LOGINCelyne’s POV
I stare at my phone in my hand for eleven minutes seeing the name once again after so many years before I dial.
I know because every memories keep flashing through my mind as I count every one of them.
Sitting on the cold bathroom floor of Clara’s apartment, back pressed against the tub, I stare at the number I swore I deleted five years ago.
Still memorized, still ringing in my head,
Some things the mind refuses to let go no matter how desperately the heart begs it to.
The clinic had called twice more since I got home. Then a third time. Then a fourth. I watched each one ring out and die in silence.
But I know what happens if I keep running.
I know Alexander Hale.
He will not stop.
He will send someone to this door. He will make calls. He will pull strings until the entire city of Los Angeles is looking for me, and he will do it all without raising his voice or breaking a sweat.
He always was terrifyingly efficient when he wanted something and knows how to get it done.
And right now, I am something he wants.
Not me.
The child.
My thumb hovers over the screen.
For a moment, I consider throwing the phone across the room. Pretending this entire situation never happened.
Wishing all these was a dream, But denial has never saved me before.
I press dial before I can stop myself.
It rings once.
Twice.
Then—
“Celyne.”
His voice hits me like cold water.
Low. Controlled. Familiar in a way that makes my stomach turn.
He doesn’t say hello. He doesn’t ask who is calling. He simply says my name like he already knew.
Like he had been sitting there waiting.
Maybe he had.
I swallow hard.
“Alexander.”
Silence stretches between us like a fault line.
“You ran,” he says finally.
Not an accusation. Not quite. Just a statement of fact, delivered in that flat, unbothered tone he perfected long before I ever met him.
“I needed space,” I say.
“You needed space,” he repeats slowly, and I can hear the disbelief behind the restraint. “You disappeared from the clinic without speaking to the doctor. You turned your phone off for four hours.”
“I’m aware of what I did.”
“Are you?”
The question lands sharper than I expect.
I close my eyes.
“I’m calling now, aren’t I?”
Another pause.
Then something shifts in his voice. Barely. The way ice shifts before it cracks — so subtle that if you weren’t listening for it, you’d miss it entirely.
“Why did you agree to this?” he asks quietly.
My breath catches.
“I don’t owe you an explanation for my choices.”
“You’re carrying my child.”
“I’m carrying a child for intended parents,” I correct, my voice steadying. “That’s what the contract says.”
“Celyne—”
“I didn’t know it was you.” The words come out before I can stop them. Raw. Unpolished. True. “If I had known, I never would have—”
I stop myself.
The bathroom feels smaller suddenly.
“You never would have what?” he asks, and there is something terrifyingly quiet in the way he says it.
I don’t answer.
Because the honest answer is too complicated.
Too dangerous.
Too close to something I refuse to look at directly.
“I want out of the contract,” I say instead.
The silence that follows is different this time.
Heavier.
“That’s not possible,” he says.
“Everything is possible with enough money, Alexander. You taught me that.” “Remember”
“The pregnancy has already begun.” His voice is clipped now. Professional. The voice he uses in boardrooms when he is done being patient. “Terminating the process at this stage carries significant medical risk — to you and to the child.”
“I’m aware of the medical risk.”
“Then you’re aware you can’t simply walk away.”
“Watch me.”
It comes out harder than I intend.
Another silence.
Then he exhales. Slow. Controlled. The sound of a man choosing his words the way a surgeon chooses a blade.
“You signed a contract,” he says quietly. “Legally binding. With penalties for breach.”
“Sue me.”
“Celyne.”
My name in his mouth again. Different this time. Stripped of the cold professionalism.
Almost—
Almost gentle.
“Stop.”
I press my palm flat against the cool tile floor.
“Why?” I whisper.
“Because running solves nothing. You know that.”
The words reach somewhere I don’t want them to reach.
Because he is right.
And I hate him for it.
I have been running for five years — from this city, from his memory, from every version of myself that existed when I loved him.
And I ran straight back into the one thing I was trying to escape.
There is no outrunning this.
There never was.
“What do you want?” I ask finally. My voice comes out quieter than I intend. Tired.
Another pause.
Then—
“Come back to the clinic tomorrow morning. Eight o’clock.”
“For what?”
“To speak with the doctor. To go over the terms properly. To handle this like adults.”
Adults.
I almost laugh.
There is nothing adult about this situation. Nothing rational. Nothing clean.
“And Elara?” I ask.
The name falls between us like a stone into still water.
He doesn’t answer immediately.
“She won’t be there,” he says finally.
I don’t know if that makes it better or worse.
“Fine,” I say.
“Eight o’clock.”
“I heard you the first time.”
Another silence.
This one has a different texture entirely.
Less hostile.
More—
Uncertain.
Which unsettles me far more than his coldness ever could.
Because Alexander Hale is never uncertain.
“Celyne.”
“What?”
A beat.
“…Get some rest.”
The call ends.
I sit on the bathroom floor for a long time after that.
My phone dark in my hand.
The city hums distantly outside Clara’s window — indifferent, alive, endlessly moving.
I press my palm to my stomach.
The child inside me is barely a whisper of life. A cluster of cells. A beginning that has no idea what world it has fallen into.
I’m sorry, I think silently.
You didn’t choose this either.
Neither did I.
But here we are.
---
I don’t sleep well.
I lie in the dark of Clara’s guest room, staring at the ceiling, listening to the city breathe outside.
At some point, Clara appears in the doorway.
She doesn’t speak.
She just crosses the room, slides into the bed beside me, and pulls the covers up like we are twelve years old again hiding from Mandy’s sharp voice in the dark.
“You called him,” she says softly. Not a question.
“Yes.”
She is quiet for a moment.
“And?”
“I’m going back tomorrow.”
Another silence.
She reaches over and takes my hand in the darkness.
“I’ll come with you,” she says.
And I squeeze her hand.
Because she is the one constant that has never broken.
The one person who has never left.
I close my eyes and let myself believe that.
For tonight, at least.
I let myself believe it.
Because tomorrow morning at eight o’clock…
I will have to face Alexander Hale again.
POV: Alexander I couldn’t focus. Not on work. Not on meetings. Not even on the endless reports sitting on my desk. My thoughts kept returning to the same thing. Celyne. I leaned back in my chair and rubbed my forehead. Why did I stand up for her? The question had been bothering me all day. I could have ignored it. I could have stayed silent. I could have looked away and acted as if nothing had happened. Wouldn’t that have been easier? Wouldn’t that have been the smart thing to do? After all, that was what I had done countless times before. Ignored things. Avoided things. Pretended not to see things. But this time… This time I couldn’t. The image of Elara grabbing her. The slap. The accusation. Something about it felt wrong. Very wrong.
Celyne povI needed air.That was the only thing running through my mind as I left the Hale mansion.The walls felt too close.The rooms felt too crowded.Every hallway felt like a trap waiting to close around me.Ever since the confrontation with Elara, I hadn’t been able to think clearly.The image of her holding my medication bottle kept replaying in my head.Again.And again.And again.I wrapped my arms around myself as I stepped through the entrance of the amusement park.The place was quieter than usual.Children laughed in the distance.Music drifted through the air.Families walked together.Couples held hands.It should have been comforting.Instead, it only reminded me of everything I had lost.My feet carried me toward a small corner hidden behind an old carousel.Nobody knew about this place.At least, nobody important.Whenever life became too much, I came here.Whenever I needed to think, I came here.Whenever I needed to escape reality, I came here.I slowly lowered my
Elara POVThe bottle shook in my hand. Not because I was nervous. Because I was angry. Furious. After everything, I had done to protect that child, after all the money spent on doctors, treatments, specialists and care. she had the audacity to hide medication from us. And somehow expected nobody to notice. I stared at Celyne. Her face had gone completely pale. Interesting. Very interesting. That wasn’t the face of an innocent person. That was the face of someone caught. “What is that?” she asked quietly. I laughed. “What is it?” “Give it back.” The moment those words left her mouth, I knew I was right. Whatever this medicine was, she desperately didn’t want anyone seeing it. “Not until you explain.” “There is nothing to explain.” “Really?” I held the bottle high
Celyne pov Three weeks. Three whole weeks had passed since the accident. Three weeks since I woke up in that hospital bed. Three weeks since someone tried to destroy everything. Yet somehow life had returned to normal. Or at least everyone pretended it had. The investigation had gone nowhere. No suspects. No answers. No justice. Just silence. Sometimes I wondered if they had truly searched at all. Because I knew what I felt that day. I knew I hadn’t simply fallen. Someone had touched me. Someone had pushed me. Someone wanted me gone. The thought still sent chills through me. Yet every day the mansion carried on as if nothing had happened. Breakfast. Lunch. Dinner. Meetings. Preparations. Check ups. Smiles. The same ro
Elara povThe moment I received Clara’s message, I knew this wasn’t something she would discuss over the phone. Clara was many things. Patient. Careful. Manipulative. But reckless wasn’t one of them. If she wanted to meet in person, then whatever she had discovered was important. Very important. I sat inside the corner booth of a small café across town, hidden from curious eyes. My fingers tapped impatiently against the table. Five minutes later, Clara finally arrived. A pair of sunglasses covered her eyes despite the cloudy weather. She slid into the seat opposite mine and removed them. “You look terrible,” she said. I glared at her. “You didn’t ask me here to discuss my appeara
Alexander povThe footage ended. Yet I remained staring at the screen. Something about it didn’t sit right with me. I replayed it again. And again. And again. The hallway appeared on the screen. Celyne walking alone. Slowly. Carefully. One hand resting against the wall. Then someone appeared. The camera angle wasn’t clear enough to show a face. But it showed enough. A brief interaction. A movement. Then Celyne falling. My jaw tightened. It wasn’t an accident. Someone was there. Someone had been close enough to touch her. Close enough to push her.
Elara POVThe moment I stepped into my father’s house, I knew something inside me had already shifted.Not cracked.Not shaken.Shifted.The air felt heavier here—thick with authority, power, and the kind of silence that forced people to measure every word before speaking. This wasn’t just a home.
Alexander POVThe office felt different.Too quiet.Too empty.I pushed the door open and stepped inside, the familiar space doing nothing to settle the unrest building inside me.For the first time in a long while—Being here didn’t feel like control.It felt like pressure.I walked slowly to my d
Vivian POVWhy was everything turning out like this?I stood by the window, arms folded, staring at my reflection in the glass. The city lights flickered behind me, but I barely saw them. My mind was elsewhere—back at the press conference, replaying every second with sharp precision.It had been un
Alexander POVThe hospital doors slid open the moment I stepped forward.Cold air hit my face instantly.Sterile.Unforgiving.I hated hospitals.Too quiet… yet too loud at the same time.Too many things hidden behind calm voices and polite smiles.My steps were quick, controlled, echoing faintly a







