Chapter 39: What the Fire Kept
By Lena Ward · 144 words
For one careful hour, the danger appears to have forgotten them.
The pursuit collides with the conductor who collects memories as fares, forcing an alliance that neither Ivy Cross nor Elias Vane is ready to name.
A locked route opens, a witness changes sides, and the opposition moves one step sooner than expected.
Ivy Cross keeps the larger goal in view: find her missing brother before his name disappears from every record. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
A small act of care unsettles them more than danger. It asks for no payment and therefore cannot be dismissed as strategy.
Their attraction grows through competence, danger, and the first honest confession.
The recurring signs of trains, clocks, rain return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
The evidence points toward someone they have both been protecting.