LOGIN(Sabrina’s POV)
I picked up Nate’s pen. The pen I had bought him for our first anniversary, engraved with his initials on the side. He had never used it. The barrel was cold.
I signed.
I clicked the pen shut and laid it down across the form, right over the word consent.
My hand did not shake. I did not cry.
“There. Done.”
Nate’s mouth opened. He looked, for one flicker of a second, shaken. Like he had expected tears. Like he had prepared himself for begging. Not this.
“Sabrina—”
“Don’t.”
I walked past Alexis. I walked past my husband. I walked into the bedroom that had been mine for three years and turned the lock with both hands.
For about ten seconds, I felt strong.
For about ten seconds I told myself: I’ll call a lawyer. I’ll file for divorce myself. I’ll take whatever scraps the court gives me and I’ll get out.
Then the ten seconds ran out.
I wanted a divorce more than I had ever wanted anything, but wanting and affording are two different languages.
I had nowhere to go.
Aunt Nancy lived in a one-bedroom that smelled like cat food. She slept on a foldout. She didn’t have room for me—especially not for me and a baby. Uncle James was still in a coma at St. Catherine’s.
The Coopers had been paying his bills for three years.
That was why I had married Nate Cooper in the first place.
If I walked out tonight, the bills stopped in the morning.
My own bank account had forty-seven dollars in it. Nate gave me a card for groceries, a card for clothes, one for emergencies. None of them were in my name. All cancelled by sunrise.
I knew, because I had watched him cancel his own father’s card the week the old man died, before the body was cold.
And I was a month pregnant.
I slid down to the carpet at the foot of the bed.
And then, because I am apparently a person who can always be made to feel worse, I threw up into the wastebasket beside the vanity. Morning sickness, but at night. The world was hilarious.
I was wiping my mouth when the knock came.
“Sa-bri-naaa.”
Three syllables. Sing-song. Like she was calling a cat.
“Sweetie. Open up. We need to have a little chat.”
I dragged myself upright. I would not let her find me on the floor next to a basket of vomit. There were limits.
I opened the door.
Alexis was waiting with a face like Christmas morning. She had taken off the cream coat. She was wearing one of my robes.
“Is that my robe?”
“It was hanging in the hallway, sweetie, don’t make it weird.” She breezed past me. Sat on my bed. Crossed her legs. “Ooh, this mattress is dreadful. Did you pick it?”
“Get out, Alexis.”
“No, I don’t think I will.” She looked around the room. “This bedroom is mine now. Obviously. You can move your things into one of the staff rooms downstairs. Chris will show you which one.”
“Excuse me?”
“Oh, don’t look at me like that. You’ve practically been the help this whole time, sweetie. Cook, clean, iron, walk his grandmother to the bathroom. You’re already doing it. You’ve just been doing it without the dignity of a job title.” She laughed, delighted with herself. “At least there will be no illusion anymore. Honestly? It’s an upgrade.”
“You want me to move into the servant quarters.”
“I want to be honest with you Sabrina. It’s for your own good.” She tilted her head, looked me up and down, and winced. “God, that sweater, though.”
She stood up and wandered to the window. She ran one finger along the curtains, frowning.
“And these curtains. My God. Who chose these?”
“I did.”
“Well, they’re going.” She turned back to me. “I’ll need the bedroom cleared out by tomorrow night. Oh—and the salmon in the fridge? Throw that out. The smell is making me ill.” She pressed two fingers to her temple, like the very thought exhausted her. “And don’t drag this out. My brothers hate seeing me upset, and Eric is going to be furious enough when he hears what you’ve put me through tonight as it is.”
I watched her move through the room, touching things, rearranging things—my things—and I suddenly realized.
“Alexis.”
She stopped, her hand on the bathroom doorframe.
“You’re not dying.”
She went very still. Just for a heartbeat. Then she turned with a smile already in place, but I had seen it. The flinch, the tiny crack in the mask.
“I beg your pardon?”
“You’re not dying,” I said again. “You’re pregnant. You’re glowing. You walked up three flights of stairs without breathing hard. You’re drinking the water from my Brita like it’s champagne. You’re not sick. You’re not even a little bit sick.”
“Sweetie.” She tilted her chin up to the light. “I’m very ill. Stage four, officially. Don’t I look tragic?”
“You look like a woman who just stole someone’s husband and wants the house to match! You enjoy degrading me, don’t you?”
Her eyes narrowed. The sweetness dropped for one full second, and underneath it I saw something terrifying.
Then the mask slid back.
“You’re upset,” she said gently. “I understand. It’s been a long night. We’ll revisit this in the morning, when you’ve calmed down.”
She turned to the bathroom, pulling pins from her hair.
“I’m running a bath. Make yourself useful and find me a fresh towel.”
She opened the vanity drawer, rummaging through it. Her hand came out holding a small white candle. The stub of one, anyway, half-burned, sitting on top of a box of matches.
“What’s this?” She turned the candle over in her fingers. “Was this for him? Were you saving this for some little romantic moment?”
She struck a match.
I watched her light the wick. The flame caught and she held it up like a birthday candle, admiring herself in the vanity mirror.
“There,” she said. “Now the room feels more like mine.”
She set the candle on the vanity ledge and turned back to the bathroom, saying something about uniforms.
I smelled it before I saw it.
Smoke.
The candle. She had set it too close to the curtain. The fabric was old, dry, and the flame had already caught the hem. A thin orange tongue was climbing the linen, quiet and fast.
“Alexis—”
She turned. She saw the fire. Her eyes went wide.
And then she screamed.
“HELP! NATE! NATE, HELP! SHE’S SETTING THE HOUSE ON FIRE! SABRINA’S SETTING THE HOUSE ON FIRE!”
I stood frozen. She was looking right at me, and she was smiling. Behind the screaming, behind the panic, she was smiling.
“NATE! HELP! SHE’S GONE MAD! SHE LIT THE CURTAIN!”
The fire was spreading. The curtain was fully alight now, licking up toward the curtain rod. Smoke was thickening in the room. Alexis backed toward the door, still screaming, her hand cupped under her belly like a shield.
I didn’t go after her. I didn’t try to explain.
I ran.
Not downstairs. Not toward Nate’s voice, which was already thundering up the staircase. I turned the other way, down the east hallway, toward the room at the end.
His grandmother’s room.
She napped every evening from seven to nine. She was eighty-three years old and half-deaf and she slept through thunderstorms.
She would sleep through the fire.
The smoke was in the hallway now. I could feel it in my throat, clawing at the inside of my chest.
I reached her door and turned the handle.
“Grandma Cooper. Grandma, wake up. Please. Please wake up.”
She was in the armchair by the window, head tilted to one side. A book lay open on her lap.
I shook her shoulder. She stirred, blinking. “Sabrina? Darling, what—”
She was saying something to me, shouting something, but I couldn’t hear it anymore.
The smoke was inside me. In my lungs, in my blood, in the dark space behind my eyes.
My knees went first. Then my hands. Then the floor came up to meet me, and the last thing I saw before the dark was the small gold flicker of firelight, and I thought: the baby. Please. The baby.
And then nothing.
Until I woke up in a hospital bed. Two men I had never seen before were standing over me.
“Sister,” the taller one said. “My name is Eric Atwood. I have been looking for you for a very long time.”
(Nate’s POV)I didn’t have brothers. I didn’t have a Luca. I didn’t have five men who’d cross oceans and crash parties and loom by swimming pools to make sure nobody touched me wrong.I had Alexis. So I used her.Evening cocktails on the castle lawn, the sky going pink over the valley, fairy lights strung through the plane trees overhead. I put my arm around Alexis and I performed.She was in a red dress that clung to her belly and fell to her ankles, her blonde hair blown out in soft waves, gold earrings catching every eye.She looked incredible. She always looked incredible. That was never the problem.I whispered in her ear—nothing, small nothings, you look good tonight—but from across the lawn it would look intimate.When the waiter came around with rosé I waved him off.“She’s pregnant,” I said. “Just water.”Alexis’s lips parted. She looked up at me and her whole face softened, and she pressed closer against my side and kissed the underside of my jaw.“You’re being so sweet toni
(Sabrina’s POV)Pool day, and my brothers were running a military operation disguised as leisure.I was stretched out on a lounger in a black one-piece, the bump just visible enough under the fabric that you’d only notice if you already knew.Luna was curled against my hip, smuggled poolside in Felix’s beach bag, purring so loudly the woman on the next lounger kept looking around for the source.Luca was beside me, reading an architecture journal with one hand while the other rested on the arm of his chair, his swim trunks sitting low, his chest still damp from an earlier lap. A bead of water was tracking slowly down the line of his jaw, and I followed it all the way to his collarbone before I caught myself and looked at the pool instead.“You’re staring,” he said without glancing up.“I am absolutely not,” I lied.“You are.” He turned a page and the corner of his mouth pulled up. “I don’t mind.”I took a long sip of my virgin mojito to hide whatever my face was doing.Felix had been
(Sabrina’s POV)The south terrace took my breath away and then Nate Cooper sat down six chairs from me and took whatever was left.The valley fell away below us into vineyards that went purple at the edges where the sun was setting, and the whole thing looked like something out of a film.I should have been enjoying the view.I was counting chairs instead.Luca pulled mine out for me, his blazer sleeve brushing my bare shoulder as he leaned past.“You look beautiful tonight,” he murmured as he sat down beside me.“You’ve said that three times,” I told him.“I’ll say it a fourth.” His knee pressed against mine under the tablecloth and he left it there. “You look beautiful tonight.”“You’re ridiculous,” I said, but I leaned into the warm pressure of his thumb when it found my shoulder blade through the silk of my dress.Felix dropped into the seat beside Nate with so much enthusiasm he knocked a bread roll onto the floor. He scooped it up, dusted it off, and extended his hand across the
(Nate’s POV)I was late. On purpose and also not on purpose.My navy suit was still creased at the elbow. Shoes scuffed. Shirt collar wrinkled. I’d shaved in the airport bathroom with a disposable razor that left a nick under my jaw.“Baby, come on,” Alexis called from the passenger side, already out, already posing.She had on a white linen jumpsuit, oversized sunglasses pushed into her blonde hair, and gold hoops hung through her ears. She was four months pregnant and glowing.Her phone was up before both feet hit the gravel. “Oh my God, look at this place. Hold on—I need the turret.”“We’re late, Alexis.”“Two seconds.” She angled the phone higher. “Got it. Baby, come stand with me, I want one—”The castle hit me square in the chest. Honey-colored stone, ivy crawling up walls older than money, a courtyard that said you don’t belong here.This was Atwood territory. Not the building—the world. The kind of wealth that didn’t shout. The kind that sat in the landscape and made every dol
(Sabrina’s POV)The castle was absurd. It rose into the blue sky like something from a picture book a child would refuse to put down.Felix had his window down in the car ahead and was narrating the approach like a nature documentary.“And here we observe the Atwood family entering their natural habitat,” his voice drifted back to us.“He’s been doing this since Lyon,” Luca said beside me, amused.I leaned forward between the seats. “He’ll do it until someone stops him.”Luca laughed. He was in a linen shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, his forearms tan from outdoor site visits, his dark hair pushed back from his forehead.My hand was on my belly. I could feel my bump now under the loose pale blue dress Adrian had picked out. The baby shifted, a tiny push, and my breath caught.The cars stopped. Felix was out first.The event coordinator, a small woman in a black apron, met us at the door, and Felix had already launched into a negotiation about the pet policy before the rest
(Sabrina’s POV)The tennis ball bounced twice before I reached it, and Felix whooped from the other side of the net.“That’s FOUR!” he shouted gleefully, pointing his racket at me. “Four to two. I’m a god. An athletic god. Say it.”“You’re cheating,” I called back, wiping my forehead with my wrist.“I’m WINNING. There’s a difference. Sabrina, there’s a difference and she refuses to acknowledge—”“You moved the line with your foot, Felix.”“SLANDER.” He pressed his free hand to his chest. “I would never. Luna saw the whole thing. Didn’t you, Luna?”Luna was asleep in her carrier by the net post. She hadn’t moved in forty minutes.“Brina. Serve. I want five before Eric comes out and ruins my fun by being productive.”I tossed the ball up and hit it cleanly. Felix lunged sideways with a dramatic grunt that was completely unnecessary, and I was laughing when I saw Eric crossing the garden from the main house.He was in his usual dark suit, coffee in hand, jacket slung over one arm, but so
(Nate’s POV)Reed came into my study and stopped at the desk.I had been staring at the photograph of Eric Atwood’s hand on my wife’s elbow for the better part of an hour. I did not look up when Reed came in.“What.”“Sir. I have a location.”The pen I’d been holding stopped moving.“You—”“Three h
(Sabrina’s POV)We had been at the manor for a week. Eric had moved us up from the Carlisle on Saturday morning because, he said, hotels were for people who didn’t have homes, and we had a home now.The knock came before sunrise.For a second I thought it was the cat (who I’d named Luna) at the doo
(Nate’s POV)I did not recognize my own house.There was music coming from the morning room. Two women I had never seen were on the back patio with their feet up on my furniture. A florist’s arrangement the size of a small dog was on the foyer table. The card was signed by a name I did not know.Al
(Sabrina’s POV)Charlie made a sound at the back of his throat that was not a word. He turned away from the table, walking the length of the room, and pressed the heels of both hands into his eyes.Tyler had not moved. His pen was on the table beside his coffee cup. He looked at the pen for a long







