LOGINMaya's POV
The city didn't care. That was the first thing I noticed as I pulled out of the Mason Empire underground garage for the last time, the traffic moved, the lights changed, a food delivery cyclist nearly clipped my front bumper and swore at me through the windscreen. The world had not paused. No one on the pavement looked up to mark the moment a woman drove away from eight years with nothing but a leather tote and a cardboard box sliding around in the back seat. I turned left at the first intersection. Away from the penthouse. Away from the harbor views and the silent, perfect rooms that had never once felt like mine. I drove without deciding where I was going until I realized I already knew. The old quarter hadn't changed much. Narrower streets, older buildings, window boxes with half-dead geraniums that somehow kept surviving. My mother's apartment building had a new intercom panel, but the same cracked tile in the lobby that I'd avoided stepping on since I was seven. Some superstition about bad luck. I stepped on it deliberately tonight Couldn't hurt more than it already did. The spare key was where it had always been, taped inside the mouth of the ceramic frog on the third-floor landing. My father's idea of a hiding place. My mother had called it embarrassing. He'd called it genius. They'd argued about it for twenty years and she'd never moved it… The door swung open to three years of held breath. Dust. Lavender, her perfume, faded to a ghost of itself. The tick of the antique carriage clock on the mantel that someone had kept winding. I stood in the doorway for a long moment, hand on the frame. "Okay," I said to no one. "Okay." I went inside. I didn't unpack. I sat on the edge of my mother's sofa with my coat still on and stared at the family photographs lining the mantel until my eyes adjusted to the dark and their faces came into focus. My parents at their anniversary dinner, her head tipped back in a laugh I could still hear if I tried. My graduation, mortarboard slightly crooked, my father's hand on my shoulder and that expression he wore when he was proud but didn't know how to say it. Quiet worry and loud love fighting for space on the same face. And there, at the end their copy of my wedding photo. My father walking me down the aisle in white lace. He'd held my arm too tightly the whole way. I'd thought it was nerves. Now I wondered if it was something else entirely. "You saw it, didn't you," I said to his photograph. The carriage clock ticked…. I pulled my knees to my chest and slept sitting up, which is how I knew I was more exhausted than I'd realized. I stayed two days. The first morning I ate crackers from a tin in the pantry that were technically expired and tasted like cardboard and poor decisions. By noon I needed real food and fresh air in equal, desperate measure, so I pulled on my coat and went out. The market two streets over was still there, the same vendor who'd sold my mother fresh pasta every Friday, though he didn't recognize me, which was fine. I bought bread, cheese, a bag of coffee, two oranges because they looked like the only cheerful things for miles. I was rounding the corner back to the building, paper bags in both arms, when something small and grey and deeply unimpressed walked out from behind a dustbin and sat directly in my path. A cat Scraggly. One ear slightly torn. Eyes the color of old amber, steady and assessing, like a banker reviewing a loan application. "Move," I told it. It didn't. "I'm serious. I've had a week. I don't have the bandwidth." It blinked once, slowly. Then it stood, walked in a tight circle, and sat back down in the exact same spot. I set the bags down on the pavement, crouched, and held out my hand. It sniffed my fingers with the skeptical air of someone who had been disappointed before and expected to be disappointed again. Then it pressed its head into my palm. Something in my chest cracked open not painfully, just…. open. Like a window unstuck after years of being painted shut. "Don't read into this," I told it. It purred anyway. I left it there. But when I reached the building door and looked back, it was sitting at the bottom of the steps watching me with those amber eyes, patient as a creditor. I'll deal with that later, I thought. The second afternoon I found myself in my father's study. I don't know what pulled me there exactly. Grief, maybe. Or the habit of looking for him in the rooms where he'd spent the most time, surrounded by books he'd actually read, contracts he'd actually understood, a leather chair worn soft at the armrests from decades of deliberate thinking. I sat in his chair. Then I noticed the locked drawer…. It was the bottom left one, the one I'd always assumed held boring things: old tax returns, insurance policies. But the key was missing from the small dish on the desk where he kept everything else. I found it in ten minutes, in the lining of his favorite jacket hanging on the back of the door. I'd known him too well not to look there. The drawer slid open. Inside: a thick folder. Dark blue. His handwriting on the tab, small and precise: M TRUST DOCUMENTS. M for Mason. Or M for Maya. I pulled it out and opened it… By the third page, my hands had started trembling. By the seventh, I was on the floor. Not because I'd fallen. Because my legs had simply decided that sitting in a chair was no longer appropriate for what I was reading. He'd done it four years ago. Quietly. Through a private trust vehicle registered in a jurisdiction Mason had no ties to, structured by a firm that had never done a single day's work for Mason Empire. He'd taken his shares, forty-nine percent of the entire conglomerate and he'd placed them in a trust with a single, irrevocable beneficiary. Me. Not contingent on the marriage. Not dissoluble by divorce. Not reachable by any corporate manoeuvre, hostile or otherwise. The trust had conditions, clean and elegant as a chess move: it activated fully upon my twenty-first day of separation from Mason Hargrove, confirmed by legal filing or written declaration witnessed by a notary. I had resigned. I had dropped my rings on the floor of his building in front of witnesses. The clock was already running. "Dad," I whispered. The word landed in the quiet study like a stone in still water. He'd known. Or he'd suspected. Or he'd simply been the kind of man who believed that preparing for the worst was the truest form of love he could offer. He'd watched me walk down that aisle with quiet worry on his face and spent the next four years making sure that if the worst came, I would not be left with nothing…. He had armed me before he died. And I hadn't known. I sat on the study floor and read every page twice. Then I sat with the folder in my lap and stared at his chair, empty above me. Then, entirely without planning to, I started laughing. Not the good kind, not at first, it came out strange and wet and slightly broken. But it kept coming, because the sheer, absurd, cinematic scale of it was too much to hold any other way. Mason had spent years engineering my removal with the precision of a hostile takeover. He'd tricked me into signing divorce papers on a romantic trip while I was jet-lagged and grieving. He'd handed my project to my best friend. He'd publicly fired me in a hallway with phones recording… He thought he'd stripped me clean. He had forty-nine percent of his own company sitting in a trust with my name on it, and he didn't even know it existed. I pressed my hand over my mouth to muffle the laughter because I was also, somehow, still crying, and the two things were happening at the same time without any sense of contradiction, and I thought: this is what a watershed feels like. This is the Rubicon. I am not ruined I am just beginning I clutched the folder to my chest and sat there on the study floor until the light through the window turned amber, then grey, then gone. Then I went to my childhood bedroom, same narrow bed, same faded blue curtains, same crack in the ceiling I'd spent years imagining was a river and I lay down with the folder still pressed to my chest like a shield… I slept better than I had in eight years. My phone lit up the nightstand at 2 a.m. Unknown number. I stared at it for three full seconds before I opened the message. He doesn't deserve what's coming. Neither do you. Be careful, Maya. The room was very quiet. Outside, somewhere on the street below, I heard a sound small, insistent, unmistakable. A cat. Calling to be let in. I looked at the message again. Then at the window. Then back at the message. Who are you? I typed. The message delivered. It never showed as read.Maya's POVThe apology had not been what I expected.I stood in the corridor with the two words still sitting in the air between us.... I'm sorry, and watched Selina's face do something complicated...Something shifted behind her eyes.I had spent enough years reading Selina's face across dinner tables and hospital waiting rooms and company functions to recognise the shift.... the moment when something that had been held in check found a crack and decided the crack was an opportunity rather than a warning."Sorry," she said.The word came back out of her mouth with a different weight than it had carried going in.... no longer an apology, something closer to disgust, as though the act of saying it had reminded her of everything underneath it that she had not yet said."Sorry doesn't fix anything," she said. "Does it. Sorry.... Sorry doesn't give me back Mason. Sorry doesn't bring back...." Her voice caught. Recovered into something harder. "You have no idea what I've lo
Selina's POVThe hotel room had become unbearable by the third day.... Not physically though, the room was fine.... The bed was good. The blackout curtains were excellent.What was unbearable was the screenI had told myself I would stop reading the coverage at noon on the first day. Then at six on the second day. Each time the resolution lasted approximately forty minutes before the specific, compulsive pull of watching your own life being discussed by people who had never met you overwhelmed whatever discipline I had available.By the third morning, I had stopped pretending I was going to stop.I read it all....Every article. Every comment thread. Every think piece that used my name as a data point in an argument about women who destroyed other women....They were not wrong.That was the thing I kept arriving at and kept moving past... they were not wrong. The clinic records were accurate. The consultations had happened. The payments were mine. Daniel Cole had not f
Zara's POVThe photographs arrived at two in the afternoon.Fourteen of them, sent through the secure channel I used for work I didn't want connected to my name. My contact had been thorough... I had received documentation from my private investigator, through a secured channel I believe was trustworthy....I set my laptop on the kitchen table, poured coffee I wouldn't drink, and opened the files.Maya and a manAnyone who did not know what the meeting was would not know what the meeting was.That was the first thing I understood, looking at the photographs.The second thing I understood was that this was the best opportunity I had been handed since I arrived in this city.I worked methodically.Not from excitement.... I had learned, across the years I had spent in professional environments that required precision, that excitement was the enemy of craft. Excitement made you move too fast. Excitement made you skip the verification step, the second look, the moment
Zara's POVAn idea was taking a root in my head immediately I left Alex's ward.The idea had not left me overnight.What if Alex wakes up from coma with an Retrograde amnesia. Not able to remember everything, especially Maya.I woke up at six and it was exactly where I had left it, sitting in the front of my mind....What if Alex woke up differently.What if there was a way to influence what he can remember or forget.I lay in bed for forty minutes running it forward.I was not naive about medicine.I understood, from the reading I had done and from the conversation I had had with myself in the hospital corridor, that retrograde amnesia was not a switch. You could not engineer a specific gap. You could not tell a brain what to retain and what to release. The process was not available to anyone standing outside it.But I was also not naive about influence.Influence was not the same thing as engineering. Influence operated at the margins, in the spaces around the thing rather
Zara's POVThe security on Alex's floor was heavier than it had been.I had noticed this on my previous visit.... Someone had redesigned the access after the IV incident. Someone competent.I had been watching the floor pattern for two days.There was a window between the eleven-fifteen nursing handover and the eleven-forty security rotation where the specific corridor leading to Alex's room had a gap. Not a long one. Twelve minutes, perhaps fifteen.Enough...The room was exactly as I had last seen it from the corridor.Alex.I closed the door behind meStood for a moment with my back to it, looking at him.He looked better than heb had in the first days.... I crossed to the chair beside the bedSat down.I had told myself, in the car, that I was coming to see that he was all right. It was a plausible reason. A human reason.Sitting beside him now, in the quiet, with no Maya and no family and no medical staff requiring me to perform a register I had not brought
Maya's POV Catherine had been patient about it for three days before she stopped being patient... She set a bag of food on the side table..... real food, not hospital cafeteria food, and she sat in the chair across from mine and looked at me for a long moment. "You need to go home," she said. "I'm not leaving." "Maya." Not unkindly. The voice she used when she had already anticipated the argument and had decided the argument wasn't going to change anything. "He moved his fingers. That is progress. The doctors have confirmed it is progress. The next step is not going to happen faster because you are sitting in this chair." "I know that," I said "Then go home," she said. "Sleep in a bed. Eat something that wasn't made in a hospital. Come back in the morning." I looked at Alex's face. At the hand I had been holding at intervals for days. "If anything changes....." "I will call you before the nurse calls anyone else," she said. "You have my word." The house felt wro
Alex's POVThe road was empty at this hour.That was why I had taken it, the longer route home, the one that added twelve minutes and removed the city's noise and gave the kind of space that a man needed when his thoughts were louder than everything else. I had be
Mason's POVI came home in a good mood for the first time in weeks.Not performed good mood, the kind I wore to board meetings and investor dinners, the studied ease of a man who needed a room to believe he was comfortable. This was the real versionThe specif
Maya's POVI got home at eight-forty.Later than I had planned, later than the day warranted.... the evening had extended itself through a series of small necessities that had accumulated into something that felt less like productivity and more like avoidance.One
Zara's POV The television had been on for three hours. I hadn't been watching it, not really. It was background, the way it was always background in this apartment, filling the specific quiet of a space that had too much room for one person and not enough noise







