LOGINI must have stared at that scarf for an hour.
The silk pooled through my fingers like liquid moonlight, impossibly soft, impossibly beautiful. Deep blues that shifted to silver when the light caught them. Hand-rolled edges that spoke of craftsmanship I couldn't even name. I didn't know designer labels—couldn't afford to—but I knew quality when I touched it. And this scarf was quality so far beyond my experience that it might as well have come from another planet.
The same planet as him.
I turned the card over in my hands for the hundredth time. *An apology for last night's tray. I hope your hand isn't hurting. - A.B.*
My palm had stopped bleeding hours ago. The cut was superficial, barely more than a scratch. Nothing that needed worrying about. Nothing that required a gift that probably cost more than my mother's entire medical treatment for the month.
Why would he do this?
I thought about the way he'd looked at me—those impossible green eyes that seemed to see straight through every defense I had. The warmth of his fingers against my skin. The way he'd knelt beside me like my humiliation was something worth sharing.
*Stop reading into it*, I told myself firmly. *Rich people do things like this. They throw money at problems. It means nothing.*
But the scarf felt like something. The note felt like something. And the fact that he'd remembered my name, found my address, and sent this before I'd even woken up—that felt like something too.
A noise from the bedroom made me jump. Mom was stirring.
I shoved the scarf back into its box, closed the lid, and hid it in the back of my closet like evidence of a crime I hadn't committed. Then I took a deep breath, smoothed my hair, and went to help my mother start her day.
---
Clara Reynolds was sitting up in bed when I entered, her silver-streaked hair loose around her shoulders, her eyes bright despite the illness that had been slowly stealing her strength for years. She smiled when she saw me—that warm, loving smile that had gotten me through every hard moment of my life.
"Good morning, sweetheart. You're up early."
"I could say the same about you." I kissed her forehead, feeling the slight warmth that always made me anxious. "How are you feeling?"
"Better today. Much better." She patted my hand. "Did I hear someone at the door earlier?"
My heart stuttered. "Just a delivery. Wrong address."
It was the first lie I'd told my mother in years. It burned on my tongue.
But what was I supposed to say? *Oh, that was a gift from a billionaire I met for thirty seconds last night. He sent me a scarf worth more than our apartment. I have no idea why.*
Mom would worry. Mom always worried. And worry made her condition worse.
So I lied. And hated myself for it.
"A delivery?" Mom's eyebrows rose. "What kind of delivery?"
"Nothing important." I busied myself with straightening her blankets. "How about some breakfast? I could make those pancakes you like."
Mom studied me for a moment with the knowing eyes that saw everything I tried to hide. But she let it go. She always let things go, my mother. It was her greatest gift and her greatest flaw.
"Pancakes sound lovely, sweetheart."
---
The week that followed was ordinary in every way.
I went to work. I cared for Mom. I picked up extra shifts at the hospital. I fell into bed exhausted every night and woke up to do it all over again. The scarf stayed in my closet, hidden beneath old sweaters I hadn't worn in years. The note stayed tucked inside my nightstand drawer, next to the handkerchief I still hadn't returned.
I didn't look at either of them. Didn't let myself think about green eyes or cold smiles or the most powerful man in New York kneeling on a dirty floor to tend to my wound.
*It meant nothing*, I told myself every night before sleep. *He's forgotten you exist. Go back to your real life.*
And I almost believed it.
Until the seventh day.
---
The hospital pharmacy had fluorescent lights that hummed at a frequency designed to induce headaches. I stood in line with Mom's prescription, mentally calculating whether I could afford the full amount this month or if I'd need to ask for another extension. The answer was always the same: barely. Stretching. Hoping.
"Next!"
I approached the counter, sliding the prescription across. "Hi, I need to pick up for Clara Reynolds."
The pharmacist—a kind-faced woman named Margaret who'd helped us countless times—typed something into her computer. Her eyes widened slightly.
"Ella, dear, there's been a... an adjustment to your account."
My stomach dropped. "What kind of adjustment? Did the insurance change again? I thought we had everything sorted—"
"No, no, nothing like that." Margaret's expression was strange. Almost wondering. "The full amount for this month's medication has already been paid. In fact..." She scrolled through her screen. "All of your mother's outstanding balances have been cleared. And there's a credit here that will cover the next six months."
I stared at her. "That's not possible. There must be some mistake."
"No mistake, dear. Someone came in last week and settled everything." Margaret leaned forward, lowering her voice conspiratorially. "Between you and me, whoever it was didn't even blink at the total. Paid in full, cash equivalent. I've never seen anything like it."
My hands gripped the counter. The world tilted slightly. "Who? Who paid it?"
Margaret shook her head. "They didn't leave a name. Just said it was... from a secret admirer."
The words hit me like a physical blow.
*Secret admirer.*
I thought of silk scarves and handwritten notes. I thought of green eyes and warm fingers. I thought of a man who could spend forty-seven billion dollars without noticing and probably considered my mother's entire medical debt less than pocket change.
"A secret admirer," I repeated flatly.
"That's what he said." Margaret smiled, clearly charmed by the romance of it all. "You must have someone very special in your life, Ella."
I didn't answer. I couldn't answer.
Because the someone special in my life was a stranger. A billionaire who'd watched me humiliate myself for exactly thirty seconds and somehow decided I was worth noticing. Worth tracking down. Worth spending money on—money I could never repay, money I didn't want, money that felt less like a gift and more like a trap.
I took the prescription with numb fingers. I walked out of the pharmacy with numb feet. I stood in the hospital corridor, surrounded by sick people and worried families and the constant beep of medical equipment, and I felt like I was drowning.
*What is this?* I thought wildly. *What does he want?*
Because men like Xander Black didn't do things for no reason. Men like Xander Black didn't notice women like me. Men like Xander Black didn't pay off strangers' medical debts out of the goodness of their hearts—if he even had a heart, which everything I'd read suggested he didn't.
So what was this? A game? A test? Some twisted form of entertainment for a man so rich and so bored that he needed to toy with ordinary people to feel alive?
I didn't know. But I was going to find out.
I pulled out my phone. Opened the search bar. Typed the three letters that had haunted my dreams for seven days.
**A.B.**
The address for Black Enterprises came up immediately. Gleaming tower in midtown Manhattan. Forty-seven floors of power and money and people who would never look twice at someone like me.
I stared at it for a long moment.
Then I started walking.
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
My answer was to kiss him again.This time, there was nothing tentative about it. No hesitation, no questioning, no walls. Just heat and need and the desperate hunger that had been building between us since the moment we met.Xander groaned against my mouth, pulling me closer, deepening the kiss un
I was halfway to the subway when the car pulled up beside me.Not just any car—his car. The same absurdly long, impossibly luxurious vehicle that had taken me to the restaurant a lifetime ago. The back window rolled down, and there he was. Xander Black, still wet from the rain, still watching me wi
The lobby of Black Enterprises had become my second home.Not by choice, obviously. If I'd had any say in the matter, I would be anywhere else—my actual home, with its broken faucet and clanking radiator; the hospital, with its antiseptic smell and endless needs; even the subway, with its delays an
I don't remember the walk home.That's the thing about devastation—it erases everything except the wound. The subway ride blurs into nothing, faces smearing into abstract shapes, announcements dissolving into white noise. I moved through the city like a ghost, already hollowed out, already rehearsi







