LOGINJasmine
The camera on my phone didn’t shake. I held it perfectly steady, watching the little red ‘LIVE’ icon blink. Thanks to the master access credentials I’d quietly retained after helping design parts of Sterling Media’s shareholder communications network years ago, this wasn’t just going to my private socials. The feed was streaming directly onto Sterling Media’s global shareholder platform and the massive screen inside the headquarters, where their late-night investor presentation was currently happening. It was perfect timing. The grunts, groans, and wet, slick sex noises from the room suddenly stopped. Victoria was the first to notice. Her eyes snapped open, looking straight at me. Instead of panicking, a slow, incredibly smug smile spread across her face. She didn’t even pull the sheets up. “Oh. Look who decided to show up,” Victoria purred, intentionally shifting her weight to stay tangled with my husband. “You’re late for your anniversary, Jasmine.” Jason froze. He turned his head slowly, his face instantly draining of color when he saw me standing in the doorway. He scrambled backward, nearly tripping over his own trousers as he tried to pull the duvet over himself. For a fraction of a second, something sharp twisted in my chest. Three years of love, sacrifice, and humiliation flashed through my mind. Then the feeling disappeared. I felt nothing. “Jasmine! Wait—it’s not what it looks like,” Jason stammered, his hands shaking as he tried to cover his chest. “I swear, I... we were just... I’m sorry. This doesn’t mean anything. I can explain, let me explain.” I didn’t blink. I didn’t cry. My expression remained completely blank. “Explain what, Jason?” I said, my voice deadpan. I glanced between them. “The fact that you are fucking your stepsister right now? The same one you told me I was insecure about?” My gaze settled on him. “Or the fact that you chose to do this on our anniversary night?” “Don’t act so holy, Jasmine,” Victoria snapped, sitting up and crossing her arms, her voice dripping with venom. “You’ve been a ghost in his life for three years. A penniless, boring drag. He deserves a real woman, not a charity case. You have nowhere to go anyway, so shut up and let him handle it.” “Right. A charity case,” I murmured, entirely unbothered. Jason looked completely desperate now, sweating despite the perfect air conditioning. “Jasmine, please. Just put the phone down. Let’s talk about this privately. We can fix this.” “Nah,” I shook my head. “I highly doubt that.” I glanced at my phone screen. “I’ve already taken it to hell.” “Stop being such a pathetic bitch and give him the phone!” Victoria yelled, finally realizing something was wrong as her own phone on the nightstand started buzzing repeatedly. Jason noticed the angle of my arm. He lunged out of the bed, reaching aggressively to snatch the phone out of my hand. “Give me the damn phone, Jasmine!” I stepped back seamlessly, completely out of his reach. At that exact moment, my screen started flashing with financial alerts. I glanced down. The live chat on the shareholder platform was moving too fast to read, thousands of furious investors screaming for answers. News reports were already breaking. The headline at the top of my screen read: Sterling CEO Caught in Live Affair. Right below it, the real-time stock ticker showed a sharp, violent red line. Sterling Group stock had just plummeted by 8% in less than four minutes. Numbers kept climbing, the stocks kept falling, and the panic was spreading. Jason’s phone began to ring loudly, likely a call from someone at the company. He froze, looking from his phone to me, his chest heaving with panic. His eyes were wide with fear. “What have you done, Jasmine?” I looked down at my hand. I reached down, twisted the diamond wedding band off my finger, and let it drop. It hit the hardwood floor with a sharp click, rolling right to his bare feet. The sound it made as it hit the floor was too loud in the quiet room. “There, I’m officially asking for a divorce.” At that point, all the color had drained from his face. “What?” he asked in disbelief. I didn’t look at Jason. I looked directly into the camera lens of my phone. “As of tonight, the Sterling name is a liability,” I said clearly. I ended the stream, turned on my heel, and walked out. I drove straight back to the Sterling mansion. I didn’t have much to pack, just a few personal clothes and a small box of sentimental items I’d kept from my life before this marriage. I kept it quick, wanting to be out before the media circus caught up to the estate. But someone was already waiting for me. When I dragged my small suitcase out through the front doors, the sky had completely opened up. Rain was pouring down in sheets. Standing under the grand porch was Jason’s stepmother, Eleanor. She was holding two more of my old bags, her face twisted in absolute disgust. Before I could even step onto the driveway, Eleanor threw the bags straight past me. They landed with a heavy, wet splash right into a massive puddle of mud at the curb. “You absolute piece of trash!” Eleanor shrieked over the sound of the rain, her voice shaking with rage. “You ruined my son’s company with your pathetic little stunt! How dare you! Look at you! You’re leaving here with absolutely nothing, just like the day you dragged your penniless feet into this house! I knew he should never have had anything to do with your poverty-stricken self. I warned him, but he never listened. Now look what you’ve done!” I stopped. I looked at the cheap bags soaking in the mud. Then I looked at Eleanor. A small, genuine smile broke across my face. “You’re right, Eleanor. I am leaving with nothing of yours,” I said softly. “Don’t you dare smile at me, you orphan!” she barked, stepping forward to glare down her nose at me. “Go on! Walk down the street in the rain. Let’s see how long your pride lasts when you’re begging for a meal!” I didn’t answer. I just stepped over the wet clothes, walking casually out to the curb. “You’re pathetic! You’ll get what’s coming to you, I promise...” I drowned out her voice. Right as I reached the edge of the driveway, Eleanor’s expression suddenly changed. Her rant stopped mid-sentence. Confusion flickered across her face. Then the dark street lit up. Headlights appeared through the heavy rain. One pair. Then another, and another. I slowly turned around. A loud, synchronized roar of engines cut through the sound of the heavy storm. A flawless convoy of six sleek, armored black SUVs pulled up to the curb. They moved with military precision, completely blocking off the street. The door to the vehicle in front clicked open. A man in a perfectly tailored, formal suit stepped out into the pouring rain. He didn’t care about the water. He walked straight toward me, stopping exactly two feet away before bowing at a perfect, rigid ninety-degree angle. “Welcome back, Miss Vance,” his voice boomed, clear and commanding. “The global board of directors is fully assembled and awaiting your arrival.” I nodded once. Then I stepped inside the dry, leather-scented warmth of the luxury vehicle. Through the tinted glass window, I looked back one last time. Eleanor was standing frozen at the edge of the porch, the driving rain soaking her expensive hair. Her mouth hung open. Her eyes were fixed on the convoy. For the first time since I’d known her, she looked afraid. Then the mansion disappeared behind us. And so did my old life.Sebastian“She’s completely head over heels for you, Sebastian,” Laura’s voice had echoed through my phone earlier that morning. “Stop playing chess. Just go tell her.”Those words were the green light I had been waiting for. I was done waiting, done playing the patient ally, done pretending my chest didn’t ache every time she looked at me.I cleared out her favorite restaurant—the small, candlelit bistro overlooking the river—ensuring the doors were locked to the public. Just her, me, and the soft sounds of the water outside.Now, sitting across from her at our corner table, the flickering candlelight caught the golden flecks in her hazel eyes. But something was wrong. She was too quiet. Her shoulders were tense, and she kept staring down at her glass, tracing the rim over and over.I reached across the table, my fingers gently brushing against her wrist until she finally looked up.“Jasmine, look at me,” I said softly. My heart was beating a frantic, erratic rhythm against my ribs.
Jasmine“I mean, Sterling stock is down another four percent this morning, and Jason looked completely unhinged in that televised clip,” Laura said, taking a sip from her glass as we lay flat on our stomachs across my bed, a bottle of champagne sitting between us. “They are absolutely miserable.”She turned her head to look at me, her eyes twinkling with mischief. “Does that make you happy?”“Hell yeah,” I answered excitedly, and we both burst into a fit of breathless laughter, rolling across the sheets and almost spilling the champagne. I had to scramble to lift my glass so I wouldn’t ruin my white duvet. “You think I’m going to say no, that I pity him? I’m no saint.”When we finally quieted down, I rolled onto my side, bopped Laura’s nose, and asked, “So, what’s happening with you and Marcus?”Laura’s face turned apple red, and she lowered her gaze. “I think Marcus is going to pop the question soon. I can feel it, although he is kinda shy.”“Marcus has never struck me as the shy typ
Jasmine“No, absolutely not that shade of gold,” Laura barked, waving off the makeup artist who was currently holding a shadow palette over my face. “It clashes with the emerald undertones. We need a soft champagne. Something that complements her hazel eyes without screaming for attention.”I sat helplessly in the vanity chair, staring at my reflection while a team of three people fussed over me. One was working on my thick, curly hair, pulling it into an elegant updo while leaving a few loose tendrils to frame my face.Laura, meanwhile, was rummaging through my walk-in closet.“Laura, please,” I groaned, wincing slightly as a bobby pin dug into my scalp. “It’s a small charity fundraiser. Why am I being subjected to all of this?” I gestured to the group of women.“Because,” Laura said, marching back into the room holding a garment bag like a trophy, “your ex-husband just spent the last forty-eight hours making a complete, unhinged fool of himself on national television. This is your f
Jason“Lady Sterling liked the interview,” my P.A., Chloe, said, with a wide smile on her face and a glint of excitement in her eyes. “The blogs are absolutely losing their minds. The media haven’t stopped praising Victoria’s outfit. The fashion critics are raving about how iconic it was. It’s expected that more celebrities are going to show up in her designs in the coming days. They’ve called her a fashion icon, an innovator—the names are endless. Our PR team’s morning report says the interview is doing numbers like we’ve never seen. They actually think your crying was convincing, and so did Lady Sterling.”I leaned back in my leather chair, a smug smile stretching across my face.I knew it.All it took was a little show of vulnerability to flip the script.“I knew they would eat it up. Excellent. I told you—”“But,” Chloe interrupted, stopping dead in her tracks and looking at me with a look of pure pity, “the public, the media, and literally everyone else on the internet are comple
JasmineI spent the entire morning staring at the same legal brief, reading the exact same paragraph over and over until the words completely lost their meaning.My cheek still felt hot. If I closed my eyes, I could still feel the phantom brush of Sebastian’s lips against my skin, just a fraction of an inch away from my mouth.It was maddening. I was a grown woman, the CEO of Vance Global, and a divorcee who had survived a public scandal, yet I had spent the whole night analyzing a near-kiss.A sharp knock on my office door made me jump.“Enter,” I called out, forcing my voice into its usual professional tone.The door swung open, and my breath caught in my throat.Sebastian walked in. He was back in his tailored three-piece suit, and he looked dashing in it, but after seeing him in an ordinary T-shirt, I found I liked him better that way. In his hand, he held a single, perfect stem of a white rose.Suddenly, the air in the room disappeared. I froze, my eyes locking onto my desk becau
Jasmine“She skipped out on us,” I said, looking at my phone with an amused, exasperated shake of my head. “She just texted me: ‘Urgent emergency. Marcus needs me to check a spreadsheet. Have fun!’ A spreadsheet. At nine o’clock on a Tuesday. Marcus? Really?”Sebastian let out a low, rumbling chuckle. “She isn’t very subtle, is she?”“Not even a little bit,” I admitted, though the nervousness was starting to creep back into my chest now that we were alone.With Laura gone, the atmosphere between us shifted completely. The bustle of the market faded as we walked side by side until we found ourselves heading toward the quieter area near the river.We stopped by a small, isolated stall selling antique brass compasses and maritime maps. My eyes softened as I traced the edge of an old nautical chart.“My father used to have maps like these in his old study,” I said quietly, a nostalgic smile touching my lips. “Before Vance Global became this massive thing that everyone fights over... he ju
Jason“Smile, Jason,” Victoria hissed under her breath, her fingers digging into the sleeve of my tuxedo. “The cameras on the left are watching us.”I loosened my jaw, plastering a stiff, practiced smile across my face as we walked down the red carpet of the Grand Imperial Gala. Flashbulbs went off
Jason“Are you that dumb, Jason?” Eleanor screamed. This was the first time I had seen her in a state of disarray. She was always perfect, not a hair out of place. Now, her clothes were damp, and her hair was sticking to her forehead as she paced the marble floor of the foyer. The storm outside was
JasmineThe car was still on the inside, but outside, it was the complete opposite. The rain lashed against the bulletproof windows, blurring my view of the city.And then I finally broke.The cold mask I had worn in the penthouse and on the driveway crumbled. I pulled my knees to my chest, buried
JasmineThe background jazz music was soothing as it wafted through the large dining hall. I found myself humming along until…“Another glass of the Dom Pérignon, Madame Sterling?” the waiter asked in a thick French accent, tilting the bottle. “Mr. Sterling is delayed, but there is no reason the ni







