LOGINAFTERNOON
The espresso machine hissed violently in the background, but nothing compared to the low-boiling fury brewing at the corner table, where Jade and Serene sat with caffeine and contempt in equal measure.
Jade slammed her laptop shut so hard the barista flinched mid-pour.
“She made us look like glorified interns,” she snapped.
“I had to explain her graphs for twenty minutes. I don’t even know what a post-Keynesian transition is.”
Serene, looking like she'd bitten into a lemon instead of sipping a macchiato, stirred her coffee with enough force to chip porcelain.
“I had to G****e her citations during Q&A and ended up on a French academic archive that tried to charge me fifty euros.”
“She napped through the compliment,” Jade hissed, leaning forward.
“And still looked smug.”
Serene’s eyes narrowed.
“We need to remind people she’s not untouchable.”
Jade smirked.
“What’re you thinking?”
At that moment, a group of students passed by, their conversation casual, too loud, too convenient.
“Langley’s assigning individual presentations next,” one of them said.
“She already uploaded the shared drive.”
Serene’s lips curved.
Dangerously.
“No more group work. No more hiding behind her polished team. Let’s see how Lyra Moreno handles failure……alone.”
AT THE CONSERVATORY LOUNGE, VALE ESTATE
The sun filtered through walls of ivy and glass, throwing a soft shimmer over teacups and linen. In the middle of it all, Lyra sat poised between her grandparents’ calm, quiet, eyes unreadable.
Across from her, Celeste Vale the matriarch herself perched in pristine cream silk. A woman who didn’t smile without reason.
Next to her, Camille, lounging like a spoiled cat in designer boots, flicked a strawberry into her mouth and chewed with drama.
Grandmother Moreno smiled, introducing Lyra as if she were presenting an heirloom.
“Celeste, allow me to introduce our granddaughter… Lyra Vallerie Moreno.”Celeste’s eyes lifted. She took in Lyra with one slow, deliberate glance like sizing up a rare painting that might just be priceless.
“Ah. So, this is the girl whose name drifts through circles like a whispered scandal.”
Camille grinned wide.
“She looks like a cursed princess. I love it.”
Lyra blinked slowly.
“I don’t do curses. Too noisy. Poison works better.”
A stunned pause…...then Celeste let out a soft, startled laugh. Real. Unfiltered.
“Oh, you’re wicked. I like you already.”
Grandfather Moreno poured tea with a gentle hand.
“She was raised to be elegant... but never harmless.”
Celeste accepted her tea, but her eyes remained on Lyra, thoughtful.
“There’s a sharpness to you. Quiet, but present. It’s refreshing. Most girls your age are... loud about being interesting.”
Lyra’s voice was soft, but exact.
“I don’t like being loud. I like being heard.”
Camille leaned in, eyes gleaming.
“You talk like you run underground empires.”
“I just finish things people are too afraid to start.”
Celeste sipped her tea slowly, a flicker of admiration crossing her face.
“You remind me of myself before I married into this madness.”Grandmother Moreno smiled knowingly.
“She’s always seen too much. Learned to stay still in the storm. And never blink first.”Camille squinted.
“You don’t blink a lot. Is that, like... trained or natural?”
Lyra’s reply was flat…. “Natural. I conserve energy.”
Laughter. Camille looked positively dazzled.
Celeste set her cup down with a quiet clink.
“You don’t belong on a shelf, or a pedestal. You’re not a girl to be dressed up for display.”Lyra nodded once.
“No one owns me. But I do look good in couture.”
Another genuine laugh. Camille choked on her strawberry.
Celeste studied her one last time.
“Terrifying. In a pretty way.”
Camille threw her a strawberry. Lyra caught it effortlessly.
“Okay,” Camille said.
“I’m starting a fan club. First rule? You can’t speak unless you’re quoting Lyra.”
Lyra smirked.
“You’re chaos.”
Camille beamed.
“You’re ice. I’m the glitter explosion. Balance.”
Later, Celeste motioned for Lyra to stay behind as the rest wandered off.
Just the two of them now.
The silence was velvet.
“I’ve spent my life reading people,” Celeste said, voice low.
“But you... you don’t unravel. You seal shut.”
“Sealed things are safer.”
“You sit here, sharing tea with a woman who could destroy reputations in three phone calls.”
Lyra’s smile was thin ice. “Only three? I usually need five.”
Celeste laughed, almost delighted.
“You’re dangerous. Not because you speak, but because you don’t.”
“They mistake silence for weakness.”
“And you let them.”
Lyra tilted her head.
“Mistakes are useful. People show their hands when they think I’m harmless.”
Celeste smiled. “Elias will need someone like you.”
“I don’t think he needs me.”
“No. But he’s drawn to you. Whether you see it or not.”
Lyra’s gaze didn’t shift. “I don’t do effect. I do results.”
Celeste leaned forward slightly.
“Don’t dim yourself. Not even for Elias. Especially for Elias.”
“I won’t bend. I am not dim. I burn quietly.”
Celeste exhaled.
“Then I look forward to watching the world catch fire.”
In the evening at Elias’s Study.
In the foor-to-ceiling windows. Leather and steel. The scent of old books, expensive whiskey, and the faint crackle of a fireplace in the background.
Elias leaned over a report, sleeves rolled, tie loosened not from chaos, but from precision fatigue.
He only looked up when Camelle burst in like she owned the world.
“I think I’m in love.”
“Again?”
She collapsed onto his couch with a dramatic sigh.
“She’s like if winter was a person. She said seven sentences the entire afternoon and I want them all tattooed on my body.”
“You’re not supposed to fall in love with my…” Elias paused, brow furrowing.
“…person you’re vaguely and confusingly associated with.”
Camelle gasped.
“Oh my God. You like her.”
“I didn’t say that.”
“You paused. You hesitated. That’s basically an emotional confession in your language.”
“She’s cold. Calculated. Disappears at random hours. She’s hiding something.”
“Exactly. She’s perfect for you.”
Camelle narrowed her eyes. “…Have you met her already?”
Elias, under his breath, “No… not yet.”
“This is what I get for letting you read spy novels.”
Camelle clutched a pillow like it was her emotional support dagger.
“I’d carry her coat. Hold her coffee. Be her loyal royal fan girl.”
“She’d kill you in your sleep.”
“I’d die beautifully.”
Elias didn’t reply. He set the report aside and stood, moving toward the fireplace with fluid calm. The fire popped quietly. He held a glass of scotch in one hand, untouched, amber catching the light.
Camelle remained curled into the leather chaise like a cat in cashmere, watching him the way only a sister could.....equal parts mischief and affection.
“So,” she said, swirling her drink lazily, “how long are you going to pretend you’re not obsessed with her?”
“I’m not.”
“Mmhmm.”
“I’m analyzing her.”
Camelle snorted. “You sound like you’re dissecting a weapon, not a woman.”
He looked up. “Same thing, in this case.”
“Oh, darling,” she purred, rising and gliding toward the fire, “you do realize you’re not the only one holding a blade in this engagement, right?”
Elias’s expression remained unreadable.
“Rio keeps running background checks on her,” Camelle continued, arching a brow. “Theo’s trying to memorize her schedule. I haven’t seen the boys that stunned since your mother threatened to rearrange the family tree with pruning shears.”
“She’s strategic.”
“She’s lethal,” Camelle corrected. “And that’s why you like her.”
Elias’s jaw ticked. “I don’t ‘like’ anyone.”
“No,” she said lightly. “You build walls, delegate feelings to assistants, and only flirt through corporate mergers. It’s very healthy.”
He said nothing.
Camelle’s voice softened, just slightly. “But this one? You don’t know how to catalog her yet, do you?”
He didn’t answer. Just walked back to his desk and set the glass down beside a folder. A photo was clipped to the file....Lyra, in grayscale, head turned slightly, eyes unreadable. One of the stills from a security feed his team had flagged weeks ago.
He stared at it for a moment too long.
“She doesn’t follow pattern,” he said at last.
“No,” Camelle replied, almost fond. “She breaks them.”
Still, he said nothing.
Camelle crossed to the door but paused in the threshold, silhouetted by the faint glow of hallway light.
“She’s not afraid of you, Eli. That’s rare.”
“I know.”
“She’ll either wreck you,” Camelle said, “or rebuild something better. Good luck guessing which.”
The door clicked softly shut behind her.
Silence settled once more. Heavy. Still.
Elias didn’t move for a long time.
Then...finally....he looked back down at the file.
Lyra’s eyes stared back.
Still. Cold. Limitless.
And somewhere, buried in the privacy of his own mind, a quiet truth echoed.
He was already unraveling.
And Lyra hadn’t even tried.
“What do we do now, Liam? If Lyra has the real ring… what does she plan to do next?”Beatrice was growing more frantic by the second. The thought turned in her mind: If Lyra had the ring, that woman would surely be celebrating but if it turned out the ring was gone and she had nothing to show for it, Richard would never forgive her. He would be furious, and the punishment would be far worse than any loss of money.Her voice rose, shaking with fear.“It’s not just about the money anymore! If Richard finds out we lost the ring and sold a fake, he will blame me completely. He warned me not to touch it and now it’s gone. He won’t care about excuses he will make me pay for this, one way or another!”Liam stopped walking, his back rigid, and looked down the long corridor toward the far end of the ship. A cold, bitter smile touched his lips, though it held no warmth. He turned his gaze to Beatrice, his eyes sharp and cruel. He wanted nothing more than to snap at her right now, but he held bac
Beatrice gasped, stumbling back a step as if she had been struck. “What? That’s impossible! I kept it locked inside my personal safe for years! I took it out myself and handed it directly to the staff to prepare for the auction. How could it not be real?”Even she could barely believe it herself. She knew how tight the security on this ship was; guards were posted at every corridor, every entrance, and every deck, with surveillance cameras watching almost every corner. There was no way anyone could have gotten close enough to swap it without being seen… or so she had thought.“How could this have happened?” she whispered, her voice shaking with fear and disbelief. “Security here is so tight that there are guards everywhere and checks at every door. Who would dare do this? And how did they do it without anyone noticing?”Liam stared at the ring resting in his palm. It looked beautiful and flawless to anyone else’s eyes, but he knew it was nothing more than an expertly made copy. Beatri
He looked at them with polite curiosity, though his posture remained guarded and composed. He had known Liam for many years, ever since Liam began expanding his business interests overseas; their paths had crossed often enough to make them familiar acquaintances. Yet they had never been close friends, and Mr. Daley could not understand what could bring Liam to his private suite at this late hour, especially accompanied by a woman he did not recognize.“May I help you, Mr. Liam?” he asked calmly, his tone courteous but carrying a subtle edge of caution. “And who is the lady standing behind you? I believe we have not been formally introduced.”Liam offered a thin, practiced smile, the kind he used for business meetings, warm enough to put others at ease but revealing nothing of his true thoughts. Beneath that surface, however, his eyes remained cold, sharp, and searching, scanning the room as if already looking for something out of place.“Mr. Daley, it has indeed been a while,” he repl
“If I could not have happiness… if my life has been nothing but empty, miserable, and lonely since she died… then neither should they. That is the only reason any of this wealth and power matters now. That is the only goal I have left. I will ruin them. I will break them down, piece by piece, just like I was broken years ago. I will make sure they suffer every bit of pain I have carried all this time. And I will make sure that in the end, their lives are just as empty, just as miserable, and just as lonely as mine has been ever since Laurin left this world.”Beatrice had been searching for Liam ever since all the guests had boarded the ship and the auction had come to an end, but he was nowhere to be found. As time passed, irritation began to creep into her more and more….none of the plans they had carefully laid out had worked out as expected.Now, beneath her growing frustration, cold fear began to sink in. She needed to get that ring back, no matter what it took. If Richard ever di
Lyra turned slightly toward Yani, her voice calm and low, almost a whisper.“It’s quieter here. I didn’t want to go back to the room just yet… it feels too enclosed. Out here, at least the air moves.”Yani gave a small, respectful nod, her eyes scanning the room subtly to ensure no one was approaching too closely.“You did well tonight, Miss. Everything went exactly as you expected. Better, even. They never stood a chance.”A faint, knowing smile touched Lyra’s lips as she swirled the drink in her glass.“Beatrice and Liam have always been too greedy, too eager to see me fall. Greed makes people blind. They only saw what they wanted to see, that I would break, that I would spend everything just for a memory. They forgot that I know how to play this game better than anyone.”Not long after, Elias and his friends Kade, Rio, Theo, and Dren followed them there. They stayed well back, lingering near the entrance and at a far corner, careful not to draw attention or disturb her. They simply
Beatrice clenched her fists secretly, struggling to keep her composure. She leaned closer, lowering her voice so only Lyra could hear, though her tone was sharp and confused. “The ring… aren’t you going to get it back? Do you truly not care at all?” She couldn’t understand it. She knew better than anyone how important that ring was to Lyra. Ever since Laurin died, all her things had been kept safe inside the Moreno family home: her clothes, her books, her jewelry. Beatrice herself had taken possession of that ring years ago, hiding it away in her private safe. She had admired it countless times, even tried wearing it once, but Richard had caught her and flown into a terrifying rage. He had slapped her so hard she nearly fell, his eyes blazing with anger as he shouted. “Don’t ever touch anything that belonged to Laurin!” Since then, the ring had been hidden away. Liam had told her back then, “If any of the Moreno family ever wants it back, they will have to come to us. And one d
The Next DayVale East Port Branch — Crisis Control RoomThe control room was a storm made of steel, wires, and human voices. Sparks spat from one of the substation relay boards, sizzling against the tile as the acrid tang of burnt circuitry thickened the air. Red warning lights stuttered across th
A Smoky Underground LoungeBackstreets of the CityA few days after the engagement announcementThe lounge was the kind of place where hope came to die quietly in a glass of cheap liquor. The walls sweated nicotine and dust, and the air clung to the skin with the damp grip of forgotten years. Somew
Their pinkies barely touched, but the quiet contact carried an intensity that neither of them fully acknowledged an unspoken agreement, fragile and precious.Then...."Aha!"The sharp exclamation shattered the moment.Lyra flinched slightly, pulling her hand back instinctively. Elias turned his hea
Main HallwayThe soft rustle of fabric echoed down the grand staircase as Lyra descended slowly, a vision of icy elegance ensemble off fitted dove gray dress with structured shoulders, subtle embroidery at the sleeves, and a high collar. Her hair was swept back into a sleek twist, silver pins glin







