LOGINElara was never meant to be more than a mistake. After a one-night encounter with Adrian, a powerful man desperate to secure his inheritance, she finds herself pregnant—and trapped in a contract marriage built on cold terms and zero love. He promised her protection. He promised her stability. But he never promised her his heart. Because it already belonged to someone else. And when the woman he truly loves walks back into his life, Elara’s fragile world begins to crumble. Now, carrying his child and wearing his ring, she must decide- Is it worth staying in a marriage where she will always come second?
View MoreThe problem with loving Adrian Vale was that it felt like standing in a room where the air slowly disappeared.
You didn’t notice it at first. You laughed, you breathed, you lived. And then one day, you realized you were gasping and he was still standing there, calm, composed, asking why you looked so tired. Adrian watched her reflection in the glass. She looked smaller than he remembered. Or maybe quieter. He couldn’t tell when that had happened. “You’re not listening again,” she said without turning around. “I am,” he replied immediately. “No,” she said softly. “You’re waiting for your turn to speak.” The words landed harder than she intended but she didn’t take them back. She was too tired for softness now. They had been circling this conversation for months. Tonight, it finally caught up with them. “I’m exhausted, Adrian.” He frowned. “From work? We can….” “No.” She shook her head. “From us.” Silence stretched between them. She laughed then a short, broken sound. “That’s the point.” She moved closer, but there was no warmth in the distance she crossed. “I’ve told you. Over and over. I tell you when you don’t come to family dinners. When you leave in the middle of conversations because your phone buzzes. When I ask you to talk to me and you say, ‘Not now, Sera. I’ll handle it.’ You handle everything except me.” “I provide for you,” he said, too quickly. “I protect you.” She looked at him like he’d missed something obvious. “I don’t need a shield. I need a partner.” Adrian’s jaw tightened. “This feels unfair.” “Does it?” Her voice trembled now. “Because what feels unfair to me is loving a man who treats emotions like liabilities.” That stung. He took a step back, crossing his arms defensive, closed. “You don’t open up,” she went on. “You don’t talk about your childhood. Or your parents. Or why your family’s name makes people whisper. Every time I ask, you shut me out. I’m marrying into shadows, Adrian.” “They’re private matters.” “They’re secrets,” she corrected. “And they follow us everywhere.” She exhaled shakily. “My family is already a mess. My father’s illness. My mother leaning on me for everything. My siblings fighting over money we don’t have. I carry them every day. I come home hoping you’ll be… somewhere I can rest.” Her voice cracked. “But you’re another place I have to be strong.” “You make decisions for us without asking,” she said. “You schedule our lives like meetings. You decide when we travel, who we see, what matters. And when I disagree, you look at me like I’m inefficient.” “That’s not true.” “Isn’t it?” She stepped closer, her eyes sharp now. “When was the last time you asked what I wanted? Not what made sense. Not what was strategic. What I wanted.” He couldn’t answer. She smiled sadly. “Exactly.” The silence pressed in again, thick and heavy. “I still love you,” she said, quietly. “That’s the worst part. I love you so much that I’ve been shrinking myself to fit into your world. Her hand clenched at her side. “And I’m disappearing.” Adrian felt something unfamiliar rise in his chest panic, maybe. “So what are you saying?” She looked at him for a long moment. Took him in like she was memorizing a face she might never see the same way again. “I’m saying I need space.” His shoulders stiffened. “You want to leave.” “No.” She shook her head immediately. “I don’t want to lose you. I just if we keep going like this, we’ll hate each other.” The word hate echoed. “A break,” she said carefully. Adrian’s control slipped for the first time that night. “And what am I supposed to do during this break?” She swallowed. “Figure out if you’re capable of loving someone without managing them.” That hurt more than he expected. “And you?” he asked. “I need to remember who I am without fighting to be heard.” She reached for her bag, already packed. That detail struck him too late. “You’re leaving tonight,” he said. Already agaited “Yes.” He looked at her in shock, and not sure if she was serious this time but something in the way she said “yes” felt different. He nodded once. It was the only movement he trusted himself to make. And Adrian Vale was alone in a room that suddenly had no air at all. He wanted to chase after her but for some reason his feet couldn’t move. Seraphina POV The elevator doors closed without hesitation. That was when it became real. Seraphina watched her reflection blur in the mirrored wall, eyes swollen, lips pressed together like they were holding back something unfinished. She waited, counted the seconds half-expecting the doors to shudder open again. They didn’t. He wasn’t coming. When she stepped outside, the storm broke open. Thunder rolled low and heavy, lightning tearing through the sky in bright, violent streaks. Rain hit her like punishment, soaking her coat, her hair, her resolve. She didn’t rush for cover. She barely felt it. Her chest tightened as she reached the pavement, the weight of six years finally collapsing in on her. The sob that escaped her was quiet, tired worn down by loving a man who never chased, never begged, never softened. She looked back once. The penthouse above was dark. No movement. No doubt. Her hands shook as she raised them for a taxi. The door opened, warm air spilling out, and she slid inside, curling inward like she was trying to disappear. As the car pulled away, she pressed her forehead to the window, watching the city smear into lights and rain. She waited for her phone to buzz. An apology. A question. Anything. Nothing came. Thunder cracked again, close enough to make her flinch. Tears streamed freely now. “I just wanted to matter,” she whispered. The taxi kept moving. The storm raged on. And with every passing block, she understood the truth she had been avoiding: If he didn’t chase her now, he never would. And loving him had finally cost her too much. Adrian POV. Adrian stood where she had left him. He didn’t move when the door closed. Didn’t follow the sound of her footsteps fading down the hall. He told himself it was restraint, not fear. Control, not pride. She’ll come back, he thought. She always cools down. That belief settled easily, dangerously. He replayed the conversation, cataloging her words the way he did losses and risks. Emotional exhaustion. Family pressure. His silence. His secrets. He told himself she was overwhelmed, projecting, misreading his intentions. He told himself many things. He could still fix this tomorrow, he reasoned. Apologies were more effective when things were calm. When emotions weren’t loud. That was how he justified staying still. He never considered that this was the moment that mattered. And that not chasing her would one day cost him more than he was prepared to lose.Seraphina POV Seraphina had been living in the village for three weeks.She'd chosen it specifically for what it offered distance. Quiet. A place so far removed from anything connected to the Vale name, the company, the world she'd spent the last several months trying to fully exit, that nobody here had ever heard of any of it. She rented a small house at the edge of the village. She'd told them, when she arrived, the simplest version of a story that explained her presence without inviting questions.My husband travels for work, she'd said. I needed somewhere quiet while I wait for him.It wasn't entirely a lie.It just wasn't the whole truth either.She heard about the stranger from the woman who sold vegetables at the small market a foreigner, found near the forest road, can't remember his own name, the nurse says he's getting better though.Seraphina had nodded politely.Hadn't thought much of it.It was three days later needing supplies for a cough that had been bothering her,
The room went still. Everyone looked at her. She kept her face completely even. "Before Adrian left," she said. "I called Mr. Osei. The transfer was completed." She held Derrick's gaze. "The fifteen percent is already in Adrian's name. There's nothing to sign." Helena looked at her. The flowers-and-tea voice was gone. What was underneath it was considerably colder. "You're lying," she said. "Call Mr. Osei," Elara said simply. "We will," Lucian said. "Good," she said. She held her ground. Three people and the weight of everything they'd done in the last weeks pressing against the single fact she'd just put in the room. True or not true she'd bought herself something. Time. She just needed— The elevator opened. Jonas came through the door at speed. He took in the room in one second — Derrick, Lucian, Helena, Elara standing against the wall with her hands flat at her sides and her face composed and doing something with her eyes that he read immediately
A pause. We haven't found the second passenger yet sir. The car went into the embankment. We're still searching. Jonas held the phone. His name was Adrian Vale,Jonas said. Yes sir, the voice said. We know. That's why we called this number. Is there family we should contact? Jonas looked at the wall of his office. Thought about the penthouse. About Elara at the kitchen table with her notebook. About a baby at fourteen weeks whose heartbeat he'd heard. I'll handle it, he said. He hung up. Sat on the floor. For approximately thirty seconds he allowed himself to be a person who had just received that information. Then he stood up. And started making calls. Elara POV She knew something was wrong before Jonas said anything. He called at seven. She was making tea. His voice had the specific quality of someone who has prepared what they're going to say and is delivering it carefully. "There's been an accident," he said. She set the kettle down. "Adrian's car," he said. "O
Adrian POV Adrian was already awake he'd been awake since four, which had become a pattern since the kitchen counter and I'm sorry and the ceiling he'd stared at for two hours afterward. He picked up on the first ring. Jonas. "You need to come in," he said. "Now. It's the Meridian infrastructure contract." Adrian was already out of bed. "What happened." "Someone filed a disclosure complaint with the regulatory board. Anonymous. Claiming financial irregularities in the original bid process." A pause. "It's detailed, Adrian. Too detailed to be random. Someone with inside knowledge filed this." Adrian stood at his window. The city was still dark. "Lucian," he said. "That's my read too." "How bad." "Bad enough that the regional board in Harwick wants a full audit. And the partner company in Harwick is threatening to pull their investment pending investigation." Another pause. "If they pull the whole project stalls. And if the project stalls during audit—" "T
Seraphina POV She heard his office door close. Stood in the corridor for a moment after. Then she went upstairs. She showered quickly the good kind, the kind that washed the day off properly. Changed into something simple. Dark jeans, a soft cream top that Camille had picked and she'd grown to
Vivienne was standing at the window. . She was wearing ivory. Perfectly pressed. Hair down and deliberate. She looked at Elara. Elara looked at her. The entrance hall held the specific quality of a space between two people who had last seen each other with one's hand raised and the other's s
Elara looked at her coffee. Looked at Amara. "I'm married," she said. Amara blinked. Once. Twice. "Married," she repeated. "Yes." "As in — legally. Certified. Someone put a ring—" "Courthouse," Elara said. "Few weeks ago." Amara stared at her. "Elara." She leaned forward. "Please tell m
Adrian POVSunday had a particular quality.He woke to it the slower light, the reduced city noise, the absence of the week's forward pressure and lay in his own bed staring at the ceiling and let himself have the morning without immediately filling it.He thought about the file.About his father'






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