LOGINShe was his forgotten wife. He was her biggest mistake. Four years later, she returns — richer, colder, and carrying his secret. For three years, Yessica did everything right. She made his breakfast, celebrated their anniversaries alone, and loved a man who barely knew her name. When she nearly bled to death during a pregnancy complication — calling Lewis four times while he finished a business meeting — she finally understood: she was never a wife. She was a convenience. So she left. With nothing but the baby growing inside her and a borrowed £50,000, she built Bellamy Holdings into a £500 million empire. She became the woman no one could ignore. Now she's back. And so is Lewis Silverthorn — shattered, desperate, and staring at a four-year-old daughter with his exact gray eyes. He wants forgiveness. He wants his family. But Yessica built her walls from the rubble of his neglect, and a charming rival named Rafferty Montague is offering her everything Lewis never could. Worse — someone has been pulling strings all along. A betrayal runs deeper than either of them imagined, and this time, it could cost them everything. Can a man undo three years of silence with a lifetime of trying? Or is some love too broken to survive?
View MorePOV: Yessica | Location: New York
"Conference call in twenty."
Lewis didn't look up from his phone.
Yessica set his plate down. Eggs perfect, bacon crispy, coffee at exactly the temperature he liked. Three years of mornings and he still hadn't learned to say thank you like he meant it.
"I made your favourite," she said.
"Mm." Scroll. Scroll.
She sat across from him with her own coffee and watched him eat without tasting. His thumb moving across the screen. The Singapore deal. Always the Singapore deal.
"I thought we could have dinner tonight," she said. "There's a new Italian place on—"
"Can't. Harrington account."
"Tomorrow?"
"Singapore team arrives. All week." He stood. Left half his breakfast untouched. Reached for his jacket.
"Lewis—"
"I'll be late tonight." He was already checking his watch. "Don't wait up."
The elevator doors closed.
The penthouse went quiet.
Four hours of preparation. Eight minutes of presence. Gone.
Yessica picked up his plate. The eggs were perfect. The bacon crispy. She scraped everything into the garbage disposal and stood there while it ground, listening to the sound that matched something in her chest — violent, then finished, then nothing.
The kitchen was spotless when she was done. It always was.
Her phone buzzed.
Pippa: Lunch today? Haven't seen you in forever.
Can't. Appointment.
She didn't have an appointment. She just couldn't face Pippa's careful eyes.
You always have appointments. You're avoiding me.
Just busy. Soon, I promise.
The lie sat in her mouth like something stale.
She walked past the wedding photos on the hall wall without looking at them. Lewis smiling at the camera — professional, controlled, giving nothing away. Her in a designer gown, believing every word of her own vows.
Twenty-eight years old and she was already disappearing.
She caught herself in the hallway mirror. Hollow eyes. Sharp face. She tried to remember the last time someone had asked her a question that wasn't logistical.
She couldn't.
The bathroom cabinet. Aspirin — the headaches had been constant for weeks.
Her hand knocked something over. A box fell.
Tampons.
Yessica stared at them.
When was my last period?
The thought arrived quietly. Then it didn't feel quiet at all.
Six weeks. Maybe seven. She'd been so focused on Lewis, on the cold sheets, on the eight-minute breakfasts — she hadn't noticed her own body.
Her hands were shaking when she found the test in the back of the drawer. Bought months ago on a hopeful day she barely remembered. She tore the package open.
Set it on the marble counter.
Two minutes.
She sat on the bathroom floor and stared at it. The marble was cold through her clothes. Outside, the city moved past the windows — indifferent, enormous, completely unaware.
Forty seconds. Thirty.
Please.
Twenty. She closed her eyes.
Ten. Five.
The timer beeped.
She looked.
Two pink lines.
The sound that came out of her wasn't a cry. It wasn't a laugh. It was something smaller than either — the sound of a person who has been holding their breath for months finally letting go.
She pressed her hand flat to her stomach.
A baby. Lewis's and hers. Something real. Something that couldn't be ignored or scrolled past or left on a plate.
This will change things. It had to. A baby would make him slow down. Come home. Look at her like she was still the woman he'd walked up to at that gallery opening — the one he'd talked to for an hour, who he'd called extraordinary on their third date.
She grabbed her phone. His name on the screen. Her thumb over the call button.
No. Not like this. Not on the phone between meetings.
Tonight. She'd make it perfect — candles, his favourite wine, the test in a small box with tissue paper. She would plan every detail. She was good at details. She'd been good at details for three years and none of it had been enough, but this was different. This was a baby.
Yessica stood. Looked at herself in the mirror.
The hollow eyes were still there. But the ghost was smiling.
She didn't yet know what was waiting for her down the hall. In the hours still to come.
She didn't know that tonight, Lewis would come home late again.
She didn't know she would overhear a phone call — her mother-in-law's voice, sharp and certain — that would rearrange everything she thought she was fighting for.
She just stood there with two pink lines and three years of cold sheets and the particular cruelty of hope.
[POV: Lewis] (Location: Edinburgh)Regina was at the kitchen table when they arrived, David Harper's letter open in front of her, a photograph of the document beside it.She'd printed it. Lewis looked at the image — a clinical-looking report, formatted like a standard paternity laboratory document, bearing a company name he didn't recognize and a result that named him as not the biological father of Ethan Ravenscroft with a stated probability of exclusion above 99.9%.It looked convincing."She sent this to David," Lewis said."By post, six months ago." Regina kept her voice even. "No covering letter. Just the document, with a note that said something like: You deserve to know the truth about this family before you make decisions that affect your future." She looked at Lewis. "He believed it. At the time he had no reason not to.""And he submitted the welfare statement based on a conviction that he was helping a child being raised by the wrong man," Yessica said."He thought he was
[POV: Yessica] (Location: Edinburgh)She heard him on the stairs at two in the morning.Not an unusual sound in this house — Lewis moved quietly but he moved, when something was turning in his head and lying still wasn't working. She'd learned the difference between the kitchen light and the living room light from the way it reached under the bedroom door.This was the living room.She got up.He was sitting with his phone face-down on the cushion beside him, not reading, not working. Just awake."Tell me," she said.He told her.She sat beside him and listened to Dr. Chen's message relayed in Lewis's careful, factual version, and when he finished she was quiet for long enough that he looked at her."You're not going to ask me how I feel," she said."Not yet.""Good." She looked at the dark window. "Because I don't know yet. I need to be in that office tomorrow before I know anything."He nodded.They went back to bed. Neither of them slept particularly well. Neither of them mention
[POV: Lewis] (Location: Edinburgh)Hayes arrived in ninety seconds.Lewis stayed in the car and watched the app feed. The upstairs hallway camera showed nothing moving. No figure, no shadow, no further alerts from any other sensor.Hayes came out of the house two minutes after going in.He crossed to the car and Lewis lowered the window."Clear," Hayes said. "Every room. Ground floor, upper floor, garden. Nothing.""Then what triggered the hallway sensor?""Rose." Hayes's expression was completely neutral. "She threw a shoe at the motion detector. It's now on the floor. She appears to have done this deliberately and found it entertaining."Lewis looked at the app. The hallway sensor was still reading active because the shoe was sitting directly under it."She's two," Lewis said."She's a very effective two," Hayes said.Lewis got out of the car. "Thank you for coming.""That's what I'm here for." Hayes looked at him. "Lewis. You've had three weeks of genuine threat, multiple securit
[POV: Lewis] (Location: Edinburgh)The name was Harrison Sterling.Lewis sat with that for the length of the drive home and didn't say it to Yessica until the children were in bed.She heard it and was quiet for a moment."The board wants your father as executive chair," she said."Three board members proposed it. Gerald hasn't formally endorsed it yet." Lewis looked at the kitchen table. "He'd have oversight of governance and shareholder relations. I'd retain full operational authority as CEO." A pause. "It's not designed to limit me. It's designed to stabilize the optics — a Sterling name at chair level signals continuity and accountability after the fraud investigation.""Have you spoken to Harrison?""No. I found out forty minutes ago.""Then you should." She looked at him. "Tonight."Harrison answered on the second ring. He'd been expecting the call — Lewis could tell from the way he picked up, not the usual three-second lag of a man reaching for a phone in a different room."Y
[POV: Yessica] (Location: Edinburgh)Lewis called McAllister before Yessica had finished reading the message twice."Another number," he said when she answered. "Same pattern, different sender. Forward incoming now."He took Yessica's phone and sent the screenshot while McAllister was still on th
[POV: Yessica] (Location: Edinburgh)Lewis repeated what McAllister had said.Yessica sat with it for a moment."She's in federal prison," she said. "They restrict outgoing communications. Phone calls are monitored, mail is screened, visits are logged.""They restrict them. They don't make them i
[POV: Yessica] (Location: Edinburgh)"Sandra Keane," Yessica said.A beat of silence from Lewis on the phone."The administrative coordinator," she continued. "She's been there since before Ethan started. She sends the parent communications, manages the pickup lists, handles enrollment paperwork.
[POV: Yessica] (Location: Edinburgh)Lewis read Eleanor's message twice. Then he handed his phone to Yessica without comment.She read it. Handed it back."She thinks you owe her," Yessica said."She thinks she's earned something. There's a difference." He put the phone in his pocket. "She has in
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews