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After seeing the destruction, the unadulterated visceral torment that innocent woman suffered was abominable, and coming from me, that said something.

I wasn’t innocent. Not by a long shot. I, too, played my games and destroyed lives, but I never willingly went after an innocent person, and make no mistake, Diana Elaine Cooper was as innocent as they come.

When she walked into my life, I didn’t think twice before sending Rowen to learn everything he could about the woman. What he came back with, I kept hidden, knowing that information was worth more than gold in this world. But seeing her in that place, the raw pain in her eyes, the flicker of disbelief battling with the dawning horror, I knew I had acted too late. She’d been a pawn in a game far larger than she knew, a game she had no hope of winning, a game meticulously orchestrated long before her birth. Her suffering was an unnecessary evil, a brutal hardship she’d been forced to accept, and now, she would be forced to endure the unraveling, the first step toward reclaiming what was stolen.

I remembered the day she’d first crossed my path, a beacon of innocence in a world drowning in corruption. My intel confirmed it all—her quiet strength, her unwavering love for August, the devastating circumstances that had ripped her life apart. That knowledge became my weapon, a carefully guarded secret that I nurtured, waiting for the opportune moment to strike. Now, seeing her struggle, seeing the fragile threads of her reality fraying, I understood the true weight of that information, and the immense responsibility it carried.

“Diana,” I whispered into the silence, my voice a low, steady current meant to cut through the maelstrom of my emotions. “I am so sorry, my dear. Please forgive me.”

But even I knew there would be no forgiveness for me.

Men like me never got what we wanted, only what we deserved.

I had played my part perfectly, a ghost in the machine, pulling strings from within the shadows. Opening Rowen’s report, it detailed the meticulous construction of her torment, the systematic erosion of her mind. He detailed all the players, the architects of her despair, as they gathered her secrets, her vulnerabilities.

Now, with Diana in the hands of the man who loved her, the delicate dance of manipulation and liberation had reached its crescendo.

My role shifted from observer to active participant, from an architect of her retrieval to a silent partner in her recovery. The path ahead was fraught with peril, a minefield of old loyalties and new threats, but I was prepared. My purpose, meticulously honed over years of careful planning, was finally coming into sharp focus.

My own past was nothing but a tapestry of shadows and calculated risks, a life spent navigating the underbelly of power and corruption. I’d made alliances, broken trusts, and paid mydues in a currency far more valuable than money. When I’d seen Diana, a flicker of her past, a ghost of the woman she was meant to be, I’d recognized not just a victim, but a symbol. Her resilience, her unspoken strength, resonated with a part of me I’d long buried. She was the key, the leverage, and the ultimate proof that even in the darkest of times, light could find its way back.

I had prepared for this moment, for the unraveling of the intricate web that held her captive, and I would not falter now. The truth, like a wild animal, was finally emerging from its cage, its roar promising both liberation and chaos. Diana’s journey back to herself would be a treacherous one, a path paved with the fractured pieces of her past. But she would not walk it alone.

I had ensured that.

My own hands were not clean, but perhaps, just perhaps, my actions, however morally gray, would finally pave the way for her true freedom.

This game was far from over, but the pieces were finally starting to fall into place.

Turning in my seat, I opened a drawer and retrieved a file. One I kept close, hidden from the others. Laying it on my desk, my hands trembled as I opened it.

What no one knew, would never know is that I never stopped watching her. I knew every place she had lived. I documented her pregnancy, her life on the run, and was there when she gave birth. I even owned the house she and her children lived in. I thought I was protecting her, allowing her the freedom to live her life away from the destruction of the underworld. In the end, I wasn’t good enough. He still found her. By the time I arrived, I was too late. She was gone, and so were her children. I looked everywhere for them, but even I knew that finding two small children in a world where even the wind could disappear without a trace was an impossible feat.

Still, I never gave up hope.

I knew now that I should have looked closer to home.

At the man who took her.

He was the key. Just like his father, he was a maestro of pain who enjoyed watching innocents suffer, and when I realized my mistake, it was too late, and I had no idea where to look.

Reaching for my phone, I called Silas. I needed him home.

“Sin?”

“Diana Cooper has been found.”

“Where was she?”

“Lyssa Asylum for the Criminally Insane.”

“Jesus Christ.”

“Thena was instrumental in her incarceration, and George and Dakota Stone visited her often.”

“The dead can’t speak, Sinclair.”

“But the living can.”