"Mr. Thorne," a Coast Guard official said, his voice low and heavy with practiced solemnity. "There were no survivors."
The words were clear. They hung in the cold morning mist, but they didn't penetrate the fog in Julian's mind. He felt his throat tighten, a dry, useless muscle. He gave no reply.
His assistant, Ethan Price, materialized at his side, his face pale. He held a phone like a shield.
"The board is..." Ethan began, his voice a nervous whisper.
Julian's head snapped toward him. His eyes, usually the color of a winter sky, were shot through with red. The look was so savage, so utterly devoid of the controlled man he was supposed to be, that Ethan flinched and fell silent.
The scene replayed in his head. A loop of torment.
Adaline, standing in the doorway of their sterile mansion. Her green eyes, usually so full of a light he'd refused to see, were hollow. Empty.
"You'll regret this, Julian."
He had laughed then. A short, dismissive sound. He'd thought it was just another one of her dramatic attempts to get his attention, another scene in the three-year play of their marriage.
Now, her words were a curse, echoing with the relentless crash of the waves against the shore.
A detective approached, his expression grim. "We're suspecting faulty wiring, but we can't rule out..."
"Find her," Julian cut him off. His voice was a raw scrape, a sound he didn't recognize as his own.
The sun climbed higher, a pale, indifferent disk in the sky. It burned away the mist on the water but did nothing to warm the chill that had settled deep in his bones. He refused to leave. He just stood there, watching the wreckage of the Serenity being towed slowly, painfully, toward the shore.
It was just a blackened skeleton of a yacht. His yacht. The one he'd bought her as a second-anniversary gift, a grand gesture to paper over a chasm of indifference.
He started to remember things he had spent years trying to forget.
The way she'd hum, slightly off-key, while she cooked dinners he rarely came home for. The ridiculously bright tie she'd bought for his birthday, which he'd never worn. The way her hand would search for his in the night, a touch he'd always pulled away from.
A sharp, physical pain lanced through his chest. It wasn't grief. Not yet. It was something colder, sharper.
Panic.
It was late afternoon when a diver surfaced from the murky water near the salvaged hull. He carried a small, sealed evidence bag. He handed it to the lead detective, who examined its contents before walking slowly toward Julian.
The detective's face was a mask of professional pity. He held up the bag.
Inside, nestled in the plastic, was a platinum band. The fire had warped it slightly, but the inscription on the inner circle was still visible, catching a weak glint of sunlight.
J&A Forever.
Her wedding ring.
The air left Julian's lungs in a single, silent rush. He felt the world tilt on its axis. The sounds of the beach-the gulls, the waves, the quiet murmurs of the police-faded into a dull roar.
The last fragile thread of his denial snapped.
He reached out a hand, his fingers trembling uncontrollably. He brushed the cold plastic of the bag, a barrier between his touch and the last piece of her.
He stumbled back a step, his body suddenly weightless, boneless.
Ethan reached for him. "Sir..."
Julian shoved him away, a violent, unthinking motion. His knees gave out. He crashed down onto the cold, damp sand.
For a moment, there was only the sound of his ragged breathing.
Then, a noise tore from his throat. It wasn't a cry or a scream. It was a raw, guttural roar of pure agony, the sound of a man being ripped apart from the inside out. The sound of a world ending.
Adaline Sinclair.
His wife.
She was gone.