Chapter 13: The Last Good Lie
By Clara Finch · 155 words
By midnight, the plan has already failed in the most useful possible direction.
Nell Harper follows the first clue deeper into a national museum sealed for renovation, where every answer creates a more dangerous question.
An ally makes the wrong decision for the right reason, and repairing it costs more than the original mistake.
Nell Harper keeps the larger goal in view: return each artifact before dawn and keep the outside world from being rewritten. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
They stand close enough to feel the argument beneath the silence. Neither mistakes desire for trust, but neither can pretend desire is absent.
Rafi Cole offers help but withholds the one fact that would make trust easy.
The recurring signs of marble, gold, midnight bells return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
A familiar symbol proves the threat began long before either of them arrived.