Chapter 1
When I accepted the Global War Photography Award at the ceremony, a reality TV crew crashed through the velvet ropes, their cameras flashing like strobes at a crime scene.
"Ms. Evelyn Vance!"
The host shoved a microphone in my face. "After twenty years of silence, are you still holding a grudge against your father? Just because he saved the neighbor's orphaned child first and left you in that burning building?"
I looked up, past the blinding lights, toward the figure at the edge of the crowd. Robert Bennett.
He pushed through and stepped forward, his calloused hands trembling as they closed around my cold fingers.
"Nora, Kayla's parents didn't make it out. Under those circumstances, I had to get that newly orphaned child to safety first."
His eyes pleaded with me. "You're my daughter. You understand, don't you?"
I stared at those hands imprisoning mine, then pulled my lips into a cold smile and wrenched free.
"You've got the wrong person," my voice was ice. "There's no Nora here. My name is Evelyn Vance."
The scattered applause died completely. Hundreds of eyes, hungry for scandal, locked onto us.
I turned to leave, but his towering frame blocked me again.
"Nora, do you have to do this here? That was standard rescue protocol! Kayla was closest to the exit—I had to get her out first. And I thought Squad Two was right behind to get you!"
Robert's face twisted with anguish. "By the time I got back... it was too late. You've been in war zones—you know there's no time to think in moments like that. How can you still be punishing me for that tragedy after all these years?"
Looking at him, you'd think time was a myth. He still saw me as that little girl who needed to "understand" his noble sacrifice.
Twenty years, and he hadn't changed one bit. He would never believe he was the one in the wrong.
The scar tissue around my heart throbbed sharply at his words.
I couldn't help the laugh that escaped—harsh and jarring in the silent hall.
"Captain Bennett..." I met his eyes with zero warmth. "Your memory seems severely compromised. You only have one daughter—Kayla. There never was any Nora."
Watching his pupils contract, I enunciated each word with precision:
"Twenty years ago, your daughter died in that fire. Along with your wife and your son. They all burned to ash."
I paused, then let a cold smile touch my lips.
"Oh wait, I almost forgot. You were far too busy back then—pinning that medal of valor to your chest, parading your newly adopted angel in front of cameras, playing superhero for the entire city..."
My voice dropped to barely a whisper. "Who had time to remember your own family was still trapped in the flames?"
Robert's face drained of color. His jaw clenched, lips working soundlessly, like a statue crumbling to dust.
That expression—identical to the moment they pulled three body bags from the rubble and forced him to face the cost of his heroism.
Seeing him trapped in that nightmare, I stepped around him.
But the host, like a shark tasting blood, blocked my path again.
"Ms. Vance! We understand your mother and brother died protecting you that night. Is your refusal to acknowledge your father really about holding a grudge, or..."
Calculated shrewdness gleamed in her eyes. "Did you disown your hero father just to secure your aunt's inheritance and your place in high society?"
I gave her a sideways glance. "That's a question for Bennett. After all, he knows far better than I do what really happened that night."
I shoved the microphone aside and strode toward the exit.
"Nora!"
Robert finally snapped. His voice rose to a roar that cut through the crowd:
"How long are you going to keep this up?! That fire took my wife and son—do you think I don't suffer every single night?! I spent twenty years clawing my way out of that disaster. We could still be a family, be decent about this—but you insist on ripping open the wounds for the whole world to gawk at?!"
He stood there, chest heaving, the picture of a heartbroken, desperate father.
The crowd erupted.
"Oh my God, she's the survivor from the Station 42 fire? And now she's the Vance heir?"
"Bennett's a saint. He adopted the neighbor's orphan from the rubble, and his own daughter turned out this cold."
"No wonder she photographs war zones—she's seen so much death she's probably numb to her own family."
"He put his duty first like a real hero. She should understand that. Ungrateful..."
I listened to those venomous whispers, watching Robert's face settle back into that expression of tragic nobility and righteous sacrifice.
My muscles tensed involuntarily. My feet stopped.
"Family?"
I turned the word over in my mouth, bitter as always. Then I laughed—short and sharp.
With nothing but wasteland in my eyes, I looked at the city's greatest fire captain.
"The moment you decided you could choose who lives and who dies twenty years ago, Bennett—the moment you built your hero's pedestal on your wife and children's graves..."
I let the words hang in the air.
"That 'family' you keep talking about? It's been dead longer than I've been gone."
