LOGINFour months after Evelyn disappeared, Alistair did something he hadn't done since he was a twelve-year-old boy.
He visited his mother's grave.
The headstone sat in the forgotten churchyard of Aethelgard on the northernmost cliff edge—a private, wind-scoured cemetery that the Thorne family maintained with the same cold, sterile efficiency they applied to their shipping fleets. Clean white marble. Sharp, manicured grass. No flowers. His grandfather had considered placing flowers at a gravesite to be sentimental, wasteful, and inefficient, and the corporate mandate had simply never been challenged.
Alistair stood before the stone on a bitter Tuesday morning in early spring. He had driven himself. He had told no one.
CECILE THORNE Beloved Mother 1973 – 2005
He had been twelve when she passed. She had been only thirty-two. The sudden cardiac event had taken exactly four hours from onset to its clinical conclusion. His grandfather had spent two of those hours on an international conference call with the Thorne Global logistics team because a major European shipment was running behind schedule. Alistair had sat completely alone in the green-tiled hospital corridor, his feet dangling inches above the linoleum from a plastic waiting-room chair, watching doctors move in and out with the hollow efficiency of people completing paperwork for a foregone conclusion.
He hadn't cried. His grandfather had arrived at hour three, knelt in front of him, and told him that Thorne men did not cry in public spaces. Alistair had taken the instruction literally, because he was twelve and his grandfather was the only mountain left standing.
He stood at her grave now, the salt spray from the cliffs cutting through his wool coat, and thought about the document sitting on his desk.
The biological mother shall execute a total, unconditional waiver of all parental rights.
He thought about his own mother—the vanished warmth of her, the specific, rare gravity of her unconditional love. He remembered the way she used to call him mon coeur and mean it without a single shred of hidden corporate calculation. He thought about that lonely twelve-year-old boy in the plastic chair, and then he thought about his own child sitting in some future equivalent of that cold room, asking why their mother was gone, and being given an answer that translated to: Because I treated her like an asset.
He stood there until the rain began to fall, soaking through his clothes.
When he finally walked back to his car, his face was an unreadable sheet of ice. His hands were perfectly steady on the steering wheel. But deep within the internal architecture of his mind, something had shifted, quietly and without ceremony—the way structural pillars give way when a tremendous, long-ignored pressure is finally acknowledged.
He called Renner before he even started the engine.
"The search parameters for Hex," Alistair said, his voice cutting through the speaker. "Expand them globally. But I don't want her captured. I don't want her brought in. I want her located. Position data only. No contact, no approach, no surveillance teams within five hundred meters." He paused, swallowing a sudden bitterness. "And pull Harrison's medical compliance protocols off the Marceau file entirely. Whatever civil fraud charges are pending against her father—waive them completely."
Renner’s hesitation over the line was microscopically longer than usual, a corporate red flag. "Sir... the legal team is adamant that the compliance clause is our only leverage to secure—"
"I know exactly what the legal team believes, Renner," Alistair snapped. "I am overruling them. Update the file immediately."
He cut the call before his head of security could argue.
He sat in the idling car, staring through the fogged windshield at the cemetery gate, and told himself that this was a superior strategy. That a healthy, unmonitored mother would produce a physically superior heir. That the legal clauses could always be reinstated at a later date.
He was still very good at telling himself things. But he was getting terrifyingly slow at believing them.
The Hex trail went live in the European Biochemical Research Index on a bitter Thursday morning.Alistair's global digital monitoring team flagged the upload within forty-five minutes of its release—not because his analysts were routinely reading academic papers on pharmaceutical trials, but because the underlying cyber-signature on the journal’s submission portal carried a unmistakable peripheral echo of the encryption architecture Hex had used to breach Thorne Global's primary servers eighteen months ago. It was brilliant. A single, stylized structural choice in the metadata layer that served as a digital fingerprint.Alistair read the automated flag report at his desk, sitting entirely motionless as the city buzzed outside his glass tower.He read the abstract first. Then, unhurriedly, he read all thirty-two pages of the full paper.By the time he reached the devastating conclusion—which meticulously dismantled a corporate shell structure that bore an identical resemblance to the T
The paper was accepted.The notification popped into the encrypted Elara Voss inbox on a rainy Wednesday afternoon—a formal, signed acceptance letter from the editorial board of the Journal of European Biochemical Research, with two peer reviewers' evaluations attached.The first reviewer described her biochemical analysis as "methodologically rigorous, flawless, and clinically significant." The second reviewer had chosen a different word: "potentially incendiary.""Both are entirely correct," Evelyn murmured to the empty room.Kai looked up from his weapon-cleaning kit at the perimeter console. "Which paper?""The Vael data analysis." She scrolled down to the publication schedule. "Eight weeks to the print edition. It hits the public digital archive in exactly four."Kai walked over, his boots clicking softly on the concrete, and read the glowing screen over her shoulder. His jaw tightened. "Vael's corporate legal team will launch an immediate containment sequence.""Of course they w
Four months after Evelyn disappeared, Alistair did something he hadn't done since he was a twelve-year-old boy.He visited his mother's grave.The headstone sat in the forgotten churchyard of Aethelgard on the northernmost cliff edge—a private, wind-scoured cemetery that the Thorne family maintained with the same cold, sterile efficiency they applied to their shipping fleets. Clean white marble. Sharp, manicured grass. No flowers. His grandfather had considered placing flowers at a gravesite to be sentimental, wasteful, and inefficient, and the corporate mandate had simply never been challenged.Alistair stood before the stone on a bitter Tuesday morning in early spring. He had driven himself. He had told no one.CECILE THORNE Beloved Mother 1973 – 2005He had been twelve when she passed. She had been only thirty-two. The sudden cardiac event had taken exactly four hours from onset to its clinical conclusion. His grandfather had spent two of those hours on an international conference
The first time she played the piano, she cried.It wasn't a grand instrument. It was a battered, dusty upright electronic keyboard—sixty-one keys, battery-powered, discovered by Kai in the ruins of a derelict youth center two blocks away during a midnight supply run. He had brought it back under his arm without a word of explanation, setting it silently against the damp concrete wall of the safehouse before returning to his watch.She had stared at the plastic keys for four full days before she dared to touch them.She didn't know how to play. She had absorbed the fundamentals of music theory from an online course she’d hijacked at sixteen—squeezed between hacking forums and structural engineering manuals, because back then, knowledge was the only currency that kept her safe. She understood intervals and chord progressions mathematically, but she had never owned an instrument.At two in the morning on the fifth night, the air freezing enough to turn her breath to mist, she sat on the
Valentin Rossano’s private dining room was buried deep in the stone basement of a harbor-front restaurant that officially served the finest seafood in the city, and unofficially served as the nerve center for the Rossano Syndicate's legitimate commercial operations. Alistair had been eating there since his grandfather first brought him at fourteen. He had never once enjoyed the food."Three months," Valentin said, swirling a deep red vintage in his glass, the candlelight catching the heavy gold rings on his fingers. "Three months and absolutely nothing. The girl is extraordinary, Alistair. A true ghost.""She is," Alistair said, his voice entirely devoid of inflection.Valentin studied him with the patient, predatory attention of a man who had survived thirty years of gang wars by reading people better than they read themselves. "You've pulled Renner's tactical teams back from the Oakhaven district.""The thermal audits returned nothing but baseline noise. Continuing to run heavy surv
She built a timetable.It occupied a single sheet of waterproof drafting paper, taped to the concrete wall above her laptop, divided into three neat columns: Medical Study, Technical Development, and Physical Maintenance. The final column was entirely Kai’s doing. He had looked at her first draft, silently noted the absolute void where rest, movement, or a single meal should be, and flatly penciled it in while she was asleep.She hadn't rubbed it out. To erase it would be to acknowledge the terrifying truth: she couldn't afford to break, and she couldn't do this entirely alone.Mornings: Marcus's library.She didn't just read the stolen medical textbooks; she devoured them, desperate to drown out the quiet panic that crept up her throat every dawn. She worked through them systematically, the way a grueling surgical residency would demand if a residency could be compressed into the freezing hours of a blacked-out former server farm. Anatomy came first, then physiology and pharmacology.







