Chapter Eleven: The Thing He Never Said
Roman was awake.
That was the first impossibility.
He had an oxygen cannula under his nose, two drains at his side, and enough medication in his bloodstream to quiet a charging bull. Still, his eyes were open.
The alarm came from his attempt to sit.
Mara entered like a storm.
“Lie down.”
His gaze found her.
“Mila.”
“Alive.”
“Evelyn.”
“Alive.”
He closed his eyes.
Only then did his body obey gravity.
Mara silenced the monitor and checked the dressing. Fresh blood marked the bandage but not enough to reopen him.
She leaned over him.
“If you pull one more stitch, I will sedate you myself.”
His mouth moved.
No sound came.
She reached for water.
“Small sip.”
He drank.
His hand shook around the cup.
That shook Mara more than she allowed.
Roman Calder should not tremble.
Roman Calder should not look like pain had finally reached the bone.
He looked at her.
“Victor?”
“Arrested.”
His eyes sharpened.
“Not safe.”
“Police have him.”
“That is not safe.”
She placed the cup down.
“Your men?”
“Some.”
“Mine?”
The question slipped out before she could stop it.
Roman watched her.
Something quiet moved across his face.
Then he answered.
“Always.”
Mara stepped back.
“Do not.”
He closed his mouth.
Good.
A doctor could control bleeding.
Not that.
Mila was asleep in the next room. Evelyn sat with police. Julian had vanished after the ballroom, leaving blood on the marble and lawyers in his wake.
Victor had been taken screaming.
Not at Roman.
Not at Julian.
At Mara.
Ungrateful.
Disobedient.
Ruined.
His words had followed her through the hospital doors and into the room where she saved the man he hated.
Now Roman lifted his hand.
A nurse had placed a sealed envelope on the bedside table. Mara had ignored it for six hours.
Roman pushed it toward her.
His fingers barely moved.
“Read.”
“No.”
“It is yours.”
“I said no.”
“Mara.”
The old softness.
She hated it.
She took the envelope.
Inside were documents.
Bank transfers.
Medical payments.
Residency tuition.
Security reports.
Photographs of men following her after the shooting. Notes on Julian’s schedule. Her apartment building. Her mother’s church. Her hospital locker.
Every year.
Every month.
Roman had watched the danger around her until it moved far enough away.
At the bottom lay a contract.
Victor’s signature.
Julian’s father’s signature.
A clause written in legal language but clear enough to kill.
Upon marriage, Mara Veyne would be transferred to Cross custody and restricted from public medical practice.
Mara stared at the page.
Her hand did not shake.
Her body knew better.
“Custody.”
The word left her flat.
Roman looked away.
“I found it after the gala.”
“After you told me to marry him.”
His throat moved.
“Yes.”
“So you paid my father.”
“Yes.”
“To send me away.”
“Yes.”
“To make me hate you.”
His eyes returned to hers.
“Yes.”
Mara folded the document carefully.
“You could have told me.”
“I was twenty-eight.”
“That is not an answer.”
“No.”
His voice scraped low.
“It is a confession.”
The room held too much silence.
Mara walked to the window.
Morning light cut across the floor, clean and indifferent.
Behind her, Roman spoke again.
“I thought hatred would keep you alive.”
She gripped the document.
“Did it?”
He did not answer.
That was wise.
The door opened.
Evelyn entered with a police officer behind her. Her face was bruised, but her back was straight.
She looked at Roman.
Then at Mara.
“Julian called.”
Mara turned.
Her mother’s hand tightened around a phone.
“He wants to trade.”
Roman tried to sit.
Mara pointed at him without looking.
“Do not.”
Evelyn swallowed.
“He says he has the original witness file.”
Mara’s pulse changed.
“The Selene file?”
Evelyn nodded.
“And he wants Mara alone.”
Roman’s monitor spiked.
Mara looked down at the contract in her hands.
Then at the man in the bed.
Then at her mother.
“No.”
Evelyn’s face crumpled in relief.
Mara’s voice stayed cold.
“He does not get me alone.”
Roman exhaled.
Mara slid the contract back into the envelope.
“He gets me in court.”