“Which is?”
He looked toward the trailer.
Then back at me.
“The disciplinary archive under alumni hall burned thirty minutes ago.”
Cold spread through me instantly.
Not panic.
Calculation.
Too fast.
Halpern moved too fast.
The agent continued:
“Campus security called it an electrical fire.”
“Of course they did.”
“But here’s the strange part.”
He handed me a printed photograph from inside his coat.
Smoke poured from a basement stairwell beneath alumni hall.
Students gathered outside.
Fire crews arriving.
And standing near the edge of the crowd—
Maya.
My blood stopped.
“No.”
The timestamp read nineteen minutes earlier.
Impossible.
Maya was supposed to be in ICU.
Sedated.
Barely conscious.
Yet there she stood in hospital sweats beside the burning building.
And next to her—
a tall man in a dark coat holding her upright.
The valet.
Samir.
Alive.
The agent looked directly at me.
“Your daughter left the hospital two hours ago.”
The Fire Beneath Alumni Hall
For one full second, I forgot how to breathe.
The photograph trembled slightly in my hand beneath the flickering porch light outside June Pike’s trailer.
Maya.
Standing beside a burning building she was never supposed to reach alive.
Hospital bracelet still on her wrist.
Bruises visible even in grainy print.
And Samir—
alive.
Not disappeared.
Not buried.
Alive and holding my daughter upright while smoke climbed into the winter sky behind them.
The federal agent watched my face carefully.
“You didn’t know.”
Not a question.
“No.”
My voice came out colder than the January air.
“She was under observation.”
“She checked herself out against medical advice.”
Of course she did.
My daughter inherited every reckless survival instinct I spent years trying to bury.
Behind us, agents shoved the contractors into separate SUVs while June Pike finally opened the trailer door holding the shotgun against one hip.
Nora stood behind her pale as paper.
The lead agent noticed immediately.
“That’s Nora?”
“Yes.”
He studied her for a moment.
Then motioned another female agent forward.
“You’ll come with us tonight.”
Nora stiffened.
“No.”
The agent softened his tone slightly.
“Miss Pike, those men came prepared for extraction.”
Nora’s eyes flicked toward the open SUV trunk.
Zip ties.
Bleach.
Gas can.
Her face went gray.
I stepped closer before panic swallowed her entirely.
“You trust me?”
Nora nodded instantly.
“Then listen carefully.
Go with them.
Do not use your phone.
Do not call anyone except June.
And if anyone asks about the drive—”
Her hand moved instinctively toward the chain beneath her sweatshirt.
“I never had it.”
“Good.”
The lead agent glanced between us.
“What drive?”
I looked directly at him.
“The kind people burn buildings over.”
That answer was enough for now.
He didn’t press.
Also good.
Professional men know when information arrives in layers.
I handed the photograph back carefully.
“I need transport.”
The agent stared at me.
“To the fire?”
“To my daughter.”
“You’re not operational federal personnel anymore.”
I almost smiled.
“Neither is a wolf after retirement.
Still dangerous.”
That earned the faintest reaction from him.
Tiny.
Respect maybe.
Or concern.
He finally nodded toward the second SUV.
“Five minutes.
Then we move.”
Inside the vehicle smelled like cold leather, coffee, and weapons oil.
Familiar enough to stir old reflexes before I forced them down again.
Sarah.
Remember Sarah.
Not Raven.
Not tonight.
I sat in the back seat studying every inch of the alumni hall fire photo while the agent drove hard through snow-dark roads toward campus.
“Maya planned this,” I said finally.
The agent glanced at me through the mirror.
“Why?”
“Because she left the hospital for the archive.”
“She could barely stand.”
“She still went.”
I stared at the image again.
My daughter looked terrified.
Exhausted.
But determined.
Exactly like me at twenty-two.
That realization chilled me deeper than the winter roads.
“Your daughter’s file was flagged two years ago,” the agent said quietly.
I looked up sharply.
“What?”
“She started requesting restricted campus incident reports connected to donor families.”
Pride and fear collided violently inside my chest.
“She was investigating them.”
“Yes.”
The agent gripped the wheel tighter.
“Which means someone noticed her long before the gala.”
Jesus Christ.
Maya didn’t stumble into danger.
She walked toward it knowingly.
The campus skyline appeared through falling snow twenty minutes later.
Emergency lights painted the night red and blue.
Smoke still poured from beneath alumni hall while students gathered behind barricades filming everything with phones.
Modern civilization.
Nothing burns privately anymore.
The SUV rolled past campus security after the lead agent flashed credentials through the window.
I stepped out before the vehicle fully stopped.
Cold air hit hard.
The fire smelled wrong.
Not accidental electrical smoke.
Accelerant.
Fast burn.
Intentional.
Firefighters moved around the lower stairwell entrance while reporters shouted questions from behind police tape.
Then I saw her.
Maya sat wrapped in a silver emergency blanket beside an ambulance.
Samir crouched next to her speaking urgently while a paramedic tried unsuccessfully to convince both of them to return to the hospital.
The moment Maya saw me, her face crumpled.
Not fear.
Relief.
“Mom.”
I crossed the distance fast enough that the paramedic stepped backward automatically.
Then I stopped directly in front of her.
Because anger came first.
Not kindness.
Not comfort.
Pure furious terror.
“What the hell were you thinking?”
Maya flinched visibly.
Good.
She should.
“You left intensive care.”
“I had to.”
“You could barely breathe.”
“They were destroying evidence.”
Her voice broke hard on the last word.
Samir stood slowly beside her.
Tall.
Lean.
Dark curls damp from snow.
One eye swollen purple.
Not a valet anymore.
A survivor.
He looked exhausted enough to collapse standing up.
But his posture shifted subtly between me and Maya anyway.
Protective.
Interesting.
“You’re Samir.”
“Yes ma’am.”
“Did you help my daughter escape a hospital?”
His expression tightened.
“Yes.”
“Good.”
Both of them blinked.
I crouched in front of Maya immediately afterward and pulled her carefully into my arms.
Then finally—
finally—
I let myself shake a little.
Not much.
Just enough for my daughter to feel it.
“Maya,” I whispered against her hair.
“You do not get to die trying to prove monsters exist.”
Her body trembled beneath the emergency blanket.
“I thought if they burned the archive—”
“I know.”
I pulled back enough to look at her battered face.
Bruises along the jaw.
Stitches above her eyebrow.
Finger-shaped marks near her throat.
Rage returned instantly.
“What happened here tonight?”
Maya looked toward alumni hall.
“Samir got the message first.”
I turned toward him.
“What message?”
He reached into his coat slowly and handed me a cheap prepaid phone.
One text remained open:
FIRE CLEANUP 9PM.
ARCHIVE LEVEL.
NO SURVIVORS THIS TIME.
My blood ran cold.
No survivors this time.
Not evidence destruction.
Execution plan.
Samir rubbed tiredly at his bruised face.
“I worked parking for the gala.
One of the security guys accidentally left his second phone in my car that night.”
“Whose phone?”
“Dean Halpern’s assistant.”
Interesting.
Very interesting.
Samir continued:
“I kept it because after what happened to Maya…
nothing felt accidental anymore.”
Smart man.
“They started texting tonight about cleanup.
I knew they meant the archive.”
Maya took over quietly.
“He came to the hospital because Nora told him where I was.”
I glanced sharply at Samir.
“You found Nora?”
He nodded.
“She contacted me through campus workers.
Told me the drive survived.”
Good girl.
Even terrified, Nora kept moving information.
“What was in the archive?” I asked.
Maya’s expression darkened immediately.
“Everything.”
Behind us, alumni hall groaned as part of the lower level collapsed inward beneath flame and water.
Students screamed.
Firefighters shouted.
Smoke burst violently through shattered basement windows.
Maya stared at it with tears burning openly now.
“They kept recordings.”
The world narrowed instantly.
“What kind?”
Her voice nearly disappeared.
“Assaults.
Threats.
Settlement meetings.”
My hands clenched automatically.
“They filmed girls?”
Maya nodded once.
“For leverage.”
Samir spoke quietly beside her.
“Not all the boys knew.”
I looked at him sharply.
“You sure?”
“Yes.”
“How?”
“Because Preston Vance panicked when he saw the cameras.”
Interesting.
That mattered.
Predators fracture under pressure.
Not all wolves understand the full shape of the pack.
Maya swallowed painfully.
“Dean Halpern kept copies downstairs.
Private insurance.”
Insurance.
Of course.
People like Halpern never protect evil from loyalty.
They protect it for leverage.
I looked toward the burning building again.
“How much survived?”
Maya reached slowly beneath the emergency blanket.
Then handed me a soot-covered hard drive.
My pulse slowed immediately.
“There were backups.”
Smart girl.
Brilliant reckless impossible girl.
“You went into a burning building for this?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Her good eye filled instantly.
“Because Lila killed herself last spring.”
Silence.
Absolute.
Even the sirens seemed farther away suddenly.
“What?”
Maya’s voice cracked apart.
“She didn’t transfer voluntarily.
She jumped off a parking garage in Arizona six months later.”
Jesus.
God Jesus.
Samir looked away sharply.
Maya continued through tears:
“Her parents signed nondisclosure papers after the school paid them.
Nobody talked about her again.”
The fire reflected in Maya’s swollen eye while snow drifted through smoke above us.
My daughter had been carrying dead girls alone while attending classes beside their predators.
No wonder she kept digging.
No wonder she walked back into danger bleeding.
The lead federal agent approached quickly through the chaos.
“We’ve got another issue.”
“When don’t we?”
He handed me a tablet displaying live news footage.
A press conference.
Elias Vance stood behind microphones beside Judge Greer and Dean Halpern.
Perfect coats.
Controlled expressions.
Power dressed for television.
Elias spoke calmly into cameras:
“This tragic fire appears connected to a mentally unstable student suffering from substance-related trauma.”
My entire body went still.
No.
Not even close to still.
Dangerous.
Onscreen, Dean Halpern added:
“We urge the public not to spread misinformation while the university cooperates fully with authorities.”
Maya made a broken sound beside me.
“They’re blaming me.”
Judge Greer stepped to the podium next.
“The young woman involved has experienced documented emotional instability since adolescence.”
I froze.
Then slowly looked at Maya.
Her face had gone completely white.
“What does he mean?”
Maya didn’t answer……………………………