Chapter 112 The Cracked Mirror
A secret is just a lie that hasn't found its way into the light yet, and when it finally emerges, it usually brings enough heat to burn the house down.
The envelope in Cassia’s hand felt like it was made of lead. She stood in the center of the National Museum’s grand foyer, surrounded by her own photographs, the faces of the poor, the weary, and the resilient but all she could see was the signature at the bottom of the receipt. Jonas Cole.
"It can't be," she whispered, her voice lost in the high, echoing ceilings of the gallery. "Evan, he loved us. He was the one who told us to run. He was the one who guarded the lighthouse while we found our way here."
Evan took the paper from her, his fingers brushing against hers. He stared at the name, his jaw tightening so hard she thought his teeth might crack. The star-lit success of the evening, the applause of the Governor’s wife, the promise of a permanent exhibit, it all felt like ash in his mouth.
"He’s my father, Cass," Evan said, his voice a low, pained growl. "He didn't have a malicious bone in his body. But he had fear. He always had fear. He lived in the shadow of the Marlowe name for twenty years, hiding us both. Maybe the City offered him something the red soil couldn't."
"Or maybe someone threatened him," Cassia said, her mind racing. "The Developer... or Thorne. They knew Jonas was the weak link. They knew his heart was soft."
Around them, the City’s elite moved like colorful birds, sipping champagne and pretending they hadn't been whispering about the Marlowe scandal only hours ago. The gossip had shifted again. Now, Cassia was a "tragic heroine" and Evan was a "musical prodigy who overcame a dark past." The hypocrisy of it made Cassia want to scream.
"We have to go back," Evan said, his eyes meeting hers. "Not to stay. But to look him in the eye. I won't have our career built on a foundation of hidden knives."
"The opening is tonight, Evan," Cassia reminded him, gesturing to the crowd. "You're supposed to play. The Governor’s wife is waiting."
"Let her wait," Evan said. He took his ebony flute from his belt, the new one, carved from the city’s finest wood but tuned to the rhythm of the village. "The music can wait. The truth cannot."
They slipped out of the museum, leaving behind the silk dresses and the flashing bulbs of the press. The carriage ride to the outskirts of the City felt like a descent into a different world. The iron and steam gave way to the familiar, damp smell of the coast. By the time they reached the small cottage where Jonas and Elena had been staying since the lighthouse fell, the moon was high and silver.
The house was quiet. A single candle flickered in the window.
When they walked through the door, Jonas didn't look surprised. He was sitting at the wooden table, a half-finished bowl of soup in front of him. He looked smaller than Cassia remembered. The strength that had once lived in his shoulders seemed to have evaporated, leaving behind a man who looked like he was made of dry parchment.
"I expected you sooner," Jonas said, his voice thin.
"Why, Dad?" Evan asked, stepping into the light. He threw the receipt onto the table. "We were winning. We were becoming the people you said we could be. Why would you give the papers to Gable?"
Jonas looked at the paper, then at Cassia. His eyes were filled with a terrible, hollow kind of grief. "Because they promised me your mother would be safe, Cassia. They told me that if the Marlowe name became a scandal, the City would stop looking for the woman who designed the gears. They said if you were a 'scandalous girl,' you wouldn't be a 'dangerous one.'"
"They lied to you," Cassia said, her heart breaking for him even as she felt the sting of his betrayal. "They used you to try to own my work. They wanted to make me so ashamed that I’d sign whatever contract they put in front of me."
"I know that now," Jonas whispered. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, tarnished key. "They didn't give me silver, Evan. They gave me this. It belongs to a locker in the Grand Station. Inside is the original contract your mother signed. The one that proves the Developer never owned the Marlowe Vision. It was a partnership, not a debt."
The weight of the secret was staggering. All these years, the fear that had driven them, the fear of being "owned", had been built on a lie.
"Where is Mom?" Cassia asked, looking around the quiet room.
"She went to the City," Jonas said, his hand trembling. "She went to find you. She said she was tired of hiding in the red soil while her daughter fought her battles."
The room felt suddenly cold. Elena was in the City, alone, with a target on her back.
Before they could move, the sound of carriage wheels echoed outside. It wasn't the heavy, clanking sound of a City carriage. It was light, fast, and familiar.
Mrs. Higgins burst through the door, her hair in a wild nest of curls and her apron stained with berry juice.
"Oh, thank the heavens!" she gasped, clutching her chest. "I followed you from the village! You have to come back! There’s a man at the lighthouse ruins. He’s digging, Cassia. He’s digging for the 'First Plate.' He says if he finds it, he can rewrite the faces of everyone in the valley!"
"Thorne," Cassia hissed.
"No," Mrs. Higgins said, her eyes wide with terror. "It’s not Thorne. It’s a man who says he’s your brother. A man who says the fire didn't just take a sister, it took a son too."
Cassia felt the world tilt. A brother? Her father had never mentioned a son. The "Marlowe Vision" was growing deeper and darker with every step they took toward the light.
"We can't be in two places at once," Evan said, looking at the key on the table and then at the door. "The contract is in the City. Your mother is in the City. But the history... the history is back at the lighthouse."
The romance of their life, the star-lit dreams, and the golden career, were being pulled apart by the roots. They stood in the center of the room, the two of them, the only real things in a world of ghosts and gears.
Evan reached out and took Cassia’s hand. His grip was a vow. "You go to the lighthouse with Mrs. Higgins. Take the carriage. Find out who this 'brother' is. I’ll go to the station. I’ll find the contract and I’ll find your mother."
"Evan, it’s too dangerous," Cassia whispered. "Gable has men everywhere."
"I have the music, Cass," he said, and for a moment, he looked like the star he had become radiant, powerful, and unafraid. "I'll play a song they won't forget. Now go."
He pulled her into a final, crushing embrace. The intimacy of the moment was sharp and fleeting, a kiss that tasted of salt, red soil, and a desperate, burning hope. It was the touch of two people who knew they might be walking into a trap, but who refused to let go of the heart-note that bound them.
"I love you," she breathed against his lips.
"I’ll see you at the horizon," he replied.
Cassia ran out to the carriage with Mrs. Higgins, the old woman surprisingly nimble as she hopped onto the bench.
"Don't you worry, dearie," Mrs. Higgins shouted over the sound of the hooves. "The village gossip might be loud, but we know how to protect our own. I’ve got a rolling pin and a jar of pickled onions that’ll knock a 'brother' into next Tuesday!"
As the carriage sped toward the coast, Cassia looked back. She saw Evan walking toward the City, his flute glinting in the moonlight. He looked like a solitary soldier marching toward a war made of clockwork.
But as they reached the edge of the red soil, the sky toward the lighthouse didn't look dark. It was glowing with a strange, pulsing violet light, the color of the ink when it was fresh.
"Mrs. Higgins," Cassia said, pointing to the horizon. "That’s not a fire."
"No," the old woman whispered, her humor finally fading. "That’s a developing bath. He’s not digging for a plate, Cassia. He’s turning the whole valley into a photograph."
Cassia looked at her camera on the seat beside her. It was the only lens left that wasn't owned by a Marlowe. She realized then that the "brother" wasn't looking for a secret. He was looking for her.
The family tree has a branch made of shadow, and the City is about to witness a symphony of steel. Can Evan find the contract before the Developer finds him, and what happens when Cassia finally meets the boy who was erased from the frame?