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The Runaway's Revenge
img img The Runaway's Revenge img Chapter 5 The house was deathly quiet the next morning
5 Chapters
Chapter 6 But you might want to watch your own step img
Chapter 7 coffee could untangle img
Chapter 8 Adrian sat perfectly still img
Chapter 9 The drive to the countryside took nearly six hours img
Chapter 10 But only if I get to paint the toaster img
Chapter 11 the middle of a battlefield img
Chapter 12 no high-fashion mask img
Chapter 13 the ringing in your ears stops img
Chapter 14 silence you find in a workshop img
Chapter 15 surprisingly img
Chapter 16 its surface catching the dim morning light img
Chapter 17 The five million dollars img
Chapter 18 It wasn't a scandal anymore img
Chapter 19 There were no private jets or motorcades img
Chapter 20 My mother never talked about Singapore img
Chapter 21 You think a few letters can stop me img
Chapter 22 The flight back from Singapore img
Chapter 23 We're done being pieces on your board img
Chapter 24 The building was a blackened ribcage img
Chapter 25 Who are 'we' without the fight img
Chapter 26 Is she still at the hotel img
Chapter 27 Vanguard Urban img
Chapter 28 have you seen my soldering iron img
Chapter 29 Honeymoon Phase img
Chapter 30 Her daughter wasn't the little girl in the yellow raincoat anymore img
Chapter 31 the celebratory breakfast Liana expected img
Chapter 32 The rain had turned into a thick img
Chapter 33 But it's not broadcasting to the city img
Chapter 34 mingling with the music from the plaza below img
Chapter 35 My muscles were screaming img
Chapter 36 watching the residents of the Anchor move about their lives img
Chapter 37 I was just Liana img
Chapter 38 the black water didn't look like a grave img
Chapter 39 from the street stalls img
Chapter 40 My father's last message img
Chapter 41 Bridge is just the first string of the instrument img
Chapter 42 the plaza was thick with a different kind of crowd img
Chapter 43 I leaned my head on Adrian's shoulder img
Chapter 44 the dew sliding off a leaf img
Chapter 45 I dragged myself out of bed img
Chapter 46 We had just fought a literal war of currents img
Chapter 47 Energy Equity Activists img
Chapter 48 I was sitting on a crate of half img
Chapter 49 the Root at the old Raka estate img
Chapter 50 The darkness in the North District was absolute img
Chapter 51 though still stained with paint img
Chapter 52 Are you happy img
Chapter 53 no more rotten eggs or burning plastic img
Chapter 54 Not the sound img
Chapter 55 come inside before you turn into a moss img
Chapter 56 For fifty years img
Chapter 57 The air was different img
Chapter 58 The floorboards of the porch groaned under my weight img
Chapter 59 my fingers tracing the worn grain of the wood img
Chapter 60 I sat on the porch img
Chapter 61 The sky was just a pale img
Chapter 62 The smell of the mountain was changing img
Chapter 63 you're going to catch your death out here img
Chapter 64 Let them try to patch us then img
Chapter 65 My chest felt tight img
Chapter 66 scratchy wool blanket that smelled of mothballs img
Chapter 67 He's still vibrating img
Chapter 68 The jungle didn't have a frequency img
Chapter 69 We aren't going to starve img
Chapter 70 heavy with a stillness that didn't just sit in the room img
Chapter 71 We started walking img
Chapter 72 choking cloud that tasted like pulverized history img
Chapter 73 I stood in the middle of the Central Plaza img
Chapter 74 Adrian's shoulder was a steady weight img
Chapter 75 The silence img
Chapter 76 Harmony img
Chapter 77 cold sheet img
Chapter 78 coating the library wing in a thick img
Chapter 79 Let them hate it img
Chapter 80 the Drifters are everywhere they shouldn't be img
Chapter 81 The vibration from that Piler img
Chapter 82 Don't touch them img
Chapter 83 The first harvest wasn't a feast img
Chapter 84 Check the rhythm img
Chapter 85 Almost there img
Chapter 86 heavy stillness of a world that thought we were already corpses img
Chapter 87 ghost-flicker of the Ink-Well img
Chapter 88 vast indifference of the ocean img
Chapter 89 They see the fires img
Chapter 90 I felt them lifting me img
Chapter 91 We had returned from the Ministry with our lives img
Chapter 92 Soren is awake img
Chapter 93 Your air is stagnant img
Chapter 94 It just cared about breath img
Chapter 95 I sat on a pile of charred debris img
Chapter 96 I sat at the base of the Ministry Spire img
Chapter 97 They're starting to build barricades img
Chapter 98 They're coming in fast img
Chapter 99 The harbor is a mess img
Chapter 100 Nara was like a stain that wouldn't wash out img
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Chapter 5 The house was deathly quiet the next morning

The house was deathly quiet the next morning, but it was a different kind of quiet. It wasn't the peaceful silence of a sleeping home; it was the heavy, suffocating pressure that comes right before a storm breaks. Liana didn't go to the sunroom at 5 AM. Her body was too sore, and her mind was too busy replaying the look in Adrian's eyes from the night before. Instead, she lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, wondering if she had pushed him too far.

By 7:30 AM, she was downstairs. She expected to see a sea of blue paint stains on the carpet or perhaps a moving van waiting to take her things away. But the house was spotless. The staff had worked through the night to erase every trace of her "neon dragon." Even the grass in the backyard had been hosed down until it looked like a green plastic sheet again.

Adrian was already gone. No breakfast, no lecture, no cold glares. Just a note left on the dining table in his sharp, jagged handwriting.

*'Mika has a doctor's appointment at 10 AM. Ensure she is dressed appropriately. No paint. No distractions. - A.D.'*

Liana crumpled the note in her hand. "Appropriately," she muttered. "He means like a doll."

She found Mika in her bedroom, sitting on the edge of her bed while a maid struggled to brush the knots out of her hair. The girl's eyes were red-puffy. She looked like she had been crying in secret.

"Hey, kiddo," Liana said, gently taking the brush from the maid. "I've got this. You can go help with the laundry."

The maid looked relieved and scrambled out of the room. Liana sat behind Mika and started brushing with a tenderness that made the little girl lean back into her.

"Is Daddy going to send you away?" Mika whispered, her voice cracking. "Hadi said you were in big trouble. He said I shouldn't have played with the paint."

"Hadi talks too much," Liana said, her heart aching. "Nobody is sending me anywhere, Mika. Your dad and I just have... different ways of seeing the world. But I'm staying right here. I promise."

"Promise?"

"Cross my heart."

They spent the morning at the pediatrician's office, a high-end clinic that felt more like a spa for rich children. Mika was healthy, but the doctor kept talking about her "stress levels" and her "lack of social engagement." Liana listened, her jaw tightening. Adrian was so focused on building an empress that he was crumbling the child underneath.

When they got back to the estate, Mika was exhausted and fell asleep in the car. Liana carried her up to her room, tucked her in, and then found herself standing in the hallway, looking at the heavy oak doors of Adrian's private study.

She knew she shouldn't. She knew it was the fastest way to get fired. But the mystery of the "Ice Architect" was starting to pull at her more than her own desire for safety. Why was he like this? What had happened to the "soft" wife he mentioned?

The door wasn't locked. Liana pushed it open, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird.

The library was dim, the air smelling of old paper and expensive leather. It was the only room in the house that didn't feel like a hospital wing. Books lined the walls from floor to ceiling-thick volumes on architecture, philosophy, and law. Liana walked toward the desk, her sneakers silent on the thick Persian rug.

She saw the blueprints spread out, the sharp lines of a new skyscraper Adrian was designing. But her eyes were drawn to the bottom drawer of the desk, which was slightly ajar.

She hesitated. *Go back, Liana. Just go back to your room.* But she didn't. She knelt down and pulled the drawer open.

Inside wasn't business documents or secret contracts. It was a stack of old sketches. Liana's breath caught in her throat. She picked them up, her fingers trembling. They weren't blueprints. They were drawings of a woman. A woman with long, flowing hair and a smile that seemed to light up the charcoal paper.

They were beautiful. They were full of life, passion, and a deep, aching love. And the signature at the bottom of each one made her blood run cold.

*Adrian.*

The "Ice Architect" wasn't just a builder; he was an artist. Or he had been. The sketches were dated seven years ago-right before Mika was born. As she flipped through them, she found one that was different. It was a sketch of the same woman, but she looked pale, her eyes hollow. And tucked behind it was a photograph.

Liana pulled it out. It was a picture of Adrian and a beautiful woman sitting in a garden that looked suspiciously like the one outside. But Adrian wasn't the man she knew. He was laughing. His head was thrown back, his eyes crinkling with joy, his arm wrapped tightly around the woman. He looked... happy. Truly, deeply happy.

"What are you doing in here?"

Liana jumped so hard she dropped the photograph. She spun around to find Adrian standing in the doorway. He wasn't wearing his coat anymore, just his white dress shirt with the sleeves rolled up. He looked exhausted, his hair messy, but the moment he saw what was in her hand, his face went from tired to murderous.

He was across the room in three long strides. He grabbed her wrist, his grip so tight it made her wince.

"Who gave you permission to touch my things?" he hissed, his voice trembling with a rage that was far more terrifying than his usual coldness.

"The door was open, Adrian-"

"Get out!" he roared, snatching the photograph from the floor. He looked at it for a split second, his expression flickering with a pain so raw it made Liana's own heart break. Then he shoved the photo back into the drawer and slammed it shut with a bang that echoed like a gunshot.

"I'm sorry," Liana said, her voice small but steady. "I didn't mean to pry. I just... I wanted to understand."

"Understand what? That I have a past? That I'm not the monster you want me to be?" Adrian stepped closer, his chest heaving. He looked like a man who was about to shatter into a million pieces. "You have no right to come in here and dig up things that are buried. You are an employee, Liana. Nothing more."

"You were an artist," Liana said, ignoring his anger. She pointed at the desk. "Those sketches... they're full of love. You didn't just build buildings, Adrian. You built a life. Why did you stop?"

"Because that life killed her!" Adrian shouted.

The silence that followed was absolute. Adrian looked shocked that the words had even left his mouth. He turned away, his hands shaking as he leaned against the desk.

"She was a painter. Like you," he said, his voice now a hollow whisper. "She saw the world in colors. She didn't care about the business or the name. She just wanted to create. And she was so happy when she was pregnant with Mika. But her heart... it wasn't strong enough. The doctors told her to stop. To rest. But she wouldn't. She said she had to finish her masterpiece for the baby."

Liana felt a lump in her throat. She moved toward him, cautiously, like one might approach a wounded animal.

"She died three days after Mika was born," Adrian continued, his back still to her. "I realized then that 'softness' and 'art' and 'joy' are just illusions. They're weaknesses that let the world in so it can hurt you. So I buried it. I buried her paintings, I buried my sketches, and I promised I would make Mika strong enough so she never, ever ends up like her mother."

Liana reached out and tentatively placed a hand on his shoulder. He didn't pull away this time.

"Strength isn't about building walls, Adrian," she said softly. "It's about being able to stand in the rain without breaking. You're not protecting Mika. You're just making her live in the same dark room you've locked yourself in. Is that what your wife would have wanted? For her daughter to never know what a 'neon dragon' looks like?"

Adrian finally turned to look at her. The ice was gone. In its place was a man who was drowning in seven years of unshed tears. He looked at Liana-really looked at her-and for the first time, he didn't see a "placeholder." He saw a woman who was brave enough to stare back at his demons.

He reached up, his hand hovering near her face. His fingers brushed against a stray lock of her hair, his touch so light it was almost non-existent.

"You look so much like her when you're angry," he whispered.

Liana didn't move. She couldn't breathe. The air between them was thick with a tension that was no longer about hate or rules. It was the sound of a wall cracking.

But then, the spell broke. Adrian's eyes cleared, and he pulled his hand back as if he had touched a hot stove. He straightened his shirt, the mask of the Ice Architect sliding back into place, though it didn't fit quite as well as before.

"Go to your room, Liana," he said, his voice flat. "Mika's French tutor will be here in ten minutes. Make sure she's ready."

"Adrian-"

"Go. Before I change my mind about letting you stay."

Liana knew when to push and when to retreat. She nodded slowly and walked toward the door. But as she reached the threshold, she stopped and looked back.

"You can hide the sketches, Adrian. You can paint over the grass. But you can't erase the fact that you still care. That's your real masterpiece. And I'm going to make sure you finish it."

She left the room, her heart racing. She had found the wound. Now, she just had to figure out how to heal it without getting herself destroyed in the process.

As she walked down the hall, she saw Hadi watching her from the shadows. The butler looked worried-not for the house, but for the man inside the library. Liana gave him a small, knowing nod.

She went to Mika's room and found the girl waiting by the door.

"Is Daddy still mad?" Mika asked.

Liana smiled and knelt down, pulling the girl into a hug. "No, sweetie. I think your daddy is just starting to wake up. And waking up is always a little bit grumpy."

That night, Liana didn't paint the dark ocean. She took a fresh canvas and painted a single, small yellow flower growing out of a crack in a grey stone wall. It was simple, and it was small, but it was there.

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