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But his eyes betrayed him. A lifetime around power had taught him the cost of public lies.

Rachel’s false confession could bury the truth for years. Worse, it could make Nico look like an impostor, the Vales like conspirators, the king like a desperate old man chasing ghosts.

Voss had chosen his weapon well.

Not bullets.

Credibility.

I looked at Pier 19 across the dark water. Old warehouses. Maritime storage. Too many blind corners.

“Does anyone here have authority over local response?” I asked.

A palace security chief began, “The demand was no police—”

“I didn’t ask what he demanded.”

Alexander almost smiled despite everything.

“I have diplomatic security who can coordinate discreetly.”

“I have people at the veterans’ center,” Daniel said. “Former Navy. Coast Guard. Police. They’ll help without turning it into a circus.”

The king looked at me.

“What do you need?”

I looked around at the strange army fate had given me: a king, a prince, a missing heir, adoptive parents, a betrayed bridegroom, an ashamed foundation director, and old sailors who would absolutely bring wrenches to a hostage rescue if asked.

“I need Voss to believe he’s still writing the ending.”

Ninety minutes later, I walked into Pier 19 alone.

At least, that was what Voss saw.

The warehouse smelled of rust, salt, and old rope. Moonlight broke through dirty windows high above. Shipping crates formed narrow lanes. Somewhere water slapped against pilings.

I wore my Navy uniform.

My phone was visible in my hand.

My weapon was not.

“Commander Carter,” Voss called from the shadows. “Where is the boy?”

“Not here.”

He stepped into view.

Lord Gareth Voss was elegant in the way poisonous things can be elegant. Silver hair. Dark coat. Leather gloves. A face made for portraits and lies.

Rachel stood beside him with her wrists bound in front of her. Tape had been pulled from her mouth, but one guard held her arm.

Her eyes found mine.

Terror. Shame. Hope.

“Emily,” she whispered.

I looked at Voss.

“Let her go.”

He smiled.

“You military types. So direct.”

“You upper-class criminals. So theatrical.”

His smile thinned.

“Where is Nikolai?”

“Safe.”

“No one is safe, Commander. That is the lesson your sister failed to learn.”

Rachel flinched.

Voss turned his gaze to her.

“She wanted the crown badly enough to lie. I merely gave her silence a purpose.”

“You blackmailed her.”

“I educated her.”

Rachel lifted her chin, tears shining.

“No. You used me.”

For the first time, I saw something real strengthen in her.

Voss sighed.

“Rachel, must you discover integrity at such an inconvenient hour?”

She looked at me.

“I’m sorry.”

This time, the words were not a performance. Not a plea to escape consequences.

They were an offering with no guarantee.

I nodded once.

Voss noticed.

“How touching. The forgotten sister and the fallen bride.”

I took a step forward.

“You stole a child.”

His face hardened.

“I preserved a kingdom.”

“No,” said a voice from above.

The king stepped out onto a catwalk.

Voss spun, furious.

King Adrian stood beneath a broken shaft of moonlight, no crown, no cameras, only grief carved into his face.

“You preserved your access to power,” the king said.

Voss recovered quickly.

“You were drowning in grief. Your son was dead. Your grandson presumed gone. The succession was unstable. I prevented chaos.”

“By hiding my grandson?”

“By avoiding a custody war with foreign agencies, scandal, and a traumatized child used by every political faction in Europe.”

The king’s voice shook.

“You left him without his family.”

Voss laughed, but there was desperation in it now.

“He had a family. A better one, perhaps. Ordinary people. No crown. No enemies. I did the boy a kindness.”

From behind a crate, Nico’s voice rang out.

“You didn’t do it for me.”

Everyone froze.

Nico stepped into view beside Daniel Vale.

Daniel’s arm hovered protectively, but he let Nico stand on his own.

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