Chapter 50: When the Lights Fail
By Thomas Wren · 139 words
Some warnings arrive loudly. This one waits until everyone is listening.
The pursuit collides with the mayor profiting from vanished refugee families, forcing an alliance that neither Maeve Doyle nor Jonas Hale is ready to name.
The evidence survives, but reaching it requires a choice that exposes the group to a new enemy.
Maeve Doyle keeps the larger goal in view: trace the missing names and prevent the new dam from burying the evidence. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
The confession is incomplete, yet honest enough to change the temperature of the room.
Their attraction grows through competence, danger, and the first honest confession.
The recurring signs of river fog, ledgers, lanterns return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
The evidence points toward someone they have both been protecting.