LOGIN[Sarah’s POV]
I was on my fifth bottle of cheap beer. It was disgusting, but it was cold, and it provided a calm between me and the crushing reality of my existence.
My small suitcase containing the pathetic remains of my seven-year marriage was wedged between my boots. I felt like a stray dog that had found a dry corner to hide in before the final storm.
"Refill."
The bartender, Miller, didn't turn around. He was wiping down the counter at the other end of the bar. "Hey." I knocked my empty bottle against the counter. "I said refill." He turned. Looked at the bottle. Looked at the four others lined up beside it. Looked at me with the specific expression of a man doing arithmetic he didn't like the answer to. "No," he said. "Excuse me?" "You've got five bottles sitting there you haven't paid for. Plus three from last night." He set down his cloth. "I'm not running a charity." "I'm going to pay." I sat up as straight as the bar stool allowed, which wasn't very. "I just need a small extension." "How small?" I opened my mouth. Closed it. He pointed at the door. "I'm not ready to leave." "You're not ready, but you're going," he said, and turned back to his counter. The television was on a channel broadcasting the Rider Group’s Emerald Gala. The volume was low, but the images were sharp.I saw them.
Tyler Rider, his hand resting with a terrifying possessiveness on the small of Lucy’s back. Lucy was wearing a gown of liquid silver that clung to her curves like a second skin.
The "OMG" moment didn't come from their presence, though. It came from the interview.
The reporter leaned in, her microphone thrust toward Tyler. "Mr. Rider, the rumors are swirling. Is it true that your recent divorce was spurred by your ex-wife’s... struggles with certain substances?"
Tyler didn't hesitate. He looked directly into the lens, his expression one of practiced, tragic nobility. "It’s a difficult time for Sarah. We tried everything... rehab, private clinics, therapy. But some people don't want to be saved. I only pray she finds the help she needs before it’s too late. My focus now is on the future. On Lucy. And on our son."
He leaned down and kissed Lucy’s shoulder, right on national television.
"What a saint," a woman at the table next to mine whispered. She was dressed in a knock-off designer blazer, her face flushed with gin. "Imagine being that beautiful and that rich, and having to deal with a junkie, cheating wife."
Her friend laughed, a sharp, grating sound. "Some women are just born trash. You can put them in a penthouse, but they’ll always find a way back to the gutter where they belong."
The world went silent. It wasn't a peaceful silence. My weeks of hunger all formed into a single, white-hot needle of pure rage.
I didn't think as I stood up, my chair screeching against the floor like a dying animal. I walked over to their table. My vision was tunneled, the edges of the room blurring into a dark smear.
"Say it again," I whispered.
The woman in the blazer looked up, her lip curling in a sneer. "Excuse me? Do you mind? We’re trying to—"
"Say it again!" I roared, the sound tearing from my chest. "Say I’m trash! Look at me!"
"Oh my god, it's her," the friend gasped, her eyes widening as she recognized the haunted face from the tabloids. "It's the Rider woman. Look at her, she’s clearly high right now."
That was the snap.
I reached out and grabbed the woman by the front of her blazer, dragging her out of her chair with a strength I didn't know I possessed. "I gave him seven years of my life!" I screamed into her face, my spit flying. "I lost three pregnancies while he was in her bed! You know nothing!."
I grabbed a glass of gin from the table and smashed it against the edge. The sound of shattering crystal was the most beautiful thing I’d heard in weeks. The sheer violence of the act sent the entire bar into a frenzy.
"Hey!" Miller shouted, leaping over the bar.
I grabbed the woman by her hair, slamming her head down onto the sticky table. "Tell me I’m trash again! Tell me!"
"Help! Someone help me! She’s crazy!" the woman shrieked.
Miller’s massive arms wrapped around my waist, lifting me off the ground. I was a wild cat, scratching and biting at the air. "Let me go! I’ll kill them! I’ll kill them both!"
He dragged me through the bar, my heels scratching the floor, while other customers filmed me on their phones. I was going to be the lead story tomorrow. I was giving Tyler exactly what he wanted.
Miller shoved me through the basement door and onto the sidewalk. I hit the wet concrete hard, the impact jarring my spine.
"Don't come back, Sarah," Miller said, his voice heavy with a strange kind of sadness. "For your own sake. Just... go."
The heavy door slammed shut. I stayed on my knees, my breath coming in ragged, sobbing gulps. I looked up at the darkened New York skyline, feeling the weight of the entire world pressing down on my shoulders.
I was done. I was empty. There was nothing left but the small, flickering pulse in my womb.
I stood up, my head spinning as I stumbled toward the intersection of 8th Avenue, my eyes fixed on nothing.
I didn't see the light turn red. I didn't see the pedestrians stopping on the curb. All I heard was the sudden, violent roar of an engine. I turned my head. Two blinding white lights were rushing toward me.
"NO!" a voice screamed from the sidewalk.
My feet went out from under me. The ground came up hard and fast. I tried to curl my hands around my stomach, a gesture of protection.
**I'm sorry, little one, I thought, my eyes closing. I tried. I really tried.**
"Is she alive?" a man’s voice shouted from somewhere far away.
The last thing I saw before the darkness took me was a man's face above me.
[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
Leena’s jaw dropped slightly. She turned her head toward Norman, her massive, soulful eyes scanning his features as if she were truly seeing him for the very first time. The innocent, profound weight of a child’s gaze hit Norman like a blow. He flinched slightly, his shoulders tightening as he stared back at her, a look of profound, agonizing uneasiness washing over his face. Tyler and I exchanged a long, heavy look over the table. Tyler’s eyes carried a grim, satisfied darkness. He was watching his enemy shake under the innocent weight of the very child he had tried to exploit. "Go ahead, Norman," I urged softly, my tone dripping with a quiet, lethal sarcasm that only the adults could fully decode. "Don't be shy. You told me yourself how desperate you were to finally meet Leena. Here she is. Say hello." Norman swallowed hard, his throat clicking loudly in the quiet space. He cleared his throat twice, trying desperately to find his professional voice, but when he spoke, it was a







