For a few seconds, everything stopped.
Aria focused on the picture. The rest of the archive faded. The smell of old paper. Rowan’s breathing. Nyra shifting her weight. All gone. There was only this small photo in her hands.
Her father was on the left.
Elias Voss. In this photo he looked… formative. Not the strained, polite stranger smile from the portraits she grew up with. Not the stiff man who died too young and left grief behind. This was a real family smile. The kind that reached his eyes. The kind Aria barely remembered but her body recognized anyway.
The man next to him was a stranger.
That made her stomach drop. Because Aria had never seen him before. And he was standing shoulder to shoulder with her father like they were equals.
“You know him?” Rowan asked.
“No,” she replied. Too quick. Because she wanted it to be true.
Aria looked again. Dark coat. Silver ring on his right hand. Sharp face, sharp eyes. The kind of face that looked annoying even when it wasn’t doing anything. The headache behind her eyes started to pulse harder.
Nyra took the picture. Shifted it back and forth between the two men. “Your dad looks happy,” she said, surprised.
It was true. Elias Voss looked unthreatened. Uncautious. He looked like he was welcoming the man next to him. Like he trusted him.
And that left an unsettling feeling in Aria’s chest. Because the man next to him was a threat. She didn’t know how she knew. She just did.
Rowan broke her thoughts. “Turn it over.”
“What,” Aria asked, pulled out of her head.
“The photograph.”
She turned it over slow. Her fingers felt clumsy.
Not much writing. But it had weight. It read: Trust no report that lacks a witness.
Nyra frowned. “That’s very specific.”
Aria agreed. It sounded like advice. Maybe a warning. Like her father knew someone would be digging through his things later. Like he knew the official story wouldn’t match.
Rowan took the picture. Analyzed the writing. Then turned to Aria. “It’s your father’s.”
Aria didn’t need the confirmation. The handwriting was familiar from old letters, from the margins of books he used to read to her. Even so, the ache in her chest intensified.
She’d always thought her father didn’t have a story left to tell. He was the man who died too young. The man who left his family to grieve. It all seemed so simple. A fire. A funeral. A small coffin. End of story.
Now the complexities were overwhelming. Her father smiled like that with strangers. Her father wrote warnings about reports. Her father had secrets.
The archivist cleared his throat. “There’s something else.”
It was strange, but Aria almost wanted to laugh. It was almost like a joke. It almost never failed to deliver a blow to her wellbeing. But it still wasn’t a joke.
“What now?” she asked.
The old man pointed to the box. “A second item.”
Aria sighed. There was nothing in the box. Or was there?
She ran her fingers along the bottom. The wood felt off. The false bottom was very well hidden. Her heart raced as the rest of the world faded away. She pried it open.
It revealed a note. Aria’s heart sank further as she saw how old, fragile, and crumbled it was. Yellowed edges. Ink bleeding.
Silence fell over the room as she read it. The first few lines were illegible, water damaged. But then the lists became clearer. Names. Dates. Observations.
Then she got to the bottom and couldn’t move.
Seven times. It repeated.
Liam Voss.
Liam Voss.
Liam Voss.
The note slipped from her fingers. Nyra caught it before it hit the floor.
“What happened?” Nyra asked.
There was no answer. Because the name… Liam Voss… Not her father.
So what was his name doing there? On a file that was fifteen years old?
Nyra read the page and frowned. Rowan took it next. His expression got darker. “That’s impossible.”
They all thought the same thing. The date at the corner of the page showed it was written almost fifteen years ago. Liam was a child back then. A little boy who spent afternoons climbing trees and getting covered in mud. Who cried if his boots got wet.
What could have possibly caused his name to end up on an investigation file?
The answer didn’t make sense. Except if…
Aria’s mind came to a halt. No. Surely not.
She looked at Rowan. He’d gone pale. He’d come to the same conclusion.
“What?” Nyra asked, angry now. “Would someone please tell me what’s going on?”
Neither of them answered.
Aria swallowed and pointed toward a line at the bottom. Tiny writing. Nyra had missed it.
The apprentice leaned in. Read it. Read it again.
She froze, mouth agape. “Oh.”
That word again. Aria was beginning to hate it. “Oh” always came right before her world shifted.
The line read: Potential successor identified: Liam Voss.
The room went completely silent.
Potential successor.
Successor to what? Successor to whom? And why Liam? He was just a brat. A kid who stole her bandages to make slingshots. Who fell asleep on her floor after nightmares.
The questions exploded in Aria’s head. Too many, too fast.
Then came the worst of them.
She turned sharply toward the archivist. “Did my father ever come back for this box?”
The old man hesitated.
For too long. Way too long.
“No.”
A lie. Aria knew it immediately. The way his eyes flicked left. The way his shoulders shifted. So did Rowan. The captain’s jaw tightened.
The archivist knew they knew. And can you believe it, he didn’t even try to pretend anymore.
Finally, the old man sighed. Shoulders sagging. “He came back once.”
The room went still.
“When?” Rowan asked. Voice low, dangerous.
The archivist’s answer hit like a hammer. “Three years after everyone believed he was dead.”
Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.
Aria simply stared. The photo in one hand. The note with Liam’s name in the other. Her father’s warning on the back. Trust no report that lacks a witness.
If that was true…
If her father came back three years after his funeral…
Then he didn’t die in the fire.
Then the small coffin was empty.
Then every story she’d been told about her childhood was wrong.
Aria’s legs felt weak. She sat down hard on the edge of the table. The wood bit into her palms. Nyra was saying something but it sounded far away.
Rowan crouched in front of her. “Aria. Breathe.”
She was breathing. Too fast. Too shallow. “He came back,” she whispered. “For this box. Three years after they buried him.”
Rowan nodded once. “Yes.”
“Why?” The word came out broken. “Why fake his death? Why leave us? Why put Liam’s name on a successor list when he was six?”
Rowan didn’t have answers. Or didn’t want to give them. “I don’t know yet.”
Nyra sat beside her. “Okay. New plan. We stop trusting anything written down. Including gravestones.”
It should’ve been funny. It wasn’t.
Aria looked down at the photo again. Her father’s real smile. The stranger with the silver ring. The man who looked annoying and dangerous.
He’d been there when her father was alive. When he was supposed to be alive. Maybe he was there when her father faked his death too.
Aria pressed her fingers to her eyes. The headache was worse now. Not from lack of sleep. From too much truth.
“He came back,” she said again. Testing the words. “And he left this. For me. Didn’t he?”
Rowan didn’t answer. But he didn’t have to.
The note. The photo. The hidden compartment. All of it meant for someone who would know where to look. Someone with Voss blood. Someone who wouldn’t trust reports without witnesses.
Someone like her.
Aria stood up slow. Her hands were steady now. That was something. “We need to find him.”
Nyra blinked. “Your father? Aria, if he’s been hiding for twenty years”
“Then he’s been hiding for a reason,” Aria cut in. “And I’m done letting other people decide what I’m allowed to know.”
Rowan stood too. “The reservoir first. If he was the last one in before it was sealed… and he came back three years later… then whatever’s down there connects to this.”
Aria nodded. Looked at the line again. Potential successor identified: Liam Voss.
Liam. Her brother. The kid who didn’t deserve any of this. Marked before he even understood what it meant.
The ache in her chest wasn’t grief anymore. It was anger. Sharp and clear.
Someone had been moving her family like pieces on a board. Her father. Liam. Her.
Aria folded the photo and tucked it into her coat, next to the map from Daren. Two clues. Both pointing down.
“The answers are beneath the water,” she said quietly.
Rowan heard her. “And beneath lies.”
The archivist looked miserable. “I shouldn’t have told you”
“You should’ve,” Aria said. She didn’t look at him. “Now we know.”
Outside the archive, the city kept moving. Inside, Aria felt something shift and lock into place.
Her father was alive. Liam was marked. And the reservoir was sealed for a reason.
She was going down there. With or without permission. With or without answers.
Because for the first time in years, she wasn’t just grieving what she lost.
She was hunting for what was taken.