LOGINElara's POV
The streetlight above me flickered, throwing broken shadows across the driveway as I stood there, gripping the divorce papers like they were the only thing keeping me from falling apart. My hands were shaking so badly the pages rustled in the night air. I don’t even remember the drive home. Just headlights and rain on the windshield and my reflection staring back at me — a woman who’d lost everything in one evening. I swallowed the lump in my throat and unlocked the front door. My heels clicked faintly on the marble floor, echoing through the too-quiet house. Karen, our housekeeper, appeared in the hallway, towel in hand, eyes wide. “Ma’am… you’re home early.” Her voice trembled. The towel twisted in her wrinkled fingers like she was trying to strangle the truth before it escaped. “Why do you look surprised?” I asked, my voice hoarse from crying in the car for hours. It sounded foreign, brittle. “I just didn’t expect you,” she stammered, glancing toward the staircase. A flash of panic crossed her face, gone as quickly as it came. My stomach turned. “Who’s in the house, Karen? Is Ian home?” “Maybe you should go back out, Doña,” she whispered. “He’ll be back soon, I’m sure.” Her words died under a sound that didn’t belong here — a soft, breathy moan that floated down the stairs. Then another, moan, filled with pleasure, followed by the faint creak of a bedframe. My bedframe. The world tilted. For a second, everything went silent except for the pounding in my chest. Karen’s eyes filled with tears. “Please, Doña, don’t—” But I was already moving. My legs didn’t feel like my own as I climbed the stairs, each step echoing in my skull. The closer I got, the clearer the sounds became — laughter, murmured words, the rhythm of betrayal. At the top of the staircase, my heart stopped. The bedroom door was half-closed. I pushed it open with a hand that barely worked. And then my world shattered. The bed — our bed — looked like a storm had hit it. Sheets tangled, pillows on the floor, air thick with sweat and perfume that wasn’t mine. Camila. Her. The woman I had once called my sister in everything but blood. My best friend. My bridesmaid. My confidante. The woman I’d trusted with my husband’s business, his life — my life. She was there, in my fucking bed, with my fucking husband, moaning his name as Ian enjoyed it. I didn't scream, didn't move, just... watched in silence. Rooted to the spot as tears stood in my eyes. Ian didn't see me. He didn't stop. He grunted Camila's name and came inside him - something he hadn't tried with me yet. And that... that was what broke me. A sound escaped my throat, not a scream, not a sob just a pure whimper of shattered devastation. They froze then Ian turned toward me slowly, lips glistening, eyes full of smug satisfaction. He didn’t flinch. He didn’t even cover himself properly. He just smiled — lazy, knowing, cruel. Camila looked up next. And in that instant, something inside me broke so quietly I could almost hear it crack. She didn’t panic. She didn’t look ashamed. She just… stared. “Oh,” Ian said flatly. “You’re home.” That’s all. Camila tilted her head, licking her lips, pretending modesty by pulling the sheet over her chest, though the smirk never left her face. “Guess the party ended early,” she murmured. My throat burned. I forced myself to breathe, to stand tall even as my knees threatened to give out. I stepped closer, throwing the divorce papers at him. They hit his chest and slid to the floor. “Is this what you wanted, Ian? To humiliate me twice in one night?” He rose from the bed, calm, collected — like a man leaving a meeting, not a marriage. “Our marriage was a mistake,” he said. “I only went through with it because of my grandmother. I never wanted you, Elara.” The words hit harder than any slap. “Would you love me if you were me?” he asked, voice dripping with disdain. Something in me snapped. “You used me, Ian. For your image. For convenience. As a sex material , someone to satisfy your sexual desires. And now you’re standing there acting like I’m the problem?” He smirked. “The truth is, you were never enough. Not in this house, not in my bed, not anywhere. What kind of woman always want to be on top of a man when it comes to having sex . Your position sucks always, Elara,but for Camila... She's the best, just perfect for a man like me." He looked back at Camila,whose grin widened. She blew him a playful kiss, and he caught it with a smirk. My blood boiled so hard I thought I might explode. Camila slid out of the bed, lazy and proud, draping herself against him. She kissed him, slow and deliberate, her eyes locked on mine the whole time — a challenge, a victory. “I guess you finally see who he really wants,” she whispered, tracing a finger down his chest. “Maybe now you’ll stop pretending you ever mattered.” My hands clenched at my sides. Every breath felt like glass cutting through my lungs. "Very soon, I'll be the next Mrs Vance," she purred. "The only woman who knows what he really wants." She nodded towards a small suitcase by the dresser. "I even packed a few things you'll need on your way out." “So all you could do with your life is steal someone else’s used husband?” I snapped, my voice sharp enough to cut glass. Camila’s eyes flared. “How dare you, bitch!” she hissed, raising her hand to slap me— —but Ian grabbed her wrist, pulled her back… and slapped me instead, hard, and my head crashed against the wall. Warm blood trickled down, but he didn’t even flinch—he didn’t care that I was hurt. Tears blurred my sight. “You’ll regret this,” I said quietly, voice shaking but full of something close to steel. Ian laughed, stepping closer until I could smell her perfume on his skin. “My grandmother isn’t here to protect you now. Get out before I lose my temper.” His fingers dug into my arm, hard enough to leave marks. He shoved me back. I stumbled but didn’t fall. Not this time. Karen was waiting at the bottom of the stairs, tears in her eyes, whispering my name. I walked past her, out the door, suitcase in hand. The night air hit my face, cold and merciless. Behind me, laughter echoed faintly from the window upstairs — her laughter. And that was the moment I promised myself: They would both pay.Elara's POV"It's Ian.""I know."I was still sitting on the edge of the bed. The burner was warm in my hand and the crack in the ceiling running from the light fixture toward the corner exactly where it had been when I'd opened my eyes this morning.I waited."I didn't confirm it," he said.I said nothing. Silence was the cheapest way to make someone keep talking and Ian had always filled silence badly. Some things didn't change in five years."The announcement. She sent it out before I was awake. I didn't know until I saw it on my phone this morning.""Why are you telling me this?""Because I thought you should—""Ian."I cut him off cleanly. "What do you want?"A pause. I could hear a slight shift"I want to meet you.""No.""Elara—""You're calling a lady at eight in the morning the day your engagement announcement dropped in every major publication in New York." I stood up and started moving because the room was too small to sit still in. "Whatever you're about to say — save it."
Ian's POVThe bed was empty.That wasn't new. Camila had been an early riser for as long as I'd known her — up before six, dressed before seven, the day already half-managed before most people had decided to be conscious. I'd stopped registering the empty side of the bed the same way I'd stopped registering a lot of things about this house. It was just how mornings worked here.What was new was my phone.I reached for it out of habit and the notifications were already stacked — twelve, fifteen, still coming in while I was looking at the screen. Not work. Not the board. My name. Camila's name. A date. A venue.Wait…. I sat up.The headline was the same across every publication. Clean, prominent, already everywhere before eight in the morning.Ian Vance and Camila Vale Confirm Engagement — Wedding Date Set for Next Month.I read it once.Read it again.Next month.I set the phone face down on the nightstand and sat on the edge of the bed, looking at the floor. The room was exactly as
Elara's POVThe ceiling was different.It was lower than the villa with a crack running from the light fixture toward the far corner that someone had half-heartedly filled in at some point and given up on.Dara's spare room.Right.I lay there for a moment and took stock. Head clear, the grogginess completely gone, a stiffness in my shoulders from a mattress that had been doing its best for several years too many. Nothing broken. Nothing that wouldn't sort itself out with coffee and movement.I reached for the burner on the nightstand and called Sydney.Noah answered on the third ring with the particular texture of someone who was technically awake but had submitted to it under protest."It's early," he said."It's eight-fifteen.""That's early.""Noah."He made a sound that communicated his position on the matter without requiring actual words. Then shuffling, and Claire's voice in the background — is that Mama, give me, Noah give me the phone — and then Claire was on."Mama.""Hey b
Camila's POVThe wine was a good one.Ian had picked it — one of the bottles from the case his business associate had sent over from Tuscany last spring, the kind that cost enough to make you pay attention to it. I opened it an hour ago and poured two glasses. Ian had taken his to his office and I'd taken mine to the sitting room and that was fine. That was how evenings worked in this house lately. Separate rooms, separate silences, the appearance of a shared life conducted from a comfortable distance.It was fine.I curled my feet beneath me on the sofa and looked at the room. Everything exactly where it should be. The flowers Petra had arranged Tuesday were still fresh on the side table. The cushions are straight. My phone lit up on the cushion beside me.The contact.I picked it up. "Tell me she's settled.""She's gone."For a moment, everything froze. I set the wine glass down on the table beside me carefully. "Say that again.""She's gone. The door was opened from the inside
Elara's POV"Four minutes," I repeated. "That's it?""That's it. Move."Dara was already at the door, easing it open just enough to check the corridor before pulling it wide. I followed her out, my legs still not entirely convinced they belonged to me, and the cold air outside that room hit my face like something I hadn't realised I'd been missing.The corridor was narrow. Made of concrete and industrial lighting, the kind that buzzed the same way the bulb in my room had, like the whole building ran on one tired generator that resented being asked to do anything."Where are we?" I whispered."Warehouse. Queen's side." Dara didn't slow down. "Don't ask me how I know that, ask me later."Fair enough.She moved fast and quiet, hugging the wall, and I matched her pace even though every part of my body wanted to sit down somewhere and process the fact that I'd just woken up in a locked room for the second time in five years. There would be time for processing later. Right now there was a
Elara's POVUrgh. What the hell?My head throbbed like something had been taken out of it and put back incorrectly. Slowly I opened my eyes and the first thing that hit me was the smell — antiseptic and something stale underneath it that immediately felt wrong.That's weird. Wasn't I just heading to my car?The ceiling above me was unfamiliar. A single bulb overhead, buzzing faintly. I blinked at it for a moment trying to get my bearings and then the memories started coming back in pieces. The car park. Bay fourteen. The indicators blinking. Something behind me that didn't belong.Shit.I was kidnapped. Again.I sat up slowly and immediately regretted it — the room tilted hard and I gripped the edge of the cot until everything decided to stay still. My head was pounding, my mouth tasted like chemicals, and somewhere at the back of my throat the sweetness of chloroform was still sitting there reminding me exactly how I'd ended up horizontal on a cot in a room I didn't recognise.Kidnap
Liam's POVThe fabric samples had been spread across the worktable since seven.By eleven I'd moved three of them and left the rest exactly where they were.Marco, my head designer, stood on the other side of the table waiting for me to say something useful. I could feel him waiting. He had that pa
Ian's POVThe drive home was quiet.My driver said nothing. The city lights bled past the window in slow streaks of amber and white. I sat with one arm against the door, two fingers pressed to my mouth, staring at nothing in particular.You remind me of someone.I'd said that out loud. And to a wom
Elara's POV My fingers trembled so hard I could barely unlock my phone. One deep breath. One last ounce of courage. Then I hit send — the recording, Ian’s confession, every single shred of betrayal he had thrown at me. I attached it all with a note that burned like poison on my tongue.> “Let’s se
Elara's POV Where the fuck is he? I muttered to myself as I searched the Grand Hall for Ian, my diamond stilettos clicking sharply against the marble floor. Tonight was supposed to be special—our third anniversary and my twenty-fifth birthday. Ian had promised to make it a night I’d never forget







