Part 2
The priest’s question hung in the chapel like smoke.
“And do you, Nathaniel James Hawthorne, take Evelyn Grace Parker to be your lawfully wedded wife?”
For one long second, the old man did not answer.
Evelyn stood frozen beside him, her pulse battering against her throat. The silence stretched until even the rain seemed to soften, as though the storm itself had leaned closer to listen.
Then the masked groom moved.
Not much.
Only his gloved fingers tightened around the silver head of his cane.
The lawyer, Mr. Vale, shifted his weight.
The priest swallowed.
Evelyn felt the world narrowing to the porcelain face beside her. Smooth. White. Empty. The mask had no expression, and yet she could feel something behind it—something watching, measuring, waiting.
At last, the man spoke.
“I do.”
His voice was wrong.
Evelyn’s eyes snapped toward him.
They had told her he was ninety. They had told her he was sick, frail, half-buried already beneath his own fortune. But the voice that came from behind the mask was not the voice of a dying old man.
It was low.
Clear.
Young.
The priest’s mouth parted slightly. One of the housekeepers gasped and quickly covered her lips.
Mr. Vale’s face went pale.
Evelyn stopped breathing.
The old man—if he was an old man—turned his masked face toward her.
“Continue,” he said to the priest.
That voice again.
Calm. Commanding. Barely above a murmur, but it filled the chapel like a hand closing around every throat inside it.
The priest fumbled with the book.
“By the power vested in me… by the state of Rhode Island… I now pronounce you husband and wife.”
A strange coldness moved through Evelyn.
Husband.
Wife.
The words did not feel real. They landed somewhere far away, beyond the chapel walls, beyond the storm, beyond the girl she had been only three days earlier.
“You may kiss the bride,” the priest whispered.
Evelyn’s stomach clenched.
The masked man slowly turned toward her.
“No,” he said.
One word.
Flat.
Final.
The priest lowered his eyes at once.
Evelyn should have felt relief. Instead, she felt something stranger, sharper. The refusal had not sounded merciful. It sounded calculated.
Mr. Vale stepped forward with a leather folder.
“The marriage certificate,” he said quickly, as though eager to bury the moment beneath paperwork. “Both signatures are required.”
Evelyn’s hand shook as she took the pen. The silver nib scratched against the paper.
Evelyn Grace Parker.
Her name looked unfamiliar.
Like something stolen and returned damaged.
When the groom took the pen, Evelyn watched his hand carefully. The glove was black, finely stitched, expensive. But the fingers beneath did not tremble. They did not curl with age. They moved with steady precision.
He signed.
Nathaniel James Hawthorne.
The letters were bold, elegant, and powerful.
Not the handwriting of a man at death’s door.
Mr. Vale took the certificate and exhaled as if he had been holding his breath for days.
“It is done,” he said.
The masked man tilted his head.
“No, Vale,” he replied. “Now it begins.”
The lawyer went still.
Evelyn felt the hair rise at the back of her neck.
Before she could speak, the groom reached up.
His gloved fingers touched the edge of the porcelain mask.
The priest made a small, frightened sound.
“Sir,” Mr. Vale said, suddenly urgent. “Perhaps not here.”
But the man ignored him.
The mask came away.
And the whole chapel froze.
Evelyn stared.
The face beneath the mask was not ruined.
It was not old.
It was not the face of Nathaniel Hawthorne, the ninety-year-old billionaire whose portrait had hung in the entrance hall, stern and silver-haired beneath oil-painted shadows.
The man standing beside her could not have been more than thirty.
His hair was dark, almost black, damp at the edges from the rain. His face was pale but sharply beautiful, with high cheekbones, a straight nose, and a scar cutting from the corner of his left eyebrow toward his temple like a white crack in marble.
But it was his eyes that made Evelyn forget how to move.
Gray.
Cold.
Alive with a controlled fury that did not belong to a stranger, but to someone who had waited a very long time for this moment.
One of the housekeepers crossed herself.
The priest whispered, “God help us.”
The young man looked at Evelyn.
For the first time, she saw his mouth.
It did not smile.
“Mrs. Hawthorne,” he said.
Her knees nearly gave way.
“Who are you?” she whispered.
The lawyer stepped between them. “Mr. Hawthorne—”
The young man’s eyes did not leave Evelyn.
“Ask him,” he said.
Evelyn turned toward Mr. Vale.
The lawyer’s face had turned the color of old paper.
“He is…” Vale cleared his throat. “He is Nathaniel James Hawthorne.”
“No.” Evelyn’s voice cracked. “Nathaniel Hawthorne is ninety.”
The young man gave a quiet, humorless laugh.
“Nathaniel James Hawthorne is ninety,” he said. “My grandfather. The man who bought your father’s debt. The man who arranged this marriage.”
The chapel seemed to tilt.
Evelyn took one step back.
“Your grandfather?”
“Yes.”
“Then why did you sign his name?”
“Because it is mine too.”
Rain hammered the windows.
The young man slipped the mask under one arm like a discarded lie.
“My name is Nathaniel James Hawthorne II,” he said. “My grandfather died twelve days ago.”
The priest dropped his book.
It hit the stone floor with a slap that echoed through the chapel.
Mr. Vale closed his eyes.
Evelyn could hear her own breathing now, fast and shallow.
“Dead?” she whispered.
Nathaniel looked at the lawyer.
“Tell her.”
Vale’s jaw tightened.
“Mr. Hawthorne Senior suffered heart failure in his sleep,” he said. “His passing was… not publicly announced.”
“Why?” Evelyn asked.
Nathaniel’s gaze sharpened.
“Because certain people needed him alive long enough to finish what he started.”
The words slid through the chapel like a blade.
Evelyn looked from him to the lawyer, then back again.
“I don’t understand.”
“No,” Nathaniel said softly. “You weren’t meant to.”
The housekeepers stood as still as statues. The priest bent slowly to retrieve his book, but his fingers shook so badly he could barely grasp it.
Mr. Vale attempted to regain his composure.
“Mrs. Hawthorne, I understand this is distressing. However, the marriage is valid. The groom’s legal name is—”
“Shut up,” Evelyn snapped.
Everyone looked at her.
Even Nathaniel.
The words had burst out of her before fear could stop them. Her hands were trembling, but anger burned through the shock now, hot and clean.
“I was dragged here,” she said, voice rising. “Dressed like a corpse. Lied to. Sold because my father is weak and your family is cruel. So don’t stand there and talk to me about what is valid.”
Mr. Vale stiffened. “Young lady—”
“I said shut up.”
The chapel went silent again.
Nathaniel watched her.
Something flickered in his expression. Not amusement. Not pity.
Recognition, perhaps.
Then he turned to the others.
“Leave us.”
The priest did not need to be told twice. He hurried down the aisle with his book clutched to his chest. The housekeepers followed, whispering prayers under their breath.
Mr. Vale did not move.
Nathaniel looked at him.
“Now.”
The lawyer’s mouth flattened.
“There are documents still to review.”
“They can wait.”
“The board will expect—”
“The board,” Nathaniel said, “will learn what I decide they are allowed to learn.”
Vale’s face tightened, but he bowed his head.
“As you wish, Mr. Hawthorne.”
He gathered the papers and left the chapel.
The heavy wooden doors closed behind him.
Evelyn and Nathaniel were alone.
For several seconds, neither spoke.
Outside, thunder rolled over the cliffs. The stained glass trembled faintly in its iron frame, painting the chapel floor in broken colors—red, blue, gold—like shattered jewels beneath Evelyn’s gray wedding dress.
She turned toward him fully.
“Was any of it true?”
Nathaniel set the porcelain mask on the altar.
“That depends on which lie you mean.”
“My father’s debt.”
“Real.”
“The contract.”
“Real.”
“The threat against my family.”
His face did not change.
“Also real.”
Evelyn felt the anger falter.
“My family?”
“Your father and stepmother would have been ruined. Possibly worse. The men who handled the original loan were not sentimental.”
“And you let me believe I was marrying a ninety-year-old stranger?”
“I needed you here.”
The simplicity of the answer struck her harder than an excuse would have.
“You needed me here,” she repeated.
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Nathaniel looked toward the chapel doors, as if making sure no one lingered beyond them.
“Because my grandfather did not choose you randomly, Evelyn.”
The sound of her name in his voice unsettled her.
She folded her arms over her chest, trying to stop herself from shaking.
“Then why did he choose me?”
Nathaniel walked past her, down the aisle between the empty pews. His steps were steady. No limp. No sickness. No age. Only the cane had been part of the disguise, and now he carried it loosely, almost with contempt.
“My grandfather built Hawthorne Holdings on secrets,” he said. “Debts. Blackmail. Quiet ownership of things people believed were theirs. Hotels. Banks. Judges. Newspapers. Lives.”
Evelyn stayed near the altar, unwilling to follow him.
“And brides?” she asked bitterly.
He stopped.
“Yes,” he said.
Something in his tone made her skin go cold.
He turned back.
“You were not the first woman brought into this family through a contract.”
The chapel felt smaller.
“What does that mean?”
“My grandmother,” Nathaniel said. “My mother. Others before them. The Hawthorne men collected women the way they collected estates. Through pressure, documents, threats dressed as agreements.”
Evelyn stared at him.
He looked away first.
“My grandfather believed wives made excellent keys. A wife could inherit. Sign. Hold property. Disappear. Be blamed. Be mourned.”
“What happened to them?”
Nathaniel’s eyes returned to hers.
“Most learned silence. Some were buried with it.”
A chill ran through her.
“And you expect me to believe you’re different?”
“No.”
The answer surprised her.
Nathaniel took a step closer.
“I expect you to believe nothing until I prove it useful.”
“That isn’t comforting.”
“I’m not trying to comfort you.”
“Clearly.”
For the first time, the corner of his mouth moved. Not quite a smile, but near enough to disturb her.
Evelyn hated that she noticed.
She hated the steadiness of him, the quiet gravity. She hated that he was not the monster she had prepared herself to face, because a visible monster would have made the terror simpler.
Instead, he was young.
Sharp.
Unreadable.
Dangerous in a way that did not need a raised voice.
“Why marry me?” she asked. “Why not expose everything? Your grandfather is dead. You have the money now, don’t you?”
Nathaniel’s expression darkened.
“I have the name. Not the fortune.”
Evelyn waited.
“My grandfather’s will is locked behind conditions. Some official. Some hidden. He knew I wanted to dismantle what he built. He knew I despised him. So he made sure I could not touch the central trust unless I completed his final arrangement.”
Evelyn’s throat tightened.
“Me.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because of your mother.”
The words knocked the breath from her.
“My mother?”
Nathaniel studied her carefully.
“You know very little about her, don’t you?”
Evelyn’s chest went tight.
Her mother, Clara Parker, had died when Evelyn was six. That was what she had been told. A car accident on a rain-slicked road outside Providence. There were no photographs except one Evelyn kept hidden in a book, edges worn soft from years of touching.
“My mother has nothing to do with this.”
“She has everything to do with this.”
“No.”
Nathaniel’s gaze did not waver.
“Her name was not Clara Parker when she met your father.”
Evelyn shook her head.
“Stop.”
“She was Clara Whitmore.”
“I said stop.”
“She worked as a legal archivist for Hawthorne Holdings nineteen years ago.”
Evelyn backed away until her hip struck the altar.
The candles beside the mask fluttered.
Nathaniel’s voice remained calm, but quieter now.
“She found something she was not supposed to find.”
Evelyn pressed a hand to her stomach.
“You’re lying.”
“I wish I were.”
“My father would have told me.”
“Your father has spent most of his life surviving what he was afraid to remember.”
The words cut too close.
Evelyn looked toward the chapel doors, suddenly desperate to be out, away, anywhere this man’s voice could not follow.
Nathaniel did not move to stop her.
“That debt your father owed,” he said, “was not created by gambling alone.”
She froze.
“What?”
“Gambling made him vulnerable. But the contract that delivered you here was older than his addiction.”
“No.”
“Your mother stole a ledger from my grandfather. A record of forced transfers, false deaths, illegal inheritances, and names of every judge, banker, and police official who helped cover them. She tried to disappear with it.”
Evelyn’s hand tightened around the lace of her dress.
“Where is it?”
“No one knows.”
“Then why me?”
“Because my grandfather believed Clara gave it to someone. Your father. Or you. He arranged this marriage to bring you into the house where he could control you. Search you. Use you.”
Evelyn felt sick.
“But he died.”
“Yes.”
“And you still went through with it.”
Nathaniel’s eyes hardened.
“Because his allies did not die with him.”
The chapel doors suddenly groaned.
Evelyn flinched.
Nathaniel turned at once, his posture changing in a heartbeat. Whatever vulnerability had touched his voice vanished. He became all edges.
The doors opened.
Mr. Vale stood there.
He was not alone.
Behind him waited three men in dark suits.
Evelyn recognized one of them immediately.
He had been outside her apartment building two weeks ago, leaning against a black car, watching her carry groceries inside.
Mr. Vale smiled thinly.
“Forgive the interruption.”
Nathaniel’s face went blank.
“You were dismissed.”
“By you,” Vale said. “Not by the trustees.”
The three men entered.
Their shoes clicked softly against the stone.
Evelyn moved instinctively behind the altar, her fingers brushing the cold porcelain mask.
Nathaniel noticed but did not look at her.
Vale held up the leather folder.
“The marriage is complete. The condition has been satisfied. Now we may proceed with the transfer.”
“No,” Nathaniel said.
Vale’s smile did not move.
“I’m afraid yes.”
Nathaniel’s voice lowered.
“You know what happens if you try to force this.”
“I know what happens if you refuse.”
One of the men in suits closed the chapel doors.
The sound was soft.
Final.
Evelyn’s pulse spiked.
Nathaniel glanced at her then, just once.
It was not fear in his eyes.
It was warning.
Vale opened the folder and withdrew a second document.
“Mrs. Hawthorne,” he said, turning his attention to Evelyn. “Your signature is required.”
Evelyn stared at the paper.
“For what?”
“To acknowledge the terms of your marriage settlement.”
Nathaniel cut in. “Do not sign anything.”
Vale sighed.
“How dramatic.”
“What does it say?” Evelyn demanded.
The lawyer’s eyes glittered.
“It grants you security, protection, and financial comfort for life.”
Nathaniel laughed once, coldly.
“It makes you a legal vessel for restricted assets. A temporary holding point. Once she signs, they can move everything my grandfather hid into her name, then remove her when convenient.”
Evelyn’s blood turned cold.
“Remove?”
Vale looked mildly offended.
“Mr. Hawthorne has always had a flair for ugly interpretations.”
“Tell her what happened to Lydia Voss,” Nathaniel said.
Vale’s expression flickered.
“Or Margaret Ellery,” Nathaniel continued. “Or my mother.”
At that, the chapel changed.
The men in suits tensed.
Evelyn looked at Nathaniel.
“Your mother?”
His jaw tightened.
“She signed.”
The words fell heavily between them.
Vale closed the folder with deliberate care.
“This has gone far enough.”
Nathaniel reached into his coat.
All three men moved.
But he did not draw a weapon.
He drew an envelope.
Black.
Sealed in red wax.
Vale’s face drained of color.
Nathaniel held it up.
“My grandfather was many things,” he said. “Paranoid above all. He kept insurance against everyone. Even you.”
Vale stared at the envelope as if it were a loaded gun.
“You don’t know what that contains.”
“No,” Nathaniel said. “But you do.”
For the first time, Vale looked afraid.
Evelyn stood behind the altar, barely breathing.
The lawyer recovered quickly, but not completely.
“That envelope won’t save you.”
“It already has.”
Nathaniel turned slightly toward Evelyn.
“Take the mask,” he said.
“What?”
“Inside it.”
Evelyn looked down.
The porcelain mask lay beside the candles, its hollow eyes turned upward.
“Take it.”
Her fingers trembled as she lifted it.
It was heavier than she expected. Cold. Smooth. Almost damp.
“Inside,” Nathaniel repeated.
Evelyn turned it over.
At first she saw only silk padding. Then her thumb brushed a raised seam.
She pulled.
A hidden compartment opened with a soft click.
Inside was a folded strip of old paper, yellowed at the edges.
Evelyn drew it out.
Vale’s calm shattered.
“No!”
He lunged.
Nathaniel moved faster.
The cane struck Vale hard across the wrist. The lawyer cried out as the folder scattered across the floor, papers sliding over stone like frightened birds.
One of the suited men grabbed Nathaniel from behind.
The second rushed toward Evelyn.
She stumbled backward, clutching the paper. Her heel caught the hem of her gray dress and she nearly fell.
The man seized her arm.
Pain shot up to her shoulder.
“Give it,” he snarled.
Evelyn did not think.
She swung the porcelain mask.
It cracked against his face with a sound that made her stomach twist. He staggered, cursing, blood spilling from his nose.
Nathaniel drove his elbow into the man holding him and broke free.
“Evelyn!”
She turned.
He tossed her something small and silver.
She caught it by instinct.
A key.
“North tower,” he said. “Top room. Go.”
“What about you?”
“Go.”
The third man drew a knife.
The blade flashed beneath the stained glass.
Evelyn ran.
She tore down the aisle, gray dress gathered in one hand, the strip of paper and key crushed in the other. Behind her came the sounds of violence—grunts, a body hitting pews, Vale shouting orders.
She did not look back.
The chapel doors were heavy, but panic gave her strength. She dragged one open and slipped through into the corridor.
Hawthorne Manor stretched before her like a maze built by someone who hated escape.
Dark portraits lined the walls. Their painted eyes seemed to follow her. Chandeliers burned low. Rain lashed the windows. Somewhere deep in the house, a clock began to strike midnight.
Evelyn ran barefoot before she realized she had lost her shoes.
The marble bit cold into her soles.
North tower.
She had no idea where it was.
She turned left, then right, past a library with shelves rising into darkness, past a dining room set for a feast no one would eat, past a staircase curling upward like a spine.
Behind her, a door slammed.
Voices echoed.
“Find her!”
Evelyn’s lungs burned.
She saw a narrow corridor lined with blue tiles. At its end, a window faced the ocean. Lightning flashed, and in that white burst she saw a tower rising from the northern side of the manor.
There.
She ran toward it.
A locked iron gate blocked the stairwell.
Her fingers shook so badly she dropped the key once. It clattered against the stone. She snatched it up, jammed it into the lock, and turned.
The gate opened.
She slipped through and locked it behind her just as footsteps thundered into the corridor.
A man appeared on the other side.
The one she had struck with the mask.
Blood covered his upper lip.
He slammed both hands against the bars.
“You stupid girl.”
Evelyn backed up the first stair.
He smiled through the iron.
“You think he married you to save you?”
Her breath caught.
The man leaned closer.
“He married you because you’re the last piece.”
Evelyn turned and climbed.
The tower stairs spiraled upward, narrow and steep. The air grew colder with every step. Her dress snagged on rough stone; she tore it free. Her legs ached. Her lungs screamed.
Halfway up, she heard the gate below rattle.
They were trying other keys.
She climbed faster.
At the top was a wooden door, black with age.
The silver key fit.
Evelyn pushed inside.
The room beyond was circular, lit by a single lamp burning on a desk. Dust covered everything except the center of the room, where a large trunk sat open.
Someone had been there recently.
On the desk lay photographs, letters, newspaper clippings, and maps marked with red thread. Evelyn stepped closer, shivering.
Then she saw her mother.
Not in memory.
Not in the faded photograph hidden in her book.
Here.
Clara Parker—Clara Whitmore—stared up from a black-and-white photograph, younger than Evelyn had ever seen her, standing on the steps of Hawthorne Manor beside a woman with sad eyes and a boy of perhaps ten.
The boy had dark hair.
Gray eyes.
Nathaniel.
Evelyn picked up the photograph.
On the back, written in her mother’s hand, were four words:
Protect him if I can.
Evelyn’s throat closed.
A crash echoed below.
They had opened the gate.
She looked at the folded strip of paper in her hand.
Slowly, she unfolded it.
It was not a ledger.
It was a birth certificate.
Her eyes moved over the names once.
Then again.
The room seemed to vanish beneath her.
Child: Evelyn Grace Whitmore Hawthorne.
Mother: Clara Elise Whitmore.
Father: Nathaniel James Hawthorne.
Evelyn stopped breathing.
No.
No, no, no.
The paper shook violently in her hands.
Nathaniel James Hawthorne.
But which Nathaniel?
Her mind recoiled from the answer before it formed.
A floorboard creaked behind her.
Evelyn spun.
Nathaniel stood in the doorway.
His coat was torn at the shoulder. Blood darkened one side of his face, though whether it was his or someone else’s, she could not tell.
For a moment, he only looked at her.
Then his eyes dropped to the birth certificate.
His expression changed.
Not surprise.
Grief.
Evelyn backed away from him.
“What is this?”
He said nothing.
“What is this?” she screamed.
Footsteps pounded below, coming closer.
Nathaniel stepped into the room and closed the door behind him.
“Evelyn,” he said carefully, “listen to me.”
“No.”
“The name on that certificate is not what you think.”
“It says Hawthorne.”
“Yes.”
“It says Nathaniel James Hawthorne.”
His jaw tightened.
“My grandfather.”
The words landed like a blow.
Evelyn felt the world split open.
“That’s impossible.”
“No.”
“My father is Raymond Parker.”
“Raymond raised you.”
“Stop.”
“He loved your mother,” Nathaniel said. “Enough to run when she begged him. Enough to put his name on documents. Enough to hide you.”
Evelyn’s vision blurred.
“My father sold me.”
Nathaniel’s eyes darkened.
“Because Vale found him. Because the trustees knew fear would make him obedient.”
She shook her head, tears spilling hot down her face.
“No. That would mean…”
She could not finish.
Nathaniel looked at the birth certificate, then back at her.
“It means my grandfather didn’t bring you here to marry into the Hawthorne family,” he said.
The door trembled as someone struck it from the other side.
Nathaniel lowered his voice.
“He brought you here because you were already in it.”
Evelyn’s heart hammered.
The door shook again.
“Open this door!” Vale shouted from outside.
Nathaniel crossed to the trunk and pulled out a stack of files tied with black ribbon.
“Your mother hid the ledger in pieces,” he said. “Names. Accounts. Death certificates. Transfers. Everything needed to destroy them. But only a Hawthorne heir can open the central vault.”
Evelyn stared at him.
“No.”
“Yes.”
“I’m not helping you.”
“You don’t understand. It isn’t me who needs you.”
The pounding stopped.
Silence fell.
Too sudden.
Too complete.
Nathaniel froze.
Then a voice spoke from the other side of the door.
Not Vale.
Older.
Thin.
Familiar only because Evelyn had heard it once in a recording played by her father’s creditors.
“Open the door, Evelyn.”
Nathaniel went white.
Evelyn’s blood turned to ice.
The voice continued, soft and patient.
“My dear child. We have waited a long time to welcome you home.”
Evelyn looked at Nathaniel.
For the first time since she had met him, fear lived openly on his face.
“Nathaniel,” she whispered, “who is that?”
He did not answer.
The brass doorknob slowly turned.
And from the hallway came the voice of the man everyone had sworn was dead.
Nathaniel James Hawthorne Senior.
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