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The autumn wind off the East Coast cut through Abigail's secondhand jacket like it had a personal grudge.
She stood at Boston South Station gripping the frayed handles of her canvas bag, spine pressed against a concrete pillar, watching the city move like a current she hadn't been invited into. Men in tailored suits. Women in sharp trench coats. Leather shoes clicking against stone with the easy confidence of people who had never once doubted they belonged somewhere.
Abigail had been practicing her smile for three weeks.
She'd rehearsed it in the cracked bathroom mirror of her foster family's house in rural Ohio. A smile that said: I'm not asking for much. Just a chance. She'd told herself blood was blood. That it had to count for something.
The black Cadillac Escalade rolled into the pickup zone. The tires made a low, expensive sound on the asphalt.
The passenger door opened.
He was tall, with a sharp jaw and the rigid posture of someone who had been corrected his entire life until good posture became indistinguishable from coldness. A dark blue Ivy League blazer. Not a wrinkle on it.
Hank. Her biological brother. She had only ever seen him in one photograph.
Her heart slammed against her ribs. She took a breath, pulled up her practiced smile, and stepped forward.
Hank's eyes swept her once. They stopped — just for a fraction of a second — on her washed-out jeans and the scuffed toes of her sneakers.
The muscle in his jaw ticked.
Abigail saw it. The raw, unfiltered disgust. Her foot froze mid-step. The smile she had spent three weeks building crumbled off her face.
Then it was gone. Hank blinked, and in its place was a flawless, practiced gentleman's expression. He closed the distance between them in long, unhurried strides and stopped exactly two feet away. He gave a single curt nod.
"Welcome home."
"Thank you," Abigail whispered.
Her thick rural accent landed in the cold air between them like a stone dropped in still water. Hank's eyes darkened. He reached out, his immaculately manicured fingers lightly pinching the frayed strap of her canvas bag.
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