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Chapter 3

My last morning in that house began like every other.

I woke at 0600, made breakfast, kissed Ryan goodbye at the door.

"Back Thursday," he said. "Training."

"I know. Good luck."

The second his truck disappeared, I began.

I had packed a single duffel the night before, hidden under the guest bed. Inside: my passport, my military credentials, the encrypted USB drive, one change of clothes, and the only photo of my mother I couldn't leave behind.

Everything else — the furniture he'd chosen, the life he'd designed, the rings — I left untouched.

I wanted him to know I hadn't taken a single thing that belonged to his operation.

Because none of it had ever been real.

At 0900, I made one final stop: his office.

I placed a single envelope on his desk, centered, impossible to miss.

Inside was a handwritten letter and one item.

"Ryan,

I found Operation Hearthstone. I've read every quarterly assessment you filed about me. I know what I was to you — a subject, an asset, a case study in compliance.

I know everything.

By the time you read this, Captain Nora Sinclair will no longer exist. Don't look for me. You were trained to find people. I was trained to survive. Let's see which training holds.

I'm returning your ring. I have no use for props from a performance.

— Nora"

Beneath the letter, I placed my wedding band.

I stared at it — the simple gold ring he'd slid onto my finger in a chapel in Monterey, the Pacific crashing behind us, my heart so full I thought it would burst.

Now it was just metal. Part of a costume.

I closed the office door and walked to the front entrance.

A black SUV was waiting at the corner — arranged by Colonel Nakamura, who had activated a military medical transfer so clean it would leave no civilian trace.

As I slid into the back seat, my phone buzzed.

Ryan's mother, Diane.

I stared at the screen. Diane had always been kind to me — Sunday dinners, birthday cards, stories about Ryan as a little boy.

Did she know? Had she always known her son's marriage was a government contract?

I declined the call.

She would find out soon enough.

The SUV pulled away, and I watched the little house with the blue shutters — the house I had planted a garden in front of, the house where I had imagined raising children — shrink in the mirror.

Four years of my life in that beautiful lie.

I turned forward and didn't look back.

At the airport, as I waited for my military transport connection, my phone buzzed one last time.

A text from an unknown number:

"Hey Nora! It's Lieutenant Keyes ? Ryan gave me your number — he said you might want to grab coffee before the unit dinner next month? I just transferred to his team and he's been SO welcoming. He talks about you constantly. You're such a lucky wife! ?"

I read it twice.

So there was a new woman in his orbit. Another "subject," perhaps. Or just a young officer who didn't know what she was walking into.

I typed back a single line:

"Ask Ryan what Operation Hearthstone is."

Then I blocked the number, powered off the phone, and boarded the transport.

Somewhere over the Rockies, I pressed my hand to my stomach and whispered to the tiny heartbeat inside me.

"It's just you and me now. And I promise you — that's more than enough."
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