LOGINSophia's POV
The rain wasn't stopping. If anything, it got louder, mocking me with every heavy drop that hit the plastic roof of the bus stop.
I stared at my phone's screen blankly. As though staring at it continuously was going to make a single dollar pop up.
How was I supposed to even get a bus? I couldn't even buy a pack of gum, let alone a ticket out of this nightmare.
My teeth were chattering so hard it actually started to hurt my jaw. I tried to pull my soaked sweater tighter around my chest, but it was useless.
I was officially a statistic. A headline in the making. Discarded Vale Wife Found Frozen at Bus Stop.
I couldn't even die with dignity.
Suddenly, the wall of rain was pierced by two blinding white lights. A bus was approaching…..me?
Maybe they'd be able to give a free ride if I begged? I just needed to wait for it to get close enough for me to yell.
I squinted, holding my hand up to block the glare. Oh. It wasn't a bus. It was a sleek, black sedan that looked like it cost more than the house I grew up in.
It pulled to a stop right in front of the bench. The engine purred before going off.
"Great," I muttered raspily. "Just what I need. A serial killer to finish the job."
The back window rolled down with a smooth hiss.
I froze. I knew that face. Everyone in the city knew that face.
Dominic Black.
The oldest of the five Black brothers. The man who spent fifty percent of his time making billions and the other fifty percent trying to wipe the Vale family off the corporate map.
He was Marcus’s absolute worst nightmare. And right now, he was looking at me like I was a very interesting specimen under a microscope.
"You look pathetic, Sophia," Dominic said. His voice was smooth, cold, and way too calm for a man staring at a drowned rat.
"Thanks, Dominic. I really needed the ego boost," I snapped. My pride was the only thing I had left, and I was clinging to it tight.
He leaned back into the leather upholstery, his dark eyes tracking the way I was shaking.
"I heard the news," he said. "The security at the Vale estate isn't as tight as they think. Word travels fast when a wife gets tossed out into a storm like you were.”
Hahahaha. It had been, what, thirty minutes?
And the scandal was already out there. Marcus and Victoria hadn't just ruined me; they’d turned me into a public joke before I even hit the bloody pavement.
"If you're here to laugh, get it over with," I said, looking away from him. "I don't have time for this. I have a bus to catch."
"With what money?" Dominic asked. "I know Marcus. I’m guessing your accounts are as empty as your stomach right now."
I bit my lip, refusing to look at him. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of seeing me cry.
"Get in the car," he commanded.
"Hell nah. I’m not getting in a car with you. You hate my husband."
"Ex-husband," Dominic corrected sharply. "And you’re right. I despise the man. Which is exactly why you’re going to get in this car."
I finally turned to look at him. "Why?"
Dominic leaned forward. "Think about it, Sophia. What would hurt Marcus more than anything? What would humiliate that arrogant prick in front of the entire board?"
I stared at him, my brain trying to keep up through the fog of exhaustion.
"You want to use me," I whispered.
"I want to adopt you," he said, a slow, predatory smirk spreading across his lips. "Publicly. The Blacks taking in the discarded Vale wife. Treating her like an honorary sister. Giving her the life the Vales were too cheap to provide."
He paused, letting the weight of that sink in.
"Imagine the headlines. Imagine Marcus’s face when he sees you at the next gala, dripping in Black diamonds, standing next to me. It wouldn't just be a scandal. It would be a declaration of war."
My heart was racing. This was insane. This was a nightmare wrapped in a fever dream.
"You're crazy," I said.
"I'm a strategist," Dominic countered. "And you're out of options. You stay here, and you’re a victim. You come with me, and you’re a weapon. Which one sounds better?"
I looked at the empty, dark road. I looked at my ruined shoes.
I had nothing. No one.
If I got in that car, I was stepping into another cage. A more expensive one, sure, but a cage nonetheless.
The Blacks weren't saints. They were more like sharks.
But at least they weren't Vales.
"Why me?" I asked. "You could find a hundred ways to mess with him."
"Because you know where the bodies are buried," Dominic said, his voice dropping an octave. "And because I like the look in your eyes right now. You want to burn his world down. I’m just offering you the matches."
He was right. I wanted Marcus to suffer. I wanted Victoria to choke on her family heirlooms.
I reached down, grabbed the handle of my pathetic suitcase, and stood up. My legs felt like jelly, but I forced myself to walk toward the car.
The driver hopped out and took the suitcase from me before I could protest. He looked at the crack in the side with a faint grimace before tossing it into the trunk.
I slid into the backseat, the warmth of the car hitting me like a physical wave. The leather was soft, smelling of expensive cologne and whatever air freshener product they use.
"Smart choice," he said.
"Don't get it twisted, Dominic," I said, my voice steadier now that I wasn't shivering. "I’m not your sister. And I’m not your pet."
"Of course not," he said, handing me a plush, dry towel. "You're a Black project now. And we never fail our projects."
As the car pulled away from the curb, I looked out the window at the bus stop.
Ten minutes ago, I was a broken girl waiting for her end. Now, I was sitting next to the most dangerous man in the city, heading toward a lion's den that made the Vale mansion look like a playpen.
Dominic went back to his phone, his face unreadable, leaving me alone with my thoughts.
What had I just done?
I’d traded one master for another. I’d sold my soul to another egoistic bastard. And what's worse? They're aren't just one in this case. Five. Five egoistic bastards all for a singular me to deal with.
Dear God, please tell me I didn't just make the biggest mistake of my life.
But then I thought about Marcus’s face. I thought about the way he’d looked at his phone instead of me.
If being Dominic Black’s weapon was the only way to make Marcus pay, then so be it.
I leaned my head back against the headrest and closed my eyes.
Sure, I was wet, I was tired, and I was stepping into a war zone.
But for the first time in three years, I wasn't a Vale.
And the new Sophia? She was going to be a problem.
A big, expensive, Black-sized problem.
Fuck, I couldn't wait to see the look on Marcus's face when he realized it.
Sophia's POVRichard Black was smiling.That was the detail that broke something open in the room. Not the threat. Not Mrs. Park standing beside Diana with the calm of someone who had finished a job well. The smile.A man whose sons believed he had been controlled, manipulated, removed from his own life by a woman he had never stopped loving. Standing there. Smiling for the camera.I looked at Damien's face.He was looking at the photograph the way you look at a wound you didn't know you had until someone pointed at it."He's not a hostage," Dominic said quietly. "He's a participant.""Maybe he's performing," Remy said. "Maybe she's making him smile.""Look at his eyes," Zane said. He had already enhanced the image on his screen, sharpened it, pulled it apart pixel by pixel the way he did everything. "Nobody forces that. That's relief."Nobody said anything for a moment."Bring the girl," Dominic read again. "Come alone."He looked at me."No," Damien said before anyone else could spe
Damien's POVThe drive back was twenty minutes of silence and thinking.Mei sat in the back with her bag on her lap looking out the window like someone taking in a city she had decided to assess rather than admire. Sophia sat beside me with the laptop against her chest and her eyes on the road and her mind somewhere I could see but not reach.I let her have it.At the fifteen-minute mark she said "Miss Chen."I glanced at her."Linda Marsh," she said. "She's been in that house for eleven years. She would have been there when I arrived. When I left. Every dinner, every argument, every conversation I had with Marcus and Victoria in that house for three years." She paused. "She knew everything about me before I knew anything about myself.""Yes," I said."Diana built a file on me," she said. "Before the marriage. Before any of this." She looked at the laptop in her hands. "She's had eyes on me for three years and I never knew.""She didn't count on you ending up here," I said."No," Soph
Sophia's POVI was out of the car before Damien finished saying wait.He caught my arm. Not rough. Just firm and certain and immovable in the specific way of someone who had decided this."Sophia.""That's my aunt in there," I said."I know," he said. "Which is exactly why we don't run in blind." He looked at the house. Then at the car two houses down. Then back at me. "Give me thirty seconds."I gave him thirty seconds because he was right and I hated that he was right and standing on a pavement at two in the morning outside my aunt's house with every light blazing and the door open was not the moment to stop listening to the person who thought clearly when everything was urgent.He texted Zane. Four words. Sent his location and the word now.Then he looked at me."Here's what we know," he said quietly. Fast and clear. "Someone is in that house or was recently. The car down the street has been running. The door is open which means either Mei left it open deliberately or someone came
Chapter 18Damien's POVCarter.I said his name once in my head and let it sit there and felt the shape of it change from an " ally to a question mark in the space of about four seconds.Sophia was already thinking it. I could see it in her face, that quiet focused recalibration she did when something shifted and she was updating every prior conclusion in real time."It might not be him," she said."It might not be," I said.Neither of us believed that."Who else was in that estate tonight," she said. "Walk me through it. Everyone.""Us. Remy. Carter." I paused. "The portrait of Victoria's grandmother but I'm ruling her out."Sophia's mouth did the thing that was almost a smile even when everything was terrible. I filed that away because I was apparently filing everything about her now without meaning to."The staff," she said. "Were there staff in the building?"I stopped.The Vale mansion ran a skeleton night staff. Two people minimum. We had moved through the building focused enti
Sophia's POVI didn't sleep.Not because of Diana or the email or Marcus or any of the things that should have been keeping me up. Those I could compartmentalise. I had spent three years in the Vale mansion learning to compartmentalise things that would have broken most people before breakfast.I didn't sleep because of what Damien had said outside the gate.Especially me.Two words. Said quietly and completely and with the specific certainty of someone who didn't say things they didn't mean. I had been lying in the dark turning them over for two hours and they kept landing the same way every time.Heavy. Warm. Terrifying.I got up at one in the morning and went to the kitchen because that was what I did and I was done pretending otherwise.The lights were already on.Damien was sitting on the counter, not on a stool, actually on the counter, with his laptop open and a coffee that had clearly been there long enough to go cold and his hair doing the thing it did when he had been runnin
Sophia's POVThey were outside.I stared at the photograph on Remy's screen and felt my brain do that thing it did when information arrived faster than it could be processed. A kind of white static behind the eyes that lasted exactly two seconds before everything sharpened.Two seconds.Then I was moving."How old is this photo?" I said, taking Remy's phone."Timestamp says four minutes ago," Remy said.Four minutes. Which meant while we were standing in Victoria's study feeling like we had won something, Diana and Richard Black had driven up to the front of the estate we had just left and were currently standing outside it like they owned it.Which technically, if the will clause went unchallenged, they might."Zane," Damien said into his phone. He had made the call before I finished my second sentence. "Lock down the estate. Full perimeter. Nobody gets through that gate." A pause. "I don't care how they got there. Don't let them in."He hung up and looked at me."We need to go back
Sophia's POVDominic's face when he came back up to the roof told me everything before he said a word.He had been gone twenty minutes. Long enough to make calls, pull information, start rebuilding whatever strategy the Carter revelation required. I had expected him to come back with a plan and a t
Sophia's POVThe six o'clock meeting never happened.At five forty five Dominic got a call that made him go very still in the way that meant something had shifted and not in a direction anyone had planned for. He cancelled the meeting with two words texted to everyone. Not tonight.No explanation.
Damien's POVThe guardianship filing hit the press at four.I watched it happen in real time from my office screens. One outlet first, then three, then twelve, the story spreading the way bad stories always did, fast and confident and carrying just enough truth to make the lie around it stick.The
Sophia's POVBy noon I knew three things.The Vale family was broke in the specific way that only very rich people managed to be broke, everything tied up in appearances and debt and a Ponzi scheme held together by reputation and fear.Diana Black had been in contact with Victoria Vale for eight mo







