LOGINDoris thought the hardest part of her life was finally over the night she walked away from the man she wasted six years loving. She was wrong. After a humiliating breakup and a car accident that leaves her nearly broke, Doris clings to the only good thing she has left an interview invitation from Delvian Group, one of the most powerful companies in New York. She tells herself all she needs to do is survive the job, save enough money to rebuild her life, and stay out of trouble. Then she meets Delvis. The kind of man people lower their voices around without realizing it. The kind of man who looks at you once and somehow makes it feel like he already knows everything about you. Doris first meets him on the worst night of her life, but she does not realize the stranger from the accident is actually the CEO she is about to work for until it is already too late to run. Working for Delvis is nothing like she expected. The office is beautiful, expensive, and controlled down to the smallest detail, but underneath all that perfection, something feels wrong. People are nervous around him. Files disappear. Conversations stop when she walks in. His name barely exists online, and the deeper Doris digs, the more she realizes her boss is not just some wealthy businessman from Singapore. His family is tied to something darker. And then there is Ethan, Delvis’s charming fiancé, who smiles too easily, speaks too softly, and somehow makes Doris feel safe in a world that suddenly doesn’t. But safety inside Delvis’s world comes with a price. Because the deeper Doris falls into their lives, the harder it becomes to tell who is protecting her… and who is slowly destroying her.
View MoreDoris checked the time again, her eyes lingering on the glowing screen longer than necessary as if staring at it would somehow change what it showed.
10:47 PM.
Her fingers tightened slightly around her phone, but her expression remained composed as she looked up at the waiter standing beside her table. He had been hovering nearby for a while now, clearly waiting for the right moment to speak.
“Ma’am,” he said politely, though there was a hint of firmness beneath the tone, “this table was reserved for another guest by eleven. We’ll need you to vacate soon.”
Doris gave a small nod, forcing a faint smile that did not quite reach her eyes. “I understand. I’m just about leaving.”
She pushed her chair back slowly and stood, smoothing down her dress in an awkward way. The movement gave her something to focus on, something to ground herself with, because she could feel it now the weight of attention around her. It was subtle, all eyes were on her and people had noticed.
Of course they had, she had been sitting alone for three hours.
Waiting.
Her chest tightened slightly as she picked up her bag and turned toward the exit. The soft clicking of her heels against the polished floor seemed louder than usual, each step echoing more than it should have.
Of course he didn’t come.
The thought settled heavily in her mind, not sharp or surprising, just… familiar.
Tom never came.
There was always something: it could be a game, probably a friend or a reason that somehow made sense to him but never to her.
Six years.
Six whole years, and she was still not important enough.
By the time she stepped outside, the cool night air brushed against her skin, but it did nothing to calm the storm building inside her. If anything, it made everything feel sharper and clearer.
She reached her car and gripped the handle, ready to leave, ready to go home and pretend this night had not happened at all.
Then a hand pressed firmly against the door.
Doris froze.
Slowly, she turned her head.
“Tom.”
He smiled at her as though nothing had happened, as though she had not just spent hours waiting for him in a crowded restaurant while everyone else moved on with their evening.
Before he could speak, her hand moved.
Landing right on his cheek, the sound cut through the silence at the parking lot.
“You forgot?” Her voice shook despite the anger behind it. “You forgot again? Do you even hear yourself anymore?”
Tom rubbed his cheek, more annoyed than apologetic. “Come on, Doris. I was busy. I got caught up in a game, and I just…”
“A game?” she interrupted, a bitter laugh escaping before she could stop it. “A game is more important than me? After everything?”
“It’s not that serious,” he muttered, his expression shifting into something defensive. “Why do you always overreact?”
The words landed harder than they should have, not because they were new, but because there had been signs and she waited for wonders.
Doris stared at him, really looked at him this time, and something inside her shifted in a way she could not ignore.
“I’m done,” she said quietly.
Tom blinked, clearly unimpressed. “You say that every time.”
“I mean it this time,” she replied, her voice steadier now, even if her chest still felt tight. “I’m breaking up with you.”
He scoffed lightly, shaking his head. “You love me. You can’t leave.”
But I already have.
The realization came with a strange kind of calm.
Doris opened her car door, slid into the seat, and shut it firmly behind her, this time she did not hesitate she did not look back.
The road stretched ahead of her, illuminated by the soft glow of streetlights, but her thoughts were louder than the engine, every turn she took felt like pain and an addition to her anger.
The anger she felt lingered, so did humiliation.
And under it all, there was something quieter and heavier.
Regret.
“How did I even stay that long…” she murmured, her fingers tightening around the steering wheel.
Her vision blurred slightly, and she blinked it away, refusing to let herself break down now.
Six years wasted on someone who never chose her.
I should have left a long time ago.
The thought settled into her chest just as…..
“Crash!!!!!!!"
A sudden crash shattered the moment.
The impact jolted her forward, forcing a sharp breath out of her as her car came to an abrupt stop. For a second, everything went still, like the world had paused just long enough for her to process what had happened.
Then a door slammed, footsteps approached quickly.
“Miss! Look at what you’ve done!”
The voice snapped through the silence, pulling her back.
Doris blinked, still slightly disoriented, before pushing her door open and stepping out. The sight in front of her made her stomach drop almost immediately.
The other car was sleek, expensive, and far beyond anything she could afford. The damage was obvious, and there was no pretending otherwise.
“I’m sorry,” she said quickly. “I didn’t mean to…”
“Sorry?” the chauffeur repeated sharply. “Do you know how much this costs?”
Her jaw tightened.
“Fine,” she said, lifting her chin despite the unease settling in her chest. “Give me the bill, I’ll pay for it.”
Even as she said it, a quiet voice in the back of her mind reminded her of the truth.
You don’t even have enough to cover rent next month.
Still, she refused to let it show.
Before the chauffeur could respond, the back window of the car slid down slowly.
“Are we done here?”
The voice was calm, controlled, and completely uninterested.
Doris froze.
Her gaze lifted toward the car, and for a brief moment, everything else faded.
The man inside did not just look wealthy. There was something about him that felt… distant, as if the world did not quite touch him the same way it touched everyone else.
His features were sharp, his gaze unreadable, and his presence carried a quiet weight that made everything around him seem smaller.
Their eyes met.
Then, just as quickly, he looked away.
The window slid back up, cutting off the moment as if it had never happened.
Like she did not matter at all.
Doris clenched her jaw, heat rising to her face, but she said nothing.
The chauffeur handed her a card. “Send the payment here.”
She took it, turned, and got back into her car without another word.
Isaiah opened the mansion door before she reached it. He had clearly been watching from somewhere inside because she had barely made it up the entrance steps before the door swung open and he was standing there with an expression that was professionally composed over something considerably more concerned. He looked at her face first. Then her wrists, then her face again. "Come inside," he said quietly. She did. The mansion felt warmer than it had any right to after the past several hours. Doris stepped into the hallway and heard the door close behind her. The house was not fully awake yet. The lighting was still in its early morning setting. Somewhere upstairs a door was closed. Isaiah was already moving. "Sit down," he said, gesturing toward the small sitting room off the hallway. "I'll get something warm." "I'm fine Isaiah." "Sit down, Miss Doris." She sat down. He disappeared toward the kitchen. She heard the quiet sounds of him moving around, water running, cupboards ope
The van stopped. Doris heard the engine cut before she felt the vehicle go still beneath her. She had been sitting in the back with her wrists loose in her lap and her eyes open in the dark for what felt like close to an hour. Nobody spoke to her during the drive. The two men on either side of her stared forward the entire time. The road beneath the van changed at some point from smooth city surface to something rougher, less maintained. Then the door opened. Grey light came through. Not full morning yet. That particular shade of early dawn that existed between dark and daylight when everything looked like it had been drained of its color. One of the men stepped out first. The other gestured toward the open door. Doris stepped out without being told twice. The road was empty in both directions. Not a highway. A two-lane stretch of asphalt cutting through a flat open area with low scrub on both sides. No buildings visible. No other vehicles. Nothing that gave her an immediate se
The warehouse was cold in a way that had nothing to do with temperature. Doris sat with her back straight and both wrists bound to the armrests and looked at Stanley across the space between their chairs. The single light above her made everything outside its reach feel darker than it probably was. She knew she had to be careful. Not because she had anything specific to hide. But because she understood now, sitting here in this building with this man watching her the way he was watching her, that the wrong word in the wrong direction would make things significantly worse. She took one breath before speaking. "I arrived at the hotel around ten," she said. "He texted me the address after calling to ask for the files." Stanley listened without moving. "I went up to the room. Gave him the folder. He checked it at the desk." "And then." "And then nothing. I sat down, the roads were blocked so I waited." Stanley's eyes moved across her face with the careful patience of someone who
Stanley had been patient for three days. That was longer than he usually allowed himself to wait after a plan failed. Patience was a tool, not a default. He used it when the situation required it and set it aside when it became an excuse for inaction. This situation required it. Because moving against Doris too quickly after the hotel would have been messy. Delvis was already alert. The security rotation around the company had doubled within twenty-four hours of the registration, which meant Delvis had anticipated some kind of response from Stanley's end. Moving against someone connected to him in the immediate aftermath would have confirmed suspicions before Stanley had the answers he needed. So he waited. He watched. Charlie's team had been on Doris for three days without her noticing. Movement logs came through twice daily. Morning to evening, every location. Every contact, every deviation from routine. She was careful now. More careful than before. She did not walk alone at
Doris stared at her phone after the call ended.For a few seconds, she did not even move.Then she slowly dropped the phone onto the bed and covered her face with both hands.“What is wrong with this man?” she groaned quietly.First, he called just to complain about how long she took to answer. Now
Doris stared at the second incoming call for a few seconds while Tom continued talking on the other line.“…and honestly, I think you’re just dragging this whole thing too much,” Tom said. “I already apologized.”But Doris was no longer paying attention properly.Her eyes remained fixed on the scre
A few minutes after the call ended, Doris remained seated at her desk, quietly looking around as she tried to get used to the space. Everything in the office looked too arranged, too perfect, as if nothing was allowed to be out of place. Even the air felt different, calmer but somehow heavier, like
Doris stood up from her desk slowly, smoothing down her skirt almost immediately. She adjusted her shirt, tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear, then checked herself quickly on the blank screen of her phone.“Okay… no mistake,” she muttered under her breath.She had not met the CEO yet, and






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