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Chapter 93
The first rehearsal was a bloodletting.Maestro Pavlenko raised his baton, held it for a long second like a surgeon deciding where to cut, then brought it down. The opening bars—low strings and a single, grieving oboe—filled the half-finished auditorium. Dust still floated in the shafts of light from the high windows. Plastic sheeting had been stripped away, but the seats were only partially installed, giving the space the feel of a cathedral under construction.Callum and Briar sat in the third row, hands tightly clasped. Every wrong entrance, every hesitant attack from the musicians felt like a personal wound. By the time the orchestra reached the savage second movement—the one Julian had titled Fracture in his shorthand notes—the air had changed. The players were no longer sight-reading. They were listening. Leaning in.A horn player missed a cue and cursed under his breath. Pavlenko stopped them immediately.“No,” he said, voice carrying. “That is not a mistake. That is what he wa
Chapter 92
The snow didn’t stop for three days. It piled against the windows until the apartment felt like a ship sealed inside a white globe. Inside, the symphony had taken on a new sound—restless, almost predatory. Every time Briar played the completed score, Callum heard something different: accusation in the brass, forgiveness in the strings, and always that hanging final chord, a question no one wanted to answer.On the fourth morning, the buzzer screamed through the quiet.Callum opened the door to find a courier in a sodden coat holding a thick envelope. No return address. Only a single line typed across the front: For the man who finished the murder.He carried it to the kitchen table without speaking. Briar came out of the bedroom still in an oversized sweater, hair wild from sleep. She watched him slit the envelope.Inside were photocopies—old police reports, redacted in places but not enough. Photographs of Julian’s body in the garden. A transcript of Callum’s original interrogation.
Chapter 91
Winter arrived early that year, wrapping the city in a gray hush that made every note sound louder inside their apartment. The upright piano had begun to go out of tune from constant use, but neither of them wanted to stop long enough to call the technician. The music had taken on its own urgency, as if it knew the hall would open its doors whether they were ready or not.Callum stood at the window with a mug of coffee gone lukewarm, watching snow collect on the balcony railing. Behind him, Briar was at the piano again, repeating the same twelve measures of the finale. She kept changing the voicing of the strings, searching for something cleaner, sharper—less forgiving.“It still feels too safe,” she muttered, playing the passage once more. The unresolved chord at the end refused to resolve. That was the point. Julian had died before he could decide how the story ended, and now the ending belonged to them.Callum crossed the room and set his hands on her shoulders. “Let it hurt. He wr
Chapter 90
The letter arrived on a Tuesday that smelled of rain and diesel. Heavy cream stock, no return address, only a single embossed initial in the corner: V. Callum turned it over in his hands twice before opening it on the kitchen counter. Briar stood at the stove stirring oatmeal, pretending not to watch.Victor’s son wrote like a man trying to sound older than he was.Mr. Davies,My name is Elias Marrow. I understand you have no reason to trust anything connected to my father, but I’m not asking for trust. Only twenty minutes of your time. I’ve read the public records. I’ve read the lies. I want the truth, whatever it costs me to hear it.If you say no, I’ll disappear. If you say yes, I’ll come alone.Callum read it aloud. When he finished, Briar tapped the wooden spoon against the pot’s edge and looked at him.“Twenty minutes,” she said. “That’s generous. Most people want eternity.”He set the letter down. “He’s twenty-eight. Same age Julian was when everything went to hell.”Briar cros
Chapter 89
The café on Ninth had survived every wave of gentrification by refusing to change. Same scuffed linoleum floors, same cracked red vinyl booths, same bitter coffee that tasted faintly of burnt toast. Desmond was already there when Callum arrived, sitting in the corner booth with his back to the wall like a man who still expected trouble. Fourteen years had carved new lines into his face and turned his hair iron-gray at the temples. Prison posture clung to him—shoulders slightly rounded, eyes never resting in one place for long.Callum slid into the opposite seat. No handshake. No pleasantries.Desmond pushed an envelope across the table. “This one’s the last. I swear.”Callum didn’t open it immediately. He studied the other man instead. “Why keep sending them?”“Because I’m tired of carrying them alone.” Desmond’s voice was rough, like gravel under tires. “My mother kept everything. Letters, notes, recordings of late-night calls. She thought Julian was going to make her rich and famous
Chapter 88
The apartment was still quiet when Callum returned, the kind of hush that only exists in the hour after sunrise. He closed the door behind him without a sound and stood in the entryway, letting the warmth of the place settle over his coat like a second skin. Coffee was already brewing; the low gurgle of the machine reached him from the kitchen. Briar.She appeared in the doorway a moment later, wearing one of his old sweaters that fell past her hips and a pair of thick socks. Her hair was loose, still carrying the slight wave of sleep. She didn’t ask where he had been. She never did on mornings like this. Instead she crossed the room, rose onto her toes, and kissed him once—soft, grounding.“You smell like cold air and wet pavement,” she said, brushing a thumb across his cheekbone. “How was it?”“Still empty.” He let her take his coat, watching as she hung it beside hers. “But not for much longer.”Briar studied his face the way she studied scores: searching for the notes beneath the
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