The car tires hummed a different tune as they hit the cobblestones of Beacon Hill. The ride became bumpier, more textured.
Elara looked out the window. The houses here were old-red brick, black shutters, gas lamps flickering in the twilight. It felt like a movie set, or a museum where people weren't allowed to touch anything.
They stopped in front of a massive wrought-iron gate. A security guard stepped out of a booth, saw the license plate, and saluted. The gates swung open with a majestic, silent glide.
The Sterling estate loomed ahead. It wasn't a house; it was a fortress. Ivy climbed the walls like veins. The windows were dark, staring like empty eye sockets.
"Listen to me," Julian said.
Elara turned to him. The car had stopped, but he hadn't opened the door.
"You are the granddaughter of Arthur's war buddy. Your parents died in a car crash. You grew up in a small town, but you are genteel. You are grateful."
"I know the script," Elara said.
"This isn't a script, Elara. It's a survival guide." Julian leaned in. "Arthur values two things: Loyalty and appearances. In this house, the law isn't what's written in the Constitution. The law is Sterling. And Sterling is the law."
"So I can't make mistakes?"
"You can make mistakes," Julian said, his voice dropping to a whisper. "You just can't get caught. That is the first rule of this family."
The driver opened the door.
Julian stepped out and extended his hand to her.
Elara took it. His grip was firm, grounding. She stepped out onto the granite driveway.
A line of staff stood on the front steps. A butler in a tuxedo stood at the head.
"Welcome home, Mr. Julian," the butler said. He bowed slightly to Elara. "Miss Vance."
Elara felt like an imposter in her expensive black dress. She felt the mud of the trailer park still clinging to her soul.
"Head up," Julian murmured near her ear. "Walk like you own the pavement."
Elara straightened her spine. She channeled the anger she felt-anger at Ray, anger at Julian, anger at the world-and turned it into posture.
They walked up the steps. The heavy oak doors groaned open.
The foyer was cavernous. A crystal chandelier the size of a compact car hung from the ceiling. The floor was black and white marble, like a giant chessboard.
Portraits of dead white men lined the walls, all sneering down at her.
"Library," Julian told the butler. "Is he awake?"
"He is waiting, sir."
Julian guided her down a long hallway lined with velvet runners. The silence in the house was heavy, oppressive. It felt like the air was pressurized.
Julian stopped in front of a set of double doors. He turned to her and adjusted the collar of her dress. His fingers grazed her throat.
"Fear keeps you sharp," he said, seeing the terror in her eyes. "Use it."
He pushed the doors open.





