LOGINSerena woke up the next morning already regretting the way her heart reacted around Kael Vale.
It annoyed her.
She was twenty-four years old, not some teenager getting nervous because a handsome man looked at her for too long. Yet ever since the storm, something had changed between them, and pretending she didn’t feel it was becoming harder.
The worst part was that Kael barely did anything, he wasn’t flirting with her ,he wasn’t touching her.he wasn’t saying inappropriate things.
It was the quietness between them that kept throwing her off. The eye contact that lasted a second too long.
The way his voice softened around her sometimes. The way he watched her with Lia like he was seeing something he hadn’t realized he missed.
Serena hated how much she noticed all of it. Which was exactly why she decided to avoid him.
Not obviously of course.
She simply timed things differently. If Kael usually had breakfast at eight, she took Lia to the garden earlier. If he worked in the library, Serena stayed upstairs with Lia. If he entered a room, Serena suddenly found a reason to leave it. It was childish but more safer that way.
Because no matter how much she tried to deny it, there was tension growing between them, and Serena had seen enough complicated relationships in life to know how quickly things could become messy.
Especially when feelings got involved.
And it was not okay at all
---
By noon, the mansion was peaceful.
Lia sat at the dining table with crayons scattered everywhere while Serena helped her finish a drawing for school.
“That doesn’t look like a cat,” Serena said, trying not to laugh.
Lia gasped in offense. “It does to me.”
“It looks like a potato with whiskers.”
“It’s artistic.”
Serena burst into laughter.
“You sound exactly like your father when he talks about those weird paintings downstairs.”
Lia grinned proudly. “Daddy says art is supposed to confuse people.”
“That explains a lot actually.”
“You don’t like Daddy’s paintings?”
“I think one of them looked like sadness fighting for its life.”
Lia blinked at her. “That’s exactly what Daddy said.”
Serena paused.
“Wait, seriously?”
Lia nodded enthusiastically. “And then Aunt Vivienne said it looked ugly.”
Serena had heard that name before.
Mrs. Rowan mentioned her once while talking about people who frequently visited the mansion.
Before Serena could ask another question, footsteps entered the dining room.
Kael.
As usual, Serena noticed him before even looking up. She didn’t know why she was becoming so aware of his presence all the time, but it was starting to irritate her.
Kael loosened the cuffs of his dark shirt as he walked toward the table, looking like he had just stepped out of one of those expensive magazine ads rich people somehow made look effortless.
“Daddy,” Lia said immediately, “Serena insulted your paintings.”
Serena nearly choked.
“I did not insult them.”
Kael looked between both of them calmly before pulling out a chair.
“What exactly did she say?”
“That one painting downstairs looks like sadness fighting for survival.”
Kael’s eyes slowly shifted toward Serena.
And then, unexpectedly, he smiled.
Which made her heart flip.
“That’s exactly what the artist intended.”
Serena stared at him suspiciously. “You’re joking.”
“I’m not.”
Lia looked delighted by Serena’s confusion.
Kael sat beside his daughter while reaching for the coffee Mrs. Rowan placed near him.
“You don’t like modern art?” he asked Serena.
“I like art that actually looks like something.”
“That’s unfortunate.”
Serena narrowed her eyes slightly. “You sound personally offended."
“I paid a ridiculous amount of money for that painting. I’d prefer if guests respected it.”
“Guests?”
Kael looked at her over the rim of his coffee cup.
“You’re not a guest?”
The question caught her off guard.
She didn’t know why. Before she could answer, Lia suddenly climbed down from her chair holding up her drawing proudly.
“Look what I made.”
Serena looked first.
Three people stood beneath a giant yellow sun.
One tall figure and one tiny figure.
And one with curly hair wearing a pink dress.
Kael stared at the drawing quietly.
“That’s us,” Lia explained happily. “Me, Daddy, and Serena.”
Something uncomfortable twisted in Serena’s stomach but not because of the drawing.
Because of how normal it suddenly felt seeing herself included beside them.
Kael’s expression changed slightly too, though he hid it quickly.
Lia pointed at Serena’s figure proudly. “You’re holding Daddy’s hand because you’re both taking care of me.”
Serena almost dropped the glass in her hand.
Children truly had no fear.
“Okay,” Serena laughed nervously, “I think somebody has been watching too many cartoons.”
“But it’s true.”
Kael stayed strangely quiet. And for some reason, that silence affected Serena more than if he had laughed it off.
She quickly stood from her chair. “Lia, why don’t we go finish your homework upstairs?”
Lia groaned dramatically. “Homework is evil.”
“Unfortunately, evil still has to be completed.”
Lia dragged herself upstairs while Serena gathered the crayons quickly. Anything to escape the sudden weirdness in the room.
She had barely picked up the last notebook when Kael spoke behind her.
“You’ve been avoiding me.”
Serena froze for half a second before turning around. Ohh lord help me.
“I haven’t.”
Kael leaned back slightly in his chair, studying her with that same calm expression that somehow always made her nervous.
“You left the kitchen yesterday when I walked in.”
“I had laundry to fold.”
“You took Lia outside for breakfast this morning because I came into the dining room.”
Serena crossed her arms. “You’re very observant.”
“I have to be.”
He answered very naturally.
Like paying attention to her had become automatic. That realization made Serena’s chest feel strangely tight.
She looked away first. “You’re imagining things.”
“No, I’m not.” His voice had softened now.
That somehow made it worse.
Serena sighed quietly before setting the crayons down.
“I just think boundaries are important.”
Kael’s gaze stayed fixed on her. “What boundaries exactly?”
“This is your house. I work for you. That alone is complicated enough.”
For a moment he said nothing. Then he stood up slowly. Serena instantly became aware of how close they suddenly were.
Kael wasn’t touching her or cornering her. But his presence had a way of filling space completely.
“You think I’m making things complicated?” he asked quietly.
Serena laughed nervously. “You really want honesty?”
“Yes.”
“You stare at me too much.”
The words slipped out before she could stop them. Silence filled the dining room immediately.
Kael looked genuinely surprised for the first time since she met him.
Then something unreadable crossed his face.
“Do I?”
Serena swallowed. “You know you do.”
He held her gaze for so long that Serena’s heartbeat started acting stupid again.
And when he finally spoke, his voice came out lower than before.
“Maybe I like looking at you.”
The air left Serena’s lungs completely because he sounded honest.
Serena stared at him, suddenly unable to think properly. And somehow that terrified her more than anything else so far.
Because she realized two dangerous things at the exact same moment. Kael Vale was no longer pretending not to feel the tension between them. And worse—
a part of her didn’t want him to stop looking at her at all.
Damon knew he should leave.He really did. The movie was over. Lia was asleep. Mrs. Rowan had disappeared upstairs.And Kael was standing in the middle of the living room with his daughter asleep against his shoulder like she weighed nothing at all. It was the perfect time to go home. Unfortunately, Damon had never been particularly good at minding his own business.Which was exactly why he was still standing there. Watching. Observing. Trying very hard not to smile. Because now he was certain. Absolutely certain. And it was probably the funniest thing he'd witnessed all year. Kael Vale was in trouble. The kind of trouble money couldn't solve. The kind of trouble board meetings couldn't fix. The kind of trouble that arrived quietly and completely ignored whether you wanted it or not.Serena.Damon almost laughed.If somebody had told him six months ago that Kael would spend half an evening pretending not to watch a woman while actually watching her constantly, he would have demanded m
The idea had been Lia's and that alone should have warned everyone because whenever Lia came up with an idea, saying no usually became impossible. Which was exactly how Serena found herself sitting in the Vale family living room on a Friday evening while an animated movie played on the enormous television.Mrs. Rowan had disappeared upstairs after claiming she was "too old for cartoon dragons."Damon had laughed.Mrs. Rowan had threatened him with a wooden spoon.And somehow that had only made him laugh harder.Now the movie was twenty minutes in, and Damon was still occasionally making comments that caused Lia to giggle.Serena sat between them on the large sofa.At least that had been the original arrangement.Somewhere along the way, Lia had stretched out across the cushions and stolen half of Serena's space.Which meant Serena was now sitting much closer to Damon than she'd intended.Not that she noticed.At first.The room was comfortable.Warm.The lamps had been dimmed, leaving
"You like him."Serena nearly dropped the phone.For a moment, she was too shocked to respond.Then she let out a disbelieving laugh."Mira.""I'm serious.""You've lost your mind.""I haven't.""You have."Mira's laughter echoed through the phone.The sound was familiar. Comforting.Because whenever her younger sister sounded this confident, it usually meant she had already decided she was right. And unfortunately, she often was."You should hear yourself whenever you talk about him.""I do not talk about him.""You literally just said his name three times.""That is not talking about him.""It absolutely is."Serena pinched the bridge of her nose. This conversation was going exactly where she did not want it to go. Thankfully, a voice called from somewhere behind Mira."Oh, hold on."Serena heard movement. A door closing. Then Mira returned."Sorry.""What happened?""Nothing important."The answer came too quickly.Serena narrowed her eyes."Mira.""What?""What are you hiding?""No
The smile stayed with Serena longer than she wanted to admit.Even after Kael disappeared down the hallway with Lia dragging him toward whatever emergency involved a frog. Even after the laughter faded. Even after the house settled into its usual rhythm again. She still found herself thinking about it.That smile. Small. Gone in seconds.Yet somehow it felt more dangerous than anything else. Because Kael Vale smiled so rarely that when he did, it meant something. At least it felt like it did. Serena was still sitting beside the piano when her phone vibrated. The sound startled her. She glanced at the screen.Mira.Immediately, her expression softened. She answered before the second ring."Hey."There was a pause.Then her sister's voice came through."Took you long enough."Serena smiled."It was one ring.""It felt longer.""You're dramatic.""I learned from the best."That earned a laugh. A real one. The kind that only Mira could pull from her. For a moment, everything felt familiar.
The last note lingered in the room long after Serena lifted her fingers from the keys.For a moment, nobody spoke. The silence wasn't awkward. It felt full. Like the music was still there somehow, floating between them. Serena looked down at her hands. She hadn't played in months. Not properly. Not since life had become a constant cycle of responsibilities and worries. Yet somehow she'd forgotten all of that while sitting at the piano.The realization made her smile slightly.Then Lia threw herself at her."That was beautiful!"Serena laughed as she wrapped her arms around the little girl."I think that's the fastest you've ever moved.""I liked it.""I can tell.""No, really."Lia pulled back dramatically."I loved it."That earned another laugh from Serena. Across the room, Damon looked unusually quiet. Which was probably the most shocking thing that had happened all day.Serena raised an eyebrow."Are you alright?""No."Damon shook his head."I'm emotional."She rolled her eyes."Th
The living room was unusually loud. Not because of Lia but Because of Damon.Serena had learned very quickly that Damon had a gift for making his presence known without even trying. One moment the house would be quiet.The next, Lia would be laughing so hard she could barely breathe. Which was exactly what was happening now."You cheated," Lia accused."I adapted.""You cheated.""I prefer the word adapted.""That's because you're guilty."Damon pressed a hand against his chest."Lia Vale, I am deeply offended."The little girl dissolved into laughter.Serena shook her head from her spot on the sofa. A smile tugged at her lips despite herself.The board game spread across the coffee table had long been abandoned. Somehow Damon had turned a simple game into a dramatic courtroom trial where he was apparently the victim.Or at least that was his version of events."You are teaching her bad habits," Serena informed him.Damon looked horrified."Me?""Yes, you.""Serena, I am a role model."
Kael realized Serena was avoiding him sometime around Tuesday morning.Not because she said anything but how she talked less around him.That was how he noticed.The woman had a habit of filling silence without trying. She argued with Lia over vegetables, complained about the coffee being too stron
By the end of the week, Serena had started getting used to the mansion. Not the size of it. She was pretty sure nobody could ever fully get used to living somewhere with three staircases and a dining room bigger than her entire apartment. But she was getting used to the feeling of it of the house
Serena barely slept that night. Not because of the job itself.But because every time she closed her eyes, she kept seeing Mr vale watching her across that office. It was ridiculous.She didn’t even know the man. Yet something about Kael Vale stayed in her head long after she left the mansion.And
Serena was late.Unfortunately for her , the universe did not seem to care.“Please hold on!” she cried out breathlessly as the elevator doors began to close.A man inside pressed the button without looking at her once.“Thanks,” Serena murmured, stepping in quickly while trying to catch her breat







