LOGINArianna's Pov
I stared at him. A second passed, then another. The seconds stretched at the edges because my brain refused to process what it just heard. "You're married," I said, not as a question, but to process what I had just heard. "I'm aware." He responded like it meant nothing. "You're standing here telling me that you're going to keep me beside you, and I belong to you?" I said it slowly, like I was explaining something to someone who hadn't heard themselves. "You have a wife, Nikolai." "And you have a lot of nerve," he said, "lecturing me about what I do with my life." He tilted his head slightly. "Given everything." The ‘given everything’ landed the way he intended it to, so I had to close my mouth. He moved to the window. The city stretched out below him, indifferent and enormous, and he looked outside like he was already deciding what to do with it. The light caught the line of his jaw, the set of his shoulders, and I hated that I noticed. I hated that even now, even standing in the middle of something that should have cured me of him permanently, some part of my body still remembered what it had once felt like to be wanted by this man. That part needed to be quiet. "Let me be very clear about something," he said, still facing the window. "I'm not asking you to be my mistress. I'm not asking you to be anything romantic." He said the word like it was slightly beneath him. "What I'm telling you is that you owe me, and I intend to collect." "Collect." I repeated it. "Like I'm a debt." "You played with me." He turned then, and his eyes were very direct. He had the look of a man who had converted pain into something useful and had been waiting patiently to spend it. "You made me believe things. You made me feel things. And then you threw all of it back in my face and let me think you were dead." He paused. "So yes, like a debt." My jaw tightened. "You don't know why I did what I did." "Then tell me." The words rose in my throat and stopped. Because the truth was a door I could not open. Not here and not to him. The truth had too many rooms behind it, and some of them contained things I had spent five years making sure no one would ever find. "I can't," I said. "Can't." He studied me. "Or won't." I didn't answer. That was enough to answer. He turned back to the window. "You know what your problem is, Arianna? You think you can decide what people deserve to know. You decided what I deserved. You made that choice for both of us." He paused. "I'm returning the favor." I wanted to say something to that. I had things to say. But I was also, underneath the anger and the fear, deeply and exhaustingly tired, and I was thinking about Noah at Mrs. Kate's with his fever and his small hoarse voice, and I was thinking about what it had cost me to build the life I had now. I had given up everything to disappear. Everything. I had been a William, and that meant something, once. My father had stood at the right hand of the Voss family for twenty years, and was trusted with the kinds of things men like that trusted no one with. My father was once the Voss family's most trusted bodyguard, and that was how I got to know Nikolai. "I'm not the same person I was," I said. "Whatever happened between us — that was five years ago. I was twenty-one years old. You don't get to hold me to who I was at twenty-one." He looked at me. "No?" "People make mistakes. People do things they regret. That doesn't mean they spend the rest of their lives paying for them." "It does," he said pleasantly, "when the mistake was deliberate." "Nikolai…." "You didn't slip up." He said it without heat. Just a fact. "You planned it. You stood across from me and you said the things you said andyou looked me in the eye and you did not slip up. Not once." Something moved behind his expression, quick and it was gone. "I would have forgiven a mistake. I'm very good at forgiving mistakes." The room felt smaller than it had before. "I need to go," I said. "I have to get back to work.." "Your family doesn't know you're alive." I stopped on hearing that. "What?" My voice came out wrong and thin. "Your father. Your cousins. The people who mourned you." He watched me. "They don't know." "That's not…" I stopped and started again. "That's my business." "Maybe." He moved toward me slowly, not threatening, just closing the distance between us. "But I wonder what your father would think if he found out. Not just that you were alive, but how you left." He stopped a few feet away. "You didn't just disappear, did you, Arianna. There was a car. A fatal one at that. You ran over a hill, your car ruined to ashes, your face was barely recognisable. There was a body they couldn't identify because by the time anyone looked closely, there wasn't enough left to look at. The body has your bracelet on its wrist so we didn't question it. But deep down in me, a hope still lingered." My heartbeat was very loud. I could feel the tears building up now, and I had to forcefully bite my lips to stop it from rolling down. "The Voss family has a reputation to protect," he continued. "Your father built thirty years of loyalty on being the man who could be trusted absolutely. A man whose own daughter faked her death and destroyed property to do it…." He paused, and he let the sentence sit there unfinished. "I wonder how that story lands." "You wouldn't." But even as I said it, I was doing the math, and the math was not in my favor. "I wouldn't need to do anything," he said. "I'd just need to ask the right questions to the right people. Information has a way of traveling on its own." I looked at him. The fear was real. I was not going to stand here and shake in front of him. I had promised myself a long time ago that I was done shaking in front of people who wanted to see it. "My father," I said carefully, "has nothing to do with this." "No. But he could." Nikolai tilted his head slightly. "That's the point." "And if I just walk out that door right now? What then? You make a phone call?" "I don't know." He seemed to consider it, genuinely, like it was an interesting question. "Maybe. Maybe I just let you walk out and see how long it takes before the world you've been hiding in stops being safe." He looked at me steadily. "Or maybe you stay and we talk like adults about what happens next." The silence stretched. I could hear the faint sounds of the restaurant downstairs, the distant clatter of the kitchen, the muffled pulse of the city through the glass. I thought of Noah's breathing this morning. I thought of the medication I hadn't bought yet, and all the careful invisible architecture of my life that I had built so that one specific small boy would never have to feel what I felt the morning I walked away from everything I had. I had one secret that mattered. Everything else — the fire, the Voss name, my father's pride, what Nikolai thought of me — all of that was secondary. All of that I could survive. But Noah was not something I could afford to gamble with. "You want to talk," I said finally. My voice was steady. I was proud of that. "Then talk." Something in Nikolai's expression shifted, almost imperceptibly, like someone who had expected resistance and was recalibrating. "Good," he said. He moved back to his seat like the conversation had been decided. Like the outcome had never really been in question. And I stood there, and I told myself the thing I had been telling myself for five years whenever the ground started to give way beneath me. He can't find out about Noah.NIKOLAI PovShe was gone. That was the information Petrov delivered to me in the flat, careful voice because he understood that what he was saying was going to produce a reaction and was bracing for it. Ms. Costa had left the search perimeter on foot. Approximately forty minutes ago. They had assumed she had gone back to the cabin. She had not gone back to the cabin.I looked at him. "And you're telling me this now.".He said nothing. There was nothing useful to say.I turned away from him before I said something that went beyond the situation, which was already bad enough without adding to it. Noah was missing. Arianna was missing. It was dark, and the search team I had doubled was combing land they couldn't fully see, and somewhere between the property and wherever she had gone she had slipped through every layer of security I had put in place as cleanly as if it hadn't existed."Hospitals," I said. "Every one within thirty kilometres. Check whether a child matching his description
ARIANNA POV"Ma'am." Petrov appeared at my side. "It's getting dark. We should get you back to the mansion while the team continues …""No.""Ms. Costa ..""I said no." I kept walking. "I'm not going anywhere without my son."He didn't argue further. I think something in my voice made the argument unnecessary. I had stopped sounding like a woman who could be stopped and started sounding like something else — the stripped-down version of a person, the one underneath all the composure, that only came out when the thing it was most afraid of was actually happening.The light was going.The sky at the edge of the tree line was shifting from grey to something darker, evening was arriving, while my son was somewhere in it. The flashlights came out. Three of them at first, then five as more men arrived from wherever Petrov had called them in from, their beams cutting pale lines through the undergrowth."Noah!"My voice had gone rough. I had been calling his name for almost two hours and my
NIKOLAI Pov:The meeting ran forty minutes over.I sat at the head of the table and watched it happen with patience. The merger with Voss Industries had been on the table for six weeks. The numbers were clean. The strategic alignment was obvious to anyone who could read a balance sheet. And yet here we were, in the third hour of a conversation that should have taken forty-five minutes, because three men at the far end of the table had concerns they were enjoying having.Rafael sat to my left throughout. He said what he needed to say when he needed to say it and did not look at me with anything that could be read as meaningful, which told me he was either very controlled or still processing what I had told him.I couldn't tell which.The meeting ended. Hands were shaken. People filed out. I reached for my phone.I saw several missed calls. I didn't get to read the numbers before my father appeared at my shoulder."My office," he said.I looked at my phone for one more second. Then I p
ARIANNA POVThe shower helped, it gave my hands something to do, gave me somewhere to stand that was warm and enclosed and required nothing of me for ten minutes. I stood under the water and let my mind do what it had been doing all morning, which was to circle back to him.To the weight of his arm across me in the dark.He used to take me on trips.That was the memory that kept arriving uninvited. He would appear at my door with no warning, sometimes at midnight, and tell me to pack something light and not ask questions. And I would go, because I was twenty-one and in love and the questions I wasn't asking were the ones I already knew the answers to and didn't want yet.We went to Iceland once.We lay on the frozen ground at two in the morning wrapped in every layer we had brought and watched the lights move across the sky, and he said almost nothing the entire timeHe had held my hand. That was all, just that.I turned the shower off.Those were the days before I understood what we
NIKOLAI PovI woke up and didn't know where I was for exactly one second.Then I did.The ceiling was too low, too plain, none of the angles of my own bedroom — and the light coming through the curtain.Arianna.She was still asleep on her side, facing away from me, her hair loose across the pillow. Her breathing was slow and even. She had one hand tucked under her cheek and the other resting open on the mattress between us, palm up, fingers slightly curled.I lay still and looked at the ceiling.I felt better than I had in weeks. That was the plain fact of it, uncomfortable and inconvenient and completely true. Not rested exactly — I had not slept deeply, had moved in and out of it for hours — but something had released in me that had been wound tight for longer than I wanted to count. Some tension at the base of my skull that I had stopped noticing because it had been there so long it had become part of the landscape.Sex was one thing.I had told myself, more than once, that what h
ARIANNA POV"When can we go home?"Noah asked without preamble, looking at me with those dark eyes that had never learned to soften a question before delivering it. He was sitting up in bed with the blanket pooled around his waist and his hair still flattened from sleep, and he looked so much better than he had the night before that my chest ached with the relief of it.I stared at him.The honest answer was that I didn't know. The slightly less honest answer was soon. "Soon," I said.Noah considered this. "I miss Lucas," he said. Lucas was his best friend from the building, a boy two months older than him who Noah treated as both his closest ally and his primary competition, depending on the day."I know.""And I miss my books.""I'll get you more books."He looked at me steadily. "I miss our home, Mama."I crossed to the bed and sat beside him and pulled him into me, my arms around his small shoulders, my chin on top of his head. He let me, which meant he was still feeling fragile
NIKOLAI POV:My father was on his feet before he could process what was happening.He went straight to her, with both hands coming up to hold her face, tilting it toward the light, like he needed to see something clearly and didn't trust what he was seeing from a distance. His eyes moved over the m
NIKOLAII drove too fast. I knew it and I didn't slow down. I moved through the city with my hands tight on the wheel and my jaw tighter, and I let the rage sit in my chest and burn because it was the one thing I wasn't going to try to manage right now.A man nobody recognised had walked into a roo
ARIANNA POV:"How would you even know that?" I asked. What did he mean by that?Nikolai looked at me. "Just trust me."I stared at him."Trust you?." I let the words sit in the air for a second so we could both hear how they sounded. "You kidnapped me and my son. You took my phone. You have men wa
ARIANNA PovI couldn't sit down.I had tried twice and both times I was back on my feet within seconds, moving from the window to the wall and back again, my arms crossed over my chest like I could hold myself together by force.Noah was asleep on the bed behind me. I had pulled the blanket up arou







