My brother’s quarters were here.

Engineering crew.

Take your time, Owen said.

We’ll meet back here in 3 hours.

Beth nodded, disappeared down a corridor with her flashlight.

Martin headed toward the bridge.

I want to see the navigation equipment.

See what they destroyed.

Owen and Emma climbed to deck 7.

The passenger corridor was narrow.

Cabin doors on both sides.

40749411 412 The door was frozen shut.

Owen put his shoulder into it, heard ice crack, felt the door give.

It swung open with a groan.

Claire’s cabin.

The room was small.

Single bed, desk, bathroom, suitcase half unpacked on the luggage rack.

Clothes laid out on the bed like she’d been deciding what to wear to dinner.

Her reading glasses on the nightstand.

her laptop on the desk screen dark.

Emma stood in the doorway, not moving.

“You okay?” Owen asked.

“It’s like she just left for a minute, like she’s coming back.

” Owen saw it, too.

The cabin wasn’t destroyed or ransacked.

It was just waiting.

Clare had left for breakfast or a morning walk, planning to come back and finish unpacking.

She never made it back.

On the nightstand, under the reading glasses, Owen found it.

Clare’s journal.

Small leatherbound notebook, pages stiff with cold, but readable.

He opened it carefully.

Clare’s handwriting, neat, precise, the same handwriting that had filled birthday cards and grocery lists and notes in Emma’s lunchbox.

First entries were exactly what he’d expect.

March 11th, 2011.

First day.

Ship is gorgeous.

My cabin is tiny, but has an ocean view.

Missing Owen and Emma already.

Conference starts tomorrow.

Hospital sent me to learn about new triage protocols.

Hoping to skip some sessions and actually enjoy the sun.

March 12th.

Conference is boring as expected.

Spent lunch by the pool instead.

Met nice couple from Boston, Dave and Linda, celebrating their anniversary.

Food is amazing.

I’m going to gain 10 lb.

March 13th.

Something weird happened today.

Was getting coffee in the crew area.

They have better machines than passenger deck.

And saw one of the crew members acting strange.

Young guy, communications officer, I think.

Name tag said Keith.

He was looking at everyone like, I don’t know, nervous, like he was checking if people noticed him.

Probably nothing.

Owen felt his pulse quicken.

Keith, communications officer, the person who would have access to ship radios.

He kept reading.

March 14th.

Saw that Keith guy again.

He was in the bridge earlier.

Heard him arguing with the captain about something.

Couldn’t hear what.

Captain looked angry.

Keith looked scared.

This is probably stupid, but it felt wrong.

The way he was watching everyone, the way he kept checking his watch like he was waiting for something.

March 15th.

Final entry.

I’m probably being paranoid, but something’s wrong.

We should have turned south 6 hours ago.

I asked one of the servers at dinner, and he said the ship’s been off course since morning.

Nobody’s talking about it, but I can see crew members arguing.

That Keith guy hasn’t been seen all day.

Owen, if you ever read this, I love you.

Tell Emma her mom was thinking about her dance recital.

Tell her.

The entry ended there.

Middle of a sentence.

like Clare had been interrupted.

Owen closed the journal carefully.

His hands were shaking.

Clare had noticed she’d seen Keith acting suspicious.

She’d known something was wrong hours before the ship trapped.

“Dad,” Emma’s voice was small.

“What does it say?” “Your mom knew.

” Owen said she figured out something was wrong.

She was trying to warn people.

Emma’s eyes filled with tears.

Did she? Was she scared? Owen looked at the last entry.

Tell Emma her mom was thinking about her dance recital.

Even in those final hours, Clare had been thinking about her daughter.

“No,” he said.

“She was thinking about you.

” Owen took the journal, technically removing evidence, but he didn’t care.

This was Clare’s voice.

Her last thoughts.

He wasn’t leaving it on this frozen ship.

They searched the rest of the cabin.

Claire’s clothes, her toiletries, her conference materials.

Nothing else that mattered.

Her phone was dead, frozen in the desk drawer.

Her laptop wouldn’t power on.

In the bathroom, Owen found Clare’s wedding ring on the sink.

She’d taken it off to shower.

He picked it up.

Cold metal burning his palm.

“She’s not here,” Emma said from the doorway.

“What? Mom’s body.

She’s not in the cabin.

Where is she?” Owen realized Emma was right.

They’d seen bodies throughout the ship, but Clare wasn’t in her cabin.

She’d left at some point and never made it back.

Kirby said they’re still cataloging locations, Owen said.

We’ll find her.

But dread was settling in his stomach.

Clare had noticed Keith.

She’d known something was wrong.

Had she tried to do something about it? They left the cabin, continued through deck 7.

More passenger cabins, all frozen in time.

Some had bodies visible through windows.

Passengers who had gone back to their rooms when the cold hit.

But most cabins were empty.

“Where is everyone?” Emma asked.

Owen checked his diagram.

Probably gathered in common areas when they realized something was wrong.

Crew would have directed them to assembly points.

They found the main passenger corridor.

Bodies here, dozens of them, collapsed in the hallway, frozen midstep.

Passengers who’d been trying to evacuate, trying to reach lifeboats, trying to get somewhere warm.

Emma grabbed Owen’s arm.

I can’t.

This is too much.

Look at me.

Not at them.

Just at me.

Emma focused on her father’s face, breathing hard.

We don’t have to keep going, Owen said.

We can go back.

No.

Emma shook her head.

We have to find mom.

We have to know what happened to her.

They kept moving, stepping carefully around the bodies.

Owen tried not to look at faces, tried not to imagine their last moments.

At the end of the corridor, they found a stairwell leading down.

And at the bottom of the stairs, frozen in the metal framework, they found something that made Owen stop cold.

Blood frozen dark red splattered on the wall.

Not a lot, just a spray pattern like someone had hit something hard or like someone had been hit.

Dad.

Emma’s voice was barely a whisper.

Owen followed the blood trail.

It led down the corridor toward the ship’s communications room, and that’s when he understood.

Clare hadn’t just noticed Keith acting strange.

She’d followed him.

She’d tried to stop whatever he was doing.

“Come on,” Owen said.

We need to find Beth and Martin right now.

Owen and Emma found Beth on deck 5 standing outside a cabin marked engineering and Torres.

Beth’s face was wet with tears.

“My brother,” she said.

“He’s in there, frozen at his desk.

He was writing something when it happened.

” “Bth, we need to go to the communications room.

” Owen said, “I found evidence in Clare’s journal.

She saw something.

There’s blood near the comm corridor.

” Beth wiped her eyes.

Martin’s already at the bridge.

Said he found something in the navigation logs.

They climbed to the bridge together.

The command center was mostly glass and metal.

Instrument panels dark except where Coast Guard had rigged emergency lighting.

Charts were spread across tables.

Frozen coffee cups sat on consoles.

And at the helm, frozen with one hand still on the wheel, was Captain Roland Voss.

Martin stood next to the captain’s body, reading from a leather-bound log book.

Owen, you need to hear this.

The captain’s log was open on the navigation desk, pages stiff with cold.

Martin read the final entries aloud.

March 15th, 2011, 1,800 hours.

Course deviation detected.

Navigation system showing coordinates 400 m from plotted route.

Officer Walden claims equipment malfunction.

running manual calculations to verify something feels wrong.

2,100 hours ICE warnings ignored by automated systems.

Walden says he’s working on the problem.

Asked him to show me his work.

He became defensive.

Said he knows what he’s doing.

I don’t trust it.

Running independent position check.

2330 hours.

We’re surrounded by ice.

Tried to radio Coast Guard for assistance.

Communications equipment non-responsive.

Walden nowhere to be found.

Sent Torres to check radio room.

She hasn’t reported back.

0200 hours.

March 16th.

Ship is trapped.

Ice closing in on both sides.

Temperatures dropping fast.

Finally located Walden in communications room.

He was destroying the equipment.

Physically destroying it with tools.

I confronted him.

He ran.

have ordered all crew to search for him, but half the systems are down and we’re losing power.

Passengers are panicking.

I don’t understand what’s happening.

Why would our communications officer sabotage the ship? 0400 hours.

Power failing throughout ship.

Backup generators compromised.

Torres found fuel lines cut in engine room.

This wasn’t an accident.

Someone planned this.

Walden has to be working for someone.

tried to deploy lifeboats, but release mechanisms won’t engage.

They’ve been damaged.

We’re trapped here.

I’ve failed my ship.

I failed 350 people.

If anyone finds this log, look for Keith Walden.

Find out who paid him.

Find out why.

The entry ended there.

Captain Voss had written his final words, then frozen at his post, trying to save a ship that was already doomed.

Martin closed the log carefully.

The captain knew he figured it out hours before everyone froze.

“Kith Walden,” Owen said.

Communications officer Clare noticed him acting suspicious.

She wrote about it in her journal.

He was checking if people were watching him.

He knew what he was doing.

Beth’s voice was horse.

“My brother found sabotaged fuel lines.

The captain found destroyed radios.

Clare saw Walden acting strange.

They all figured it out too late.

” “Where’s Walden now?” Emma asked.

Good question, Martin said.

Dead like everyone else, or did he escape? Owen thought about the blood trail near communications.

Clare’s journal cuts off mid-sentence.

She wasn’t in her cabin when she froze.

I found blood near the comm corridor.

“You think she went after him?” Beth asked.

“I think she figured out something was wrong and tried to help.

Let’s check the communications room.

” They left the bridge, descended to deck 4, where ship operations were centralized.

The corridor Owen had found earlier was just ahead, the one with frozen blood on the wall.

The communications room door was partially open.

Inside, the space looked like a war zone.

Equipment smashed, wires cut, circuit boards destroyed.

Someone had taken a hammer or crowbar to every piece of radio equipment, every satellite uplink, every emergency beacon.

And on the floor, frozen in a corner behind a destroyed console, they found Keith Walden.

He was young, maybe 35, dark hair, crew uniform.

His body was curled into a ball like he’d been trying to hide.

His hands were frozen to his chest, clutching something.

Martin knelt carefully, trying not to disturb the body.

He died here, hiding in the equipment closet.

Owen saw what Keith was holding.

A waterproof pouch, the kind designed to protect documents from water damage.

“He’s got something.

” “We can’t remove it,” Beth said.

“Evidence protocol.

Screw protocol.

” Owen reached down, carefully pried the pouch from Keith’s frozen fingers.

The body was rigid as stone.

Inside the pouch were documents.

Owen spread them on a desk that wasn’t covered in broken equipment.

Bank statements.

Offshore account in the Cayman Islands.

Deposits totaling $2.

8 million spread over 6 months.

September 2010 through February 2011.

A payment schedule on Oceanic Ventures letterhead.

Initial payment $500,000.

September 2010.

Equipment access granted $800,000 November 2010.

Final deployment $1,500,000 March 2011.

Completion bonus $3 million million on confirmation of total loss.

A handwritten note, not Keith’s writing.

Full payment on confirmation of total loss.

No survivors.

No evidence.

Make it look like navigation failure or environmental disaster.

You have 2 hours after ice closure to extract via predetermined coordinates.

Helicopter will not wait.

Jesus Christ, Martin whispered.

They paid him $3 million to kill everyone on this ship.

Beth was shaking.

The company, Oceanic Ventures, their letterhead, they paid for this.

Owen kept searching the pouch.

False identity documents.

Five different passports, all with Keith’s photo, but different names.

David Morrison, Kevin Walsh, Keith Walden, multiple social security cards, driver’s licenses from three different states, and receipts, printed emails showing meetings in Miami with someone named D.

Stratton, VP operations, Oceanic Ventures.

Emma’s voice cut through the silence.

Dad, why is he still here? The note says, “Helicopter extraction.

Why didn’t he leave?” Owen looked at the body at the destroyed equipment around them at the ship tilted and frozen between icebergs.

Because the ice closed faster than they expected, he said.

Look at the timeline.

Captain’s log says they were trapped by 0200 hours.

Keith was supposed to destroy the equipment and get extracted within 2 hours, but the ship was already locked in ice.

The helicopter couldn’t land.

He was trapped here with everyone else.

He died with his victims, Beth said quietly.

After murdering 350 people for money, he froze just like them.

Martin was photographing everything with his phone.

This is evidence, direct proof the company hired someone to sink the ship.

The FBI needs to see this.

Owen’s hands were shaking as he held the payment schedule.

Someone at Oceanic Ventures, someone with access to company letterhead and corporate accounts, had hired Keith Walden to murder everyone aboard the Aurora Dream.

They’d planned it for months.

They’d paid him in installments like he was a contractor renovating a house, not a killer destroying a ship.

And Clare had noticed.

She’d seen Keith acting nervous, checking his watch, watching people.

She’d known something was wrong.

The blood, Emma said suddenly.

in the corridor.

Where’s mom? Owen had been so focused on Keith’s body and the documents that he’d forgotten.

Clare wasn’t here.

She’d left her cabin.

She’d noticed something wrong.

She’d written in her journal about Keith.

Where had she gone? There’s another corridor, Beth said, pointing to a doorway past the destroyed radio equipment.

Crew access leads to engineering and passenger services.

They moved through the doorway.

The corridor beyond was narrow, lit only by their flashlights.

And there, 20 ft from the communications room, they found her.

Nina Torres, Beth’s brother, frozen in the corridor, collapsed against the wall.

She’d been carrying maintenance logs.

They were scattered around her, pages frozen to the floor.

Beth made a sound like she’d been hit.

Owen knelt beside Nah’s body while Beth gripped the wall, unable to look.

Nah’s logs were still readable.

Owen picked up the pages carefully.

March 14th, fuel consumption abnormally high.

Checked lines.

Someone accessed fuel controls without authorization.

Keith Walden logged into system.

Why would communications officer need fuel access? March 15th.

0900 hours.

GPS recalibration required.

Keith volunteered to handle it.

Took 6 hours.

Should take 30 minutes.

I ran diagnostics after he left.

He changed our course coordinates.

Ship thinks we’re 300 m south of actual position.

Going to captain immediately.

1,200 hours.

Captain Voss investigating.

Keith locked me out of communications room.

Says he’s fixing a problem.

I know equipment access codes.

Going to override and see what he’s doing.

1,400 hours.

Backup navigation system offline.

I ordered replacement parts last week.

No order exists in system.

Keith deleted it.

He’s been sabotaging us for weeks.

Captain needs to know.

Final entry.

Keith destroyed the radios.

I saw him.

He saw me.

I’m going to warn Captain Voss.

If I don’t make it, someone needs to know.

Keith Walden isn’t his real name.

I saw his ID card fall out when he The entry ended there.

Nah had been running to warn the captain when the temperature dropped and she froze.

She figured it out.

Owen said, “Your brother documented everything.

” and Keith did.

She knew he was using a false name.

She was trying to stop him.

Beth was crying openly now.

That’s who Nah was.

She saw something wrong and she couldn’t walk away.

Neither could Clare, Emma said softly.

Mom was the same way.

Owen stood.

His chest felt tight.

Nenah had died trying to warn the captain.

Captain Voss had died trying to save the ship.

Keith had died hiding like a coward with his blood money.

But where was Clare? There’s more corridor, Martin said, gesturing ahead.

Passenger services, medical bay.

Where would Clare have gone? Owen thought about his wife.

ER nurse.

Someone who ran toward emergencies, not away from them, someone who saw people in trouble and had to help.

Medical bay, he said.

She would have gone where people needed help.

They kept moving past Nah’s body, past the blood spatter Owen had seen earlier, following the corridor as it curved toward the ship’s medical center.

And there, outside the medical bay door, frozen against the wall with one hand reaching for the handle, they found Clare.

Emma saw her first.

Mom.

The word came out barely a whisper.

Owen turned, followed Emma’s gaze, and there she was, Clareire Hartley, frozen against the medical bay wall, one hand reaching for the door handle, the other clutching a walkie-talkie.

She was wearing jeans and a sweater, casual clothes, not the business outfit she’d packed for the conference.

Her dark hair was pulled back in a ponytail.

Her eyes were closed.

She looked exactly like she had 8 years ago, frozen at 38, while Owen had aged to 48.

Emma took a step forward, then stopped.

“I can’t.

” “It’s okay,” Owen said, but his own legs wouldn’t move either.

Beth put a hand on Emma’s shoulder.

“Take your time, both of you.

” Owen forced himself forward.

Each step felt like walking through concrete.

When he reached Clare, he saw details that broke him.

wedding ring back on her finger.

She’d gone back to the cabin and put it on.

Small cut on her forehead, dried blood frozen dark.

Radio clutched in her hand like she’d been trying to call for help.

She was running, Martin said quietly, examining the corridor.

See the way she’s positioned? She was moving fast, hit the wall when she froze.

Owen knelt beside his wife’s body.

Up close, he could see frost on her eyelashes, ice crystals in her hair.

The cold had taken her mid-stride trying to reach the medical bay where she could help.

She never stopped being a nurse.

Owen said ship was dying and she ran toward people who needed help.

Emma finally moved closer.

She knelt on Clare’s other side, reached out, but didn’t touch.

I don’t remember her voice anymore.

I try, but I can’t hear it.

She had this laugh.

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