LOGINEvelyn watched her mother’s hand flutter to her nose. It was a small gesture, but it hit harder than any blow she’d sustained in the mountains.
She knew she didn’t smell—not anymore. She had scrubbed until her skin was raw and bleeding in the precinct showers. But to Grace Carter, the "scent" wasn’t physical. It was the stench of failure, of a scandal that refused to stay buried.
"You’re home now," Grace forced a brittle smile, her hand dropping back to her side like a dead weight. "That’s... that’s all that matters. You’ve suffered enough."
Suffered. The word felt insulting coming from a woman who hadn’t spent a single night in the rain.
"Let’s get a photo," one of the officers suggested, lifting his phone. "For the official report. A happy ending."
Officer Miller nudged Evelyn forward. "Go on. The nightmare’s over."
As Evelyn stepped toward her parents, the crowd of guests curdled, drawing back as if she were a live wire. Her parents stood rigid, their bodies leaning away from her even as they forced themselves to stay in the frame.
"The rest of the family too," the officer waved Lucas and Iris over. "Come on, make it a complete set."
Iris gripped Lucas’s arm, her voice a frantic whisper. "Lucas, I’m scared... what if she’s..."
"It’s okay," Lucas murmured, his eyes fixed on Evelyn with a mixture of pity and profound disgust. "The police are right here. Just don't touch her."
The shutter clicked.
In the photo, four people stood like statues in a graveyard. No one smiled.
The police left shortly after, their departure taking the last shred of "safety" with them. The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.
"Well... Evelyn," Grace said, her voice echoing in the vast garden. "Why don’t you come inside?"
She didn't offer a hug. She didn't offer a hand.
Evelyn walked past Lucas and Iris on the steps. She stopped, her gaze settling on her sister’s shimmering engagement ring.
"You look beautiful today, Iris," Evelyn said. Her voice was too calm, a flat line that made Iris flinch. "Congratulations."
"Thank you," Iris stammered, shrinking into Lucas’s side.
"Does it scare you?" Evelyn asked, leaning in just enough to see the pupils of Iris’s eyes dilate. "Seeing me back from the dead?"
"What... what do you mean?"
"You know exactly what happened that night."
Iris’s face drained of color. Her breath hitched, and she clutching her stomach, swaying slightly.
"I don't feel well," Iris whimpered. "Lucas... my stomach..."
"Iris!" Grace rushed over, her maternal instincts finally kicking in—but only for the daughter who hadn't been sold. "I told you not to drink that cold cider. Let’s get you inside, honey."
The guests began to melt away, making hurried excuses about early mornings and forgotten appointments. No one wanted to be near the "miracle" survivor.
"Maybe we should be careful," Iris whispered as they reached the door, casting a fearful look back at Evelyn. "What if she brought back a disease? Those places... they’re filthy."
Evelyn’s eyes narrowed. "If you want proof I’m clean, ask for it. Or bring out the child you’ve been telling everyone I had. I’d love to meet him."
Her father’s face darkened. "Evelyn, enough. We’ve seen the reports. There's no need to lie about your... condition."
"I was examined at the precinct," Evelyn snapped. "Call them. Or take me to a hospital yourself."
"Is that a challenge?"
A new voice cut through the tension. Deep, resonant, and entirely devoid of warmth.
A man rose from one of the patio chairs in the shadows of the veranda. He was tall, his presence so commanding it seemed to s*ck the air out of the space. This was Lucien—Lucas’s uncle, the man who had been sent to Europe years ago and returned as a legend in the surgical world.
"Uncle," Lucas straightened up, his posture turning submissive.
Iris seized the opportunity. "Uncle Lucien! You’re a doctor. Could you... could you just check her? For everyone's peace of mind? She’s convinced she’s fine, but..."
Lucien stepped into the light. He looked at Iris with a faint, mocking curve of his lips. "You’re afraid of dying, Iris. I’m not."
"But you have your kit, don't you?" Lucas added. "The protective meds?"
Lucien didn't answer. His eyes shifted to Evelyn. They were sharp, analytical, like a scalpel. He didn't look at her with pity or fear. He looked at her like a puzzle.
"Give me your hand," he commanded.
Evelyn hesitated, her fingers curling into a fist.
"See?" Iris cried. "She’s hiding something!"
Evelyn looked Lucien in the eye and placed her hand in his.
His grip was ice-cold and steady as a mountain. He didn't flinch. He turned her arm over, his thumb pressing against the pulse point in her wrist. He checked the scars on her forearms, his touch professional yet strangely intimate. He moved to her neck, his fingers pressing against her glands.
"Fever?" he asked.
"No."
"Night sweats?"
"No."
He stepped back, wiping his hands with a handkerchief. The family held their breath.
"She’s cleaner than any of you," Lucien said flatly. "No infection. No contagious disease."
The silence that followed was deafening.
"What?" Grace whispered.
"But the police files said—" her father started.
Lucien turned a freezing gaze on him. "You asked for a professional opinion. You have it. Unless you’ve suddenly earned a medical degree while I was in London?"
Robert Carter swallowed his words. "No, of course not, Lucien."
"I have a surgery at six," Lucien said, checking his watch as if this entire family drama were a minor annoyance. "Don't call me for this nonsense again."
He walked toward his dark sedan without another word, leaving a trail of shattered expectations behind him.
Evelyn felt a brief spark of triumph, but it died the moment Grace turned back to her.
"Evelyn... wait outside for a moment. We need to discuss... arrangements."
The door slammed shut.
Evelyn stood on the gravel, forgotten again. Ten minutes later, the housekeeper emerged, looking at the floor.
"This way, Miss Evelyn," the woman whispered.
She led Evelyn away from the main house, past the manicured gardens, to a small, isolated structure in the far corner of the yard. It was a luxury build—cedar wood and iron bars—designed for the prize-winning Dobermans the Carters used to keep.
"Madam said..." the housekeeper swallowed hard. "She said this is for the best. To prevent any... complications until we're sure."
Evelyn stared at the kennel.
"You want me," she said, her voice dangerously low, "to sleep where the dogs sleep?"
Evelyn didn't let them wait long. As Iris reached the peak of her theatrical sobbing, Evelyn slowly extended her hand. Resting in her palm, catching the dim light of the staff room, was a blood-red ruby necklace.Iris’s tear-stained face transformed instantly. The despair vanished, replaced by a sharp, jagged excitement. "Mom! Look! I told you she stole it!". She wiped her eyes, her triumphant grin clashing violently with her previous state of collapse.Evelyn let out a dry, hollow laugh. "Iris, you really should consider a career in acting. You’d win an Oscar for that pivot alone".Eleanor Carter didn’t join the laughter. She looked at the necklace in Evelyn’s hand with a mixture of profound disappointment and cold fury. "Evelyn, why? Why must you become a thief? You sat there and watched your brother tear this room apart, knowing the whole time you had it"."She’s a liar and a parasite!" Iris added, her voice gaining a righteous edge.Evelyn remained unphased. "I found this tucked u
"Since you're so eager to back out, I assume you're not as desperate for the cash as the market suggests," Evelyn said, her voice like silk over gravel.Lucien Hale studied her for a moment, his analytical gaze lingering on her sharp features. He wasn't used to being outnegotiated, especially not by a woman the world considered "broken.""Fine," Lucien conceded, his voice dropping an octave. "If you can clear the full wire transfer by Monday, I’ll knock off another million. Consider it a discount for your... persistent tongue."Nora practically vibrated with excitement beside her, gripping Evelyn’s arm. "Evelyn! That’s incredible! Buy it!"Evelyn maintained her mask of cold indifference, but a spark of dark satisfaction flickered in her chest. A million-dollar discount. It seemed the "Good Doctor" did have a price for his ego after all. Or perhaps, she had finally insulted him into a state of clarity.They sat down to finalize the paperwork. The real estate agent was nearly weeping wi
The heavy rain battered the windows of the Carter mansion, matching the cold calculation in Evelyn’s eyes. She spent the afternoon checking the "Alpha Investor" group chat.[White Knight]: Next week is up in the air. If I have time, I’ll show.Evelyn watched the notification, her lips curling. The "White Knight"—Lucien—was as arrogant as ever.[Coach Yu]: @Mrs. Li, still recovering?[Mrs. Li (Evelyn)]: Yes. My body isn’t ready for a social circus yet. You guys enjoy. Dinner is on me—I’ll drop a massive red envelope in the chat when the bill comes.She figured she was likely the wealthiest person in this group of six. If she couldn’t show, the least she could do was buy their silence and their loyalty with cash.[Zzhou]: @Mrs. Li, out of curiosity, how old are you?Evelyn smirked at her screen.[Mrs. Li]: My grandson is already in preschool.A string of shocked emojis flooded the screen.[White Knight]: She’s lying. Don't be idiots. If she doesn't want to tell the truth, stop asking.E
Evelyn watched Nora pull the car back onto the main road. The morning’s encounter at the restaurant had left a bitter aftertaste, but it hadn't slowed her down."So," Nora asked, her eyes darting between the road and Evelyn’s calm profile. "You really have a plan? To deal with... them?"Evelyn looked out the window, watching the city's neon lights begin to flicker to life. "It’s already in motion, Nora. One step at a time. When you push someone into a corner where there are no exits, they become very easy to handle."She wasn't in a hurry. In fact, she found a dark sort of amusement in watching Iris scramble. Every day was a new game—watching her sister snap, crumble, and perform for an audience that was slowly losing interest. It was like watching a predator play with its prey; you don't kill the mouse immediately. You let it exhaust itself first.Earlier that day, Evelyn had made her move.She had gone with Nora to a high-end real estate agency. She didn't want a "home"—she wanted a
By the time Evelyn reached the ground floor, the house had already reached its verdict.It wasn’t a loud declaration. It was the heavy, clinical silence that followed a boardroom collapse or a handled scandal. No shouting, no panic. Just the cold machinery of removal.Evelyn slowed her pace. She poured a glass of water, her movements deliberate, and sat at the head of the dining table. She occupied the space as if she still had every right to it—as if the deed to the mansion didn’t have "Carter" written in a bloodline that had already disowned her.Her father appeared first. He stood with the detached, lethal composure he used for hostile takeovers."This ends today," Robert said. "You’re leaving."Evelyn didn't look up from her water. "Leaving for where, Robert?""We’ve arranged a private residence. Outside the city. Gated. Secure."Exile. They weren't offering her a home; they were offering her a cage with better wallpaper.Her mother stood a pace behind him, arms locked over her ch
Nora’s eyes widened, her breath hitching in her throat. "You... you know him?"Evelyn didn’t answer. The muscle in her jaw pulsed with a rhythmic, aching intensity."Stay in the car," she commanded, her hand already on the door latch. "Don't let him see you. I’ll handle this.""Evelyn, wait—!"But Evelyn was already gone. She crossed the street like a heat-seeking missile, her rage wrapped in a thin, lethal layer of control.Inside the restaurant, the man by the window ended a call with the kind of clipped impatience that seemed to reorganize the air around him. Lucien Hale. He wasn't waiting for a romantic date; he was waiting for a business obligation that was late."I’m giving you ten minutes," he said into the phone, his voice a cold scalpel. "If you’re not here, I’m gone."He set the phone down and looked up.A woman pulled out the chair across from him and sat with a terrifying, quiet confidence.Lucien’s brows drew together. Evelyn Carter. Again."Can I help you?" he asked, his







