ログイン
“Sign the papers, Evelyn. Aria is waiting, and I don’t have time for another one of your desperate plays for attention.”
The words did not echo. They did not need to. They landed clean and sharp. Across the room stood her husband. Damian Blackwood. Three years of marriage and he still felt like a stranger in a tailored suit. Impeccable. Untouchable. His violet eyes, the rare shade whispered about in business magazines as if even his genetics were elite, were fixed on her without warmth. There had never been warmth. “The baby…” she breathed, her voice cracking as pain radiated through her abdomen. “Damian, something is wrong. Please. Just stay until the doctor” “The doctors are here, Evelyn.” His tone was clipped, precise. “I am not a medic.” He dropped the divorce papers onto her bedside table. They slid slightly, stopping beside the glass of untouched water. He did not look at her stomach. Not once. His phone buzzed. He glanced down. And for a fraction of a second, his face changed. Softened. It was so subtle that most people would miss it. Evelyn didn’t. She had spent three years studying every flicker of his expression like a woman rationing scraps of affection. “Aria has a crisis,” he said. “Unlike you, she actually needs me.” The contraction eased just enough for humiliation to rush in. Unlike you. She swallowed against the dryness in her throat. “I am in labor.” “You’re seven weeks early. The doctor already said stress can trigger false alarms.” His gaze flicked to her face, assessing, distant. “Stop dramatizing everything.” She wanted to laugh. She wanted to scream. Instead, she whispered, “I’m not lying.” He had always believed she was. From the beginning, their marriage had been an arranged union carved by his grandfather. A strategic alliance. Evelyn Vance: kind, healthy, suitable. Good breeding. Good reputation. No scandals. A perfect corporate bride. Aria had been the love story. Evelyn had been the obligation. Damian adjusted his cufflinks, immaculate even in a hospital room. “Sign the papers. We’ll finalize this quietly. You’ll be compensated generously.” Compensated. As if three years of silence could be itemized. As if carrying his child was a service rendered. Another contraction tore through her, sharper this time. She gasped, her body arching despite herself. The monitor beside her spiked erratically. He didn’t move. For one reckless second, she searched his face for the man she had once imagined loving her back. The man she thought she saw on rare nights when he came home exhausted and didn’t have the energy to push her away. But there was only ice. He turned on his heel. His leather shoes clicked against the polished floor. Steady. Unhurried. The door opened. Closed. The silence he left behind was louder than any scream. An hour later, the world cracked open. It began with a dull thud from somewhere below. Not loud enough to panic. Not yet. Then another. The lights flickered. Evelyn pushed herself upright despite the nurse’s earlier instructions to remain flat. Her heart thudded unevenly. The air felt… different. Thicker. A sharp scent slipped through the ventilation system. Smoke. At first, her brain refused to process it. Hospitals did not burn. Private wings funded by the Blackwood Foundation did not catch fire. But then came the shouting. Running footsteps.A distant alarm. Her pulse spiked. She swung her legs over the side of the bed, biting back a cry as another contraction seized her mid-motion. Pain and fear tangled until she couldn’t tell them apart. The smoke thickened, curling along the ceiling like something alive. “No,” she whispered. She reached for her phone with trembling hands and dialed the number she knew better than her own. It rang onceTwice.Three times. He answered. “Damian,” she sobbed as the first wave of real panic crashed through her. “The hospital is on fire. I’m trapped in Wing B. Please. Please, come back. I can’t get out.” On his end, there was no chaos. She heard soft music. The faint clink of glass. A pause. For one heartbeat one agonizing, flickering second Damian’s breathing hitched. The cold, mechanical indifference in his voice wavered. He gripped his phone so hard the plastic groaned, a flash of her face the way she looked when she thought he wasn't watching stabbing at his resolve. Stay, his instinct whispered. Go back. Then, a high-pitched, feminine cry rang out in the background of his line. "Damian! It’s my ankle... I think it’s broken! Help me!" The hesitation died. Damian’s jaw set into a jagged line of stone. "Aria is actually hurt, Evelyn. This 'fire' is just another pathetic ploy to keep me from the divorce papers. Don't call me again." “I’m not”.She coughed as smoke filled her lungs. “Damian, I swear” “Goodnight.” Click. The line went dead. Evelyn stared at the screen until it went dark. As the heat surged, her gaze fell to her left hand. The simple diamond band the one his grandfather had forced him to slide onto her finger was slick with sweat. In the orange glow of the approaching flames, she tried to twist it off, but her fingers were too swollen from the pregnancy. She was literally trapped by the symbol of his family’s "respectability" while the man himself left her to burn. For a suspended second, no sound but the low roar was growing beneath the floor. She stared at her screen as it dimmed in her shaking hand. He had chosen. Not just between two women. Between truth and assumption. Between his child and his pride. Orange light flickered beneath the crack of her door. The heat followed. It moved fast. Faster than her mind could catch up with it. The air shifted from thick to suffocating. The smoke poured in, black and merciless. Evelyn slid from the bed, her knees hitting the cold tile. The impact jarred her spine, but she barely felt it over the contractions. The baby kicked.Alive.Fighting. “I’m here,” she whispered hoarsely to her stomach. “I’m here.” The heat pressed in like a living thing, clawing at her throat. She crawled toward the door, each movement a battle between labor and survival. She tried the handle. Scalding. She recoiled with a cry. “Help!” she screamed, but her voice dissolved into coughing. Somewhere in the corridor, something collapsed. The smoke thickened, turning the world into shadow and flame. Her body gave out before her will did. She crumpled against the wall, her vision blurring. Each contraction now felt like her body tearing itself open in protest. “Damian…” she rasped. The name tasted like betrayal. She had loved him quietly. Carefully. Like a woman afraid to disturb fragile glass. And he had believed the worst of her every time. Her phone slipped from her fingers. The ceiling groaned. The door did not open. It exploded inward. Wood splintered. Flames lunged through the gap. And through the inferno stepped a figure untouched by panic. He was not in firefighter gear. He wore a dark tailored suit, jacket discarded, white shirt sleeves rolled to his forearms as if this were merely another boardroom confrontation. For a second she thought it was Damain but it wasn't him. The man behind the smoke is Victor Kane. Damian’s rival and his greatest nightmare As he reached into the embers for her, one question flickered in Evelyn’s fading mind: How did he know I was still inside?"The doors didn’t hold. They folded inward with a sharp, metallic crack that cut through the controlled silence of the facility. Not an explosion. Not chaos. Precision. Helix didn’t rush. They entered. Dark silhouettes first measured steps, weapons raised, movements too coordinated to be anything but planned. They didn’t sweep wildly. They didn’t hesitate. They advanced. Inside the room, nothing scattered. Victor didn’t shout orders. He didn’t need to. “Sector breach confirmed,” the system voice said calmly. Evelyn’s fingers tightened at her side. “They’re in.” Damian didn’t answer. His hand was still locked with Silas’s. That hadn’t changed. It couldn’t. The monitors pulsed steadily—fragile stability holding by a thread that looked thinner the longer you stared at it. Silas’s breathing had found a rhythm, but it wasn’t strong enough to survive disruption. And Damian knew it. Victor’s voice cut through, sharper now. “They’ll push for the core.” “They’ll find us,” Eve
The first impact didn’t sound like chaos.It sounded controlled. A deep, precise strike against the outer structure measured force, not reckless destruction. The facility absorbed it, but the vibration carried through the floor, up the walls, into the air itself. Silas’s breathing hitched. Damian’s grip tightened instantly. “I’ve got you.” His voice stayed low, steady, even as the ground trembled beneath them. The monitors flickered, recalibrating around the shift. Numbers adjusted, lines steadied, the system fighting to maintain the fragile balance it had just established. Evelyn didn’t move away. Not from the table. Not from them. “Tell me we can move him,” she said. The woman at the console didn’t look back. “If he loses contact, he destabilizes.” “That’s not an answer.” “It’s the only one that matters.” Another impact hit. Closer. This time the lights dimmed for a fraction of a second before stabilizing again. The room didn’t descend into panic. It adjusted. That w
The room didn’t feel like a crisis anymore.That was the danger. Silas lay still on the table, but not the way he had before. His breathing, while still fragile, had found a pattern that held. Not stable. Not safe. But no longer collapsing.Damian hadn’t moved. His hand remained wrapped around Silas’s, the contact unbroken. The system had adjusted fully around that connection now, recalibrating every few seconds, reinforcing what it recognized as essential. Evelyn stood close, her eyes moving between Silas and the monitors, learning to read what mattered and what didn’t. She didn’t relax. Not fully. Because this felt temporary. And temporary didn’t last. Victor stood slightly apart, watching everything with a different kind of focus. Not the system. Not just the data. The space. The timing. The silence. That was what he didn’t trust. “They’re too quiet,” he said. Evelyn looked at him. “Who.” “Helix.” Damian didn’t look up. “They just lost a facility.” “They don’t lose,” V
They didn’t pull Damian away. Not after what the monitors showed. The room shifted around that decision without anyone saying it out loud. The staff adjusted positions, screens recalibrated, systems rerouted, all of it moving toward one clear point. Him. Evelyn stayed close to the table, her eyes fixed on Silas, but her awareness had widened. She watched the screens now. The numbers. The patterns. The way everything changed the moment Damian’s hand stayed in place. It wasn’t subtle.It wasn’t random.It was controlled. Silas’s breathing didn’t normalize, but it found something steadier. The long gaps shortened. The sharp spikes softened into something that almost resembled a rhythm. Almost.Damian didn’t move. He stood at Silas’s side, his hand still wrapped around his, his focus locked in a way that shut everything else out. He wasn’t watching the monitors. He wasn’t listening to the low voices moving around them. He was watching his son. “Silas.” His voice was low. Not urge
The monitors didn’t slow.They climbed.Not in chaos. Not in error. In recognition. Numbers aligned, split, then reformed into a pattern none of them had seen before. Two signals separate, distinct locking into the same system response. Silas’s body remained tense on the table, his breathing still uneven, but no longer drifting. Something in him had found a point to hold on to. And that point was Damian. “Step away,” the woman said again, sharper this time. Damian didn’t move.His hand stayed wrapped around Silas’s, steady, grounding. His focus didn’t leave him not the monitors, not the room, not the shift in the air. Just him. “What’s happening,” Evelyn demanded.No one answered immediately.Because they were watching it unfold in real time. The man at the console leaned in closer, eyes narrowing as the data stabilized into something clearer. “…this isn’t just a response,” he said.Victor stepped forward. “Then say what it is.”The man didn’t look at him. “It’s synchronization.”S
The coordinates led them away from everything that still felt familiar. No roads. No lights. No signs they could follow. Just distance. Victor drove. That alone said enough. He didn’t ask for directions. He didn’t check the device more than once. Every turn, every shift in direction, came with a quiet certainty that made it clear this wasn’t guesswork. He knew where they were going. That didn’t help Damian trust it. Evelyn sat in the back, Silas in her arms, his head resting against her shoulder. She hadn’t let go of him since they started moving. Not once. Not even when the vehicle hit rough ground and forced her to tighten her hold just to keep him steady. His breathing hadn’t improved. If anything, it had become more fragile. Less predictable. Every now and then, his chest would rise too sharply, like something inside him was trying to force its way through, then fall back into that thin, uneven rhythm that made every second feel borrowed. Evelyn tracked each one. Cou
The meeting was arranged without assistants, security briefings, or records. That alone made it dangerous. Evelyn chose the location carefully. A neutral space neither connected to Blackwood Industries nor Kane Holdings. A private art gallery closed for renovation on the edge of the financial dis
The tension inside Blackwood Tower no longer hid behind polite corporate language. It breathed openly now. Screens across the executive floor glowed with falling stock indicators, financial news banners looping endlessly beneath market analysis panels. The Blackwood name, once synonymous with sta
Morning sunlight filtered softly through the tall iron gates of St. Aurelius Academy, turning the polished stone driveway gold. Security vehicles discreetly lined the entrance, their presence subtle enough not to alarm parents yet unmistakable to anyone paying attention. For the first time since l
Morning sunlight stretched gently across the private academy grounds, turning the trimmed lawns gold and softening the sharp edges of the modern glass buildings. Children’s laughter carried through the air, bright and careless, untouched by corporate wars or buried betrayals. From across the stree







