was three and a half years old. He was wearing a miniature navy blazer, a white shirt, and a bow tie that Ethan had tied for him (crookedly, but with love). He was holding his lamb, which had been washed so many times it was now more gray than white, but still soft.River wasn't looking at the judge. He was looking at Liam’s hand, tracing the veins on the back of his knuckles."Petitioner Cross," Judge Halloway said. It was the same judge who had sentenced Isabella. He looked less tired today. He looked almost... happy. "We are here to finalize the adoption of River Doe.""River Vale-Cross," Liam corrected gently.The judge smiled. "River Vale-Cross. Let the record reflec
The penthouse living room was a battlefield of wrapping paper.Aurora sat on the rug, a glass of iced tea in her hand, surveying the wreckage. It was a good wreckage. The kind that meant a life was being lived loudly and without apology.Hope was two.She was no longer the fragile preemie in the incubator. She was a toddler with a vocabulary of fifty words (mostly "no," "mine," and "cookie"), a head full of riotous dark curls, and a terrifying amount of agency.She was currently wearing a tutu over her pajamas and trying to put a party hat on the dog Marcus had adopted last month—a patient, elderly golden retriever named Buster who had joined the extended family."Gentle, Hope," Aurora called out. "Buster doesn't like hats.""Hat!" Hope insisted, jamming the cardboard cone onto the dog’s ear.Sitting next to them, watching with the intense scrutiny of a safety inspector, was River.It had been six months.Six months since the intake center. Six months since the night terror. Six month
The bedroom was a blue cave.The blackout curtains were drawn, blocking the city lights, leaving only the soft glow of the star-shaped nightlight. It was 9:00 PM. The penthouse was quiet, but it was the quiet of people sleeping, not people hiding.Ethan lay in his bed, staring at the ceiling. He was tracing the glow-in-the-dark stickers he had put there last year. Orion. The Big Dipper. The Death Star (which wasn't a constellation, but Uncle Marcus said it counted).He turned his head.In the bottom bunk across the room, River was awake.Ethan could tell by the breathing. Sleeping breathing was slow and heavy. River’s breathing was fast and shallow, like a rabbit waiting to run.River had been quiet for three days. Ever since the nightmare about the closet. He didn't play with the kaleidoscope. He didn't eat his toast. He just sat in the corner, holding his lamb, watching.Ethan sat up. He swung his legs over the side of the bed.He walked across the room. The floor was cold on his fe
The scream shattered the silence of the penthouse like a thrown brick.It wasn't the fussy cry of a baby. It wasn't the frustrated shout of a child who didn't want to go to bed.It was a sound of pure, unadulterated terror. High-pitched. Animalistic. The sound of someone being hurt.Aurora was out of bed before her eyes were open. Liam was right behind her. They ran down the hallway, their bare feet pounding on the runner.They passed the nursery. Hope was asleep, undisturbed by the noise that lived in the other room.They burst into the boys' room.The nightlight cast a soft, blue glow over the scene. Ethan was sitting up in his bed, clutching his duvet to his chin, his eyes wide with fear.Across the room, in the bottom bunk, River was thrashing.He was tangled in his sheets. He was kicking, punching, fighting an invisible enemy."No! No! Don't put me in!" he screamed. His voice was raw. "I'll be good! I'll be good!"Aurora moved to the bed."River," she said, keeping her voice low
The alert on Aurora’s phone was red.In the old days—the days of the siege, the depression, the bunker—that color would have triggered a cortisol spike strong enough to stop her heart. It would have meant a leak. A lawsuit. A threat to her children.Today, sitting in her corner office at Vale-Cross Global, Aurora looked at the red notification with the calm, detached assessment of a structural engineer noticing a hairline fracture. It was a problem. It needed fixing. But the building wasn't going to fall down."Claire," Aurora said into the intercom. "Get Liam and Marcus. Boardroom B. Ten minutes.""On it," Claire’s voice came back, crisp and unbothered.Aurora stood up. She smoothed the front of her navy blazer. She checked the time: 2:00 PM.The notification was from the account manager for the Nexus Tech campus project—a three-hundred-million-dollar contract that was supposed to break ground in Seattle next month.Subject: CRITICAL. Nexus threatening termination. Competitor bid rec
The "war" wasn't being fought with supply chains anymore. It was being fought in the dark.Liam Cross sat in the back of his Maybach, the city of New York sliding past the tinted windows like a film noir. It was raining again, a relentless, gray drizzle that matched his mood.He wasn't going to the
The "war" Vanessa Leigh had promised was not starting now. It had started five years ago, in the aftermath of a wedding that never happened.The present—Liam’s office, the dossiers, the obsession—faded as Vanessa sat alone in her dark apartment, pouring a glass of wine she didn't want.She closed h
The American Museum of Natural History was a cathedral of bones.It was vast, echoing, and smelled faintly of floor wax and old dust—the scent of time standing still. It was the perfect place to hide, surrounded by things that had already lived, died, and been cataloged.Aurora walked through the H
The dossier sat on Liam Cross’s desk, a thin, unassuming stack of paper that weighed more than the building it was housed in. It was 8 AM. The city outside was waking up, a gray, indifferent beast stretching its limbs. But inside the glass office, time had stopped. Liam sat in his chair, h







