LOGINSANDRA’S POV
The door slams behind me harder than I expect, the sound echoing down the hallway like a gunshot.
I keep walking fast anyway. If I stop, even for a second, I know I’ll lose it completely.
My legs feel weird beneath me, stiff and heavy at the same time, like my body is moving without waiting for my brain to catch up. My ears are still ringing from everything that happened upstairs.
Pamela. Austin. The bed. I press the elevator button harder than necessary, breathing unevenly as silence closes around me. The hallway suddenly feels too small, too quiet, like the walls are moving closer every second I stand there.
The elevator doors slide open. I step inside quickly and the second they close, I’m alone with my reflection.
I look awful. My mascara’s smudged beneath my eyes, my lips trembling slightly no matter how hard I press them together. I stare at myself in the mirror and barely recognize the girl staring back at me.
A few hours ago, I was happy. That memory hits hard enough to make my chest ache.
Dad had smiled at me over breakfast this morning, coffee mug still in his hand. “You’re glowing,” he said casually. I remember laughing softly and shaking my head. “I’m not glowing.”
“You are,” he insisted, pointing at me like he’d figured something out. “Let me guess. Austin finally proposed?” My smile faded instantly after that. “Dad, we’re twenty. Nobody even gets engaged that young anymore.”
“Your mother and I did.”
“That was like a hundred years ago,” I muttered, making him laugh. But then he looked at me again, softer this time. “Still…… you’re happy. That’s what matters.”
The elevator jolts slightly as it reaches the lobby, dragging me back to the present so hard it almost hurts.
The doors open and I walk out quickly before I start crying again. The lobby is polished and quiet, expensive in that cold, perfect way rich places usually are. Soft music plays somewhere in the background while people walk past like nothing happened upstairs.
I push through the glass doors and the night air hits my face immediately. Cars pass. Streetlights glow. People laugh somewhere across the street. The world keeps moving like nothing changed.
Meanwhile I can barely breathe. My phone vibrates violently in my hand and I already know who it is before I even look down.
Austin. I stare at his name flashing across the screen and something bitter twists inside me.
The nerve of him. The call ends. Then another starts almost immediately. I decline it again.
A message appears seconds later. *Babe, where are you? Pick up the phone.* Another one. *Sandra, don’t do this.* Then another. *Babe, listen to me. You’re taking this too far. We need to talk properly.*
I actually laugh. Not because anything’s funny. Because what the hell else am I supposed to do?
My fingers tighten around the phone before I lock the screen without replying. Then it vibrates again.
Pamela.
For a second I just stare at her name. I open the message anyway. *Sandra please, I’m so sorry.* Another one appears immediately after. *I never wanted you to find out like that.*
Something hot flashes through me instantly. So there was a better way to find out my boyfriend was screwing my best friend behind my back?
I block her number before I can think twice about it. Gone. Just like that. My throat tightens painfully and I tilt my head back for a second, blinking hard against the pressure building behind my eyes.
Don’t cry again. I step closer to the curb and raise my hand for an Uber.
I can’t go home yet. I can’t sit across from Dad pretending I’m okay when I feel like somebody reached inside my chest and ripped everything apart with their bare hands.
The Uber pulls up a minute later and I slide into the backseat quietly. “Where to?” the driver asks.
“The Sterling Hotel.” The words leave my mouth automatically. Dad uses that hotel for business meetings sometimes. Expensive. Private. Nobody asks questions there.
he car pulls away from the curb and merges into traffic while city lights flash across the windows beside me.
My phone vibrates again.
Lena. Calling. Again. And again. I stare at her name for a long second before finally answering. “Hello?” My voice sounds hollow even to me.
There’s immediate silence on the other end before Lena speaks. “Sandra?” Her voice sharpens instantly with concern. “What the hell happened?”
“I’m fine.” The lie comes too fast. Lena exhales slowly. “No, you’re not.” I close my eyes briefly and lean my head against the window, exhaustion crashing into me all over again. “I said I’m fine,” I whisper softer this time, but even I can hear how broken it sounds. “Talk to me.” Her voice gentles immediately. “Please. You’re scaring me.”
My throat burns. I stare out at the passing lights outside the car because focusing on something else feels easier than answering her.
“What happened?” Lena asks quietly. I shake my head before realizing she can’t even see me. “I can’t talk about it right now.”
A pause. Then carefully, “Is it Austin?” My grip tightens around my phone. That silence tells her enough. “Oh my God,” she breathes softly. “Sandra…….”
The sympathy in her voice almost destroys me right there. “I’m coming to you,” she says quickly. “Just send me your location, okay? I’ll be there in ten minutes.”
“No.” The word comes out sharper than I mean it to. The driver glances at me briefly through the mirror before looking away again. I swallow hard and lower my voice. “I don’t want to see anyone right now.”
“You shouldn’t be alone.”
“I need to be.”
“No, you don’t,” Lena says immediately, and damn, the way she says it almost makes me cry again.
Because she sounds scared for me. Everything inside me feels wrong right now. Heavy. Hollow. Numb all at once. “I’ll call you later,” I whisper quickly before she can argue more.
“Sandra, wait……” I hang up. Silence fills the car immediately after.
No Austin. No Pamela. No Lena trying to save me from falling apart. Just me and my thoughts. I lean my head back against the seat and stare at the ceiling while the city moves outside the windows in blurred streaks of light.
Everything keeps replaying in my head no matter how hard I try to stop it.
The sheets. Pamela’s face. Austin pulling his shirt on like none of it mattered. “It didn’t mean anything.”
My chest aches quietly. Like somebody hollowed me out from the inside and left nothing behind. I close my eyes for a second and let out a shaky breath. Then whisper softly into the darkness of the car, “I just need to not feel anything tonight.”
KELVIN'S POVOne year later…...Rachel walks into my office without knocking.She drops three folders onto my desk before stealing the coffee I haven't touched yet."Good morning to you too."She takes a sip."It was.""That was my coffee.""It was your coffee."I stare at her."You've become fearless.""You got married.""So?""You stopped being intimidating.""I was intimidating?""You used to scare entire boardrooms.""And now?""Now you send heart emojis during meetings."I nearly choke."I did that once.""You sent it to the board chat.""It was an accident.""It was hilarious."Before I can defend myself, my phone vibrates.*Wife ❤️*Rachel notices immediately."There it is.""What?""That smile.""I don't have a smile.""You have the smile."I answer the call anyway."Morning."Sandra's voice makes the office feel smaller somehow."Busy?""I was being bullied."Rachel places a hand dramatically against her chest."I heard that."Sandra laughs through the phone."Hi, Rachel.""T
SANDRA'S POVClayton Global's annual charity reception looks exactly the way wealthy people think hope should look.Crystal chandeliers, live string music and Champagne flowing like water.Politicians chatting with investors. Business executives pretending they aren't secretly watching one another.Tonight, they're watching us instead.Kelvin offers me his arm before we enter the ballroom."You still have time to run."I glance at him."Is that your idea of romance?""It's my idea of an emergency exit."I slip my hand through his arm."Too late.""You've decided?""I decided a long time ago."His smile reaches his eyes."Good."The ballroom doors open.Conversations pause. Not all of them, just enough.People look.Some smile politely and some don't bother hiding their curiosity.A few months ago, I would've shrunk beneath those stares.Tonight, I smile back.Rachel appears almost immediately, carrying a champagne flute she clearly has no intention of drinking."There you are."Kelvin
KELVIN'S POVThe boardroom is already full when I walk in, with shareholders, senior executives, legal advisers, and board members filling every seat, and not a single person bothering to pretend this is just another ordinary meeting.Rachel slides into step beside me carrying a tablet."You've got this.""You sound unconvinced.""I am unconvinced."I glance at her. "That's not encouraging.""I believe in honesty.""You could've chosen optimism.""I tried." She shrugs. "It didn't suit me."Despite everything, I smile.The room notices.Whispers immediately begin.Rachel clears her throat."Ladies and gentlemen, unless anyone intends to solve the global economy before breakfast, shall we begin?"A few nervous laughs ripple through the room, the tension eases slightly.I take my seat at the head of the table.Mr. Hanley, one of the older shareholders, wastes no time."We'll speak plainly.""I'd prefer that.""Your personal life has become a corporate liability."Across the table, Direct
SANDRA'S POVWalking across campus doesn't feel like walking into a courtroom anymore. It finally feels like a campus again, where not everyone stares, though some still do, some still whisper, and others pretend they aren't whispering at all. It's progress, and for now, I can live with that.Lena catches up beside me carrying two iced coffees and an expression that promises trouble."I bought you caffeine.""You also bought yourself caffeine.""I'm generous.""You're addicted.""I can be both."She hands me a cup."You look lighter.""I slept.""With eight pillows and anxiety?""Seven pillows."She nods."That's growth."I laugh, and a group of classmates passing us glance over.One of them smiles."Hey, Sandra. Good luck on your presentation."I blink. "Thanks."They keep walking.Lena nudges my shoulder. "See?""I almost forgot what normal people sound like.""They're overrated."Our marketing lecture begins ten minutes later. Professor Mitchell walks in carrying his laptop."Pre
KELVIN'S POVMarcus smiles one last time before climbing into his SUV.The engine starts.The taillights disappear beyond the gates. Only then do I look down at the photograph still resting on my car.Sandra steps beside me."What is it?"I don't answer immediately.Not because I'm hiding it but because I'm already exhausted. I hand her the photograph.She studies it, her expression changes almost instantly.It's subtle, just a flicker.Confusion.Then something sharper.The picture shows me sitting inside a quiet restaurant with a woman around sixty years old. She's holding my hand across the table while I'm leaning forward, saying something the camera can't hear.Without context, it looks intimate.Sandra stares at it a second longer than I expected.Then she quietly asks,"Who is she?"The question isn't angry.It's careful.I look at her."You thought…..."She immediately groans. "I know. I know how this looks.""You were jealous.""I was not.""You absolutely were.""It lasted f
SANDRA'S POVI spend the entire drive to my childhood home wondering if this is a terrible idea.Kelvin glances at me before stopping at a red light."You've sighed six times.""I counted five.""I missed one while driving.""I appreciate your commitment to accuracy."He smiles."You can still change your mind.""So can you.""I've already worn the uncomfortable suit.""I picked that suit.""I know.""If tonight goes badly...""I'm blaming your fashion choices."A laugh escapes me before I can stop it."That's better.""What is?""You laughed.""I also feel like throwing up.""We can multitask."I roll my eyes."I forgot how annoying you are.""No, you got used to it."When the car stops outside the Nicholson house, neither of us reaches for the door.The porch light glows softly.Everything looks exactly the same, everything feels completely different.Kelvin quietly clears his throat."If your dad throws me out...""I'll leave with you.""If he throws both of us out?""We'll order p
KELVIN'S POVMarcus Webb doesn't strike me as the type of man who enjoys golf.The realization arrives halfway through lunch while he stands beside a putting green overlooking one of the most expensive country clubs in Los Angeles, smiling politely at investors and executives while pretending this
SANDRA'S POVI know exactly how prisoners feel.The thought arrives the moment I step into the ballroom and immediately makes me feel guilty because nobody dragged me here, nobody locked any doors, and nobody forced me into the expensive dress hanging perfectly against my body, yet as congratulatio
KELVIN'S POVThe acquisition should be consuming every second of my attention.Eight months of negotiations, hundreds of millions of dollars, three companies waiting for final approval, and a boardroom full of executives expecting me to lead them through the most important deal Clayton Global has h
SANDRA’S POVThe message arrives three hours later, no greeting, just an address. A small café tucked between office buildings across the city.Private and quiet, away from people who know us. I stare at it for almost five minutes then type. *This is a bad idea.* His reply comes immediately.*I know







