
The Mitchells' Costly Mistake
Chapter 1
The gravel crunched beneath my tires as I guided my car down the familiar, overgrown lane toward Grandma's farmhouse. Afternoon sunlight filtered through the branches of the massive oak that had stood sentinel over the property for generations. I parked beside it, just as I always had during those childhood summers when this place had been my only real home.
My fingers tightened around the steering wheel. I wasn't ready for this—to face the emptiness, to acknowledge that she was truly gone. The modest white farmhouse with its wraparound porch looked exactly as it always had, deceptively unchanged. Only I knew what secrets it held beneath its weathered clapboards: the hidden communications hub of Safe Harbor, the classified intelligence operation I managed remotely for Homeland Security.
I took a deep breath, steeling myself. This was supposed to be a solemn day of preparation—arranging Grandma's memorial service, honoring her with the dignity she deserved. That was the only promise that mattered now.
As I stepped through the front door, the scent hit me first—artificial floral perfume overlaying the familiar smell of Grandma's lemon furniture polish. But something was wrong. The living room, where her body had lain just days before, had been transformed.
I froze in the doorway, unable to process what I was seeing.
Pastel pink and blue banners stretched across the ceiling, proclaiming in glittering letters: "Congratulations, Claire & Ryan!" A table had been set up with champagne flutes and a tiered cake stand. Framed engagement portraits—photos I'd never posed for, clearly manipulated—glinted under the chandelier Grandma had always been so proud of.
Madison Parker turned from arranging flowers, her blonde hair perfectly styled, her smile as artificial as the roses she held. "Claire! Finally! We were beginning to think you'd gotten lost." Her voice dripped with saccharine sweetness that didn't reach her eyes.
"What is this?" My voice came out as a whisper, shock momentarily overriding the rage building inside me.
"The engagement party, silly!" Madison gestured around the room. "Ryan thought it would be the perfect way to cheer everyone up after all the sadness. I've been planning it for days!"
My gaze shifted to Ryan Mitchell, lounging in my grandmother's favorite armchair as if he owned it. The man I'd never met before today—my supposed fiancé—didn't even bother to stand when I entered. He merely raised his beer bottle in lazy acknowledgment.
"You're late," he said flatly. "Mom's been calling you all morning."
Something snapped inside me. I crossed the room in three strides and ripped down the nearest banner, the sound of tearing paper slicing through the silence.
"Get out." My voice was deadly calm, the same tone I used when directing field agents through crisis situations. "Get out of my grandmother's house. Now."
Madison's mouth fell open. "Excuse me?"
"My grandmother died three days ago." I turned to face Ryan, who was finally standing, his expression darkening. "This room is where she took her last breath. And you've turned it into... this?"
Ryan's lips curled into a sneer. "Look, orphan girl, I don't know what your problem is, but you should be grateful my family's even acknowledging you. This engagement was my parents' idea, not mine."
"Grateful?" I repeated, the word tasting like poison.
"Yeah, grateful." He stepped closer, towering over me, clearly accustomed to intimidating women with his size. "The Mitchells own half this town. You're lucky to be associated with us. Now calm down and stop making a scene. Madison's worked hard on this."
Madison slid beside him, her hand possessively wrapping around his arm as she shot me a triumphant smile. "Ryan's right, Claire. This is for your benefit, after all. Everyone knows how lonely you must be now."
I stood perfectly still, my training kicking in as I cataloged exits, assessed threats, and calculated my next move. These people had no idea who they were dealing with. They saw only what I'd allowed the world to see—a quiet granddaughter, a nobody.
They had no idea they'd just declared war on Falcon.
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