My eyes shift from my watch to the familiar city landmarks that pass us by. I tap my foot impatiently. Weâre getting closer, the surroundings getting more and more familiar, but it still feels like we arenât moving fast enough.
Damn flight delay. I spent all month ensuring that Iâd have a full week off and that Iâd get here in time. It shouldnât have taken me more than six hours to get from California to Miami, but it ended up taking almost all day.
My patience is wearing thin by the time we pull up in front of Noahâs house. Noah is a lot like me. Neither one of us has a lot of friends. Hell, weâre probably each otherâs only friend. I hate the thought of him expecting me, and me keeping him waiting â on his birthday, no less.
I place my suitcase by the front door and press the doorbell, reaching into my pocket to retrieve the two season tickets I bought him. Iâm not really into football, but Noah is obsessed. A few years ago, tickets like these were nothing but a dream, but now? Now there isnât much thatâs out of reach for me.
Noah opens the door, a wide grin on his face. He looks thrilled, and to this day, it still surprises me that someone could be so genuinely happy to see me.
âHappy birthday, buddy,â I say, holding up my gift for him. âIâm sorry Iâm late.â
Noahâs eyes widen and he snatches the tickets out of my hand. He looked happy to see me, but he looks even happier to see these tickets. I shake my head and smile.
âNo way,â he says, holding up his gift. âAre they real?â
âOf course they are.â I chuckle. âYou can keep both so you can take someone with you. Your schedule is insane, so I figured season tickets were my best bet. Youâre busier than I am, man.â
He smiles at his tickets and nods at me as he puts them away. âI canât wait to drag you to the next game,â he says, leading me into the house. âYouâll learn to enjoy it at some point.â
I look around, unable to wipe the smile off my face. Stepping foot in this place still feels like coming home, even though Iâve never lived here.
This house is filled with warmth. It always has been. It isnât just a house, itâs a home in every sense of the word. Noah and his little sister made sure of it.
Itâs nothing like my penthouse apartment. No matter how much money I spend on it or how I decorate it, itâll never feel like this place does.
I frown when I realize that itâs uncharacteristically quiet. âWhere is Aria?â I ask involuntarily.
I place my suitcase at the bottom of the stairs, my eyes falling to the family photos on the wall. Just like me, Noah and his sister grew up parentless. Youâd never be able to tell by looking at them, though. Theyâre never engulfed in sadness and sorrow. They work hard â not just at their education and jobs, but at being happy and building lives they can be proud of.
Iâve always wondered if itâs because they got to spend a few years with their parents before they were brutally taken from them. The way they are⦠was that instilled in them by their parents?
Iâm not sure whatâs worse, never knowing your parents at all and never knowing why they left you, or having them taken from you the way Aria and Noah did.
âShe moved out,â Noah says, grimacing. âSheâs living with her boyfriend now. He seems like a nice guy, and Iâm happy that sheâs finally building a life of her own, but I miss her, you know?â Noah is rambling, so heâs lying about something. I bet itâs about liking Ariaâs boyfriend.
He runs a hand through his hair and smiles, his expression sorrowful. âEver since our parents were murdered,â he says, grimacing. He inhales shakily, his eyes falling closed. âI can barely say it even now. Itâs been fifteen years, and it still kills me. Ever since they were⦠taken from us⦠Iâve been scared to let Aria out of my sight. This is good for her. Brad is good for her.â
Brad, huh? In all the years Iâve known her, sheâs never dated anyone. I wonder who this guy is. Somehow, I doubt heâs good enough for Aria.
Throughout everything theyâve been through, Aria has remained the light in Noahâs life. Heâs never told me the full story, but from the bits and pieces Iâve been able to put together over the years, theyâve been through hell. I donât understand how they both smile the way they do. To this day, I count myself lucky that Aria has always gone out of her way to ensure that I feel like I belong with them too, like Iâm part of their family.
âHow long has she been dating him? I saw you guys just a year ago, and I donât think she was dating anyone then. Isnât it too soon for her to move in with some guy?â
Noah smiles, but his smile doesnât reach his eyes. âI canât be an overbearing brother anymore, and you canât act like one either. Aria is twenty-six, and I have to let her live her own life. I canât keep her trapped in the past. I canât protect her from life itself.â
I smile wryly. âThose sound like Ariaâs words, not yours.â
I can just imagine her expression as she tells Noah exactly what he just told me. Her dark chocolate eyes flashing with fury, her cheeks flushed.
Noah smirks and shakes his head. âYou know us too well, man. Fucking hell, she lost it when I forbade her from moving out.â
I cringe. No one tells Aria to do . Forbidding her something is straight-up dumb, and even attempting to would have pushed her straight into her boyfriendâs arms.
âTheyâll be here soon,â Noah says, walking into the kitchen. âI think youâll like Brad. Go easy on the guy, or Aria will have your fucking head too.â
I have a feeling Iâm not going to like , but Iâll manage to keep my mouth shut. I always do.
Noah hands me a beer and turns on the TV. âWait a minute,â I say, stopping him from changing the channel.
I sit down next to him and grin when the reporter announces that a well-known politician has been sentenced to fifteen years in prison, courtesy of countless sexual harassment cases. My smile widens when the cameras settle on his face, his disbelief apparent. He knows he was set to get away with what he did, and he would have. Until a few hours ago.
My phone buzzes, and I sit up when I see the logo of the Nemesis Platform on the screen, a thrill running down my spine.
I glance back at the TV, satisfaction washing over me. Fucking scumbag, using his money and power against those weaker than him. He had this coming.
I smile as I type my reply. Nyx and I have never met. I donât even know if sheâs actually a woman, since she wonât confirm or deny that. Iâm just assuming she is, based on the Greek goddess she named herself after. All I know is that sheâs the founder of the Nemesis Platform â a platform where victims let down by the justice system have a chance to tell their stories and ask for help.
Members can take on cases and attempt to balance the scales, the way I just did, and every once in a while, a few of us collaborate to crack a tough case.
Most of us, like Nyx and I, prefer to remain anonymous, since many of the methods we employ arenât quite legal. But there are many lawyers and social workers on the platform too, offering pro bono legal and emotional support. Nyx allows reward money after cases have been resolved, but never payments upfront. I think thatâs a key part of why this platform is so successful. She doesnât allow any opportunity to scam or hurt those that are already vulnerable.
I tap my foot as I wait for her reply. Iâm hailed as one of the best software engineers alive right now, but no matter what I do, I canât find out anything about Nyx. Her platform is coded so brilliantly that I canât even find a single vulnerability. Thereâs no way to hack into the Nemesis Platform â no way to find out who she is. I might be good, but Nyx is better. Far better.
I bite back a smile and shake my head. She wonât give me anything.
:
I clutch my phone tightly as I await her reply. It wouldnât surprise me if she ignores me altogether, but I hope she wonât.
Nyx and I have been friends for months, and itâs only recently that Iâve started to throw slightly flirtatious lines at her. Sheâs never responded to it, and I canât tell if sheâs not interested or just clueless.
:
I grin as I stare at my screen. She has this way of making me feel giddy like I never have before, and I donât even know her. Hell, she didnât even give me a reward â I already know sheâs a woman. Despite that, she has me smiling like an idiot.
âHuh, Iâll be damned,â Noah says, his eyes on me. âYouâre texting a woman.â
I freeze and look up at him. Iâd totally forgotten where I was. Iâd forgotten Noah was sitting right next to me. Lately Nyx has started to have that effect on me. I donât even know what she looks like, but sheâs got me enthralled.
âWho is she?â
I shake my head. âI donât know, man. I have no idea who she is. Itâs complicated.â
Noah grins and leans back in his seat. I sigh as I prepare myself to tell him all about Nyx. As much as I know, anyway.