LOGINThe world had collapsed into a symphony of humiliation.
Glass crunched beneath my knees as I scrambled to pick up the shattered remnants of what had been, moments ago, a perfectly arranged tray of champagne flutes. My fingers trembled, narrowly avoiding the sharp edges. The cold liquid soaked through the fabric of my pants, but I barely noticed. All I could feel was the burn of a thousand eyes on my back.
"Are you okay?" someone asked, their voice distant, muffled by the roaring in my ears.
I couldn't answer. Couldn't look up. Couldn't face the pity or the mockery I knew I'd find in their expressions. So I kept my head down, kept gathering glass, kept pretending I was invisible even though every nerve in my body screamed otherwise.
*Just disappear*, I begged the universe. *Let the floor open up and swallow me whole.*
The universe, as always, ignored me.
Instead, a pair of shoes entered my field of vision.
Not just any shoes. Italian leather, hand-stitched, gleaming under the chandelier light like they'd never touched anything as mundane as a sidewalk. Shoes that probably cost more than my mother's entire monthly medical budget. Shoes that belonged to someone who had never in their life dropped a tray of champagne at a party.
I knew whose shoes they were before I looked up. I'd felt his approach like a shift in atmospheric pressure, like the stillness before a storm.
*Please don't let it be him. Anyone but him.*
Slowly, reluctantly, I raised my head.
Green eyes met mine.
He was even more devastating up close. The kind of handsome that made your chest ache and your brain short-circuit. Sharp cheekbones, a jaw that could cut glass, lips that looked like they'd been sculpted by an artist who specialized in sin. His dark hair was slightly disheveled now, as if he'd been running his fingers through it, and that single rebellious strand still fell across his forehead, softening the severity of his features just enough to remind you he was human.
But those eyes. God, those eyes. They weren't just cold—they were ancient. Like they'd seen everything the world had to offer and found it all wanting.
I opened my mouth to speak, but my voice had abandoned me entirely. All that came out was a pathetic squeak that I hoped, desperately, he would interpret as words.
"I'm so—I'm so sorry," I finally managed, my voice cracking like the glass beneath me. "Your shoes—the champagne—I didn't mean to—"
He looked down at his ruined footwear, then back at me. His expression didn't change. Not anger, not annoyance, not even the disdain I expected. Just... nothing. An empty canvas that revealed absolutely nothing about what was happening behind those impossible eyes.
"It's fine."
Two words. That was all. Two words delivered in a voice so deep, so rich, so impossively controlled that I felt them resonate somewhere in my chest. His voice was whiskey and smoke and midnight secrets. His voice was danger wrapped in velvet.
*It's fine.*
Such simple words. Such a casual dismissal. And yet my entire body responded to them like a prayer answered. My shoulders relaxed slightly. My breathing steadied. My heart, which had been threatening to escape my rib cage, slowed to a mere gallop.
I was still kneeling at his feet like some kind of supplicant, surrounded by broken glass and my own incompetence, and he'd just absolved me with two syllables.
"Your shoes," I whispered, staring at the dark stain spreading across the pristine leather. "They're ruined. I should—I can pay for—"
A sound escaped him. Not quite a laugh, not quite a scoff. Something in between. "You can't afford these shoes."
It wasn't cruel. It wasn't condescending. It was simply a statement of fact, delivered with the same neutrality he might use to comment on the weather. And he was right, of course. I probably couldn't afford a single shoelace from whatever designer had created those masterpieces.
"I'm sorry," I said again, because it was the only thing I could say. "I'm so sorry."
He tilted his head slightly, studying me. I felt exposed under that gaze, stripped of every pretense and defense. He was looking at me the way you might look at a painting you couldn't quite understand—curious, assessing, searching for meaning in the chaos.
"You're bleeding."
I blinked, confused, and followed his gaze to my right hand. A shard of glass had sliced through my palm at some point during my cleanup efforts. Blood welled from the cut, bright red against my pale skin. I hadn't even felt it.
"Oh," I said stupidly. "I didn't—"
"Here."
He moved before I could react. One moment he was standing there like an ice sculpture, and the next he was crouching beside me, producing a handkerchief from somewhere—pure white linen, monogrammed, probably worth more than my entire outfit—and pressing it gently against my palm.
His touch was warm. Unexpectedly warm. I'd expected him to feel cold, to match the ice in his eyes, but his fingers against mine were almost feverish.
"You should be more careful," he said quietly, his voice low enough that only I could hear. "Glass doesn't care about apologies."
I stared at him. At the way his dark lashes cast shadows on his cheeks. At the concentration in his expression as he held the handkerchief to my wound. At the impossible reality of Alexander Black—or whoever he was—kneeling on a dirty floor to tend to a waitress he'd never met.
"Why?" I whispered.
He looked up. Our faces were inches apart now. Close enough that I could see flecks of gold in his green eyes I hadn't noticed before. Close enough that I could smell him again—that intoxicating mix of expensive cologne and something darker, something that made my stomach flip.
"Why what?"
"Why are you helping me?"
Something flickered in his expression. Too fast to identify, too complex to name. Then it was gone, replaced by that familiar mask of indifference.
"Because you're bleeding," he said simply. "And because no one else was going to."
Before I could respond, a voice cut through the bubble that had formed around us.
"Xander! There you are. We've been looking everywhere."
A man appeared beside us—equally well-dressed, equally polished, but with none of the gravity that surrounded the man still holding my hand. He looked at me, at the mess on the floor, at his friend crouched beside a kneeling waitress, and his eyebrows shot toward his hairline.
"Am I interrupting something?"
"No." Xander—so that was his name—released my hand and stood in one fluid motion. The handkerchief remained pressed against my palm, already staining red. "Just leaving."
He looked down at me one last time. Our eyes met, and for a moment—just a moment—I saw something human in those frozen depths. Something almost like regret.
Then he turned and walked away, his friend falling into step beside him.
"Xander, who was that?" I heard the friend ask as they disappeared into the crowd.
"No one," Xander replied. His voice carried back to me clearly. "Just a waitress."
*Just a waitress.*
The words shouldn't have stung. They were true. I was just a waitress, moonlighting for one night, an invisible servant in a world of wealth and power. Of course that's all he saw when he looked at me.
But somehow, for one brief moment, I'd thought he saw more.
I stayed on the floor long after they'd gone, long after the other guests resumed their conversations and the party continued around me like nothing had happened. Sophie found me eventually, helped me to my feet, fussed over my hand and my uniform and my pride.
"Ella, what happened? Are you okay? Who was that guy?"
"Xander," I said quietly, still staring at the spot where he'd disappeared. "Someone called him Xander."
Sophie's eyes went wide. "Xander? As in Xander Black? The Xander Black?"
I looked at her blankly.
"Ella, he's like... the biggest deal in New York. Black Enterprises? The tech empire? His family's worth more than some small countries. He's a billionaire, Ella. Like, actual billionaire. They write articles about him. Women throw themselves at him constantly. He never dates anyone. Never smiles. Never—" She stopped, looking at my expression. "Wait. Why are you looking like that?"
I wasn't looking like anything. I was just... remembering. The weight of his handkerchief in my hand. The warmth of his fingers against mine. The way he'd looked at me like I was something worth seeing.
"Ella?" Sophie waved a hand in front of my face. "Hello? Earth to waitress-girl?"
"I'm fine," I said, forcing a smile. "I just... I need to get back to work."
But as I returned to my duties, as the night wore on and the guests eventually departed, I couldn't stop thinking about him. Xander Black. The name echoed in my mind like a song I couldn't forget.
*Xander.*
I whispered it to myself on the subway home, watching the tunnel walls blur past. I thought about it as I let myself into our tiny apartment, as I checked on my sleeping mother, as I finally collapsed into my narrow bed.
*Xander Black.*
The most powerful name I'd ever heard. Belonging to a man who'd knelt on a dirty floor to tend to a stranger's wound. A man whose eyes were frozen but whose touch was warm. A man who'd looked at me like he actually saw me, even if he'd dismissed me as nothing moments later.
I fell asleep with his name on my lips, certain I'd never see him again.
Certain that our collision had been nothing more than an accident—a brief intersection of two worlds that would never, could never, truly meet.
I was wrong.
The private investigator's report arrived on a Tuesday.Xander read it first, his face growing darker with each page. Ella watched him from across the kitchen table, Clara asleep in her arms, the morning light streaming through the window. She knew something was wrong before he spoke. Could see it in the tension of his shoulders, the set of his jaw."She's out.""Who?""Sophia." He set down the report. "She was released last week. Early parole for good behavior."
The photograph sat on the kitchen counter like a threat.Ella couldn't stop looking at it. Every time she walked past, her eyes were drawn to the image of her daughter in that incubator, tubes and wires keeping her alive, someone watching from the shadows. The word on the back echoed in her mind. *Soon.* Soon what? Soon they would strike again? Soon they would take what they'd come for? Soon they would destroy everything Ella had fought to build?Xander had called the police within hours of finding the envelope. Two officers had come to the house, taken statements, examined the photograph, asked questions Ella couldn't answer. No, she didn't know who had sent it. No, she hadn't seen anyone suspicious. No, she couldn'
The wheelchair felt strange beneath her, but Ella didn't complain.She was out of the ICU. She was awake, alive, and on her way to see her daughter. Nothing else mattered. Xander pushed her through the long corridors, his hands steady on the handles, his presence a quiet comfort at her back. The hospital was bright this time of morning, sunlight streaming through the windows, casting patterns on the floor.The NICU was quieter than she'd expected.Soft lights, soft voices, the gentle hum of machines designed to keep tiny bodies alive. Nurses moved between incubators, checking monitors, adjusting blankets.
The chair had become an extension of his body.Xander couldn't remember the last time he'd stood up. Hours had blurred into each other, marked only by the changing patterns of light through the window and the quiet shuffling of nurses on their rounds. Ella's hand rested in his, warm now instead of cold, her fingers occasionally twitching in her sleep. The monitors beeped their steady rhythm, proof that she was still fighting.He talked to her. Had been talking for hours, his voice hoarse, his throat raw. He told her about the baby—about Clara's tiny fingers, her shock of dark hair, the way she'd gripped his finger when he'd touched her palm. He told her about the house by the ocean, about the garden her mother
The operating room doors had closed behind Ella hours ago.Xander had lost count of how many. He stood in the hallway, his back against the cold wall, his hands shoved into his pockets. The fluorescent lights hummed above him, casting everything in a sickly glow. Nurses passed by without looking at him. Doctors came and went with clipboards and grim faces. No one stopped. No one offered news.He was alone.The waiting room was empty at this hour. Families had gone home, visitors had left, the chaos of the emergency room had faded into the quiet rhythm of the night shift. But Xander couldn't sit in those pl
The weeks that followed were the hardest of Ella's life.Not because of the fear—though there was plenty of that, lurking in the shadows, waiting to pounce at every quiet moment. But because of the helplessness. The waiting. The not knowing whether her daughter would survive.The doctors had been clear: the pregnancy was high-risk. The baby was small, the placenta wasn't functioning properly, and every day was a battle. There were no guarantees. No promises. Only hope.Ella had been put on bed rest. Complete bed rest, the doctor said. No getting up except for bathroom trips. No stairs. No stress. No life.She hated it.Not the resting—she was tired enough to appreciate that. But the loss of control. The feeling that her body had betrayed her, that she couldn't protect the child growing inside her.Xander had moved his work to the bedroom, setting up a desk by the window, taking calls in whispers so he wouldn't wake her. He'd hire
The house felt different after the hospital.Not physically—the walls were the same color, the furniture in the same places, the ocean still visible from the kitchen window. But something had shifted. Something had changed. The grief that had been pressing down on Ella's chest for mo
The days after the funeral were the hardest.Ella didn't leave the house. Didn't get out of bed. Didn't do anything except stare at the ceiling and listen to the waves crash against the rocks. The world outside continued spinning, but she wasn't part of it. Couldn't be part of it.X
The name appeared on the third page of the document.Ella had been searching for hours, scrolling through files, cross-referencing names, trying to find a connection that would make sense of everything. Isabella and Sophia were pointing fingers at each other, each claiming the other was gu
The visiting room was the same.Gray walls, plastic chairs, the thick glass partition that separated visitors from inmates. Ella had been here before, had sat in this same chair and stared at Isabella's face through the barrier. But something felt different this time. Heavier. More urgent.







