In the firelight, he looked hollowed out.
“Nathaniel did not die in an accident,” he said. “He was taken.”
I could not breathe.
“For ransom?”
“At first, we thought so.”
My mouth went dry. “Who took him?”
He looked at the portrait again.
“Margot Ellery.”
Celeste’s mother.
The name filled the library like smoke.
My father continued, each word measured as if speaking too quickly might shatter him.
“Black Harbor collapsed because Margot and her partners were stealing from it. When I exposed them, she lost everything. Money, access, protection. She blamed me. She took Nathaniel from the marina during a family event.”
My hand went to my throat.
“My mother said he drowned.”
“She believed that was all you should know.”
“And you?”
“I agreed.”
“Why?”
His face twisted, just once.
“Because you were four years old. Because you woke every night asking why your brother wasn’t coming home. Because your mother stopped eating. Because I had already failed one child and thought hiding the horror from the other was mercy.”
The anger rose fast.
Hot. Wild.
“You lied to me my entire life.”
“Yes.”
“And now her daughter is here?”
“Yes.”
“And my children are involved?”
His silence was answer enough.
I stepped back.
“Evelyn,” he said.
“No.” My voice shook. “No, you do not get to say my name like that. Not tonight.”
“I know.”
“What else?”
He looked at me carefully.
“What else did you bury with my brother?”
My father’s expression changed.
It was slight.
But I saw it.
A door closing.
I laughed once. “There it is.”
“Evelyn—”
“No more secrets, you promised.”
He looked toward the portrait.
Then toward the fire.
“When Nathaniel’s body was found, there was an object with him. A small drive. Hidden in the lining of his jacket.”
“A drive?”
“Yes.”
“What was on it?”
“Records. Names. Accounts. Evidence from Black Harbor. Enough to destroy several people who are still alive and powerful.”
“Why was it with Nathaniel?”
“Margot put it there.”