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Chapter 1 - ​CHAPTER 1: THE BLUE HOUR

The screaming started the moment the sirens died.

​It was 4:13 AM. The "blue hour."

​Eva Bennett woke to the sound of someone trying to break her door down.

​"Police! Open up!"

​Her heart dropped. This wasn't a mistake. This wasn't a warning.

​Something had already gone wrong.

​She stumbled out of bed, the faint scent of champagne still lingering from the auction hours earlier.

​The pounding didn't stop, a violent, rhythmic assault against the solid oak.

​She opened the door.

​Red and blue lights flooded the hallway, slicing the shadows into fragments of chaos. Two officers stood there, rigid, awake—too awake for this hour.

​"Eva Bennett?" the older one, Officer Davis, asked.

​His voice was too gentle. That was the first thing that felt wrong.

​"Yes… what's going on?"

​"Ma'am, we need you to come with us. There's been an incident. Your father, Arthur Bennett…"

​The world tilted. The air in the hallway became thin.

​"No—wait. Is he in the hospital? I need to call him—"

​She reached for her phone.

​A hand stopped her. Warm. Firm. Final.

​"Ma'am… I'm sorry," Davis said.

​A heavy pause hung between them.

​"Your father was found at the docklands. He has passed away."

​The words didn't land.

​Passed away. Too soft. Too clean. People passed away in bed. Not at the docks. Not at 4 AM.

​"No," the word came out automatically, a reflex to reject the script they were handing her. "You're mistaken. My father doesn't go there. He hates the water."

​"We found his ID. And his car."

​"Anyone could have stolen it!" Her voice cracked. The rational curator was gone. "He was home. He had his medication—his heart—"

​The officer's expression didn't change.

​"This does not appear to be a heart attack, ma'am. It looks like foul play."

​Murder.

​The hallway spun. Eva felt her knees give out.

​But before she hit the ground, someone caught her.

​Strong. Steady. Familiar.

​Sandalwood. Expensive leather. Absolute control.

​Liam Carter.

​He had appeared without her noticing, still in his suit from the auction. His tie was loosened, but his face—Eva froze.

​Something was wrong.

​Liam Carter did not panic. He did not react. He calculated.

​"Davis." His voice cut through the air. Low. Controlled. Dangerous. "You've informed her. That's enough."

​No comfort. No questions. No grief.

​As if he already knew.

​"We'll go to the scene," Liam continued, his grip tightening slightly around Eva.

​Too tight. Like he was holding something together, or holding something back.

​"But you will not take a statement from her like this."

​It wasn't a request. The officer hesitated.

​"…Of course."

​The elevator ride was silent. Eva stared at the numbers dropping.

​"Liam… It's not him. It can't be."

​Liam didn't answer immediately. For a long moment, he said nothing. Then—

​"We need to be sure."

​Not if.

When.

​Cold. Flat. Final.

​Something inside Eva shifted, turning ice-cold. That wasn't how you spoke to someone whose father had just died.

​That was how you spoke when you already knew the truth.

​The car ride was worse. Too fast. Too quiet.

​Liam drove like time mattered, as if something unstoppable was already in motion.

​The docklands smelled like salt, fuel, and blood. Police lights flashed across the water. The car sat near the edge of the pier.

​Her father's car.

​Eva's breath hitched. That was it.

​But Liam stopped. He didn't step forward. Didn't move. Didn't breathe.

​For the first time in ten years, Eva felt a single, violent crack in something that had always been unbreakable.

​Fear.

​Not fear of what was inside the car. Fear of something else.

​"Go back to the car, Eva," his voice was strained. Wrong.

​"No." She pulled away and stepped forward.

​One step. Two. Three—

​And then she saw him.

​Slumped over the steering wheel. Charcoal suit. Still. Silent. Gone.

​The world simply stopped spinning.

​"Miss Bennett," Davis said gently, appearing beside her with a tablet. "There's something else. Timeline puts his arrival here at 3:52 AM. Time of death—between 3:50 and 4:10."

​That made no sense. "He shouldn't be here," Eva whispered.

​"Exactly." Davis turned the screen toward her.

​Grainy footage. A figure exiting the passenger seat. Dark coat. Head down. Walking away.

​Not running. Walking.

​With a pronounced limp.

​Eva's stomach dropped. That walk. She had seen it before.

​Slowly, she turned.

​Liam wasn't looking at the screen. He was staring at the ground. Hands clenched. Knuckles white.

​He said nothing. Did nothing. Denied nothing.

​Silence stretched between them, heavy enough to crush bone.

​"Liam…" Her voice broke. "Who limps like that?"

​Liam finally looked up. Not at her. Past her. Into the dark.

​"My father."

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