LOGINI thought my past was buried. I was wrong. On the eve of my wedding, anonymous messages began to haunt me—warnings that some things never stay buried. I ignored them. I had moved on. I was happy. I was marrying a good man. Until he walked into my wedding. Eden Blackwood—my first love, my deepest wound, now the untouchable billionaire CEO everyone worships. Seven years ago, he vanished without explanation. Now he’s back, looking at me like I still belong to him. I am married to another man. He refuses to accept that. I escaped him once. But this time… he came for me.
View MoreEVELYN
"Some things don't stay buried forever."
I read the message three times. Three times, and my hands still would not stop shaking.
The restaurant was warm. The kind of warm that wraps around your shoulders like a blanket. Chivido's was full of Saturday afternoon noise, couples leaning close, children laughing too loud, waitresses weaving between tables with practiced ease. Life, moving the way life does.
My chicken was getting cold.
I didn't care.
"Eve." Mia's voice cut through the noise. "You've been staring at that phone for four minutes. I've been counting."
I locked the screen without thinking.
"It's nothing," I said. "Social media trolls."
Mia tilted her head. Slowly. The way she did when she already knew I was lying and was giving me one last chance to fix it.
"Evelyn."
Just my name. That was all it took. Mia had a way of saying my name that made it sound like a question, a warning, and a hug all at once.
I put the phone face-down on the table. "I'm fine."
"You keep saying that word," she said. "Fine. Fine. Fine. Like if you say it enough times, it'll become true." She reached across the table and tapped the back of my hand. "You are not fine. Your eyes are doing the thing."
"What thing?"
"The thing where you go somewhere far away inside your head and leave your body sitting here to deal with me alone." She picked up her glass of Trevitos. "Which is very rude, by the way."
I almost smiled. That was Mia, she could make you almost smile even when your chest was caving in.
Tomorrow was my wedding.
I was supposed to be happy. I had every reason to be happy. Oscar was good. Oscar was steady, honest, the kind of man who remembered small things, the way I liked my coffee, the name of my childhood dog, the exact spot on my back where tension lived. He was safe. He was home.
So why did one anonymous message feel like a hand reaching out of the ground, grabbing my ankle, pulling?
My phone vibrated. Face-down, Still vibrated.
Mia noticed. Of course she noticed.
"Eve."
"Don't."
"I'm not doing anything."
"You're doing the face."
"I don't have a face."
"Mia. You have so many faces."
She pressed her lips together to hide the smile. Then she nodded at the phone. "Is it the comments? Because people have been sweet today. Your post blew up this morning. Everyone is …"
She picked up her own phone. Started scrolling my page. Reading aloud.
"'Beautiful couple.' 'God bless your home.' 'Mrs. James already?'" She pressed her hand to her chest. "Awwn. Eve, people love you."
Then she stopped.
The smile dropped.
Her eyes moved slowly across the screen.
"'When love finds the wrong person,'" she read quietly.
She looked up at me. Her expression had changed completely. no more teasing, no more warmth. Just a sharp, careful stillness.
"Who wrote that?" she asked.
"Mia .."
"Who wrote it, Eve?"
My throat was tight. "No name. No picture. The profile is blank."
She stared at the screen a moment longer, then set the phone down. She didn't speak. She didn't have to. The silence between us was already saying everything.
"Can we go?" I asked softly.
She nodded. "Yes."
No questions. No pressure.
That was the thing about Mia. She knew when to push and when to simply stand beside you.
We left without finishing our food.
* * *
Back in my bedroom, the world was quiet in the wrong way.
My wedding dress hung on the wardrobe door like a ghost, white and still, catching the evening light. Boxes of decorations lined the walls. Mia had organized everything with military precision. Tomorrow was supposed to be the most beautiful day of my life.
I sat on the edge of the bed. And then I saw the box. It was sitting on the reading table by the window, exactly where I had left it years ago. Old brown cardboard, edges soft with time, the lid slightly crooked. I had never been able to throw it away. Every time I tried, my hands refused.
Inside that box was a version of me I had worked very hard to bury.
Letters, Photographs. A dried flower that had once been pressed between the pages of a book I no longer owned. Small, stupid things that held the entire weight of a girl who had loved someone so completely she had forgotten how to exist without him.
I stood up. Walked to the table. Put both hands on the box. Then I pushed it to the back of the shelf and turned away.
Not today.
Not ever again.
My phone buzzed.
Unknown Number: You look happy, Evelyn.
I went cold from my neck to my feet. Before I could breathe, another message came.
Unknown Number: Let's see how long that lasts.
A knock on the door.
"Evelyn?" Mia's voice was careful. "Oscar is here."
I pressed the phone against my chest like I could hide it from myself. My heartbeat was loud and wrong. Too fast. Too much.
The door opened. Oscar stepped in.
He was wearing the dark grey shirt I had picked out for him last month. He looked good. He always looked good, clean, solid, like a man who had never once let the world knock him sideways.
"You're alone," he said, looking around. "Where's Mia?"
"Just stepped out." I stood quickly, turning so he wouldn't see my face. "I was just getting some rest."
He walked closer. Slowly. "Evelyn."
"I'm fine, Oscar.."
"You're shaking."
I looked down at my hands. He was right. I hadn't even noticed.
He closed the distance between us and took my hands in both of his. His hands were warm. Always warm. Like holding them was the most natural thing in the world.
"Talk to me," he said gently.
I shook my head. "I'm just tired. Wedding nerves."
He studied my face for a long moment. I had always hated how well he could read me. "Whatever is in your head right now," he said, "let it go. Tomorrow, you start a new chapter." He raised my hands to his lips. "And I'll be right there with you."
I nodded. Made myself smile.
He pulled me into a hug, and I let myself stay there, chin on his shoulder, his arms solid around me, the smell of his cologne familiar and safe.
My phone buzzed between us. I didn't move.
It buzzed again. Oscar pulled back slightly. "You should answer it. Could be the makeup artist."
I reached into my pocket..One new message.
Unknown Number: Tick. Tock.
The roo
m tilted. He was counting down to my wedding. And I had no idea how to stop him.
EVELYNBy the fourth anonymous message, I stopped telling myself it was coincidence.Someone wasn't trying to scare me anymore.They were leading me somewhere.The latest message appeared just after noon.Unknown: If you want the truth about Eden, come alone.Attached was an address.An abandoned church on the outskirts of Manhattan.No signature.No explanation.Only one final sentence.Come before someone dies.Every sensible part of me knew I shouldn't go.Oscar was at work.Mia hadn't answered any of my calls since yesterday.Eden had texted three times.I ignored all of them.For some reason I couldn't explain, I drove to the address anyway.The church looked forgotten.Broken stained-glass windows.Peeling paint.Dust covering every wooden pew.The silence inside felt unnatural."Hello?"My voice echoed.Nothing.Then..."I knew you'd come."I spun around.A woman stepped out from the shadows.She looked to be in her early thirties.Beautiful.Elegant.But exhausted.As if she h
CHAPTER 21EVELYNThe worst thing about secrets was not discovering them.It was realizing how long they had been sitting beside you, quietly breathing, while you lived your life pretending everything was normal.I stared at the envelope on my kitchen counter for almost ten minutes before touching it.No name.No address.Just my name written across the front.EVELYN WILLIAMS.Not Mrs. James.Not Evelyn James.That alone made my stomach tighten.Someone wanted me to remember exactly who I was before the wedding.Before Oscar.Before everything became complicated.I looked toward the window. The city lights blurred through the glass, beautiful and distant.My life had become a strange collection of things I couldn't trust anymore.My memories.My marriage.My friendships.Even my own heart.Slowly, I opened the envelope.Inside was a photograph.My fingers froze.It was old.Seven years old, maybe.But I knew the people in it.Me.And Eden.We were sitting on the steps outside his old
CHAPTER 20EVELYNThere was a strange thing about betrayal.The person who hurt you the most was rarely the person you expected.I had spent seven years blaming Eden.Seven years replaying every moment.The goodbye that never happened.The calls that were never answered.The silence that destroyed me.I had built an entire story in my head.Eden left.Eden forgot.Eden moved on.But now I was standing in my childhood home, holding a file that connected my mother, my father, Eden, and the man who had been trying to destroy him.And I didn't know what story was real anymore."Did my mother know Eden?"My father looked at me.A long, painful silence passed."Yes."My throat tightened."How?"He sat down slowly."Your mother worked with Blackwood Industries before we got married."I frowned."My mother was never in business.""Not publicly."I stared."Then who was she?"My father's expression changed.Like he was looking at someone who wasn't there anymore."Your mother was brilliant, Ev
CHAPTER 19EVELYNI used to believe the truth would set me free.That was what people always said.The truth.Like it was some beautiful thing waiting on the other side of pain.Nobody ever warned me that sometimes the truth was a monster.And once you opened the door, you couldn't close it again.I sat in my car outside my childhood home for almost ten minutes.I didn't know what I was afraid of.Seeing my father?Finding out he was involved?Or discovering that after everything, I had misunderstood everyone.My hand rested on the steering wheel.My phone sat beside me.Three missed calls from Oscar.Two messages from Eden.One from Mia.I couldn't bring myself to open any of them.Because every person I trusted had a secret.And every secret had my name attached to it.Finally, I stepped out.The house looked exactly the same.Same white walls.Same garden.Same front porch where my father used to sit every Sunday morning with his coffee.A place that once felt safe.Now it felt lik












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