"This is the place?" the officer beside her asked, his voice dropping an octave as he took in the opulence.
"Yes," Evelyn said. Her voice was a dry rasp, a ghost of the melodic tone that had once charmed these gardens.
The other officer, a woman named Miller, muttered under her breath, "I called them three times. The father hung up twice. Said he didn't have time for prank calls about 'dead daughters' during a family gala."
Evelyn didn't blink. Her heartbeat was steady-too steady. Three years in the dark had drained the adrenaline out of her. She wasn't a daughter returning to a sanctuary; she was a glitch in a perfectly curated reality.
"You ready?" Miller asked softly.
Evelyn didn't answer. She just started walking.
She passed a fountain she used to play in. She passed the rose bushes her mother used to prune with surgical precision. Then, she saw the banner draped across the grand balcony in gold leaf:
ENGAGEMENT CELEBRATION: LUCAS CHEN & IRIS CARTER
Evelyn stopped.
Lucas. The man who had promised to find her if she ever got lost. Iris. The sister who used to cry if Evelyn so much as scraped a knee.
The irony was a cold blade, sliding between her ribs. She didn't gasp. She didn't cry. She simply stared at the names until the gold blurred into a dull, meaningless yellow.
"Go on," the officer encouraged, oblivious to the carnage behind the words on that banner. "They'll be so relieved."
Evelyn stepped into the garden.
The music-a string quartet playing something light and expensive-stopped mid-note. It wasn't a fade-out; it was a violent silence, like a record being scratched.
One by one, heads turned.
Evelyn felt the weight of their stares. She was a stain on their perfection. Her skin was sallow, her hair a hacked-off mess, and her clothes were oversized charity bin scraps that smelled of the long, humid bus ride from the border.
The whispers started, sharp and jagged.
"Is that... Evelyn?" "Look at her. She looks like a vagrant." "I heard she was sold. Somewhere in the mountains. God knows what she had to do to get back..." "Is she contagious?"
In the center of the crowd stood Lucas Chen. He looked exactly the same-sharp jawline, impeccably tailored suit, the eyes of a man who owned the world. Beside him, Iris was a vision in silk, her hand resting possessively on his arm.
"Evelyn?" Iris's voice trembled, but her grip on Lucas tightened. "You're... you're alive?"
Evelyn looked at her sister. She didn't see family. She saw a squatter living in a life that had been vacated too soon.
"I'm alive," Evelyn said. It wasn't a greeting; it was a statement of fact.
Grace Carter, their mother, broke through the crowd. She looked at Evelyn, and for a split second, a flash of pure, unadulterated horror crossed her face. It wasn't the horror of a mother seeing her tortured child; it was the horror of a socialite seeing a ruined dress.
As Evelyn moved closer, Grace instinctively took a half-step back. Her hand rose, fingers fluttering near her nose, blocking the scent of the world Evelyn had just escaped.
The rejection was silent, but it was absolute.
"Evelyn," her father, Robert Carter, stepped forward. His hair was perfectly dark-no gray from mourning, no lines from sleepless nights. "You've... returned."
"Dad," Evelyn said.
"We were told the search was a dead end," Robert said, his voice projecting for the benefit of the guests. "We were told there was no hope."
"So you stopped looking," Evelyn finished for him.
The lead officer frowned, sensing the rot beneath the polite surface. "Is this how you welcome her? She's been gone three years. She was a victim of-"
"We are very grateful to the department," Robert interrupted, his tone dismissing the officer like a waiter. "But as you can see, we are in the middle of a private event. My daughter needs... medical attention. And a bath."
Grace finally found her voice, though it was tight and brittle. "Yes. You should go upstairs, Evelyn. Through the back. Don't... don't upset the guests further."
Evelyn looked at the "guests." Her old friends. Her fiancé. Her sister.
She wasn't a miracle. She was an embarrassment.
Something in Evelyn's chest-the last flickering ember of the girl she used to be-finally went cold. She straightened her spine, her eyes locking onto Lucas. He wouldn't look at her. He was staring at the ground as if he could erase her presence by sheer will.
Evelyn didn't head for the back door. She walked straight toward the main buffet, picking up a crystal glass of champagne.
The guests recoiled as she passed, as if her poverty were a virus.
She took a slow, deliberate sip of the vintage Krug. It tasted like ash.
"Don't worry, Mother," Evelyn said, her voice cutting through the stifling air. "I'm not here to ruin the party. I'm just here to see what else you gave away while I was gone."
She turned and walked into the house, leaving the silence of a grave behind her.