LOGINI dragged my suitcase through the grand foyer, my eyes burning. I just wanted to leave quietly. I wanted to vanish into the night before the reality of being homeless and pregnant fully sank in.
But as I reached the massive oak front doors, they swung open. Light flooded in, followed by the aggressive flash of cameras. A swarm of reporters was already there, tipped off by someone. And standing in the center of the chaos, leaning gracefully on a cane she clearly didn't need anymore, was Lydia. "Elara! Going somewhere?" Lydia’s voice was sweet, but her eyes were venomous. "Lydia, move," I whispered, trying to shield my face from the lenses. "You got what you wanted. You got the house, you got the man. Just let me go." "Let you go?" Lydia laughed, turning toward the cameras. "After what you did? You didn't just paralyze me, Elara. You spent three years draining Charlie’s accounts while I was suffering in silence!" "What the f**k are you talking about?" I gasped. One of the reporters shoved a microphone into my face. "Ms. Vance, is it true that the divorce was triggered by your embezzlement? Did you steal the 'Heart of the Sea' diamond from the Vane vault tonight?" "I didn't steal anything!" I shouted, looking back at Charlie, who was standing at the top of the stairs, watching the spectacle with a cold, detached expression. "Charlie, tell them! I’m leaving with nothing but my clothes!" Lydia stepped forward, her hand moving like a snake. She reached into the side pocket of my worn-out suitcase and pulled out a velvet box. She snapped it open, revealing the massive, blue diamond that had belonged to Charlie’s mother. The crowd gasped. The flashes became a blinding wall of light. "My God, Elara," Lydia sobbed, a masterclass in fake grief. "Even on your way out, you had to rob him? Is it not enough that you ruined my body? You had to take his family's legacy too?" "I didn't put that there! You planted it!" I screamed, lunging for the box, but Charlie stepped down the stairs, his hand gripping my arm with bruising force. "That's enough," Charlie hissed, his voice audible over the shouting press. He looked at the diamond, then back at me with a look of pure, unadulterated loathing. "I was going to let you walk away, Elara. But you really are as cheap as everyone says. You're a thief, a liar, and a goddemned parasite." "Charlie, please... I’m…. Done with you you will regret this all of you!" I cried out knowing even if tell him I’m pregnant he won’t believe, the words slipping out in a moment of pure terror. The reporters went silent for a heartbeat before erupting into a frenzy. Charlie didn't even flinch. He leaned in close to my ear, his voice a lethal whisper. "Do you think you will survive without me? You’ve been sleeping with half the city to get back at me. Go rot in hell, Elara. If I ever see you again, I'll make sure the police finish what I started tonight." He shoved me toward the door. Lydia stepped aside, a small, triumphant smirk playing on her lips as she watched me stumble. "Guilty!" someone in the crowd shouted. "Thief!" "Trash!" I ran. I didn't look back. I ran through the rain, my suitcase abandoned on the driveway, the laughter and mockery of the reporters ringing in my ears. I couldn't believe it. My own sister had framed me. My husband had condemned me. I collapsed under a bus stop shelter blocks away, my clothes soaked, my heart shattered into a million jagged pieces. I clutched my stomach, the only thing I had left in the world. "They're going to pay," I whispered through my sobs, my voice hardening into something cold and sharp. "I don't care how long it takes. Every single one of them is going to bleed for this."The penthouse was blissfully quiet. The soft, ambient light of the Manhattan skyline filtered through the floor-to-ceiling glass windows, casting long, peaceful shadows across the minimalist luxury of the living room. The air was filled with the faint, comforting scent of fresh lavender and vanilla, a welcome contrast to the toxic, heavy atmosphere of the lakeside terrace they had left behind upstate.Tyler walked slowly down the carpeted hallway, carrying little Leo gently on his shoulders. The boy’s small hands were loosely wrapped around Tyler's forehead, his head lulling to the side as his eyes fought a losing battle against sleep. Tyler navigated the doorway of Leo's bedroom with practiced ease. He bent down slowly, lifting Leo from his shoulders with his massive, careful hands, and went and lay him down on the plush, cloud like mattress."Sleep tight, little champion," Tyler whispered, pulling the soft blue comforter up to the boy’s chin. He brushed a stray lock of hair from Leo
Elara POV The frantic, neon lit chaos of the upstate highway slowly dissolved into a soothing, rhythmic blur of streetlights as Tyler’s luxury SUV glided southward toward Manhattan. The interior of the vehicle was a warm, quiet sanctuary, insulated from the chilly autumn wind and the toxic echoes of the lakeside terrace.In the back seat, little Leo had finally fallen fast asleep. Wrapped in his soft woolen blanket, his long eyelashes casting tiny shadows on his tear stained cheeks, he slept deeply, utterly exhausted from the crying and the terrifying confrontation with the Vanes. The quiet, rhythmic sound of his soft, steady breathing filled the cabin, bringing a profound, grounding peace to the two adults in the front.Elara sat in the passenger seat, her head leaning tiredly against the window as she watched the dark waters of the Hudson River flicker under the moonlight. The emerald-green silk of her dress shimmered softly in the dim amber glow of the dashboard. For a long time,
Downstairs in his drunken, raging stupor, Charlie had completely lost his fucking mind. The humiliation of the restaurant, the burning pain of Elara’s double slap, and the cold, terrifying finality of his mother’s lockdown had pushed him past the brink of sanity. He was drowning in a toxic mix of premium scotch and raw, unchecked madness. He wasn't just a man defeated; he was a cornered animal, screaming at the empty mahogany walls of the library, throwing priceless crystal glasses into the roaring fireplace until the hearth was littered with jagged, glowing shards."Damn it! F**k all of them!" Charlie roared, his voice thick, slurred, and echoing with a pathetic, desperate fury. "I am Charlie Vane! They can't lock me in my own fucking house! They can't treat me like a criminal!"His mind was a chaotic blur of rage and alcohol. He couldn't face the reality of what was coming. He couldn't face his mother’s freezing gaze, and he damn sure couldn't face the terrifying truth of Lydia's em
The master bedroom of the Vane suite had never felt so much like a tomb. Outside the heavy, triple locked doors, the silent mansion was patrolled by Evelyn’s private security guards, their heavy, rhythmic footsteps occasionally echoing through the hallway like the ticking of a grandfather clock counting down to her execution.Downstairs, the muffled, violent sound of glass shattering against the marble fireplace signaled Charlie’s descent into a pathetic, drunken stupor. He was completely out of his mind, screaming at the walls, drowning his humiliation in bottle after bottle of expensive scotch. He couldn't face the reality of the slaps Elara had delivered, nor could he face his mother's freezing, silent wrath. He had completely abandoned Lydia to her fate, locking himself in the library to drink himself into oblivion.Upstairs, Lydia sat on the cold floor of her walk-in closet, her knees pulled tightly to her chest, shivering violently. Her gorgeous sapphire velvet gown was crumpled
The interior of the custom Mercedes limousine was a silent, terrifying nightmare. The partition separating the driver from the passengers had been rolled up, creating a claustrophobic, airless vacuum. The sleek vehicle glided smoothly down the dark, misty upstate highway, but inside, the atmosphere was thick with a toxic, paralyzing tension that made it difficult to breathe.Lydia sat huddled in the corner of the leather seat, clutching her sapphire velvet dress around her shivering frame. Her eyes were wide, vacant, and fixed on the passing headlights outside, but she wasn't actually seeing them. Her mind was spinning in a state of absolute, chaotic panic. The fragile digital fortress she had built with Clara Sterling’s help had been completely bypassed. Tyler's devastating revelation that she was Elara’s younger blood sister had stripped away her carefully crafted identity in a single second.Beside her, Charlie sat with his head buried in his hands. His knuckles were still red, and
The heavy silence that blanketed the heated terrace was suffocating. Every whisper in the restaurant had died down, and the eyes of dozens of high-society diners were glued to the dramatic stage.Charlie blinked, his mind completely numb, his face still burning with the fiery imprint of Elara’s double slap. Beside him, Lydia was afraid and confused, thinking that the whole truth was going to be exposed soon. Her heart was beating like a wild, trapped animal against her ribs. She knew that if Tyler opened his mouth further, her fake pregnancy, her fake doctor, and her stolen life would be shattered in front of the Vane matriarch. Yet, even as cold sweat beaded at her hairline, she desperately fought to keep her composure, maintaining a polite smile on her face to hide the absolute terror consuming her soul.Evelyn Vane’s brilliant, calculating mind was spinning out of control. She looked at her towering, furious nephew, then at her utterly silent son, and then back again."Tyler, what
I shouldn’t have come. I told myself I was doing it for closure, but as I stood in front of the Vance mansion, the air felt just as poisonous as it did six years ago. Beside me, Leo gripped my hand, his small fingers warm against my palm."Mommy, why are we here?" he asked, his voice echoing in the
Six years later.They say time heals all wounds, but they’re wrong. Time just gives you the tools to sharpen your blade.I stood at the window of my penthouse suite, watching the skyline of the city that had spat me out like trash. I wasn't that shaking girl in the oversized blazer anymore. My body
The rain was a cold, relentless weight as I stumbled up the driveway of my childhood home. My clothes were shredded, my face was bruised from where the reporters had shoved their cameras, and my heart was a jagged hole in my chest.I pounded on the heavy oak door. "Dad! Please! Open the door!"The
"Sign it and be done with it, Elara. Stop making this difficult." He slid a thick manila folder across the table. I didn't need to open it. I knew what the divorce papers looked like. "She’s really back, then?" I asked, my voice sounding raspy even to my own ears. "Lydia is home. And she's packi







