LOGINHe was running.
“I'm coming, Joelle!” He screamed, but the rain swallowed his voice.
His shoes pounded against cracked concrete, the sound echoing through the narrow alley behind the orphanage. His lungs burned, each breath tearing through his chest as though the air itself refused him mercy.
Rain lashed his face, blurring his vision, soaking his clothes until they clung heavily to his small frame. But he didn’t stop.
He couldn’t.
At the end of the alley stood the rusted iron gate, half-open, swaying weakly in the wind. Beyond it, beneath the flickering yellow security light, she stood exactly where she had promised she would be.
Joelle.
She looked smaller than he remembered, her thin shoulders hunched against the cold, her fingers curled tightly around the straps of her worn backpack. Her dark hair clung damply to her cheeks, and her wide eyes scanned the darkness with fragile hope.
She was waiting for him.
Relief surged through him so violently it hurt.
“I’m here!” he tried to shout.
But no sound came out.
His throat moved. His chest strained. Nothing.
Panic clawed up his spine. He pushed himself harder, legs screaming in protest as the distance between them refused to close.
The gate seemed to grow farther away the faster he ran, the ground stretching endlessly beneath his feet.
Joelle’s eyes found him then. For a moment, her face lit up — pure, unguarded relief. She stepped forward.
And then… Hands seized him from behind. Strong. Unyielding. He struggled violently, clawing at the unseen grip dragging him backward into the darkness.
No. No. No.
He reached for her, fingers outstretched, desperate. Joelle’s expression changed.
Confusion.
Fear.
And then the worst of all…
Resignation.
Her hand slowly fell back to her side. She stopped trying to reach him. Stopped waiting.
“Joelle!” he forced out, the name tearing from somewhere deep inside him.
This time, sound came. But it was too late.
The gate slammed shut between them with a deafening clang. He woke up with a sharp inhale. For a moment, he didn’t move, his heart hammering violently against his ribs, his hand still half-reached toward someone who wasn’t there.
His fingers curled slightly, as though they had been holding someone else’s hand only seconds ago. Slowly, deliberately, he lowered it. The dream clung to him, vivid and suffocating.
It always ended the same way. His breathing steadied gradually, though his chest still felt tight.
He rarely dreamed. He never forgot when he did.
The ceiling above him was unfamiliar in its perfection—smooth white molding, recessed lights, silence so complete it felt unnatural. Nothing here creaked. Nothing here was broken. Nothing here was temporary.
He turned his head slightly. Floor-to-ceiling glass windows stretched across the far wall, revealing the pale gray light of early morning and the sprawling city beneath. Crescent towers of steel and glass pierced the sky, cold and untouchable.
He had spent years building a life that could never be taken from him again. Yet somehow, sleep still dragged him back to the one thing he had lost.
He sat up slowly, running a hand through his dark hair. The silk sheets slipped effortlessly from his body, pooling at his waist. Everything around him was expensive. Controlled. Permanent.
Nothing like the place he had come from. On the nightstand sat a watch, a phone, and a small object half-hidden beneath them.
A thin red thread bracelet. Worn. Faded. Out of place among everything else.
He stared at it for a moment, his jaw tightening almost imperceptibly. Then he slid open the drawer and placed it inside, shutting it carefully.
Out of sight.
A soft knock sounded at the door. He didn’t answer. He didn’t need to. The door opened anyway.
“Good morning, sir,” the house staff said quietly. “Your father is waiting for you downstairs.”
Sir.
Not his name. Never his name.
He gave a single nod. “I’ll be down.”
The dining room was already bathed in morning light when he entered. His father sat at the head of the long table, posture rigid, a newspaper folded neatly beside his untouched coffee.
His mother sat opposite him, elegant and silent, her fingers wrapped around a porcelain cup as though it were the only thing anchoring her there.
They both looked up when he approached. For a moment, no one spoke.
He took his seat without a word. A staff member stepped forward immediately, placing a plate before him. The smell of freshly baked bread and brewed espresso filled the air.
He wasn’t hungry.
His father studied him with the same measured scrutiny he reserved for boardrooms and negotiations.
“You’re late.” It wasn’t an accusation. It was a statement of fact.
“I slept poorly,” he replied evenly.
His father’s gaze lingered, as though searching for something beneath the surface. Whatever he was looking for, he didn’t comment on it. Instead, he reached for his coffee.
“There is a board dinner next month.”
He said nothing.
“You’ll attend.”
Not a request. A decision already made.
His father set the cup down carefully, folding his hands neatly atop the table.
“It is time,” he continued, voice calm and absolute, “for you to begin preparing for marriage.”
The words settled into the space between them with quiet finality. Across the table, his mother’s fingers tightened almost imperceptibly around her cup, though she did not look up.
He felt nothing. Or at least, nothing he allowed himself to feel. Marriage. Alliance. Strategy. Ownership disguised as tradition. He had been raised long enough in this world to understand what it meant. He remained still.
His father’s eyes held his. “There are several suitable families who have expressed interest." Giovanni Guidotti said. “This will strengthen the position you’ve worked so hard to build.”
Build.
The word lingered strangely in his mind. As though none of it had been handed to him. As though none of it had cost him anything. His gaze drifted briefly toward the window. From this height, the world looked small. Manageable.
Families.
Not women.
Not love.
Interest.
He wondered, briefly, what his father would say if he knew there had once been a girl waiting for him behind a rusted gate. A girl who had believed he would come back. He wondered, distantly, what had become of the boy who once believed promises could survive distance.
His father spoke again. “You understand what is required of you.”
Not what you want. Not what you feel. Required.
He picked up his coffee and took a slow sip, steady and unhurried. “I understand,” he said.
It was the answer his father expected. It was the answer Alessandro Guidotti would give. His father nodded once, satisfied. The conversation was over. That was how it had always been.
He had learned, over the years, how to bury hesitation before it reached the surface. How to silence instinct. How to become exactly what was expected of him.
How to become someone else.
Alessandro Guidotti never hesitated.
Alessandro Guidotti never looked back.
And he had perfected being Alessandro Guidotti.
There were very few people or things that made Alessandro Guidotti nervous.His father was one of them.Giovanni Guidotti had a particular way of occupying a room — not loudly, not theatrically — but with the quiet, immovable authority of a man who had never once doubted his own significance. Alessandro had spent the better part of twenty-one years learning how to breathe normally in his presence. He was still learning.But tonight, it was not his father making his pulse unsteady.Tonight, it was her.Viviana.The name alone did something unflattering to his composure. He sat rigid in the back of the car, dressed in a custom-tailored black tuxedo that fit him like a second skin, and felt, with some private humiliation, like a sacrificial lamb being chauffeured to the slaughter. The bowtie at his throat was immaculate. It was also strangling him.It feels like a noose, he thought grimly, resisting the urge — for the fourth time since leaving the estate — to reach up and tear the thin
The name hit Kelay like a slap. For a beat she said nothing, her eyes narrowing slowly into slits as something cold and unsurprised settled in her chest. I knew it. I said it years ago and nobody wanted to listen. She had never been able to put her finger on exactly what it was about Maddie — something in the way she'd always looked at Eric when she thought Maya wasn't watching, something in the particular sweetness she performed whenever Maya was in the room. Kelay had filed it away and said nothing, because Maya had loved her, and who was she to plant seeds of doubt in her cousin's happiest season?She wished now that she had."I knew it." The words came out low, almost a hiss. "I knew she was not to be trusted." Something hotter pushed through and she let it. "That frigging bitch!""It's what it is." Maya lifted one shoulder in a shrug so practiced it almost looked real.Don't do that. Kelay watched her — the set of her jaw, the careful blankness behind her eyes — and felt a quie
The familiar scent of makeup remover filled the small bathroom as Maya dragged a cotton pad across her cheek, watching the day dissolve onto the white cloth in streaks of foundation and mascara.It had been a long evening at her parents' restaurant — the kind that left her feet aching and her smile muscles sore — and the quiet of her room was a relief she hadn't realised she'd needed until she was standing in it.Almost done, she thought, reaching for a fresh napkin. Then bed.That was when she heard it.The soft but distinct sound of her bedroom door swinging open — and then clicking shut. No footsteps followed. No voice called out. Just silence, thick and deliberate, pressing against the walls.Maya's brows furrowed. She stood still for a moment, head tilted, listening. The room didn't creak or settle in ways she hadn't learned to recognise over the years. That sound was something else entirely. Someone else.Someone's in my room.She tossed the napkin into the waste bin beneath the
"I won't pay you back in any other way except cash or transfer, Mother." He snapped, the pleasantness of a moment ago entirely gone. "You should look for your puppet elsewhere.""I want you to take Viviana Geralt as your date to the anniversary." She said it calmly. Infuriatingly, serenely calm — as though he hadn't spoken at all, as though his refusal was simply atmospheric noise she had chosen not to register.Alessandro stared at the phone on his desk. For a full, suspended second, the name simply sat in the air of his office, and his mind — sharp, efficient, accustomed to processing bad news with the detached precision of a man who ran a billion-dollar enterprise — flatly refused to accept it.Viviana Geralt."Over my dead, worm-infested body, Mother!" The words left him before he could architect them into something cooler, something more controlled. He heard himself bellow and distantly recognized that she had done it again — cracked him open in under sixty seconds, stripped awa
Roderick stopped five feet from the desk — he had learned, over five years, to read the landscape before advancing further. "Um... It's yours, sir." He cleared his throat. "Your mother ordered me to pick it up for you."Of course she did.Alessandro leaned back in his chair. The leather sighed beneath him. "How long have you been working for me, Rod?""Um. Five years.""Five years." He let that sit. "And in all that time — five years of working in very close proximity to my person — have you ever, even once, seen me wearing something like that?" He gestured toward the tuxedo with an expression that would have been appropriate for something found on the underside of a shoe."No, sir.""Then why," Alessandro said, with the patience of a man who was not feeling particularly patient, "did you not tell her how hideous it is?"Rod blinked. Once. Twice. He looked down at the tuxedo on his arm as though he was only now truly seeing it. "I... She asked me what your favourite colour is."Alessa
Amihan was waiting for him at the door. She had not gone to bed. Of course she hadn't. She'd been standing there, or near there, moving between the window and the doorway with the restless energy of a woman who knows something is wrong and has been forbidden, temporarily, from doing anything about it. The moment she saw Santos's face — the careful, measured expression of a man carrying someone else's news — she crossed her arms and set her jaw."What did she say?" Amihan demanded. Her eyes were sharp, her voice pitched low but urgent. "Her boyfriend did something, didn't he? I knew that man was no good for her. The very first time I saw him I knew."I should have said something, she thought. I saw it. That particular way he looked at her — or rather, the way he didn't. Like she was a presence he'd grown accustomed to rather than a person he'd chosen. I saw it and I said nothing because it wasn't my place and Maya was happy and I didn't want to be the one to—"It's not just him." Sa
Maya stepped into the lobby of Starlight Apartments, Eric’s residence, and instinctively lowered her head as if that might somehow make her invisible. Her eyes flicked toward the reception desk while a silent prayer formed in her mind, directed vaguely to whoever might be listening above.Please do
Eric stepped out of the elevator when it reached the underground parking level. The echo of footsteps bounced faintly across the concrete space as employees filtered toward their cars after another long day at Atlas.Daniel followed him out. “Well,” Daniel said, stretching his shoulders, “if tomorr
Morning light filtered through the glass façade of Atlas Tower as Eric Keaton stepped into the lobby a little after seven-thirty. The marble floor reflected the bustle of early arrivals—assistants clutching tablets, analysts balancing coffee cups, security greeting executives by name.Eric nodded t
“Hannah, have you seen Joelle?” Maya asked, already halfway distracted, her eyes scanning the hallway as if the child might magically appear.“Joelle? I saw her waiting out front for someone a few minutes ago,” Hannah replied.“Waiting for someone?” Maya repeated, her brows pulling together instant







