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"Your perimeter authentication is single-layer," Lex says, scrolling through something on Sully's screen. "If someone clones a biometric signature, and we know from experience that's possible, they walk through your entire system with one credential."

Sully pushes his glasses up. "I built redundancy into the?—"

"You built redundancy into thealertprotocol. Not theaccessprotocol. Those are different problems."

Sully opens his mouth. Closes it. Opens it again. Looks at me.

I shrug. "Don't look at me. She's right."

"She's always right," Sully mutters, but he's already pulling the laptop back and typing furiously, which is Sully forI'm impressed and I hate it.

Vivian leans across the table toward me with her wine glass. "Your girlfriend just made Sully rewrite his own security system at dinner. She's the scariest mom friend I've ever had."

"She's not a mom."

"She told Elena to use her inside voice yesterday and Elenalistened. She's a mom. She's just skipping the biological part."

Across the table, Lex hasn't heard any of this. She's already moved on from Sully because Elena has abandoned her wooden spoon command post and climbed into Lex's lap. Lex shifts the laptop aside without looking, makes room, and continues reading Sully's firewall logs with a toddler's head against her chest. One hand on the trackpad. The other absently smoothing Elena's hair.

She doesn't notice me watching. That's the thing. She does this so naturally now that she doesn't register it as remarkable. Nine months ago, she showed up at my cabin with four suitcases and a look that dared me to comment on the volume of luggage. I carried all four inside without a word. Cleared half the closet. Gave her three of my four dresser drawers. Watched her hang her suits next to my flannels and line her heels up beneath my hiking boots and thought:this is what the rest of my life looks like.

She'd hired a COO to handle day-to-day operations at Morrison Pharma, opened the Whisper Vale satellite office she'd designed herself — sleek, modern, the kind of building that makes the rest of Main Street look like it wandered out of an old Western — and rearranged her entire empire so she could be here. On my mountain. In my cabin. Three days a week at the office, one monthly board meeting in San Francisco, and every other minute in a world that has nothing in common with corner offices and conference tables.

Natalie holds up the proof copy of her book and shows Lex the dedication page. "What do you think?"

Lex leans forward, Elena still in her lap, and reads. Her expression shifts. A flicker of something soft that she pulls back almost immediately, but not before I catch it.

"'To Aunt Lex, who taught Lily that being in charge is a superpower,'" Lex reads aloud. She clears her throat. "That's... very generous, Natalie."

"It's accurate," Natalie says.

"Lily is a fictional fox."

"Lily is a fictional fox who runs the entire forest. I wonder where I got the inspiration." Natalie grins, and Lex does the thing she does when she's genuinely moved and doesn't want anyone to know — she takes a sip of water and changes the subject.

"Cade, is there more stew?"

Cade's already up, ladle in hand, because Cade tracks who's eating at this table the way Sully tracks network traffic. He refills her bowl and sets a piece of bread beside it, the sourdough Natalie's been perfecting, and Lex eats with one hand while Elena dozes against her shoulder.

Deck watches from the head of the table. He catches my eye and holds it for a beat.

A year ago, the man pulled me off her protective detail and told me my judgment was compromised. A month after that, Lex sat in his briefing room and identified three vulnerabilities in our client intake process that none of us had caught. Deck looked at me across the table. I looked back. He gave me a single nod, and that was that.

Mace told me later that Deck said, "She's smarter than all of us combined, and she chose Hayes. That either speaks well of him or poorly of her, and she doesn't make bad decisions."

Tonight, Deck's look isn't assessment. It's something closer to recognition. One man who found his person looking at another man who found his.

I look back at Lex. Elena's fully asleep now, one small fist wrapped around the collar of Lex's sweater. Lex is listening to Sadie pitch her on appearing in a video about "female executiveswho embrace the outdoor lifestyle" with an expression of such polite horror that Vivian is hiding her laugh behind her wine glass.

"Absolutely not," Lex says, and the elegant finality in those two words makes Sadie throw her head back and cackle, which wakes Jake, which makes Wolfe shoot Sadie a look that she answers by kissing his cheek.

Lex's eyes find mine across the table. Just for a second. The boardroom mask is down and underneath it she's warm, tired, content. Her mouth curves. Not her public smile. The real one. The one that reaches her eyes and softens every sharp edge.

It’s time for the ring to move from the draw to my pocket.

Soon.

Lex ison the porch with her laptop and her coffee, because even on a Saturday, Alexandra Morrison works. But the work looks different now than it did a year ago. She's in my flannel shirt, bare legs tucked under her on the Adirondack chair I built last summer, and her platinum hair is loose around her shoulders. No makeup. Reading glasses perched on her nose. The ones I drove nine hours to return, the ones she now leaves on my nightstand because it's her nightstand too.