ログイン[Alice's POV]I had no idea what that could be.I didn't know what mattered to Adam on the surface level, let alone a deeper one. I knew he had become a doctor because of a girl in an alley. I knew he had destroyed his career because of me. I knew he had jumped into a river because of me. But those were actions, not reasons. They told me what he had done, not what he would come back for.I sat there for a long time, turning the problem over in my mind the way I would turn over a diagnostic puzzle, looking for the pattern, the key, the one variable that would unlock the system.Still, I didn't find it.The door opened. Endall.He had been coming every day; sometimes twice a day. Once in the morning and once in the evening, as if he had added hospital visits to his schedule alongside board meetings and lab reviews. He never stayed long. He would come in, check on me, check on Adam, ask if I needed anything — water, food, a different chair, a blanket — and then leave. Efficient. Practica
[Alice's POV]They moved Adam to a private room on the third day.Not because there was a medical reason — the ICU ward had been good, the monitoring and care had been excellent, everything was functioning well for his recovery.I learned that Endall had pulled some strings.I didn't ask how, and he didn't explain. He simply appeared at my bedside one morning and said, "He's in room 312. I had him transferred. The neurologist agreed it might help — quieter environment, fewer interruptions, more consistent circadian cues."He said it with such clinical efficiency that I almost believed it was purely a medical decision.Almost.Room 312 was larger than the ICU bays. It boasted a window — an actual window, not a slit in a wall but a pane of glass that looked out over the Zurich skyline and the distant, snow-dusted line of the Alps. The light that came through was different here. Softer. Warmer. Less institutional. Someone — Endall, probably — had placed a small vase of white flowers on t
[Alice's POV]"You should be careful, Dr. Andorra," Lily said quietly. "Like you said, you're a scientist, not a warrior. Not a politician. Not someone who knows how the real world works. If you push this, if you make accusations you can't prove in a courtroom, the consequences won't just fall on you. They'll fall on the institute. On Alice. On my fiancé. On everyone connected to this."She was weaponizing Endall's position. Reminding him that he wasn't just a person — he was a node in a network, a piece in a system, and systems had mechanisms for dealing with nodes that caused problems.It should have worked. By any rational analysis, it should have made Endall step back, reassess, calculate the cost-to-benefit ratio of continuing this confrontation.It didn't work.Because Endall Andorra had not just spent the last seventy-two hours doing rational analysis. He had spent them staring at a phone screen, reading updates about a woman he loved being rescued with a dead bomb on her chest
[Alice's POV]"I got a call at the institute," Endall continued, his eyes locked on Lily's face. "Two hours ago. From the Zurich police. They told me that Dr. Alice McCutchen — my colleague, my mentor, the most important person in my professional life — had been found on a riverbank with a bomb strapped to her chest and a gag in her mouth. They told me that a man had jumped into the river to save her and was now in a coma. They told me that the kidnapping appeared to be premeditated, professional, and targeted."He took another step closer. Lily held her ground, but I saw it — the slightest tightening around her eyes, the almost imperceptible shift in her posture from relaxed to guarded."So, I dropped what I was doing and hurried to the hospital," Endall said, "and I find you standing at her bedside. The same woman who has spent the last six months systematically destroying Alice's life. The same woman who was named — by a man who is now conveniently dead, by the way — as the archite
[Alice's POV]"Surprised?" Lily said, watching my face. "Don't be. David proposed the morning after the press conference. Well — I proposed that he propose, but the actual knee-bending was his. Very romantic. Very sincere. He even shed a tear, and I did too, which was a nice touch for us both."She placed the invitation card on my bedside table, right next to Marie's envelope. Two envelopes. Two ultimatums. Two women who wanted me gone."You're going to attend," Lily said. It wasn't an invitation. It was a statement of fact. "You're going to sit in the pews and you're going to watch me marry the man you threw away, and you're going to smile, and you're going to clap, and you're going to congratulate us, and then you're going to leave. Permanently. And that will be the end of it.""Why would I come?" I asked.My voice sounded strange to me — flat, distant, as if it belonged to someone standing on the other side of the room. But the question was real. I genuinely wanted to know what ans
[Alice's POV]Lily walked to the window. The afternoon light streamed in, catching the silk of her blouse, making her look like she was glowing. She stood with her back to me for a moment, looking out at the Zurich skyline, and when she turned around, she was holding something.An envelope. White. Thick paper. Gold lettering."I have a theory, Alice," she said, walking back toward me with the envelope in her hand. "I've been developing it for a while, and recent events have only confirmed it. My theory is this: you believe that truth is a weapon. That if you can just gather enough evidence, assemble enough facts, connect enough dots — the truth will win. That exposure is the ultimate weapon. That if you can just show people what I've done, they'll turn against me."She stopped at the side of my bed. Closer than before. Close enough that I could see the individual lashes framing her eyes, close enough that I could smell the perfume again, close enough that I could have reached out and
[David’s POV]Alice stood up, easing Camilla onto her feet at the same time. Her movements were a bit slow, and she even staggered for a moment. I immediately wanted to support her, and when I raised my arm to lend support, she seemed to be startled. She pulled away from me.Her gaze was lowered, s
[Alice’s POV]I fetched a cup of coffee for Lily from the hospital canteen. I hoped it would help soothe her agitation.Lily was quietly sobbing when I came back to her room. She stopped crying and raised her head, her red and swollen eyes flashing with a light that was hard to decipher. She slowly
[Alice’s POV]It was a brilliant, sunny day and yet, I still felt cold all over. Since moving out of our ruined home, I haven’t had a good night’s sleep these past few days.The ever-present, dull pain deep in my abdomen warns me that my condition is worsening, while my baby was growing. For the sa
[David’s POV]When I arrived at the door to our apartment, I heard sharp human voices and the sound of porcelain shattering, coming from inside. I had received a call from our panicked housekeeper. Her incoherent words on the phone made my heart sink, and I immediately left Lily to sleep. She had j







