LOGIN{Third person's pov}
Evan didn’t slow down as he walked. Natasha followed, her steps quieter against the polished floor, her awareness sharper than before. His hand brushed briefly against her back as they entered the elevator, light, controlled. “Stay close,” he said as the doors closed. Silence pressed in. The elevator opened to a floor she hadn’t seen before. Dim. Isolated. Still. She has been in this building so many times and yet there was space she has never been too. Evan stepped out first, Natasha followed, her gaze flickering across the empty corridor. At the end, a door stood slightly open. Evan pushed it open without hesitation. He stopped, Just for a second, He wasn't expecting this, he wasn't expecting him after three years. Inside, Ethan Ramos sat at the far end of the room, posture relaxed, like he had always been there. Not waiting. Just… present, Evan’s expression shifted, quick, contained. “You’re here?” Evan asked, Not anger, Just surprise. Ethan didn’t move. “I had to be,” he replied. Evan stepped in fully now, control returning to his posture. “I wasn’t informed.” “You were,” Ethan said. “Not like this.” Evan replied. “You weren’t listening.” Natasha stepped in quietly behind Evan, stopping where she always did, just outside the center, just within his space. Evan’s jaw tightened faintly. “You don’t show up unannounced in my business.” Ethan leaned back slightly. “Your business?” Evan didn’t react immediately. “It is... Now." Ethan held his gaze. “No,” he said calmly. “It isn’t.” “You’re misusing the funds,” Ethan continued. “They were allocated.” Evan replied, “They were wasted.” The words landed clean. Evan stepped closer, his voice lower. “You don’t interfere like this.” “I correct when necessary.” Ethan said. “You don’t get to correct me.” Evan replied. “I built what you’re sitting on,” Ethan said, Still calm. “You’re in that position because I put you there.” The room went still. Evan’s gaze flickered, just briefly. Not to Ethan. To Natasha. For the first time, there was something else there. Awareness of what she had just heard, His jaw tightened. “You should go,” he said to her, without looking fully at her. “I’ll come later.” The words were quick. Natasha stilled slightly, the shift abrupt. She nodded faintly, turning toward the door. “Stay.” Ethan’s voice cut through the movement. "You can stay." Not loud. Natasha paused, Her hand barely moved from her side. Evan turned then, his expression tightening. “This doesn’t concern her.” Ethan’s gaze didn’t shift. “It does,” he said. A beat. “She’s already here.” Evan looked at Natasha again, this time longer, Then back at Ethan. For a moment, it felt like he might argue. He didn’t. “Fine,” he said. Natasha stayed where she was, Evan straightened slightly, pulling his composure back into place. “Then say what you came to say.” Ethan didn’t rush. “Fix it,” he said. Evan didn’t respond immediately. Didn’t challenge it. And that, that said enough. No one spoke after that. Not for a moment. Not until Evan turned, the tension pulled tight beneath his calm. “Let’s go.”This time, his voice didn’t carry the same weight. Natasha moved, stepping toward the door. But just before she crossed it, she looked back. Ethan was already watching her. Like nothing in the room had surprised him. Like this had always been how it would go. Their eyes held for a second, long enough to register. Then she turned, And walked out. The hallway felt colder, Quieter, Evan walked ahead, his pace sharper now, something restrained beneath it. Natasha followed. But the silence between them wasn’t the same as before, Because now she knew. Not everything belonged to him. Not the power. Not the control. "Does it belong to him?” Her voice broke the silence. Evan didn’t move. “Does what belong to him?” he asked. “The company,” she said. “All of it, Does it belong to your brother?” Evan turned his head then. His eyes met hers, not calm this time. Not composed. Sharp. “Why are you asking that?” Natasha held his gaze. “Because he said he built it.” Evan’s jaw tightened, something colder settling in his expression. “You’re reading too much into it.” “Am I?” The word slipped out before she could stop it. Evan stepped closer, the small space of the elevator suddenly feeling even smaller. “Don’t question things you don’t understand,” he said. Natasha felt it, the shift, the familiar pressure pressing in again. The same tone. Last night. “You can decide everything for me,” she said quietly, “but I can’t ask you a question?” Evan’s expression hardened. “This isn’t about you.” “It is,” she said. The words surprised even her. The silence that followed was heavier now. Evan stared at her for a long moment, like he was recalculating something. “You’re crossing a line,” he said. Natasha let out a slow breath. And suddenly, it clicked. The way he had pulled her close, told her she was perfect, made everything feel calm again. And now, this. “You were sorry yesterday,” she said. Evan’s expression flickered, just for a second. “I said I was frustrated.” “And now?” she asked and He didn’t answer. Natasha looked away first this time, not out of submission, but out of clarity. Evan stepped out without waiting. she wasn’t just reacting to him. She was seeing him.{Third person's pov}Natasha woke before Ethan and the golden sunlight filtered through the thin white curtains of the seaside cottage.She quietly slipped out of bed, careful not to wake him, wrapping one of his oversized sweaters around herself, she stepped onto the small porch.The sea stretched endlessly before her, the air smelled of salt, the waves rolled gently onto the shore.She closed her eyes.For the first time in a very long time... She felt completely at peace.A few minutes later... She heard footsteps behind her."You escaped." She turned around.Ethan stood in the doorway, his hair was slightly messy from sleep.He held two steaming mugs of coffee. "I only escaped five metres." She said and he replied. "I still noticed."She smiled as he handed her one of the mugs. "Thank you."He nodded toward the beach. "Walk?""I'd love to." They made their way down to the shoreline.The morning was quiet, only a handful of people had arrived, some jogged along the water and others
{Third person's pov}A week had passed since Natasha returned to London, life had slowly begun finding its rhythm again, the bruises on her arms had faded.The nightmares came less often and for the first time in weeks... She drove herself.Her destination was familiar, Maya's apartment and the moment Maya opened the door... She squealed."There she is!"Before Natasha could react... Maya wrapped her in a tight hug. "I missed you, idiot."Natasha laughed. "I was gone for barely a week.""A week where you were kidnapped."Maya pulled back. "I'm allowed to be dramatic."Natasha rolled her eyes. "You've always been dramatic.""And you've always loved me for it." Maya said and Natasha replied. "I'll pretend that's true."They both laughed.An hour later... The two of them sat cross-legged on Maya's living room floor.Coffee mugs rested on the table between them. "So..."Maya leaned forward. "Tell me everything."Natasha smiled. "Everything?""Everything, no skipping details, no mysterious
{Third person's pov}The mansion was unusually quiet, It had been three days since Natasha returned, the bruises on her body had begun to fade.The nightmares... Not so much.That night, rain pattered softly against the bedroom windows and Natasha stirred in her sleep.A sudden movement beside her made her eyes flutter open, she blinked into the darkness and Ethan was no longer lying beside her.He was sitting at the edge of the bed, his back was to her, his shoulders were tense and she could hear it, his breathing almost as if he was trying to calm himself."Ethan?"He stiffened and then slowly looked over his shoulder."I didn't mean to wake you.""You didn't." She sat up, rubbing her eyes. "I think you had a nightmare." He looked away. "I don't dream much.""You do." She quietly slipped out of bed and walked over to him, without saying anything... She sat beside him.For several minutes... Neither of them spoke, the rain filled the silence. Finally... Natasha rested her head gently
{Third person's pov}Evan cried out in pain and the gun slipped from his grasp and clattered across the wooden floor. Ethan's man shot him from the window.His hand instinctively flew to his injured arm as he staggered backward. "Sir!"Two of his men shouted simultaneously, before either of them could move... Ethan reached Natasha.He wrapped one arm firmly around her shoulders and pulled her against his chest. "Natasha."His voice was barely above a whisper. "Look at me."For a second... She couldn't, her entire body trembled from the shock, she had genuinely believed those were her last moments.Then she heard his heartbeat and slowly, she opened her eyes. The first thing she saw... Was Ethan.He cupped her face gently. "You're safe." The words she had been waiting days to hear.The tears she'd held back since her kidnapping finally escaped. Without thinking... She buried her face against his chest. "I knew you'd come..."she whispered between shaky breaths."I told you." Ethan rest
{Third person's pov}The house had fallen silent agai, only the occasional footsteps of the guards broke the stillness.Inside her room, Natasha sat against the window, she hadn't given up, she simply waited.Outside... Two guards stood near the front gate, one lit a cigarette and the other glanced toward the second floor. "You know... I don't like this."His companion frowned. "What?""This." He nodded toward the house. "Keeping her here.""We're following orders." The other man said. "So?"The older guard sighed. "I've worked for the Ramos family for twelve years... I've done things I'm not proud of, but this.. .this isn't business, It's personal." The younger guard remained quiet."She hasn't stopped asking to go home and she hasn't stopped believing Chairman Ethan will find her." The older man looked down at the ground. "Maybe he will.""You think Chairman Ethan is really looking?" The younger guard asked the older guard gave a dry laugh. "If Ethan Ramos cares about someone... He
{Third person's pov}The rain had stopped sometime during the night, the countryside was unusually quiet.Natasha sat by the window, absentmindedly tracing circles on the fogged glass.Another day, another locked room, the familiar sound of footsteps echoed outside.The key turned and Evan stepped inside carrying a dinner tray.Unlike the previous days... He wasn't dressed in black, he wore a simple white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms.He looked... almost like the man she'd once known, If she ignored everything else. "I thought we could have dinner together."Natasha didn't move. "I'm not hungry.""You've said that every day." He said and Natasha replied. "And yet you still bring the tray."A faint smile crossed his face. "I've always been stubborn.""You've always been controlling." He set the tray on the small table anyway. "I made sure they cooked your favorite."She looked at the food then back at him. "My favorite meal stopped tasting the same a long time ago."Th
{Third person's pov}If Evan had come home angry, slammed doors, shouted, Natasha would have known exactly what it was.Instead, he smiled. He brought her coffee the next morning. He kissed her forehead before leaving.He asked how she slept. And somehow, that felt worse.But wasn't it his habit? H
{Third person's pov}The apartment felt different when she came back.Not quieter, just… heavier.Natasha slipped off her heels near the door, the faint echo of the party still clinging to her skin, her hair, the fabric of the dress she hadn’t changed out of. The stain had dried into something dull
{Third person's pov}Natasha stirred slowly, the sheets cool against her naked skin, the faint scent of his cologne still lingering like it belonged there more than she did.She didn’t open her eyes immediately. For a second, she let herself stay in that space, half-asleep, weightless, untouched by
{Third person's pov}The party was everything Natasha expected. And everything she hated.Crystal chandeliers. Low golden lighting. Conversations that weren’t really conversations, just carefully crafted words exchanged between people who measured value in power, not sincerity.Evan fit into it eff







