登入[Sarah’s POV]
The first thing I saw was white.
White ceiling. White walls. White coat. I stared at the man leaning over me and said the only thing that made sense. "God?" I croaked. My throat felt like I had swallowed a handful of dry sand. "Am I dead? Is this heaven?" The man laughed softly, and shook his head. "You’re in the hospital. You were brought in last night." I lay there for a moment absorbing that information. Not heaven... Hospital. Somehow both disappointing and a relief at the same time. He helped me sit up, a young doctor with calm hands and the unbothered energy of someone who had seen far worse than me on a Tuesday night. He checked my blood pressure, shone a light in my eyes, asked me to follow his finger. I followed his finger and tried to remember last night. The bar. The women. The television screen with Tyler's hand on Lucy's waist. The door with the blind pulled down. Walking backwards in the dark— My hand flew to my stomach before the thought even finished. The doctor saw it. He stopped what he was doing and looked at me. "The baby is fine. I want you to hear that first." The breath I let out embarrassed me. I didn't care. "However." He sat down on the stool beside the bed and folded his hands, and I knew that posture. That was the posture of a conversation I wasn't going to enjoy. "We ran your bloods when you came in. There was an unusual amount of alcohol in your system." He held my gaze steadily. "I have to ask you directly — was that deliberate?” "No." The word came out hard and immediate, the most certain I'd been about anything in weeks. "Never. I would never—" I stopped. Steadied my voice. "It was a bad night. A very bad night. But I would never do anything to hurt this baby. Not ever.” He studied me for a moment longer, then nodded once, satisfied, and handed me a cup of water. "Drink that slowly.” I drank it like I hadn't seen water in days, which was not far from the truth. "The man who brought you in last night," the doctor said, making a note on his clipboard, "said you walked into the path of his vehicle. He's been here since last night. He should be back any minute — I'd suggest waiting for him before we process your documents.” "I'm fine." I was already swinging my legs off the bed. "Miss—" "I'm fine." The floor was cold through my socks. I looked around for my shoes, found them under the chair, and reached for them. The room tilted very slightly when I bent down. I ignored it. "Thank you. Really. But I need to go." "At least let us bring you something to eat.” *Food.* The word hit me somewhere embarrassingly desperate. I couldn't remember the last time I'd eaten something that wasn't from a vending machine.But this was a hospital and somewhere down the corridor a machine was beeping, and I could already feel it crawling up my throat... that smell, that silence. It pressed against old memories I had spent years learning not to think about. My mother in a bed that looked exactly like this one. My mother's hand in mine going slowly, impossibly cold.
"I'm fine," I said again. Quietly this time. I left before he could say anything else. ---------- The car park was cold and I stood in the middle of it like a person who had absolutely no plan, which was accurate. I didn't recognise this part of the city. I had no money for a cab. And my phone showed four percent battery. I stood very still and stared at the exit and thought about my options. The list was short. Embarrassingly short. "Sarah!" I turned. A woman was cutting across the car park toward me, heels striking the tarmac like she was late to something important. She was in her forties, sharp eyes behind dark-rimmed glasses, leather folder under her arm. "Sarah Rider." She said it like a statement, not a question. Like she'd been practising it. "Oh thank God. Do you have any idea how long I've been trying to find you?" I took a small step back. "Do I know you?" "No. But I know you." She grabbed my hand and shook it before I could decide whether I wanted her to."Agatha Coleman. I'm a lawyer. I sent you a text last week, asking where I could find you.” Unknown number. "That was you," I said. "That was me." She nodded. "I've been chasing you for weeks, Sarah. Your old address... well, your husband's people made it very clear they weren't going to help me find you." "Ex. we are no longer married." "I know." She said it plainly, no pity, which I appreciated more than she knew. She was already opening her folder, clicking her pen. "I represent the estate of Margaret Eloise Hale." I went still. "Your great-aunt," Agatha said. "She passed away five months ago. She was ninety-one, and she went peacefully at home." She paused to let that land."But before she went, she made sure everything was in order. She updated her will three times in the last two years alone." She looked at me over her glasses. "Your name is in it, Sarah. It has always been in it."
"I haven't spoken to Aunt Maggie in twenty years." My voice came out smaller than I wanted. "I know." Agatha pulled a document from the folder and held it out. "But she never took your name out. Not once.” I stared at the papers without taking them. "What do I need to do?" I asked. Agatha snapped her folder shut. "Come with me," she said simply. "I'll explain everything.”[SARAH’S POV]I was too engrossed, mentally reviewing the talking points I needed to cover with Tyler on why my estate should supply him with the raw materials he would need to restart production. I wasn't paying attention to the staff behind the curved mahogany desk. As I adjusted the strap of my leather tote bag over my shoulder, my heels clicking sharply against the polished floor. I heard a sharp, exasperated sigh followed by the distinct sound of a stapler being slammed aggressively onto a desk."I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about, Brenda. The printer is blinking red, which obviously means it is broken. No, I am not going to open the tray. My nails were done yesterday, and I am not getting toner on my cuticles. Call IT."My footsteps faltered. I stopped dead in my tracks, my brain struggling to process the auditory input. I knew that voice. I had heard that voice scream at me across country club terraces and screech through the grand halls of the Rider estate f
[Tyler's POV]I didn't offer a greeting as I walked into my fathers study. I knew what the meeting was about immediately I got the text and I wasn't surprised when I saw Chloe already seated."Tyler," my father finally spoke, his voice a low, gravelly rumble that vibrated through the floorboards. "Take a seat.""I prefer to stand, Father. I don't plan on being here very long," I replied, leaning casually against the edge of the bookshelf, my glass perfectly balanced in my hand. "I assume this urgent family summit is regarding the sudden, tragic realization that my sister is going to have to learn how to set an alarm clock?"Chloe let out a sharp, offended gasp. "Father, do you hear him? Do you hear how he speaks to me?"Byron raised a single hand, and Chloe’s mouth instantly snapped shut. He set his cigar down on the edge of an emerald ashtray and folded his hands over his desk, his heavy gaze locking onto mine."Your sister came to me in a state of severe distress this afternoon," By
"I am happy, baby," I reassured him softly, smoothing down his hair. "I’m very happy." "No, I mean genuinely happy," Caleb pressed, his voice taking on a surprisingly mature, stubborn edge. "You are always, always putting everyone else’s happiness before yours. You worry about me, you worry about Leena, you worry about the vineyard, and Rosa, and the company. You fix everything for everyone. But I want you to just... be happy for yourself." I stared at him, completely bewildered. I blinked, my mind spinning as I tried to calculate how a nine-year-old boy had just accurately psychoanalyzed my entire trauma response and coping mechanism. Where on earth was this coming from? "Caleb..." I started, my voice laced with genuine confusion. "Where is all of this coming from? Have you been reading my self-help books?" Caleb didn't laugh. He looked at me with an absolute, deadly serious expression. "I know Daddy makes you happy," he said simply. The name dropped into the quiet room like a
My entire body felt as though it had been drained of every last ounce of adrenaline. I stood in front of the vanity mirror in my bedroom, running a brush through my hair with slow, mechanical strokes. The faint, bruised purple shadows of exhaustion under my eyes were impossible to ignore, but the deep, grounding sense of peace settling into my chest made them bearable. We had won. The narrative was finally ours again.I set the brush down, turned off the heavy brass vanity lamp, and pulled the sash of my silk robe tight around my waist. The king-sized bed looked like an absolute sanctuary. I reached out to pull back the heavy down comforter, ready to sink into the mattress and let the dark completely consume me.Knock, knock.I paused, my hand hovering over the duvet. The knock was incredibly soft, so light I almost thought I had imagined it over the sound of the wind."Come in," I called out softly, turning toward the door.The brass knob clicked, and the heavy oak door slowly pushed
Carrying the soup myself wasn't necessary. I could have easily let Rosa, or had one of the kitchen staff take it over. But after the confrontation with Skye in the living room, a strange, persistent restlessness had taken hold of me. I needed to see Vivian. No matter our history, she was dying. And as I looked at the quiet apartment ahead, I realized that the least I could do as a human being was show a sliver of compassion for a woman on the brink of eternity.I pushed the heavy oak door open without knocking, the quiet chime of the entry bell echoing through the dimly lit foyer. The guest house always smelled of a sharp, medicinal undertone cutting through the familiar scent of lavender.I walked down the short hallway and paused at the doorway of the master bedroom.The curtains were drawn tight, casting the room in a soft, amber twilight. Skye was sitting on the edge of the mattress, her back curved elegantly as she held a silver spoon to her mother’s lips. Vivian sat propped up
Skye was sitting on the edge of the velvet sofa. It was the first time I had seen her in the main house in months. Honestly, since I had returned home from the hospital, ever since I woke up from the coma, Skye had claimed she was dedicating every waking second to taking care of her mother, Vivian, in her final days over at the guest house. But I knew the truth. Deep down, she was simply terrified of looking me in the eye, and she had been avoiding me like the plague. The second she heard my footsteps, she bolted upright, her face turning pale as she grabbed her cardigan. "Sarah. I didn't think you'd be back so soon." She immediately shifted her feet, turning toward the exit. "I was just leaving." "Stay, Skye," I said, my voice quiet but carrying an unyielding weight that anchored her to the spot. I walked further into the room, tossing my handbag onto an armchair. "There’s really no use running away from me anymore." Skye stiffened, her chin lifting in a sudden, defensive moveme







