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The sky didn't just rain; it screamed.
Jagged veins of lightning tore through the charcoal clouds above Burke Manor, illuminating the gothic spires in strobe-light flashes of white and gray. It was the kind of storm that made the air taste like ozone and impending disaster.
Harper was eight years old. She was wearing a pink tulle dress that scratched her skin, a hand-me-down from another girl in the system, and she was hiding.
The balcony on the second floor of the banquet hall was her sanctuary. Inside, the air was thick with the cloying scent of expensive perfume and the sound of crystal glasses clinking-a symphony of wealth she didn't belong to. Out here, the wind whipped her hair across her face, stinging her cheeks. It felt real.
The glass door slid open.
Harper flinched, backing into the shadows of a large stone planter.
A girl stepped out first. Ciera. She was ten, a blur of white silk and malice, her eyes already scanning the darkness for Harper. Behind her, Finn Burke followed. He was twelve, dressed in a custom tuxedo that fit his slender frame perfectly. He didn't look like a child. He looked like a bored emperor surveying a kingdom he already despised.
"There you are, little charity case," Ciera sneered, her voice sharp enough to cut through the wind. "Hiding with the gargoyles. How fitting."
Harper pressed herself further into the shadows. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird.
Finn sighed, a sound of profound weariness. "Ciera, leave her alone."
"Why? She doesn't belong here," Ciera stepped toward Harper, her pretty face twisted with contempt. "My uncle only lets you stay because he feels sorry for you. You're an orphan. A stray."
The words were meant to hurt, and they did. Harper shrank back, but her heel caught the edge of a clay pot. It tipped over.
Crash.
The sound of shattering terracotta was louder than the thunder.
Ciera's eyes lit up with a cruel glee. "Clumsy," she drawled. "Just like your deadbeat parents."
That was it. A dam broke inside Harper. "Don't talk about them!" she cried, her voice small but fierce.
"Or what?" Ciera lunged, not at Finn, but at Harper. She shoved Harper hard against the stone balustrade.
It happened in slow motion. The physics of it didn't make sense to her eight-year-old brain. Her back hit the stone railing. It should have held. It was stone. It was permanent.
But the mortar had rotted away years ago, hidden by ivy and neglect.
The stone gave way with a sickening, grinding crunch.
Harper was falling. Her hands flailed, grasping at the wet air. The world turned upside down.
"Harper!" Finn's voice was a roar of panic.
He lunged forward. His hand shot out, fingers stretching until his tendons burned. He caught her wrist. For a breathtaking second, she dangled over the abyss, his grip the only thing tethering her to the world.
But he was only twelve. Harper's body was deathly heavy, slick with rain. The crumbling edge of the balcony gave way under his feet.
His eyes, the color of glacial ice, widened in shock. His grip slipped.
"Finn!" Harper screamed.
She felt the rough fabric of his tuxedo sleeve brush against her fingertips as he went over the edge with the rest of the broken stone. Just a brush. A ghost of a touch.
And then he was gone.
A second later, there was a sound. A heavy, wet thud that the thunder tried to mask but failed. It was the sound of a body hitting the pavement below. It was a sound that would live in her nightmares for the next decade.
Harper was hauled back onto the balcony by a guard who had heard the crash. She stood there, rain soaking her to the bone, staring down into the abyss.
Ciera stood behind her. She was panting, her chest heaving. Then, she smiled. It wasn't a happy smile. It was a twisted, terrifying thing. She opened her mouth and let out a bloodcurdling scream.
"She pushed him! Harper pushed him!"
The doors burst open. Adults flooded the terrace. Hands grabbed Harper. Rough hands. Angry hands.
"Murderer!" someone shrieked.
The world tilted on its axis. The gold and crystal of the party faded into the gray of the storm, and then into the black of a police cruiser.
Whirrrrr-zzzzzt.
The sound of the pneumatic drill drilled straight into Harper's skull, shattering the memory.
Harper gasped, sitting up so fast her forehead nearly clipped the undercarriage of the 2009 Ford Focus.
Her heart was racing, beating a frantic rhythm against her sternum. Thump. Thump. Thump. She pressed her hand to her chest, trying to force her lungs to expand.
The smell of ozone and expensive perfume was gone. Replaced by the thick, acrid stench of motor oil, stale coffee, and exhaust fumes.
She wasn't eight years old. She was eighteen. She wasn't at Burke Manor. She was in a garage in Queens, lying on a mechanic's creeper, covered in grease.
"Solis! You sleeping under there?"
Her boss, Al, kicked the bumper of the car. The vibration traveled through the frame and rattled Harper's teeth.
"Almost done, Al," she called back. Her voice was raspy.
She wiped the sweat from her forehead with the back of her hand, leaving a smear of black grease across her skin. She took a deep breath, grounding herself. Pulse check. She pressed two fingers to her carotid artery. One, two, three. Fast, but slowing down.
She slid back under the car.
Her hands, usually steady enough to thread a needle in the dark, were shaking slightly. She clenched them into fists until the knuckles turned white. Focus.
She reached up, her fingers finding the rusted bolt on the exhaust manifold. She didn't need to see it. She knew the anatomy of a car as well as she knew the anatomy of the human body. Maybe better. Cars didn't lie. Cars didn't betray her. If a car was broken, she fixed it.
She worked for another hour, the physical exertion acting as a sedative for her anxiety. By the time she slid out from under the Ford, her arms ached in a satisfying way.
She grabbed a rag and started scrubbing the worst of the oil from her hands. It was a losing battle. The grease had settled into the lines of her palms, a permanent tattoo of her station in life.
"Hey, Harper," Al grunted, not looking up from his ledger. "Customer's here for the Civic."
"On it."
She walked to the bay door to roll it up. The Queens sky was a bruised purple, the sun setting behind the skyline of Manhattan across the river. It looked like a different planet.
A car pulled up to the curb.
It wasn't the owner of the Civic.
It was a Maybach. Sleek, black, and costing more than this entire city block. It looked like a shark swimming in a pool of goldfish.
The tinted window in the back rolled down slowly.
Harper froze. Her towel dropped to the concrete floor.
A man sat in the back seat. He wore sunglasses, even though the sun had already set. But she didn't need to see his eyes to know who he was. She knew the shape of his jaw. She knew the arrogant tilt of his head.
Finn Burke.
He didn't say a word. He just turned his head slightly, the dark lenses fixing on Harper. He took her in-the grease-stained coveralls, the messy bun, the dirt on her face.
A shiver went down her spine, colder than the rain from ten years ago.
He was supposed to be crippled. He was supposed to be broken. But the energy radiating from that car wasn't weak. It was predatory.
The window rolled up. The car pulled away, disappearing into the traffic of the evening rush hour.
He hadn't come to talk. He had come to mark his territory.
The nightmare hadn't ended on that balcony. It was just beginning.