“I hate him,” I whispered.
My father stood beside me. “Good.”
I looked at him, startled.
He gave the faintest smile. “For now. Hate has energy. Use it carefully.”
By evening, the second article dropped.
Sources close to Vale Capital confirmed an internal investigation into alleged misuse of corporate funds, unauthorized asset pledges, and suspicious payments to consultant Celeste Monroe.
By midnight, investors were demanding answers.
By morning, Adrian’s board suspended him pending review.
Celeste vanished.
Not metaphorically.
Actually vanished.
She checked out of the hotel at 3:18 a.m., left through the service entrance wearing sunglasses and a scarf, and entered a black SUV registered to a shell company.
But she left something behind.
A gift.
It arrived at Ashford House in a white box tied with black ribbon.
Security intercepted it before it reached the main door. The bomb squad was called. Nothing explosive was found. No powder. No wires. No poison.
Only a baby rattle.
Silver.
Antique.
Engraved with the Ashford crest.
My mother saw it and went pale.
I had never seen Vivienne Ashford go pale.
My father took one look and closed his eyes.
“What is it?” I asked.
Neither answered.
Mara did.
“That belonged to your brother.”
The world stopped.
My brother, Nathaniel, had died when he was seven and I was four. A boating accident, they told everyone. A storm. A tragic mistake. His body recovered two days later. My parents never spoke of it beyond the simplest facts. His room was closed. His portraits remained, but grief had turned him into a museum piece in our house.
I looked at the rattle.
“That was buried with him,” I said.
My mother covered her mouth.
My father said nothing.
Mara’s voice was quiet. “Then someone opened his grave.”
My knees buckled.
This time my father caught me.
For the next hour, Ashford House became something else entirely.
Security doubled. Gates locked. Former intelligence men appeared as if summoned from the walls. My mother disappeared into her office and began making calls in a voice I had never heard before. Calm, precise, lethal.
I sat in the nursery with my babies and watched the door.
Leo woke first.
Then Noah.
Then Samuel.
I held them one by one, pressing my lips against their tiny heads, breathing in milk and warmth and life.
Someone had touched my dead brother’s grave.
Someone had sent a message into my home.
Someone wanted us afraid.
And for a moment, they succeeded.
At 2:00 a.m., I found my father alone in the library.
The fire was low. He stood before the mantel, staring at a portrait of Nathaniel.
My brother had golden hair, serious eyes, and one hand resting on the shoulder of a brown spaniel long dead.
“Was it an accident?” I asked.
My father did not turn.
“No.”
The word entered me like ice.
I gripped the back of a chair. “What?”
He turned then.