Lily’s Perspective
The phone rang as I was staring into a stone-cold cup of coffee, my mind a tangled, useless knot. Ethan sat across from me, gripping a useless investigative report, his knuckles white.
When the unfamiliar male voice came through the speaker, introducing himself as "Liam Thornton, of the Northwatch Sentinels," and stating, "Aurora is with me. She’s safe and being returned," my ceramic mug slipped from my hand and thudded onto the thick carpet. Dark coffee bloomed into an ugly stain, but I barely registered it.
*Safe? Aurora is safe?*
A wave of dizzying, overwhelming relief crashed through the dam of anxiety I’d built over days. I shot to my feet, my voice sharp and trembling, unfamiliar even to me. "Where is she?! Let me talk to her! Now!"
"She’s right here. Tired, but physically okay. Just a moment, ma’am." The man, Liam, sounded infuriatingly calm, almost businesslike.
Then, I heard her.
"Mom...?"
Just that one syllable. Husky. Uncertain. Fragile with the aftermath of an ordeal. It pierced right through my façade. Tears streamed down my face. I clamped a hand over my mouth to stifle a sob. "Baby... Aurora, my baby... Are you alright? Really alright?" I was babbling. Ethan was beside me in an instant, his arm tight around my shoulders, pressing his ear close to the phone. His breathing was ragged.
"I’m okay, Mom. Really. Just... tired." Her voice steadied, even trying for a hint of her usual, maddening nonchalance. "A... uh... ’good Samaritan’ got me out. We’re on our way back."
We asked a few more frantic questions, confirming no serious injuries. The call was brief. Liam took the phone back, gave a concise ETA and location, and hung up.
Ethan and I stood there for a long moment, holding each other, silent. The only sound was our choked, shuddering breaths. The Sword of Damocles that had been hanging over our heads for days had lifted. At least halfway.
But honestly, I didn’t truly believe it until I saw her.
When the dark grey Model X pulled into the estate’s front drive, when the door opened and my daughter—pale, dark circles under her eyes, wearing ill-fitting sweats, vivid red marks on her wrists and ankles, but *alive*, her eyes bright—stumbled out, the cold, hard block of ice lodged in my chest finally cracked and melted away.
I was across the gravel before I knew it, any pretense of pack matriarch composure gone. I crushed her to me, holding her so tight I thought I might fuse her back into my very bones. My girl. My Aurora. I kissed her hair, her forehead, her cheeks, over and over, my lips feeling the warmth and faint tremor of her skin. I breathed in deep, the unique scent of my child cutting through the alien smells, the faint chemical taint, the residue of fear. She was here. Whole.
"Mom..." she mumbled into my shoulder, her arms coming around my waist, stiff at first, then tightening. I felt her body relax, felt the suppressed shudder of a sob.
"It’s alright, it’s alright, you’re home, you’re home..." I murmured, my tears wetting her hair.
Ethan stood behind us, one hand a heavy weight on my shoulder, the other stroking Aurora’s hair. His eyes were rimmed red, his Adam’s apple working. It took him a moment to rasp out, "Welcome home, kid."
Eventually, I loosened my hold, though I kept a firm grip on her arm, as if she might vanish. Only then did I turn my attention to the young man who had been waiting patiently by the car.
Not everyone could maintain that veneer of calm.
My heart clenched. Aurora was home, thank every power that be. But Brett... that boy was family. Selena and Jacob’s whole world.
"We are not stopping the search for Brett. Not for a second," Ethan said, his voice steely with resolve, addressing Selena and Jacob as much as Liam. "Every resource. Every corner. Mr. Thornton, if you uncover *anything*, no matter how minor, you contact us immediately."
Liam gave a solemn nod. "Of course. I’ll be in touch."
He stayed a few minutes longer, answering our limited questions about Aurora’s condition and the Pandora Institute with careful, revealing-yet-concealing precision. Then, with polite farewells, he drove away in his silent electric car.
Watching his car disappear down the tree-lined drive, I turned, wrapping an arm around Aurora’s shoulders, guiding her toward the warmth and light of the house. Our recovered treasure needed comfort and rest.
But in my heart, the cloud of questions about Liam Thornton, the Northwatch Sentinels, and what might truly lie behind all this didn’t dissipate. It gathered.
The gratitude was real.
So was the suspicion.
It was all a little too neat. Until we found Brett, until we understood the full story, we couldn’t afford to let our guard down.

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