
The west wing of the Ashford Museum of Modern Art smelled like money and lies.
Dominic Hale stood before the gallery’s centerpiece, his reflection ghosting across the protective glass. Where his mother’s masterpiece should have hung, a massive gold-framed portrait of Vivienne Ashford dominated the wall instead. The woman in the painting wore a satisfied smile, her hands folded over a pristine white dress, as if she’d never destroyed anything in her life.
A brass plaque gleamed beneath the frame:
In memory of Eleanor Hale, amateur painter (1975-2015). This gallery honors Vivienne Ashford, who elevated our city’s art beyond mediocrity.
Dominic’s jaw tightened. His fingers moved to the battered leather case at his side, worn smooth from ten years of carrying. He opened it with practiced care and removed a six-inch fragment of torn canvas. The paint had cracked with age, but the brushstrokes were still visible—a child’s eye, impossibly blue, and the curve of a small hand reaching upward. In the corner, barely legible, were the initials E.H.
He held it up to the light streaming through the gallery windows. It was all that remained of The Unbroken.
The memory came without warning, sharp as broken glass.
-----
Ten years ago.
Dominic was sixteen when his father shoved the suitcases into his hands. Richard Hale’s face was red, his tie loosened, his expensive watch catching the afternoon light as he pointed toward the door.
“Your mother’s embarrassed me for the last time,” Richard said. His voice shook with something between rage and fear. “Vivienne Ashford’s lawyers were very clear. Either Eleanor leaves, or I lose everything.”
“Dad, please—” Dominic started.
“Get out. All of you.”
Eleanor stood in the doorway with eight-year-old Lily clutching her skirt. His mother’s face was calm, but her hands trembled as she smoothed Lily’s hair. She’d spent three years on the painting behind her—a portrait of her children, seated together in golden light. She called it The Unbroken.
Vivienne Ashford had called it derivative trash.
They moved into a studio apartment on the south side, where the walls were thin and the radiator clanged through the night. Eleanor set up her easel by the window and worked under the streetlights when she couldn’t afford the electric bill. Dominic watched her paint the same portrait over and over, each version more desperate than the last. She was trying to prove something—to Richard, to Vivienne, to herself.
She never got the chance.
Dominic came home late one Thursday, Lily’s hand in his, and smelled smoke before he reached their floor. He took the stairs three at a time. The door hung open, splintered at the lock. Inside, two men in dark suits stood over his mother’s easel. One held a lighter, the other held a crowbar.
“Please,” Eleanor begged, her voice breaking. “Not the painting. Please, not—”
The man with the lighter smiled and touched the flame to the canvas.
Eleanor screamed and lunged forward. The man with the crowbar stepped into her path. Dominic heard the crack, saw his mother crumple. He shoved Lily behind him and moved without thinking. His fist connected with someone’s jaw. Someone else grabbed his arm. Fire roared up the easel, devouring his mother’s work in seconds.
Eleanor crawled toward the burning canvas and thrust her hand into the flames. She pulled out a corner—just a fragment, and pressed it into Dominic’s hands before collapsing.
“Run,” she whispered. “Take Lily and run.”
He did.
By the time the sirens arrived, Eleanor Hale was dead from smoke inhalation. The fire was ruled accidental. Vivienne Ashford sent flowers to the funeral.
Dominic and Lily lived on the streets for three days before the stranger found them.
The man appeared through the smoke of a trash fire in an alley, dressed in black, his face hidden in shadow. He knelt before Dominic and studied him with eyes that seemed to see straight through skin and bone.
“Come with me, boy,” the stranger said quietly. “I’ll teach you to burn their world.”
Dominic looked at Lily, shivering in his arms, and at the torn canvas fragment tucked inside his jacket.
He stood and followed.
-----
The present day crashed back like cold water.
Dominic stood alone in the gallery, the fragment still in his hand. Ten years had passed since that night. Ten years of training in places without names, of learning how to move like smoke and strike like lightning. Ten years of war in Karethwyn, where a covert operative called the Shadow King turned the tide of battle by infiltrating enemy command alone.
Now he was home.
He carefully placed the fragment on a nearby bench and turned back to Vivienne’s portrait. His voice was barely a whisper.
“I’m here, Mom. I’ll make them remember, every brushstroke, every lie.”
Footsteps echoed through the gallery. Two security guards appeared at the entrance, their uniforms crisp, their expressions bored. The older one, a man with a thick neck and a radio clipped to his belt, pointed at Dominic.
“Gallery’s closing, buddy. Time to move along.”
Dominic didn’t turn. “Tell Vivienne Ashford someone’s come to collect what she stole.”
The guards exchanged glances. The younger one, barely out of his twenties, stepped forward with his hand on his baton.
“Look, we don’t want trouble. Just leave, and we’ll forget you were here.”
“I stood in this room when I was six years old,” Dominic said quietly. “My mother brought me here to see the Masters’ exhibition. She told me that one day, her work would hang on these walls.” He turned to face them. “And it will.”
The older guard’s patience snapped. “Listen, pal, I don’t care about your sob story. Ms. Ashford’s son sent us to clear out the trash, and that’s you. So either you walk out, or—”
“Or what?”
The guard’s hand went to his radio. “We’ve got a situation in the west wing. Possible 415. Send backup.”
Dominic moved.
The younger guard barely had time to pull his baton before Dominic’s palm struck his solar plexus. The man folded with a wheeze and hit the marble floor hard. The older guard swung, but Dominic caught his wrist and twisted. Something cracked. The guard screamed and dropped to his knees.
“You’re standing where my mother’s work should be,” Dominic said. His voice was ice. “Move.”
More footsteps rushed through the museum. Radios buzzed with noise. Somewhere, an alarm started screaming.
Dominic went back to the bench, picked up the fragment, and gently put it back into its case. He snapped it shut and turned toward the entrance as a dozen guards poured into the gallery, holding their batons.
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