The grand hall of the Harrington Naval Club shimmered like a scene from a storybook—crystal chandeliers reflected light across the polished marble floors, white roses adorned every table, and silver trays gleamed with carefully arranged hors d’oeuvres. A towering banner celebrated my father’s retirement from his defense firm, a company whose contracts had shaped my family’s reputation for generations. Navy officers, senators, contractors, and long-time family friends mingled, clinking glasses and exchanging congratulations. The air was filled with the low hum of polite chatter, the kind of sophisticated noise that made even the most confident person lean in just a little to be heard.
And then, there was me. Evelyn Harrington.
For five long years, I had vanished from the world my family had meticulously constructed. For five years, I had been painted in whispers as unstable, ungrateful, a shadow of the girl they claimed to know. But tonight, the story would change.
