LOGINElara's POV
I followed Ian out of the fashion show and kept my distance, slipping behind a marble pillar in the corridor. My pulse was steady, trained to hide itself; my breath slow. From my hiding place I could hear him—low, flat—answering a call. “You need to hurry up with Camila,” his mother’s voice snapped. “You’re thirty-three. Do you think you’re still young? This isn’t the old days. Stop clinging to nonsense ideals. Marrying her will be good for our family’s reputation. You’re a businessman, Ian. You should know the benefits.” Her tone softened for one poisonous second. “As long as she can be a good wife, that’s enough.” My fists tightened. The same manipulation, the same woman who once praised me as the perfect daughter-in-law. Ian’s face didn’t move. “I know, Mum.” “You always say you know,” she said. “But you never act on it.” The call ended. Ian slid the phone into his pocket and exhaled. I ducked deeper behind the pillar, certain he’d sense something was off. I waited—then heard his voice again. “Elara…” My body froze. Had he seen me? No. His eyes weren’t on me. He’d seen—someone else. A woman walking toward the showroom caught his attention; from behind she looked like me—same height, same dress, the same dark waves of hair. Ian straightened, pupils narrowing, and followed her. I stayed where I was, breath held. Watching him trail after a stranger who looked like me brought a sharp, bitter satisfaction that tasted almost like victory. When he reached her, he tapped her shoulder. “Elara?” She turned, startled. Completely unfamiliar face. “What do you want?” she asked, playful at the sight of his suit. “Want my number?” Ian’s expression closed like a door. “Sorry. Wrong person.” He left without another word. The woman stood there, stunned, then sneered. “What rubbish! You mistake me for someone else and can’t even see properly at night—are you a mole or what?” Her insult hung in the air. Ian didn’t look back. Not far off, I watched from the crowd—wearing the same dress as that woman, mask hiding the top half of my face. A small, cold smile curved my lips. Ian, I thought, five years ago I respected you. I loved you and treasured you with my life. And what did you give me? You called me a nuisance, a burden. Fine. I adjusted my mask until it sat right. This time, I promised myself, I’ll be your worst nightmare. I won’t let you hurt me again. Memories clawed at me—his betrayal, the humiliation, Finn’s silence—but tonight wasn’t for pain. Tonight was about control. The lights dimmed. Models began to parade down the runway, one breathtaking look after another. The hall shimmered and applauded; I sat very still, eyes fixed on the two people who had ruined me—Ian and Camila. A cold prickle ran down my spine when Camila shifted and swept her gaze over the crowd. For a breathless second our eyes locked. My pulse hit a faster tempo. Did she recognize me? I wondered. Her brows moved for a second, then smoothed. The mask worked. Evil witch, I murmured beneath my breath. You wanted me dead five years ago. Too bad for you—I survived. I’m back, and you will pay. For me. For Finn. I blinked the sting of tears away before anyone could see. Ian leaned in and tapped Camila’s shoulder. “Who are you looking at, Cam?” She forced a smile, cupping his face. “Nothing, babe. I thought I saw an old friend.” She kissed him. I stared at the stage instead—anger tempered into quiet resolve. When the show ended, Camila was invited onstage to speak. She glided up with the confidence of a woman who’d planned every step. The microphone was in her hand, the lights on her. She opened her mouth—and the big screen behind her shuddered to life. “Camila, please help me… please…” A woman who looked exactly like me begged for help across the hall. The voice was trembling, raw. The audience sucked in a collective breath. Weeks of planning and a clever IT hand had made that video possible—an image designed to turn the room against her. Camila froze, her face draining color. Murmurs rose like a tide. This is only the beginning, I thought, my whisper drowned by the audience. The tip of the iceberg. I lifted my glass and crushed it in my palm. The glass shattered, glittering like splintered promises. Panic rippled through the crowd. Bottles and programs became missiles—paper, water, anything people could grab. Chaos surged toward the stage. “What’s going on? What’s wrong with everyone?” Camila barked, panic slipping into her voice. She spun toward Ian—but he stared at the screen, muscles tight. “Who played that video?” she cried. “Turn it off! TURN IT OFF!” She bolted for the wings, but the press swarmed her like bees, shouting questions. “Ms. Camila, who is the woman in that video?” “Do you know her?” “Were you involved?” “I— I don’t know her!” she stammered, sweat beading on her upper lip. “How would I know her?” The flashes kept firing. The microphones kept asking. When she finally looked for Ian, his chair was empty. Her face went ashen. She lunged after him. “Ian, listen—this is an accident! It’s not what you think!” He stopped, turned slowly, and his voice was brittle as glass. “Then what is it, Camila?” She went still. The color left her cheeks. Ian’s jaw tightened. He released her arm like a burning coal and ordered, cold and curt, “Laura, take care of her. If anything happens, wait for me.” Then he walked away. I watched him go, a slow smile unfolding at the corner of my mouth. Round one, Camila. Welcome to the beginning of your downfall.Elara's POV"I want the same thing you want," Morticia said. "I just want different parts of it."I didn't respond immediately. The voice on the other end was low and unhurried and carried beneath it something that wasn't quite amusement."Go ahead," I said."My father died three years ago. Marcus Vale. He left a significant estate — properties, investments, the original Vale Group shares before Camila rebranded it. The will divided it between both of us." A pause. "Camila contested it. Produced documentation I'd never seen before that amended the original will six weeks before he died. A man who hadn't spoken to his legal team in eight months apparently revised his entire estate in Camila's favour while being treated for stage three cardiac failure.""And you couldn't prove it was forged.""I couldn't access the right documentation. It's buried inside Vale Group's legal structure in a way that requires internal access to the surface. I've been building around the outside of it for th
Elara's POVLiam walked in the way he did everything — without announcing himself, without filling the space before he'd assessed it. He looked at the room once. The spare bed with its tired mattress, the coat folded on the chair, the burner on the bed beside me. Yesterday's clothes. Dara hovering in the doorway behind him with the expression of someone who had decided her job right now was to be invisible.He sat down on the chair in the corner — moved the coat first, set it carefully on the edge of the bed — and looked at me.He didn't say anything.I appreciated that more than I would have admitted out loud."You’ll have to excuse the appearance.” I started, then looked him in the eye. “I was kidnapped last night," He didn’t give any reaction. "Dara got me out. We've been here since approximately one in the morning."Liam was quiet for a moment."Are you hurt?""No."He nodded. That was all — just the nod, taking it in, filing it without performing a reaction that would require
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
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 “What are you thinking about, Mum?” Noah’s small voice pulled me from my thoughts.“Nothing much, dear,” I said softly, smiling at him. “I was just remembering the day I gave birth to my lovely triplets. I love you, my children.”“Mum,” Emily said, her eyes sparkling with mischief, “we
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 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 dri







