
“Julian Mercer?”
The woman’s voice was clipped, British, and laced with suspicion. She stood by the porch, her white blouse too crisp for the heat, her eyes sharp like she could see straight through the lie I’d written on the form.
“That’s me,” I said, keeping my tone calm and my hands buried in my pockets.
Her gaze flicked over me once; the cheap duffel, the rolled sleeves, the way I avoided the gold band on her finger. She nodded toward the doorway. “You’re late.”
I almost told her that people like me are born late, always running behind what they’re owed, but I bit my tongue. Instead, I stepped into the house that smelled of lemon polish and old money.
The Ardmore estate wasn’t a home; it was a reminder that time and wealth could be passed down like blood. Portraits stared down at me — stern men in dark suits, women who probably never laughed in public.
“This way,” the woman said. “Mr. Ardmore is waiting.”
I followed her into a library that looked untouched by dust or affection. A man in his sixties sat behind a heavy oak desk, his posture military straight, his expression somewhere between boredom and judgment. Beside him, a young woman with wild auburn curls sat in silence, twisting a pen between her fingers.
“This is Lila,” he said, nodding toward her. “My daughter.”
Lila’s eyes lifted...green, steady, and assessing. There was a flicker of curiosity in them, maybe recognition, but it vanished just as quickly.
“Mr. Mercer...,” the older man said, sliding a folder across the table. “You understand the arrangement?”
“Yes, sir.” My voice sounded steadier than I felt. “Thirty days. You get your grant. I get my payment. No attachments.”
He gave a short nod, like this was all a business transaction, and maybe to him, it was. He opened the folder, revealing the contract I’d promised myself I’d never sign again — not after what happened last time, not after the name I’d buried.
Lila leaned forward, her tone light but edged with something sharp. “And what happens if the board asks for proof?”
Her father’s gaze flicked to her. “They won’t. They respect the Ardmore name.”
“But if they do?” she pressed.
I met her eyes. “Then I’ll play the role.”
For a moment, the air between us felt charged, like she was testing me for cracks. Then she smiled, small and knowing. “Let’s hope you’re good at pretending.”
I signed my name, each stroke of the pen heavier than the last.
The first night, I learned the house had more silence than sound. The staff kept their heads down. Lila stayed upstairs, her laughter occasionally echoing through the hall — a sound that didn’t fit the walls. I slept in a guest room near the east wing, the one with the piano covered in dust and a photo of a woman who looked too much like my mother.
I shouldn’t have looked closer, but curiosity and ghosts share the same hunger. The piano was out of tune, but when I lifted the lid, I found a thin ledger wedged between the strings — names, dates, payments. Some crossed out, some underlined in red.
At the top of the page: M. Mercer.
My chest tightened.
That name — that damn name — followed me even here.
I snapped the book shut, but the sound echoed too loud, and when I turned, Lila was standing at the doorway, barefoot, wearing a faded sweatshirt that didn’t belong in this kind of house.
“Can’t sleep?” she asked, eyes darting to the piano.
“Bad habit,” I said.
She stepped closer, her tone soft but laced with suspicion. “That piano’s been shut for years.”
I shrugged. “Curiosity’s another bad habit.”
“Careful,” she said, smiling faintly. “In this house, curiosity gets you burned.”
Her words felt like a warning, but also like a challenge.
The next few days blurred into polite breakfasts and hollow small talk. Mr. Ardmore paraded me before a board of men who looked too polished to sweat, introducing me as “the future of the Ardmore family.” Lila smiled beside me, hand in mine, nails digging in just enough to remind me that we were both acting.
But every night, I found myself drawn back to that piano. The ledger sat there like an accusation I couldn’t ignore. And every time I opened it, the knot in my gut grew tighter.
The names weren’t random — they were tied to foundations, trusts, and companies that didn’t exist anymore. The last few entries were smudged, almost erased, but I could still make out the initials: H.M.
My mother’s initials.
That’s when the neighbor showed up.
An old man with a cane and cloudy eyes, standing at the edge of the Ardmore gate. I was walking back from town when he called out.
“Mercer?” he croaked. “You’re Helena’s boy, aren’t you?”
The air froze.
I wanted to deny it — to say he was mistaken — but the way his expression softened told me he already knew.
“She used to play that piano,” he said, nodding toward the house. “Before the fire.”
“What fire?” I asked.
But he just shook his head and limped away, leaving the words heavy and unfinished.
That night, I couldn’t shake the unease. The house felt alive — whispering through the walls, humming through the pipes. Around midnight, I smelled smoke.
By the time I reached the east wing, the air was thick and hot. A small fire licked the piano’s edge, spreading fast across the curtains. I grabbed the extinguisher and doused the flames until the smoke thinned.
Lila appeared in the doorway, eyes wide, coughing. “What happened?”
“Someone tried to burn it,” I said, wiping the soot from my hands.
Her gaze dropped to the ledger on the floor, its cover blackened but intact. She looked up at me, her voice low. “That’s not supposed to exist.”
The words hit me harder than the heat. “You knew?”
She didn’t answer. She just turned, whispering, “You should’ve stayed away, Julian.”
Later, after the smoke cleared and the sirens faded, I sat outside watching the horizon turn gray. My name wasn’t safe here — it never was — but for the first time in years, I didn’t want to run.
I came for the money, but something in that house was older than lies and worth more than the grant they were chasing.
Maybe it was truth. Maybe it was blood.
Either way, the dark had already started, and if I wanted to find my way out — I’d have to walk straight through it.
Latest Chapter
Mornings Like This
Lila awoke with the doors of the balcony open. The sun was slanting over the quilt, and was warm on her bare arm. Julian was on his feet, already leaning on the rail with a mug of coffee, and looking at the water as though it could tell him something.She walked away bare-footed, with her hair unkempt, in her yesterday shirt.Morning, she said, scratching her voice.He glanced over, small smile. "Coffee's fresh. Landlady brought a pot."Lila filled a cup, leaned over him. The water was smooth and near-transparent. A fishing boat sailed by, lethargic and slow."You sleep?" she asked."Some. You?""Better than I have in months." She sipped, and scowled at the hotness. Waiting still, however, to have the knock.Julian nodded. "Me too."They rested a minute in delighted silence, breathing the salt air.Lila broke it first. "So... what now? We can not live forever on bread and olives."Why not?" He raised an eye
Prague
Prague was playing out under a mantle of autumn fog, and its spires were thrust up through the haze like long-lost swords. The city was a maze of cobblestone and secrets, and history was clung to the archways and bridges. Lila came at sunset, when the Vltava River took up the fading light in its gold and dark waves.She had entered a small pension in the Old Town, with cash and a false name. The room was not very large, the walls were not very thick to hear the murmur of the tourists below. She placed the note left by Julian over the bed, in addition to a map which she had purchased at the station.Viktor Hale. The name did not mean anything to her right away, yet a quick look on a burner phone allowed seeing some bits of information: a reclusive financier, rumors of a connection with Eastern European oligarchs, a man who traded information and not money. The villa on the outskirts of which he was a sort of fortress, was his last known address.Lila looked at the screen, and her heart
Shadows that Linger
The coast of the Adriatic was like an old unfulfilled endeavour, the water a dark indigo in the afternoon sun. Miravento was a village, fastened to the cliffs, its houses built of stone, and worn with time and salt, its streets too small to be overheard. Lila had selected it as it seemed the last place on the earth, silent, unassertive, miles away on the other side of the fires which had pursued her all the way around the globe.She was sitting on the terrace of a small cafe and a cup of untouched espresso was cooling on her. The newspaper report that she had a tablet shone dimly: "Anonymous Foundation Blows Whistle over International Corruption Cartel - Billions of dollars of illicit funds recovered. The bottom motto, "From ashes, truth," looked up at her like a ghost, which she could not shake.Since Geneva it was three months. Three months later Julian disappeared into the machine he claimed. There were no calls, no messages, no indications that there was still anything in the man
Shadows that Linger
The coast of the Adriatic was like an old unfulfilled endeavour, the water a dark indigo in the afternoon sun. Miravento was a village, fastened to the cliffs, its houses built of stone, and worn with time and salt, its streets too small to be overheard. Lila had selected it as it seemed the last place on the earth, silent, unassertive, miles away on the other side of the fires which had pursued her all the way around the globe.She was sitting on the terrace of a small cafe and a cup of untouched espresso was cooling on her. The newspaper report that she had a tablet shone dimly: "Anonymous Foundation Blows Whistle over International Corruption Cartel - Billions of dollars of illicit funds recovered. The bottom motto, "From ashes, truth," looked up at her like a ghost, which she could not shake.Since Geneva it was three months. Three months later Julian disappeared into the machine he claimed. There were no calls, no messages, no indications that there was still anything in the man
His Last Fire
The train rocked gently as it cut through the Swiss countryside, slicing between mountains and fog. Julian sat alone in the last car, his reflection in the glass faint and hollow. The morning light painted him in fragments half-shadow, half-man, like someone unfinished.Geneva waited beyond the hills, beautiful and cold, the kind of city that pretended to be innocent. Somewhere inside its steel veins, The Requiem Initiative lived Bellgrave’s last mutation, the one his mother hadn’t been able to destroy.He closed his eyes, Helena’s voice whispering from memory. “Truth doesn’t die, Julian. It just finds a new name.”He opened them again, watching the world blur by. “Then I’ll find this one,” he murmured, “and burn it too.”The city greeted him with quiet precision. Geneva was order disguised as grace mirrors and money, secrets that smiled in daylight. Julian walked the streets in a gray coat and dark gloves, blending into the calm like another ghos
The Silence After the Fire
The hotel by Lake Zurich smelled of new rain and disinfectant. The sky was pale gray, the kind of color that didn’t belong to any season. Julian sat by the window, shirt unbuttoned, his shoulder wrapped in gauze where the glass had cut him. The city outside moved like nothing had happenedtrams clanging, people laughing, the world unaware that something powerful had just been erased.Lila stirred on the bed behind him, the faint rustle of sheets the only sound. She’d barely spoken since the explosion. For hours, they’d just sat there, breathing the same air, trying not to think about what came next.“Did anyone see us leave?” she asked quietly.Julian shook his head. “No one saw anything. The fire took care of it.”She sat up, her hair tumbling over her face. “And the files?”He glanced at the envelope on the table half burned, sealed with tape. “What’s left of them.