“And no contact with my family until I say so.”
Morales nodded. “Understood.”
The commercial flight was cleared to depart in the afternoon, once the storm front moved west. I was the last to board, alone, showing no visible signs of having just spent three hours inside a base operations center reading evidence that could have sent my sister to prison.
Seat 34E was waiting.
Chloe spun around before I even sat down. “Where did you go?”
“Work.”
He scanned my face. “What kind of work requires soldiers?”
“That boring guy.”
This irritated her, which helped. Irritated people cling to familiar patterns. My father leaned forward and chuckled.
“It was an overreaction on the part of the military,” he said. “They probably thought you mattered more than you actually did.”
Chloe recovered quickly. “Exactly.”
Vance said nothing.
He glanced at me once when he thought I wasn’t looking, then looked away too quickly. Fear comes in many forms. Some raise their voices. Others freeze. Vance’s mouth was tight, like a man already working out his explanations.
We landed in Honolulu under a purple, bruised sunset.
The resort sat on a curved stretch of coastline north of Waikiki: carved stone, flashlights, tropical flowers arranged so perfectly they seemed luxurious even from afar. Our private dining room overlooked the sea. Glass walls. White tablecloths. A string quartet in the distance, distant enough to be refined but not intrusive.
Everyone acted as if the afternoon had been awkward rather than a life-changing event.
My mother admired the orchids. My father toasted my grandparents before they even arrived at the table. Chloe effortlessly returned to the center of attention as if nothing had happened.
He didn’t even open the menu.
“We’ll start with the seafood tower,” he told the waiter. “And the Wagyu tasting. In fact, for the whole table.”
The waiter, who seemed to have been trained to remain calm even during aristocratic divorces, simply nodded. “Very good, ma’am.”
The food arrived in batches: oysters on crushed ice, lobster cooked in butter, thin slices of seared beef still pink in the center. The room smelled of burnt fat, white wine, salt, citrus. My family continued to talk over it all, floating on the surface of the day with the skill of those who don’t want to look directly into a crack.
None of them asked what really happened on that plane.
My family’s problem was precisely this: they never wanted the truth. They wanted a version of events that would preserve the social hierarchy.
By the time the dessert menus arrived, Chloe was beaming again. She’d rediscovered her laugh. My father, who had been increasingly loud before, had become even louder. Vance had loosened his tie, but not his expression.
Then the waiter returned with the order book and placed it discreetly next to Chloe.
He didn’t even give him a glance.
He slid it across the table until it came to rest against my glass of water.
The movement was so fluid that he must have imagined it beforehand.
“Well,” she said with a smile, “since it seems you’re someone important now.”
Arthur laughed. “Yes, General. Let’s put the taxpayers to work.”
My mother gave me that hopeful look she used when she wanted bad things to pass quickly. Not because she disapproved of Chloe, but because she couldn’t stand being awkward in public.
I opened the folder.
Just over three thousand dollars.
I closed my wallet and reached into my jacket for my travel card. Matte black titanium. Heavier than a standard credit card. A small government emblem engraved in one corner. The waiter saw it and his posture instantly changed, not dramatically, but just enough.
“Of course, ma’am.”
He took the paper with both hands.
My father frowned. “What kind of paper is this?”
“Government travel authorization.”
Chloe shrugged. “Comfortable.”
“Sometimes.”
The waiter returned, placed the receipt in front of me, and walked away. The dinner should have ended there: stupid, expensive, clean. But I had stopped pretending.
I folded the receipt, put down the pen, and looked Vance straight in the eye.
“Something interesting happened today,” I said.
He stopped.
“OH?”
“The Department of Defense has initiated a review of the contracts.”
Arthur waved his hand. “It seems deadly boring.”
I kept an eye on Vance. “They’re looking at offshore payment channels.”
A heartbeat.
Then another.
Chloe’s smile faded. “What does this have to do with us?”
I raised my glass of wine and let the silence linger.
“It depends,” I said. “How often do you do business in the Cayman Islands?”
Vance’s fork slipped from his fingers and hit the plate with a sharp metallic clink.
No one at the table held their breath for a full second.
He looked at me then, not like a smug brother-in-law being teased at dinner, but like a man who had just realized that the floor beneath him wasn’t a floor at all.
Part 4
The family villa sat behind palm trees and black lava rocks, with wide French windows overlooking the ocean and a private pool that glowed a deep blue after sunset. It smelled of polished wood, expensive sunscreen, and the sweet, moist scent of flowers that had clearly been replaced before dawn.
Chloe walked in first and started assigning rooms as if she owned the place.
“Mom and Dad upstairs. Vance and I are taking the oceanfront suite, of course. Harper, you take the room near the patio.”
The room near the patio was smaller, darker, and close enough to the pool equipment closet that you could hear the hum through the wall.
“That’s fine with me,” I said.
This disappointed her, which almost made it bearable.