LOGINThe next morning at Wellington Enterprises, Lucas was trying to make sense of the mountain of responsibilities that came with his new position when his assistant buzzed him.
“Mr. Wellington? You have a visitor. Mr. Damien Rhodes?” Lucas frowned. “Send him in.” Damien strode into the office moments later, carrying two bags from that expensive deli downtown, grinning like he owned the place. “Surprise!” Damien announced, setting the bags on Lucas’s desk. “Brought you lunch.” Lucas stared at him. “It’s 10 AM.” “Early lunch. Pre-lunch. Whatever.” Damien threw himself into a chair. “Can’t a guy visit his best friend at work?” “Since when do you bring me lunch?” Lucas asked suspiciously. “Actually, since when do you show up unannounced at my office? .“You hate corporate buildings, you always say they make you want to die of boredom.” “Maybe I’m turning over a new leaf.” Damien’s smile was too bright, too casual. “Besides, I wanted to see your fancy new VP digs. Very nice. Corner office and everything.” Lucas wasn’t buying it. He knew Damien too well. There was always an angle. “What are you really doing here?” Before Damien could answer, the door opened. Miriam walked in, a folder in her hands, her expression all business. She wore a burgundy blouse and black slacks, her hair pulled back in a sleek ponytail. Professional. Untouchable. And Damien’s entire demeanor shifted. He sat up straighter, his eyes tracking her every movement with an intensity that made Lucas’s stomach drop. “Here’s the Richardson file you asked for,” Miriam said to Lucas, her tone clipped. She set the folder on his desk without looking at him. “Thanks,” Lucas said quietly. Miriam turned to leave, but Damien was already on his feet. “Hey,” he said, that charming smile in full force. “We didn’t get properly introduced yesterday. I’m Damien Rhodes. And you’re Miriam, right?” Miriam’s gaze swept over him with the warmth of an arctic winter. “I know who you are.” “I was hoping maybe we could grab coffee sometime. I would love to get to know Lucas’s sister better.” “I’m busy.” “What about lunch?” “Busy.” “Dinner?” “Still busy.” Miriam moved toward the door. Damien stepped into her path, still smiling, but something predatory had entered his eyes. “Come on, just one cup of coffee. I promise I’m more interesting than I look.” “Please move,” Miriam said, her voice ice. For a moment, Lucas thought Damien wouldn’t. There was a beat where his friend seemed to consider pushing further, where that charming mask slipped just enough to show something darker underneath. Then Damien stepped aside with an exaggerated bow. Miriam left without another word. The moment the door closed, Lucas hissed, “Dude, I told you. My sister is off limits.” Damien turned to him, all pretense of casual friendship gone. “She’s incredible.” “She’s not interested.” “She will be.” Damien’s confidence was absolute, unshakeable, and deeply concerning. “Damien, seriously” “I couldn’t sleep last night,” Damien interrupted, sitting back down. “I Kept thinking about her. Those eyes, man. That fire. She’s not like other women. She doesn’t fall all over herself trying to impress me.” “That’s because she’s smart enough to see through your bullshit,” Lucas snapped. “Leave her alone.” Damien studied him for a long moment. “You’re really protective of her.” “She’s my sister.” “Funny. Yesterday you were celebrating taking her promotion.” The words were delivered casually, but they landed like daggers. “Now suddenly you care about protecting her?” Lucas felt his face flush. “That’s different” “Is it?” Damien leaned forward. “You let your mom screw her over, took what was rightfully hers, and now you want to play the concerned brother? Pick a lane, Lucas.” “You don’t understand the situation” “I understand perfectly.” Damien stood, straightening his jacket. “Your mom runs the show, your dad’s too weak to stop her, and you’re content to ride their coattails. But Miriam? She’s fighting for everything while you coast on your last name. And you know what? That makes her even more interesting to me.” “Stay away from her,” Lucas said, his voice hard. “I mean it, Damien. She’s been through enough.” Damien paused at the door, that predatory smile returning. “We’ll see.” After he left, Lucas sat frozen in his chair, a cold dread settling over him. He had seen Damien pursue women before. Seen what happened when his friend decided he wanted something. And he had never seen Damien want anything as much as he clearly wanted Miriam. ----- That evening, Lucas waited for Miriam in the hallway outside her room. “I need to talk to you,” he said when she appeared at the top of the stairs. “I told you…” “It’s about Damien Rhodes.” That made her pause. “What about him?” “He’s not a good guy, Miriam. I know he’s been… persistent. But you need to stay away from him.” Miriam’s laugh was bitter. “Now you care about protecting me? Where was this concern yesterday when you were taking my promotion?” “That’s not fair..” “Isn’t it?” She brushed past him toward her door. “You let your mother manipulate Dad into giving you something you didn’t earn, something I worked my ass off for, and now you want to play protective brother? I don’t need your protection, Lucas. What I needed was your support. And you made it very clear where your loyalty lies.” “Miriam, please, just listen. Damien is dangerous. I’ve seen how he treats women, and…” “Save it.” She opened her door. “I can take care of myself. I’ve been doing it my whole life, in case you forgot.” The door closed in his face. Lucas stood there, that feeling of dread growing stronger. Because he knew what was coming next. He knew Damien Rhodes. And he knew that when Damien wanted something, he didn’t stop until he got it. No matter what it cost. No matter who got hurt.Emily stood up and walked straight toward Damien.“You did this.” Her voice was low, but it carried weight. “Didn’t you?”She stepped closer, finger raised. “If anything happens to her — if anything happens to that baby, you will be hearing from my lawyers. I will make sure of it.”Damien’s jaw tightened. He looked past her toward Miriam.“I need to speak to her.”“You need to leave.”“Emily, that’s my wife. My child”“That’s exactly the problem.” Emily’s voice didn’t waver. “She doesn’t want you here right now.”Damien looked at Miriam across the room.Miriam met his eyes for a second. Just long enough.Then she looked away.“Please go,” her voice was low, not loud enough for him to hear directly, but Emily caught it and turned back to him.“You heard her.” Emily’s voice was final. “Leave, Damien.”He stood there for a long moment, jaw working, hands clenched at his sides.Then he turned and walked out without another word.The doors closed behind him.Miriam exhaled and let her hea
She stood in front of the mirror, hands resting lightly on the sides of her stomach.It was there now. The slight curve, the unmistakable roundness that hadn’t been there a few weeks ago. She turned slightly to the side, studying it.Then she felt it— a small flutter. It was gone in a second.She pressed her hand flat against her stomach.There it was again.A kick.She exhaled slowly. Something settled in her chest that she had been holding at a distance for months. This was real. All of it. She was going to be a mother.She looked at herself in the mirror, and for the first time since the doctor had said those words in that hospital room, she didn’t feel conflicted about it.She felt the kick again and smiled.“I’m going to the hospital tomorrow,” she said. “For a check-up.”She hadn’t looked at him, but she could feel him watching her. He had been watching her since she got up.“I’ll come with you.”She turned.He was lying on his side on the bed, head propped on his hand, eyes on
A knock came at the door.She looked up from her desk.“Come in.”The door opened.Lucas.She blinked. Then she slowly leaned back in her chair.“What are you doing here?”He stepped inside, hands in his pockets, looking around the office like he owned the place.“Is that how you welcome your only brother to your company?”“Lucas.”“Nice place.” He looked at the walls, the desk, the logo on the glass partition. “Mira and Co.” He nodded. “I like it.”He dropped into the chair across from her without being told.She watched him.“How have you been?” he asked. “How’s married life? Is Damien treating you well?”She looked at him. “I’m sure you know where your friend works. Why don’t you ask him yourself?” She tilted her head. “Or is he not your friend anymore?”Lucas went quiet.He looked at his hands briefly. Then back at her.“I don’t like this,” he said. The casual tone was gone. “The way things are between us. I want to make it right, Miriam. I mean that.”She closed the file in front
The text was from Adrian.They had been talking properly for a few months now. It had started with an apology she sent the morning after the restaurant.I apologize for my silence. I'm unsure what you expect, considering my marriage. So I need to ask. What do you truly want from this?He hadn’t taken long to reply.A friend. That’s it. I enjoy talking to you.She had believed him, mostly because he had always respected their boundaries. He was just someone on the other end of the phone when she was bored or needed to laugh at something lighthearted. He checked in on her and sent random messages that made her smile. Never once did he push past the line they had both agreed upon without discussing it first.Damien had noticed she was always on her phone lately. She had caught his eye on her a few times and waited for the question that never came. He was trying not to lose his temper, and she could see the effort in the way he chose silence over reaction. The pregnancy had done something
It’s been three months, and her stomach is still flat — barely a hint of what is growing inside her. Most mornings, she had to remind herself it was real. That somewhere underneath the surface, something was happening that she couldn’t see yet.The morning sickness reminded her every time she forgot.She sat by the window in the bedroom, tea in hand, watching the city do its usual thing below. It was early. Damien was still asleep.He hadn’t lost his temper in three months—not once. She didn’t know how to handle this change, the absence of something she had grown accustomed to anticipating. Every time he came home late, she braced herself for the shift. Each time she said the wrong thing, she watched his face for a flicker of anger.It never came.Maybe he had changed, she thought. Maybe this baby had done something to him that she hadn’t been able to do on her own.Or maybe she was just hoping.She set her tea down and looked at her stomach.She had always wanted children. She had i
The smell hit her before anything else — that distinct mix of antiseptic and clean linen that could only mean one thing. She turned her head.Damien was sitting beside the bed, leaning forward, elbows on his knees, still in the clothes she had last seen him in. He looked like he hadn’t moved in hours.The moment he saw her eyes open, he exhaled — sharp and long, like he had been holding it in.“Thank God.” He reached for her hand immediately. “I thought I had lost you, baby.”She blinked at the ceiling. “Where am I?”“Hospital.” He squeezed her hand. “You fainted this morning.”She looked at him. Then around the room again.It had started in the kitchen.She had come down that morning while Damien was still upstairs, having taken the day off. She had been standing at the counter, reaching for a glass, nothing unusual, until the room tilted.She didn’t remember hitting the floor.Rosie had found her and had stood there for barely two seconds before she turned and ran.“Sir.” She had pu
“Welcome sir.”The gatekeeper’s voice reached him before he even stepped out of the car. Damien parked, nodded once, and walked inside.It had been a long day. Long day of working through the files that had piled up during the honeymoon. Long day of checking his phone and hoping that Miriam respond
The door had barely closed behind them.“You embarrassed me tonight,” Damien said.Miriam turned around. “I embarrassed you? You dragged me out of a gala because a man said hello to me.”“He wasn’t just saying hello.”“He introduced himself. That’s it.” She dropped her clutch on the side table. “Yo
The drive back home was calm and peaceful.Miriam kept both hands on the wheel and let the quiet sit with her. Something felt different. Lighter. The few hours with Emily had put something back in its right place.She hadn’t realised how much she had missed her until she was pulling out of that par
“I’m home!” Emily’s voice was bright and excited. “Well, I’m at my parents’ place. Can you come over? Mom and Dad are dying to see you.”Miriam was already getting up before she finished the sentence.“I’ll be right there in an hour “.She hung up and was on her feet before she’d even fully process







