It was there.
Waiting.
Pale, expensive paper.
My name scrawled in red ink that looked more like it had been carved than written.
No return address.
No logo.
Just inevitability.
Inside: a single photo.
The black book.
Small. Leather-bound. Wedged against a stack of sealed files inside a safe I’d only seen opened once. Barron’s safe.
The note was printed in smooth, feminine handwriting:
He still keeps secrets. But you’re the only one close enough to open the lock. You want peace, Cloe? You know what you need to do.
I stared at it for too long.
Long enough for my stomach to knot.
Long enough for the silence in the office to settle into my spine like a second skin.
I took it home.
I shouldn’t have. But I did.
Because I didn’t want anyone else to see it.
Because I didn’t want to admit that I already knew what the code might be.
Because Camille’s birthday was seared into me like a scar.
It was late when I finally poured the wine.
Too late for visitors.
Too late for thinking.
Just me, the lights low, the city outside, and the envelope on the table like a loaded gun.
The black book stared up at me from the photo.
I hadn’t touched it.
But I wanted to.
More than I wanted to admit.
The phone rang.
I froze.