LOGINThe midday sun reflected off Verta’s glass walls, an upscale restaurant where everything felt polished, as Sloane adjusted her pink silk blouse and watched Lila Monroe sit across from her, looking effortlessly perfect in cream cashmere.
“Tell me everything,” Lila said softly with a teasing smile, squeezing Sloane’s hand, “So… how’s married life treating my favorite person?”
Sloane smiled, warmth tugging at her chest—Lila had been with her since childhood, through scraped knees and broken hearts. “It’s good,” she said softly. “Really good.”
“Good?” Lila repeated as she raised her coffee. “Not ‘incredible’ or ‘blissful’? Just… good?”
“Great… sure, great,” Sloane muttered, forcing a smile.
“You’re putting on that polite, careful voice,” Lila said, setting her cup down with a soft click. “The same one you used when your mom asked about her new boyfriend. Sloane… I’ve known you for twenty-three years. Tell me, what’s really wrong?”
“Nothing’s wrong.” And it wasn’t, we’re just busy. Sloane responded, knowing fully well what she said is a lie. “The new fund he’s launching is consuming all his time.”
“Busy.” Lila frowned lightly. “So he’s still at the office before you wake up? Still missing dinner?” When Sloane nodded, she continued, “Marcus mentioned the rumors in the financial circles. They’re saying Nathaniel’s fund is taking on unprecedented risk. It must be eating him alive.”
Sloane felt defensive, but also certain. “He doesn’t bring work stress home and that’s one of the things I love about him. When we’re together, we’re *together*.”
It was true. Their date nights were sacred. Just last week, Nathaniel had surprised her with reservations at that impossible-to-book sushi place, had listened with genuine interest as she talked about her latest commission. He’d held her hand across the table, his thumb tracing circles on her wrist, and told her she was the only thing keeping him sane.
“That’s beautiful,” Lila said smiling. “I’m just worrying too much as usual, you know I like to fuss over the people I love.” She reached for her purse gracefully and added, “You deserve real happiness, not just good or even great but something truly extraordinary.”
As she pulled out her lip gloss, the sleeve of her cream blouse rode up.
Nestled beside Lila’s gold watch was a woven platinum bracelet, delicate yet strong, finished with a single teardrop-shaped black diamond clasp.
She recognized the bracelet instantly. The one Nathaniel wore every day after they moved in together and remembering how it suddenly disappeared, how he’d searched in panic before brushing it off. “Just a thing,” he’d said, kissing her temple. “I have everything that matters right here.”
The memory hit her painfully clear—Nathaniel’s bare wrist as he reached for his coffee, the pale mark where the bracelet had been, and his easy smile. “I think I lost it at the gym, clasp must have broken.”
But it was right here, on Lila’s wrist.
“Sloane? Darling, you’ve gone pale,” Lila whispered with a hint of worry in her voice. “What is it?”
“Your bracelet,” she said, stunned. “Where did you get it?”
Lila looked down and for a brief moment her face went completely empty then she gave a small, uncertain laugh. “This? I’ve had it for years. Why?”
“Nathaniel had one just like it.” Sloane answered, her heart pounding. “He said he lost it months ago.”
“Did he?” Lila extended her wrist for a closer look. The black diamond winked darkly in the light. “How strange. It’s probably just a common design, though. You know how these boutique pieces get copied.”
It wasn’t just any design, it was made for him. Nathaniel had said his father commissioned it from a jeweler in Amsterdam, a piece like no other.
Sloane’s eyes drifted from the bracelet to Lila’s face: her person, the one who’d held her when her father vanished for three months in college, who’d cried harder than her own mother while helping her pick a wedding dress, who had just spent the last twenty minutes gently, relentlessly questioning every part of her marriage.
The restaurant buzzed with clinking plates and quiet voices and Sloane felt like she might stumble.
“Maybe he got his from the same place I got mine, Paris has dozens of jewelry boutiques. Or maybe…” Lila paused, her expression shifting to something almost playful. “Maybe he gave it to someone, as a gift and then felt guilty about it.”
The words hung between them, fragile and painful.
Lila smiled and reached across the table to take Sloane’s hand, her touch warm and the platinum bracelet cool against her skin.
“You’re shaking,” Lila said softly. “Let me get you some water.”
She couldn’t move and Lila holding her hand, she seemed perfect, but the bracelet reminded Sloane she didn’t know who was lying.
Or if they both were.
She called Elena first who arrived twelve minutes later, in a cream blouse and wide-leg trousers and her blonde hair pinned at the nape of her neck, she took one look at Damon standing on the far side of Sloane’s office and didn’t say a word.Coming from Elena, that said a lot.“He stays,” Before Elena could respond, Sloane said, … “For now.”Elena put her portfolio on the side table and sat down across from Sloane, crossed her legs and looked at Damon. Her face was calm, but she didn’t look impressed.“Elena,” Damon said.“Damon,” Elena said, giving him a look that said she wasn’t convinced.Sloane spread the contents of the folder across her desk. “Here’s the situation,” she said in a steady, businesslike tone. “Damon has proof linking Marcus to Nathaniel’s holding company. We also have a witness who understands how the company operates, we need to contact that witness without Nathaniel finding out and we have to move before the board meeting at the end of the month.”Elena leaned
Sloane Blackwell stood at her window of her quiet office with a cup of tea, watching the city thirty floors below move without her. She was still wearing her charcoal blazer, and her dark locs were pinned up. The day had been full of meetings and phone calls. She had also spoken with her lawyer, who warned her about a legal motion Marcus Hale’s team was preparing.She had assured Harrison that she wasn’t afraid, but she kept her exhaustion to herself.There was a soft and hesitant knock on the door, which was unusual. Most people who came to see Sloane were board members, lawyers, and executives who are always confident and direct.She turned toward the door.“Come in.”The door opened and Damon Cross walked through it, he looked the same and completely different at the same time.The sleeves of his navy shirt were rolled up to his elbows. For Damon Cross, who was always neatly dressed in professional settings, it stood out.Sloane did not move from where she was standing.“You have
Sloane sat at her desk with the documents neatly arranged in front of her and her third cup of coffee growing cold beside her. She was working on the timeline Harriet needed by morning which required her full attention and making it easy to lose track of time and forget about everything else, it was one of the few things in her life that still felt uncomplicated.A call came on a Sunday evening and Sloane recognized the number immediately, but she hesitated for a second before answering.“Mr. Grey,” she said.“Sloane.” Harrison Grey’s voice came through the line. He was the longest-serving member of the Vance Industries board, seventy-four years old and the one person in the entire composition of the company’s governance structure whose name she had not marked with a question or a worry when she’d gone through the list because she did not know where he stood.You could never tell what Harrison Grey was thinking. His respect had to be earned, his support wasn’t guaranteed, and he rarel
Sloane was in the middle of a call with Harriet when Claire showed up at the office door. She held up her tablet and whispered, “This is important.”Sloane held up one finger.Harriet was outlining the legal process for challenging the board vote and Sloane followed every word, but she couldn’t ignore Claire’s expression. It was obvious that whatever she was reading on the tablet was a big deal.“Harriet,” Sloane said, when there was a small break in the conversation. “Let me call you back in five minutes.”“Everything all right?” Harriet asked.“I’ll find out in five minutes.”She hung up and looked at Claire. “Show me.”Claire walked over to the desk and placed the tablet in front of her.The headline was boldly written:UNSTABLE HEIRESS ABANDONS DUTIES FOR BODYGUARD FLING — EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS INSIDE.Two photographs were attached below, Sloane looked at them quietly for a few seconds.The first photo was taken from a distance and looked slightly blurry, showing a man and a woman stan
Sloane saw the story on her phone first on a Wednesday morning. A notification from a financial news app she had set up years ago alerted her to any mention of Vance Industries or her name. She was standing barefoot in the penthouse kitchen, still wearing the clothes she had slept in. The coffee was brewing while the morning light slowly filled the city outside.She tapped the notification and read the headline. Then she placed her phone face-down on the counter, poured herself a cup of coffee, and read it again. This time, she leaned against the counter and stood quietly.People close to Vance Industries have expressed concerns about the COO’s recent behavior. They cited poor decision-making, frequent absences, and actions that several people connected to the board described as disruptive.She took a few more sips of coffee, turned her phone face down, and headed to her room to get dressed.Claire was already at her desk when Sloane walked out forty minutes later, she’d seen it too.
The restaurant was everything Lila used to dream about, she hadn’t grown up thinking about fancy place. But later in her twenties, while eating takeout with Sloane in a small apartment, she sometimes imagine elegant dinners with a man who truly wants her. Now she was living that picture and she was miserable. Nathaniel sat across from her, eating quietly and taking his time. He was the type of man who liked everything under control. His dark hair was starting to gray at the sides, and he had the kind of looks and confidence that naturally drew attention which Lila had spent years drawn to.Tonight, though, he barely looked at her and it felt as if he had already moved on but only going through the motions out of habit.“You seem quiet,” Lila said. Nathaniel looked up quickly, just a quick acknowledgement that someone has spoken. “I’m thinking,” he said. “About?” “Work.” He returned to his plate. “Nothing you need to be involved in.” Lila picked up her wine glass and held it in h
An envelope arrived on a Tuesday. Not digitally, not through any of the secure channels Sloane had spent the last two weeks or through email. An actual envelope, cream-colored and unmarked except for her name written across the front.Petra brought it to her personally, she walked directly into Slo
The sixty-eighth floor of Vance Industries felt empty after midnight, Sloane’s heels echoing on the concrete as she walked back from the kitchenette with cold coffee in her hand while her desk glowed alone in the darkness, covered in plans for the Tokyo flagship that she stayed late to perfect afte
The sunlight through the tall windows should have been beautiful, and in her first week as Mrs. Blackwell, Sloane had believed it meant she was above all her problems. Well, that delusion lasted nine days.Now the sunlight showed the truth, making the space between her and Nathaniel feel like a bar
The crystal chandeliers of The Carlyle ballroom spilled light like liquid gold onto Manhattan’s elite. Sloane Blackwell stood at the edge of a glittering circle, posture flawless, expression serene; every inch the billionaire’s wife.Her husband, Nathaniel, held the room. He always did.His calm ba







