“The photograph curled in the fireplace. I watched my own face turn black, blister, and dissolve into ash. My wedding photo. The one where I was smiling and he was almost smiling. I placed the engagement ring and the wedding band side by side on his desk. Next to them, the keys. On top, the letter for Mrs. Tucker. In the elevator, I took out my SIM card and snapped it in half. The sound was small. Final. I dropped the broken pieces and the phone into a public trash can on the corner. A yellow cab pulled up. "Where to?" Anywhere. As long as it wasn't here. I got in and looked ahead, through the windshield, at the gray, uncertain road. This time, I did not look back. Three months later. I sat on the porch of a small cottage, a mug of coffee warming my hands. The morning fog rolled in off the Pacific, smelling of salt and pine. No one knew I was here. No one in this town had ever heard the name Harlow Thornton. I was Harlow Graham. And I was alive again. But I should have known that a man like Axel Thornton would never let go. I just didn't know how far he would go to find me.”