Chapter 31: The Road That Moved
By Noah Reese · 146 words
By midnight, the plan has already failed in the most useful possible direction.
The pursuit collides with the eldest brother selling the house to conceal their father's final confession, forcing an alliance that neither Anna Mercer nor Daniel Mercer is ready to name.
The trap is clever because it offers exactly what the hero wants. Recognizing that desire becomes the only escape.
Anna Mercer keeps the larger goal in view: discover who manipulated the family after their mother vanished. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
They disagree without leaving. For both of them, that becomes a more intimate choice than agreement.
Their attraction grows through competence, danger, and the first honest confession.
The recurring signs of wallpaper, cassette voices, dust return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
The evidence points toward someone they have both been protecting.