




Chapter 2: The Return
Irene had sworn she would never return to Silver City.
For five years, she'd built a new life in R Country, establishing herself under the radar while raising her brilliant children. She'd had no intention of ever stepping foot in that glittering metropolis again, where the Sterling name still opened doors and crushed careers with equal ease.
But then the letter came.
Her grandfather's personal secretary had written with trembling hands—the old Sterling patriarch's health was failing. Three hospitalizations in the past month alone. The doctors were baffled. Her father John Sterling had followed up with a terse email demanding she return to formally dissolve her engagement to Richard Vein, but it was her grandfather's condition that finally made her decision.
She owed him everything. When the pregnancy scandal had erupted five years ago, he alone had stood by her, arranging her escape to R Country and ensuring she and the triplets would be provided for. Now he needed her—not just as his granddaughter, but as the talented surgeon she'd become.
And so here she was, watching Silver City's familiar skyline through the business class window, her reflection ghosting against the dark clouds below. A gentle tug at her sleeve pulled her from her thoughts. "Mom?" Alex, her eldest by seven minutes, peered at her with those strangely familiar eyes that still made her wonder. His cherubic face, framed by dark curls and dimpled cheeks that made flight attendants coo over him, belied the sharp intelligence in his gaze. "Are you worried about seeing Great-grandfather?"
Before she could answer, Lucas chimed in from her other side, his small face serious. "The Silver City Chronicle says he's been in and out of the hospital three times this month."
"How did you—" Irene started, then shook her head with a wry smile. Of course. Her middle child's uncanny ability to access any information he wanted, financial or otherwise, had long since ceased to surprise her. "We've talked about hacking into private records, sweetheart."
"It wasn't private," Lucas protested, the picture of innocence. "It was on their subscriber-only section."
"Which you subscribed to?" Irene raised an eyebrow.
A small cough from Lily, her daughter and youngest triplet, interrupted what was clearly going to be a creative explanation from Lucas. "Mom, shouldn't we talk about what to say to Great-grandfather? It's our first time meeting him in person."
Irene's expression softened. "Remember what we practiced," she said, smoothing Lily's dark curls. "He's very traditional, but also very kind. Just be yourselves—respectful, but natural."
"We'll make you proud, Mom," Alex promised, his small shoulders straightening. At five, he already carried himself with a gravity that sometimes broke her heart. All three of them had grown up too fast, too aware of their precarious position in the world.
"You already do, darling. Every day." She touched each of their faces in turn, marveling as always at how they'd inherited her dark hair but those distinctive eyes that nagged at her memory.
"Mom?" Alex's voice had turned hesitant. "Are we... are we staying in Silver City? After we see Great-grandfather?"
Irene chose her words carefully. "For now, yes. Great-grandfather needs medical attention, and I want to help him." As a renowned surgeon—though that reputation was known to few outside her family—she knew she could help improve the old man's condition.
"Then maybe..." Alex exchanged quick glances with his siblings, a silent communication passing between them. "Maybe you should consider Mr. Haven's offer?"
Irene stiffened. "How do you know about that?"
"I saw it on the dark web forums," Alex explained, his sweet, childish voice contrasting sharply with his words as he hugged his teddy bear closer. His eyes lit up with the thrill of his discovery, making him look momentarily like any excited five-year-old rather than the prodigy who could breach corporate firewalls between nap time and snacks. "Haven Enterprise posted an encrypted request—one million dollars for a series of consultations with their CEO. The message has been circulating in some really exclusive hacker channels. That's a lot of money, Mom."
"Which we could really use," Lily added softly. "Especially since..."
"Since my tech stock portfolio had some unexpected losses," Lucas finished, studying his shoes with sudden intense interest. The picture of childhood innocence in his sailor suit and perfectly combed hair, he could have been practicing for a child modeling catalog—if not for the complex financial terminology flowing effortlessly from his rosebud lips.
Irene's eyes narrowed. Her children were brilliant, but subtle they were not. "The same portfolio that was up 40% last month?"
Three identical looks of innocence met her gaze, their angelic faces—still carrying traces of baby roundness—masking minds that operated far beyond their years. She sighed, knowing exactly what they were doing. Ever since the mysterious CEO of Haven Enterprise had posted that astronomical consulting fee, they'd been trying to push her toward accepting it. She strongly suspected they had their own agenda—one that had nothing to do with money and everything to do with their ongoing private investigation into their paternity.
"We'll discuss it after we're settled," she said firmly. "Right now, let's focus on—"
A slight turbulence rocked the plane, making the children giggle. Irene smiled, but her mind drifted to what awaited them in Silver City. Anna Claire would still be there, no doubt, the girl who had unwittingly taken Irene's place in the Sterling family for twenty years due to a hospital mix-up. Now legally the Sterlings' adopted daughter, Anna had never forgiven Irene for reclaiming her true identity.
And John Sterling... her father in blood only, who had cast her out five years ago without a second thought.
---
In the first class cabin ahead, Thomas approached his employer's seat with careful steps. The Haven Enterprise CEO sat reviewing documents on his tablet, his aristocratic profile highlighted by the cabin's soft lighting. Dark hair fell carelessly across his forehead, framing upturned eyes that might have seemed almost delicate if not for their penetrating intensity.
"Sir, about the doctor..."
"Not found?" Adam Haven's voice was quiet but carried an unmistakable note of authority.
"No, Mr. Haven. The specialist seems to have gone completely off-grid five years ago. We've tried every medical conference roster, every private clinic. It's like they vanished."
Adam's long fingers tapped once against the armrest—the only sign of his frustration. "Double the offer. Triple it if necessary." As Thomas retreated, Adam turned to the window, his reflection showing features that had graced countless magazine covers—the straight aristocratic nose, the sculptured lips, the distinctive phoenix-like eyes that could shift from smoldering to arctic in an instant.
Eyes, unknown to him, that were identical to those of three children sitting just a few rows behind in business class.
The plane banked slightly, beginning its descent into Silver City. And somewhere below, in a stately mansion on the outskirts of the city, an old man sat in his study, checking his watch and allowing himself a small, satisfied smile. The pieces were finally moving into place.