Brennan glanced at Grace before answering.
“All the time.”
Lily seemed relieved by that.
A few minutes later, after Caleb’s arm was bandaged, Brennan moved toward the window overlooking the snowy street.
His phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
He answered immediately.
Silence.
Then breathing.
Slow.
Controlled.
Brennan’s entire body went still.
Finally, a voice spoke.
Male.
Older.
“You should have listened to your father.”
The line disconnected.
Grace had walked close enough to hear it.
“What did he say?”
Brennan looked at the dead phone screen.
Then toward Lily sitting wrapped in a blanket on the sofa.
Tiny hands still trembling slightly despite how brave she tried to look.
Finally he answered quietly:
“That this is bigger than we thought.”
Grace stared at him.
Not frightened now.
Resolved.
And somehow that scared Brennan even more.
Because people who lose everything stop negotiating with fear the same way.
Outside, snow continued falling over Boston.
Soft.
Quiet.
Beautiful.
And somewhere beneath that peaceful winter silence, powerful people were starting to panic.
Which meant things were about to become far more dangerous.
PART 4 — Lily’s School Scene
Three days after the break-in, Lily insisted on going back to school.
Grace said no immediately.
Absolutely not.
No discussion.
But Lily crossed her arms from the hospital clinic chair and delivered the kind of devastating logic only children can produce.
“If scary people make me stop being normal, then they win.”
Grace stared at her daughter in exhausted disbelief.
“Who taught you to say things like that?”
Lily pointed directly at Brennan.
Brennan nearly choked on his coffee.
“I absolutely did not.”
“You talk like a lawyer in sad movies,” Lily informed him.
Grace covered her mouth suddenly.
Not crying.
Laughing.
A real laugh.
The kind that escaped before fear could stop it.
Brennan froze slightly when he heard it.
Because he realized something quietly horrifying.
He had become addicted to that sound.
Not romantically.
Not yet.
Something gentler.
More dangerous.
Hope.
The school agreed to increased security quietly.
No reporters allowed near campus.
No media disclosures.
No parent emails mentioning the scandal.
For Lily, normal mattered more than publicity.
And surprisingly, Brennan understood that perfectly.
The morning of the school play, Grace stood in the small apartment kitchen staring at Brennan in open disbelief.
“No.”
Brennan looked down at himself.
“What?”
“The suit.”
“It’s a normal suit.”
“It looks like you’re about to purchase the school.”
“It’s navy blue.”
“It’s billionaire navy blue. There’s a difference.”
Brennan looked genuinely offended.
“I changed ties twice.”
Grace pinched the bridge of her nose.
“You own sweaters, right?”
“Yes.”
“Then wear one.”
“I don’t know where they are.”
She blinked slowly.
“You don’t know where your sweaters are?”
“I have staff.”
Grace stared at him for three full seconds.
Then muttered:
“That sentence should legally embarrass you.”
From the living room, Lily shouted:
“I vote sweater!”
Twenty minutes later, Brennan returned wearing dark jeans and a charcoal-gray sweater that still probably cost more than most laptops.
But it was progress.
Grace opened the apartment door.
Stopped.
Then smiled despite herself.
“There. Now you look like a human being.”
“I was unaware that was the previous concern.”
“It was everyone’s concern.”
Lily ran into the hallway wearing paper leaves attached to her costume with visible excitement.
“I’m a tree!”
Brennan crouched slightly.
“A very intimidating tree.”
“I have three lines.”
“That’s basically Broadway.”
Lily beamed proudly.
Grace watched the interaction quietly.
And something inside her shifted painfully.
Because Lily trusted Brennan completely now.
Not because he was rich.
Children rarely care about wealth the way adults do.
She trusted him because he showed up.
Hospital rooms.
Phone calls.
Soup.
Security.
School plays.
Presence.
That was the dangerous thing about kindness.
Once someone gave it consistently, people started building emotional homes inside it.
The school auditorium smelled faintly like crayons, coffee, and winter coats.
Parents filled the folding chairs while children raced backstage in handmade costumes.
Normal chaos.
Beautiful chaos.
Brennan stood awkwardly near the entrance holding a tiny bouquet of flowers Lily had specifically requested for “important trees.”
He looked deeply uncomfortable.
Grace noticed immediately.
“You’ve negotiated billion-dollar acquisitions without blinking,” she whispered. “But a second-grade auditorium terrifies you?”
“These chairs are extremely small.”
“That’s your fear?”
“There are glitter particles everywhere, Grace.”
She laughed again softly.
“You’re surviving bravely.”
His expression softened hearing her laugh.
Then Lily’s teacher approached.
A tired woman in her fifties with reading glasses hanging from a chain around her neck.
“You must be Brennan.”
The fact she used his first name startled him instantly.
Not Mr. Ashford.
Not CEO.
Not billionaire.
Just Brennan.
“Yes.”
She smiled warmly.
“Lily talks about you constantly.”
Grace looked horrified.
“Oh no.”
The teacher nodded seriously.
“She informed another student you once fought corporate corruption with a thermometer.”
Brennan closed his eyes briefly.
“That is not entirely inaccurate.”
The teacher laughed.
Then her expression softened.
“She’s doing much better.”
Grace’s face changed immediately.
The protective tension mothers carry.
“How can you tell?”
“She smiles before class again.”
The answer hit Grace harder than expected.
Because trauma steals joy first.
And Lily had smiled less after the shelters.
Less after the station.
Less after learning adults could become frightening without warning.
Now slowly, pieces of childhood were returning.
The auditorium lights dimmed.
Children shuffled onto the stage.
Paper stars hung crookedly overhead.
One painted moon tilted sideways.
The set looked imperfect in the way only deeply loved things do.
Brennan watched quietly from beside Grace.
Then suddenly—
His breathing changed.
Grace noticed instantly.
“What’s wrong?”
Brennan stared at the stage without answering.
At first she thought he was emotional seeing Lily.
Then she followed his gaze.
A little girl stood near center stage wearing a yellow costume.
Yellow.
Like Eliza’s dress in the photograph.
Understanding crossed Grace’s face immediately.
“Oh,” she whispered softly.
Brennan swallowed hard.
“I’m fine.”
“No, you’re remembering.”
That sentence nearly undid him.
Because yes.
He was.
Eliza laughing in hospital hallways.
Eliza singing badly on purpose to annoy him.
Eliza begging him to braid her doll’s hair even though he never learned properly.
Grief does not disappear with time.
It simply learns how to wait quietly until something innocent opens the door again.
Onstage, Lily stepped forward proudly.
Tiny paper leaves shaking slightly.
Then she delivered her first line with enormous seriousness.
“Even trees get scared during storms.”
Several parents smiled.
One laughed softly.
But Brennan felt something break open inside his chest.
Even trees get scared during storms.
Children accidentally tell the truth better than adults do.
Grace glanced sideways and realized Brennan’s eyes were wet.
He turned away immediately.
Too late.
She had already seen.
“You loved her very much,” Grace whispered.
Brennan nodded once.
Still watching the stage.
“I was supposed to protect her.”
Grace’s expression softened painfully.
“No,” she said quietly. “You were supposed to love her. Adults always confuse those things.”
That sentence reached somewhere deep.
Because Brennan suddenly understood something terrible:
His father believed protection meant control.
Grace believed protection meant care.
And those two philosophies built entirely different worlds.
Onstage, Lily forgot her second line completely.
The auditorium went silent.
Panic flooded her little face.
Grace half-rose immediately—
But Brennan touched her arm gently.
“Wait.”
Lily stood frozen beneath the bright lights.
Then suddenly looked into the audience.
Straight at Brennan.
He smiled calmly.
Placed one hand dramatically over his heart like a dying Shakespeare actor.
Lily burst out laughing instantly.
The audience laughed with her.
And just like that, fear disappeared.
She remembered her line.
The play continued.
Grace stared at Brennan in shock.
“What was that?”
“I have no idea.”
“You just saved the entire second grade production.”
“I panicked artistically.”
She laughed quietly again.
Then stopped.
Because Brennan was still smiling at Lily with an expression Grace had never seen on him before.
Peace.
Not complete.
Not healed.
But real.
And suddenly Grace realized something dangerous too.
Lily was not the only one rebuilding a home around Brennan’s presence.
After the play ended, children exploded into chaos across the auditorium.
Parents taking photos.
Teachers collecting costume pieces.
Tiny voices everywhere.
Lily sprinted toward them proudly.
“I DIDN’T THROW UP.”
Grace blinked.
“That was apparently one of the possible outcomes?”
Lily nodded gravely.
“Public speaking is serious.”
Brennan handed her the flowers.
“For the most important tree.”
Lily gasped dramatically.
“These are real flowers!”
“I considered buying fake ones but feared your criticism.”
“Correct choice.”
Grace shook her head softly.
“You two are becoming a problem together.”
“Mom,” Lily whispered loudly, “I think Brennan needs friends.”
Brennan looked deeply wounded.
“I have friends.”
Grace raised an eyebrow.
“Name three.”
He opened his mouth.
Paused.
Then narrowed his eyes suspiciously.
“This feels like a trap.”
“It absolutely is.”
Before he could answer, someone nearby spoke sharply.
“Oh my God.”
All three turned.
A woman stood near the auditorium entrance staring directly at Brennan.
Then at Grace.
Recognition spreading fast.
Within seconds, phones appeared.
Whispers.
Movement.
Someone had recognized them.
The fragile normal evening cracked instantly.
Grace’s entire body tensed.
Lily noticed immediately.
And Brennan saw the exact moment joy disappeared from both their faces again.
That destroyed something inside him.
Because children should not have fear attached to school plays.
Reporters began moving toward them rapidly.
Questions already starting.
“Ms. Miller, is it true federal investigators—”
“Mr. Ashford, are there more whistleblowers?”
“Did your father threaten—”
Brennan stepped in front of Grace and Lily immediately.
Not dramatic.
Instinctive.
Protective.
Flashbulbs exploded across the auditorium.
Teachers looked alarmed.
Children confused.
And then one reporter shouted the question that changed the entire room.
“Grace, is it true another child may have died because of Ashford Global?”
Silence.
Grace froze completely.
Brennan turned sharply toward the reporter.
But not before seeing the horror that drained all color from Grace’s face.
Because she already knew the answer.
And suddenly Brennan realized:
There was another file.
Another secret.
And Grace had not told him yet.
PART 5 — The Final Hidden File
The auditorium noise disappeared around Brennan.
Parents.
Children.
Reporters.
Flashing cameras.
Everything blurred into meaningless sound behind one terrible detail:
Grace looked guilty.
Not dishonest.
Not manipulative.
Devastated.
Which meant the reporter’s question was true.
Brennan moved immediately.
“Everyone back away,” he said sharply.
A teacher hurried children toward backstage exits while security finally pushed through the crowd.
Lily clung tightly to Grace’s hand.
Confused.
Scared again.
The reporter kept shouting questions.
“Ms. Miller, did Ashford Global cover up a pediatric death?”
“Was the patient denied medication assistance?”
“Did Montgomery Ashford know?”
Grace looked physically ill.
Brennan stepped closer instantly.
“We’re leaving.”
She barely nodded.
The drive back to the apartment happened in silence.
Not angry silence.
The kind where truth sits heavily between people waiting to be spoken aloud.
Lily eventually fell asleep in the backseat still holding part of her tree costume in one hand.
Grace watched her daughter carefully the entire drive.
Like making sure she was still there.
Still safe.
Still breathing.
Only after Lily was asleep in her room did Brennan finally speak.
“Tell me.”
Grace stood near the apartment window wrapped in silence for several seconds.
Then quietly:
“I didn’t know the reporter already had it.”
“What?”
“The file.”
Brennan’s pulse tightened.
“What file, Grace?”
She turned slowly.
And for the first time since he met her, Brennan saw fear stronger than exhaustion.
Not fear for herself.
For him.
“There was one patient record I never copied completely.”
“Why?”
“Because after what happened… I was afraid to even keep it.”
Brennan walked closer carefully.
“Who was the child?”
Grace looked down.
Then whispered:
“A seven-year-old boy named Daniel Mercer.”
The name hit Brennan instantly.
Not because he recognized the child.
Because he recognized the surname.
Mercer.
As in Senator Richard Mercer.
One of Ashford Global’s largest political allies.
One of Montgomery Ashford’s closest friends.
One of the loudest public defenders of the company since the investigation began.
Brennan went cold.
“No.”
Grace’s eyes filled.
“Daniel had a rare autoimmune condition. Medication assistance had already been approved for him through Saint Bartholomew’s pediatric fund.”
Brennan already knew where this was going.
And he hated that he knew.
Grace continued softly.
“But weeks before distribution, the approval vanished from the system.”
His chest tightened painfully.
“Why?”
“Because his treatment cost exceeded the revised financial cap your father implemented quietly.”
Brennan turned away immediately.
Not because he doubted her.
Because he believed her completely.
Grace’s voice cracked slightly.
“His mother kept calling every day asking when the medication would arrive.”
The apartment felt too small suddenly.
Too warm.
Too hard to breathe inside.
“What happened to him?”
Grace closed her eyes.
“He died three months later.”
Silence.
Terrible silence.
Then Brennan asked the question already haunting him.
“And Senator Mercer knew?”
Grace looked at him carefully.
“I don’t think so.”
That shocked him.
“What?”
“The records suggested someone hid the denial from the family entirely. They were told administrative delays caused treatment complications.”
Brennan stared at her.
Meaning Senator Mercer publicly defended Ashford Global without knowing the company may have killed his son.
Or helped kill him.
God.
Grace walked toward the kitchen slowly.
Like carrying the memory physically hurt.
“I tried to report it internally after Daniel died,” she whispered. “That was when things got dangerous.”
Brennan’s voice lowered.
“What do you mean dangerous?”
Grace laughed once bitterly.
“The first time I reported missing medication, they treated me like an inconvenience.”
She looked up at him.
“But after Daniel… they treated me like a threat.”
Brennan felt sick.
Not metaphorically.
Actually sick.
Because suddenly pieces aligned too perfectly.
The threats.
The break-in.
The desperation.
The panic spreading through powerful people.
This was never only about fraud.
It was about death.
And if the truth came out fully, careers would not merely end.
People could go to prison.
Grace opened a kitchen drawer slowly.
Reached deep beneath old paperwork.
Then removed a sealed yellow envelope.
Brennan stared.
“You kept it here?”
“I didn’t know where else to put it.”
Inside the envelope sat:
- photocopied patient assistance logs
- treatment approval forms
- internal emails
- medication inventory records
And finally—
One death certificate.
Daniel Mercer.
Age 7.
Cause of death complications listed clinically and coldly across the page.
Brennan sat down heavily.
The room tilted slightly again like it had in the hospital.
Grace watched him carefully.
“I’m sorry.”
His head snapped up immediately.
“Why are you apologizing?”
“Because every time I tell you another truth about your family, you look like someone grieving all over again.”
That almost destroyed him.
Because she was right.
He was grieving.
Not just Eliza.
Not just innocence.
He was grieving the version of his father he spent his life trying to earn love from.
And maybe worse—
The version of himself built from that man’s teachings.
Brennan stared again at Daniel’s file.
Then suddenly:
“Does Senator Mercer know now?”
Grace shook her head slowly.
“I don’t think so.”
Before Brennan could respond, his phone rang.
Caleb.
Brennan answered immediately.
“What happened?”
Caleb sounded breathless.
“Someone leaked the Mercer file to the press thirty minutes ago.”
Grace closed her eyes instantly.
“Damn it.”
Caleb continued:
“Senator Mercer just publicly withdrew support from Ashford Global and demanded independent federal review.”
Brennan looked toward the envelope again.
Too late now.
The truth was moving on its own.
Then Caleb said something worse.
“And Brennan… your father disappeared.”
The apartment went silent.
“What do you mean disappeared?”
“He left the estate an hour ago. Security lost track of his vehicle near the harbor.”
Grace whispered:
“No.”
Brennan’s jaw tightened.
“What else?”
Caleb hesitated.
Then quietly:
“Before he vanished, he emptied several offshore accounts.”
Not fleeing panic.
Preparation.
Brennan understood immediately.
Montgomery Ashford was not running from embarrassment anymore.
He was preparing for war.
Then another call beeped through.
Unknown number.
Brennan answered slowly.
This time there was no breathing.
No silence.
Only Montgomery’s voice.
Calm.
Controlled.
Terrifying.
“You should not have opened that box, son.”
Grace went pale instantly hearing him through the speaker.
Brennan’s voice hardened.
“Where are you?”
“A question you’re not ready for.”
“You threatened a mother and child.”
A soft laugh came through the line.
“No. I warned them.”
“You terrorized them.”
“I protected what I built.”
Brennan looked at Grace.
At the envelope.
At Lily’s small shoes near the hallway.
And suddenly something inside him settled permanently.
Not rage.
Clarity.
“No,” Brennan said quietly. “You protected your ego.”
Silence.
Then Montgomery’s voice changed slightly.
Colder.
“You think you’re different from me because you feel guilty.”
“I know I’m different from you because I still can.”
For the first time in Brennan’s life, his father sounded genuinely angry.
Real anger.
Not controlled intimidation.
“How many people depend on Ashford Global?” Montgomery snapped. “How many employees? Investors? Patients? Entire systems survive because men like me make hard decisions weak people avoid.”
Grace whispered under her breath:
“Oh my God…”
Because suddenly they both understood.
Montgomery truly believed himself righteous.
That was the horrifying part.
He did not see cruelty as cruelty.
He saw it as efficiency.
Brennan answered quietly:
“You let children become acceptable losses.”
“I built an empire.”
“You built it on graves.”
Silence exploded across the line.
Then Montgomery spoke one final sentence.
“If you continue this, more people will suffer than you can imagine.”
The line disconnected.
Grace stared at Brennan.
“He’s threatening you.”
“No,” Brennan said slowly.
“He’s promising escalation.”
Outside, snow began falling again over Boston.
Soft.
Beautiful.
Silent.
The kind of night that hides terrible things well.
Brennan looked toward Lily’s bedroom door.
Then at Daniel Mercer’s death certificate.
Then finally at Grace.
And for the first time since this began, he admitted the truth aloud.
“I think my father is capable of anything now.”
Grace nodded once.
Not surprised.
Only sad.
Then quietly she said:
“Brennan…”
He looked at her.
“What happens if powerful people decide the truth costs more than human lives?”
The question stayed hanging between them.
Heavy.
Because both already knew the answer.
And somewhere out in the dark city, Montgomery Ashford was preparing to prove it.
PART 6 — The Harbor
At 2:13 a.m., Brennan stood in the apartment kitchen staring at a map of Boston spread across the counter.
Three federal agents had arrived.
Two private investigators.
Caleb.
Grace sat nearby wrapped in a blanket, exhaustion carved deep beneath her eyes.
No one had slept.
No one trusted sleep anymore.
Montgomery Ashford had vanished with money, leverage, and decades of secrets.
Which meant danger no longer felt theoretical.
One investigator pointed toward the harbor district.
“We tracked his vehicle entering this area before traffic cameras lost visual.”
“Lost visual?” Brennan repeated sharply.
The investigator exchanged a look with the other agent.
“Several cameras were manually disabled.”
Grace looked sick immediately.
“He planned this.”
“Yes,” Brennan said quietly. “He always plans.”
The apartment felt colder suddenly.
Then Lily appeared sleepily in the hallway holding her stuffed rabbit.
Every adult in the room immediately softened.
Fear does that around children.
It remembers what matters.
“Mommy?”
Grace stood instantly.
“What is it, baby?”
Lily rubbed her eyes.
“Why are there so many serious people here?”
Nobody answered quickly enough.
Finally Brennan crouched beside her.
“We’re figuring something out.”
“About the scary grandpa?”
The room went still.
Grace blinked.
“What?”
Lily pointed vaguely toward Brennan.
“The one from the phone.”
Brennan’s chest tightened.
She heard more than they realized.
Children always do.
Lily frowned sleepily.
“He sounds mean.”
Brennan almost smiled sadly.
“Yes,” he admitted. “He does.”
Lily thought about that seriously.
Then asked the question that quietly destroyed every adult in the room.
“Did somebody forget to love him when he was little?”
Silence.
One federal agent actually looked away.
Grace closed her eyes briefly.
And Brennan—
Brennan felt something inside him crack wide open.
Because children simplify truths adults spend lifetimes complicating.
Did somebody forget to love him?
Maybe.
Maybe that was exactly where monsters begin.
Not born.
Built slowly inside empty places where tenderness should have been.
Grace gently guided Lily back toward bed.
But before disappearing down the hallway, Lily looked back at Brennan.
“You’re not mean though.”
He swallowed hard.
“Thank you.”
“You’re just sad in expensive clothes.”
Caleb made a choking sound that suspiciously resembled suppressed laughter.
Even Brennan laughed weakly.
And somehow the tension broke just enough for everyone to breathe again.
A moment later, Caleb’s phone buzzed.
His expression changed instantly.
“What?”
One of the investigators looked up.
Caleb lowered the phone slowly.
“We found Montgomery’s driver.”
Brennan went still.
“Alive?”
“Yes.”
“Where?”
“Harbor medical clinic.”
Grace’s face tightened immediately.
“What happened?”
Caleb hesitated.
Then quietly:
“He was beaten badly.”
Twenty minutes later, Brennan and Grace entered the private clinic together.
The driver, Arthur Nolan, looked terrible.
Bruised jaw.
Split lip.
One arm in a sling.
Fear visible beneath every movement.
When he saw Brennan, he looked genuinely relieved.
“Mr. Ashford.”
Brennan stepped closer immediately.
“What happened?”
Arthur glanced nervously toward the hallway first.
Then lowered his voice.
“Your father dismissed security after leaving the estate.”
“Why?”
“He said he needed privacy.”
Brennan’s jaw tightened.
“Then what?”
Arthur swallowed painfully.
“He made me drive to Pier Forty-Seven.”
Grace exchanged a look with Brennan.
The harbor.
Arthur continued shakily.
“There was another man waiting there.”
“Who?”
“I don’t know. Tall. Gray coat. Foreign accent maybe.”
Fear flickered visibly across Arthur’s face again.
“They argued.”
Brennan frowned.
“About what?”
“I only heard pieces.”
Arthur’s breathing grew uneven.
“Your father kept saying the documents should have been destroyed years ago.”
Grace froze beside Brennan.
Then Arthur whispered the sentence that changed everything.
“The other man said Daniel Mercer wasn’t the only child.”
The room went silent.
Brennan felt the air leave his lungs slowly.
Grace looked horrified.
“No…”
Arthur nodded weakly.
“They mentioned multiple settlements. Missing assistance records. Children denied treatment.”
Brennan gripped the edge of the hospital bed.
Not one child.
Not one cover-up.
A system.
Arthur continued:
“Then your father saw me listening.”
Fear fully overtook his expression now.
“He pulled me out of the car himself.”
Grace covered her mouth.
Arthur’s voice trembled.
“He said loyal people know when not to hear things.”
Brennan’s entire body went cold.
“Did he hit you?”
Arthur laughed weakly.
“No. The other man did.”
The investigator stepped forward slightly.
“Why?”
Arthur looked down.
“Because I asked if children died.”
Silence again.
Then Arthur whispered:
“He told me dead children don’t bankrupt companies. Talking employees do.”
Grace physically recoiled hearing that.
Brennan stared at Arthur with horror growing deeper every second.
“How many people know about this?”
Arthur shook his head quickly.
“I don’t know. But your father wasn’t running from prison tonight.”
Brennan frowned.
“Then what was he doing?”
Arthur looked directly at him.
“He was protecting someone.”
The words landed heavily.
Because Brennan understood immediately.
Montgomery Ashford was ruthless.
But ruthless men rarely destroy themselves unless someone even more powerful stands behind them.
Grace spoke softly.
“The man at the harbor…”
Arthur nodded.
“He wasn’t scared of your father.”
That frightened Brennan more than anything else so far.
Because Montgomery spent his life becoming the most dangerous man in every room.
If someone else frightened him—
Then this reached far beyond Ashford Global.
Arthur suddenly grabbed Brennan’s sleeve weakly.
“There’s more.”
“What?”
“He mentioned a storage facility.”
Grace stiffened instantly.
Brennan saw it.
“What kind of storage facility?”
Arthur swallowed.
“I heard your father say one phrase clearly before they attacked me.”
His voice lowered.
“Burn everything before sunrise.”
Every muscle in Brennan’s body locked.
Grace whispered:
“Oh my God.”
The copies.
The records.
The settlements.
Potential evidence.
Brennan turned immediately toward Caleb.
“Find every storage property connected to Ashford shell companies.”
Caleb was already typing.
“Working.”
The investigator stepped closer.
“If there’s physical evidence being destroyed, federal warrants—”
“Will take too long,” Brennan interrupted.
Grace looked at him sharply.
“What are you thinking?”
He already knew.
And judging by her expression—
So did she.
“You cannot seriously be considering going yourself,” Grace said.
“I know my father.”
“That’s exactly why this is dangerous.”
“He’s destroying evidence.”
“He threatened people!”
Brennan stepped closer.
“And if those records disappear, how many families never learn the truth?”
Grace looked away instantly.
Because that argument hurt.
She knew exactly what buried truth costs.
Still—
“You could get arrested.”
“Probably.”
“You could get hurt.”
“Likely.”
“You could get killed.”
Brennan held her gaze steadily.
“So could every truth your father buried.”
The room fell quiet again.
Then unexpectedly—
Grace laughed once softly.
Not because anything was funny.
Because exhaustion sometimes disguises itself that way.
“You know what the worst part is?” she whispered.
“What?”
“You’re starting to sound exactly like the kind of reckless person I would’ve admired before my life fell apart.”
Brennan almost smiled.
“Good or bad?”
“Extremely inconvenient.”
For one dangerous second, neither looked away.
And suddenly the air between them changed.
Not dramatically.
Not romantically.
Worse.
Honestly.
Then Caleb interrupted carefully.
“I found the property.”
Everyone turned instantly.
He rotated the tablet screen toward them.
Warehouse district near the harbor.
Owned through three shell corporations linked quietly to Ashford Global legal holdings.
And scheduled for emergency demolition at 6:00 a.m.
Brennan looked at the clock.
4:11 a.m.
Grace whispered:
“He’s really trying to erase everything.”
Brennan stared at the warehouse address.
Then slowly reached for his coat.
Grace watched him.
Already knowing.
Already afraid.
“Brennan…”
He looked at her.
And for the first time since this all began, she said his name like losing him would hurt.
“Don’t go alone.”