LOGINLOLA'S POV
I hear Ethan's office door slam and I know. I know what's coming. I'm still in the bedroom where Ocean found me, sitting on the edge of the bed with my hands clasped so tightly my knuckles are white. My heart is pounding so hard I can hear it in my ears. Ocean saw. He saw everything. My face, the bruises I couldn't hide, all the evidence of what Ethan does to me. And he confronted him. I heard raised voices downstairs, muffled through the floors but unmistakable. Ocean was angry. Really angry. For one brief, stupid moment, I let myself hope. Maybe this would be enough. Maybe Ocean would make it stop. Maybe someone finally cared enough to... "LOLA!" Ethan's voice echoes through the house and every muscle in my body locks up in terror. Oh god. Oh god, no. "Get down here. NOW." My legs won't move. I'm frozen, rooted to the spot, because I know what's about to happen and I can't, I can't do this again...I can't "I said NOW!" Something crashes downstairs. Glass breaking. He's throwing things. I force myself to stand. Force my legs to move. Because if I don't go down there, he'll come up here, and that will be worse. It's always worse when he has to come find me. Each step down the stairs feels like walking toward my own execution. He's in the living room. His face is red, veins bulging in his neck. There's a lamp shattered on the floor. He's breathing hard, fists clenched at his sides. The moment he sees me, his eyes narrow into slits. "You fucking bitch." "Ethan, I'm sorry, I didn't..." "You didn't what?" He takes a step toward me and I automatically step back. "You didn't think? You didn't consider what would happen if you let my father see your face looking like that?" "I didn't know he was coming! You didn't tell me, I was just..." "You embarrassed me." Another step forward. I'm backed against the wall now. Nowhere to go. "My own father thinks I'm some kind of monster because you couldn't be bothered to put on makeup and hide your fucking bruises." "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry..." "Do you have any idea what you've done?" He's right in front of me now, so close I can smell the coffee on his breath. "He threatened me. My own father threatened me because of you." Tears are streaming down my face. "I didn't mean to..." "You never mean to." His hand shoots out and grabs my throat. Not squeezing hard enough to cut off my air completely, but enough to make breathing difficult. Enough to make panic explode in my chest. "You're always sorry. You never mean to. But somehow you keep fucking up anyway." "Please," I gasp. "Please, I'll do better, I promise..." "You promised that last time." His grip tightens slightly. "And the time before that. And the time before that. Your promises don't mean shit, Lola." Black spots are dancing at the edges of my vision. I claw at his hand, trying to pull it away, but he's so much stronger than me. "You made me look weak," he hisses. "You made my father think he can tell me what to do in my own house with my own wife. Do you understand what you've done?" He releases my throat suddenly and I collapse, gasping for air. My lungs burn as I drag in breath after breath. But I don't even have time to recover before his fist slams into my stomach. All the air rushes out of me again. I double over, retching, trying to breathe but my lungs won't work properly. "Get up." I can't. I'm still trying to remember how to breathe. His hand tangles in my hair, yanking me upright. I cry out in pain but he doesn't care. He never cares. "I said get up." He drags me across the living room by my hair. I stumble, my hands trying to pry his fingers loose, but it's useless. He throws me onto the couch and I land hard, my already injured ribs screaming in protest. "You know what I learned today?" He's pacing now, like a caged animal. "I learned that I need to be more careful. My father is watching now, isn't he? Looking for evidence. Looking for reasons to interfere in my marriage." "Ethan, please..." "So no more face hits. No more visible bruises." He stops pacing and looks at me with something cold and calculating in his eyes. "Can't have dear old dad seeing any more evidence, can we?" My blood runs cold. Because I understand what he's saying. He's not going to stop. He's just going to be more careful. "From now on," he continues, his voice eerily calm, "I'll make sure everything is where you can hide it. Your stomach. Your ribs. Your back. Places that are covered by clothes. That way, when my father comes snooping around, you'll look just fine." "Please don't do this," I sob. "I'll be more careful, I'll make sure no one sees..." "You're right. You will be more careful." He walks back over to me. "Because if my father sees any more bruises? If he has any more reason to question me? I'll make you regret it in ways you can't even imagine." He grabs my arm and yanks me off the couch. I try to resist but it's pointless. He's too strong and I'm too weak. "Ethan, please, I'm sorry..." The first punch lands in my stomach again. Then another. And another. Each one drives the air from my lungs, leaves me gasping and retching. But he's careful. So careful. Doesn't touch my face. Doesn't leave marks where anyone can see. He throws me to the ground and I curl into a ball, trying to protect myself. But there's no protection. Not really. His foot connects with my back, my ribs, my legs. "This is your fault," he says, punctuating each word with a kick. "You did this. You made this happen." And the worst part is, I believe him. If I'd been more careful. If I'd heard Ocean coming. If I'd put on makeup faster. If I'd hidden better. This is my fault. I don't know how long it lasts. Time stops meaning anything when you're in this much pain. All I know is hurt and fear and the desperate wish for it to be over. Finally, he stops. Stands over me, breathing hard. "Clean yourself up," he says. "And remember. No more visible bruises. No more ammunition for my father. You keep your mouth shut and you make sure no one sees anything wrong. Understand?" I can't speak. Can barely breathe. But I manage a small nod. "Good." He steps over me like I'm trash on the floor. "I'm going out. I expect this house to be spotless when I get back. And I expect you to look presentable." I hear him grab his keys. Hear the front door open and close. Hear his car start and pull away. Only then do I let myself cry. Really cry. Great, heaving sobs that make my injured ribs scream but I can't stop. Ocean's intervention didn't help. It made everything worse. Now Ethan will be more careful. More strategic. He'll hurt me where no one can see. Where there's no evidence. No proof. I'll still be in hell. I'll just be better at hiding it. I don't know how long I lie there on the floor. Eventually, the sobs slow. My body goes numb. I stare at the ceiling with empty eyes. Ocean tried to help. I know he did. He saw what was happening and he confronted Ethan and for one brief moment I thought maybe, just maybe, someone cared. But it didn't matter. It only made things worse. Because this is my life. This is all it will ever be. And no one can save me. Not Ocean, not anyone. I'm alone. Completely, utterly alone. And any hope I had left, any tiny spark that maybe things could get better, dies right there on the living room floor. I finally force myself to sit up, wincing at the pain that shoots through my entire body. Everything hurts. My stomach, my ribs, my back. I run my hands over my torso carefully and feel the bruises already forming. Deep, ugly bruises that will last for weeks. But they'll be hidden. Under my clothes where no one can see. Just like Ethan planned. I drag myself to my feet, holding onto the couch for support. The room spins and for a moment I think I might pass out. But I steady myself. Force my legs to hold me up. The house is a mess. The broken lamp. Furniture pushed askew from our struggle. I need to clean it before Ethan gets back. I always need to clean up after he hurts me. Erase the evidence. Make everything look perfect again. Like nothing happened. Like I'm not dying inside. I start picking up the pieces of the broken lamp with shaking hands. Each movement sends fresh waves of pain through my body but I don't stop. Can't stop. Because if the house isn't spotless when he returns, he'll be angry again. And I can't take any more today. I just can't. As I clean, my mind is blank. Numb. I'm not even really here anymore. I'm just going through the motions. An empty shell performing the tasks required to survive another day. Ocean's face keeps flashing in my mind. The look in his eyes when he saw my bruises. The anger. The concern. But it doesn't matter. His concern doesn't matter. His anger doesn't matter. Because at the end of the day, I'm still here. Still trapped. Still being destroyed piece by piece with no way out. And now it's going to be even harder to get help. Because Ethan will make sure there's no visible evidence. No proof. Nothing for anyone to see. I'm more alone than ever. The hope that briefly flickered when Ocean confronted Ethan is gone now. Completely extinguished. Because hope is dangerous. Hope is what gets you hurt worse. I learned that today. Ocean tried to help and now I'm paying the price for it. I'll probably be paying the price for days, maybe weeks, as my body heals from this beating. I finish cleaning up the living room. Make it look perfect. Then I go to the kitchen and start preparing dinner even though the thought of food makes me want to vomit. But Ethan will expect dinner when he gets home. Will expect me to act normal. To smile and serve him and pretend like nothing happened. So that's what I'll do. Because that's all I know how to do anymore. Pretend. Hide. Survive. And never, ever hope again. Hope is the cruelest lie of all. I move through the kitchen like a ghost, my body on autopilot while my mind drifts somewhere far away. Somewhere that doesn't hurt. Somewhere safe. But there is nowhere safe. Not anymore. Not for me. By the time Ethan comes home three hours later, the house is spotless and dinner is on the table and I'm wearing a long-sleeved shirt that covers all the damage. I smile when he walks in. Serve him his food. Act like everything is fine. And he smiles back, satisfied that I've learned my lesson. That I know my place. That I'll never tell anyone what happens in this house again. Because who would believe me now anyway? With no visible bruises, no proof, just my word against his? No one. That's who. I'm trapped in this nightmare with no escape. And Ocean's intervention, his moment of caring, has only made my cage smaller. That night, lying in bed next to a husband who sees me as nothing more than property to abuse, I close my eyes and let go of the last shred of hope I was holding onto. There is no rescue coming. There never was. There's only this. Day after day. Year after year. Until one of us dies. And honestly? I'm starting to hope it's me. At least then it would be over. At least then I'd finally be free.Lola's POV I find out on a Thursday morning in July. Storm is fast asleep for his nap, and the house has slipped into that particular kind of quiet it only gets during these stolen hours. Everything holds its breath. I can actually hear the low hum of the fridge and the faint creak of the floorboards settling, and I remember what silence feels like without a six-month-old attached to my hip. Usually I use this time to race through the million little tasks that get impossible once he’s awake. Today I do something different. I’ve been ignoring the signs for two full weeks. Not on purpose, or maybe it was on purpose. There is this specific way of ignoring something where you know exactly what you’re doing. You’ve made a quiet, private decision to keep shoving it aside until the moment comes when you can’t anymore. That’s exactly where I’ve been living for two weeks. The bone-deep tiredness I blamed on Storm’s sleep regression. The nausea I told myself came from something I ate. Tha
Sophia I fell head over heels for Storm Moretti on a Wednesday afternoon in March. Not the polite, fake kind of love adults do when they’re supposed to find a baby cute. The real deal. The sudden, goofy, can’t-help-it kind that hits you out of nowhere. He was four months old the first time I properly held him. Lola brought him over to the Romano estate for lunch. Just the two of them, like the old days when she used to stay with us. But everything felt different now. She carried herself differently. Walked through rooms like she owned the ground under her feet. That old wariness she used to have was gone, replaced by this calm confidence of a woman who finally knows where she stands. She put Storm in my arms. He looked at me real serious, like he was sizing me up. Then he made this little sound. I glanced at Lola. “What does that mean?” “Approval, I think,” she said. “Probably.” “He’s got a whole bunch of sounds. I’m still learning what they all mean.” I looked back at Stor
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SEVEN Various POVs Ocean Storm laughs for the first time on a Tuesday morning in February. Not a full laugh. Not yet. It’s the preliminary version... that bright burst of air and delight babies make before they’ve developed the full machinery of laughter. It lasts maybe two seconds and then disappears, like he’s still figuring out what this sound is for. I’m the one who causes it. I don’t even know how. I’m sitting on the floor of the sitting room with him lying on his back on the play mat Sophia brought last month. I’m making some ridiculous face, the kind I would never make in any professional setting anywhere on earth, and he looks up at me and makes that sound. I freeze. He does it again. I make the face again. He makes the sound again. We go back and forth like this for a solid four minutes. Same ridiculous face from me. Same delighted burst from him. Like we’ve stumbled onto a private frequency only the two of us can hear. Lola appears i
Third Person Willow Hart is arrested on a Thursday morning in November. Not dramatically. There are no kicked-in doors, no shouting, no theatrical display of authority. Just two men from Vincent Caruso’s organization arriving at her flat in Kensington at nine o’clock and knocking politely. When she opens the door, they tell her quietly that her presence is required. She stands there in a silk robe with a coffee cup in her hand and looks at them for a long moment. Then she steps back and lets them in. She knew this was coming. She’s known since the morning the recording surfaced and Michael Santos’s name tore through the organization like lightning. She understood immediately what it would mean for her. When Michael’s conspiracy began to unravel, every thread connected to it would be pulled. Every person who had played any part, no matter how they had justified it to themselves. She had spent three weeks waiting. The first week she drank. The second week she stopped drinking a
Lola's POV He doesn’t look away. That surprises me. The Ethan I knew always looked away from things he couldn’t control. He looked away from consequences, from discomfort, from anything that required him to sit inside his own mess rather than throw it onto someone smaller. This Ethan looks at the gun, then at my face, and holds my gaze. Maybe weeks sitting alone in a room in South London does something to a person. Strips the avoidance away until what’s left is just the bare fact of who you are and what you’ve done. I look at him for a long moment. I let myself really look. Four years of this face. This face leaning over me in the dark. This face cycling through charm, cruelty, indifference, and rage. This face that was the first thing I saw every morning and the last thing I saw every night for four years of my life that I can never get back. I look at it now. I’m not afraid. I said that to myself in the bedroom before we left the house this morning. Standing in front of th
Lola's POV The room is waiting on me. I can feel it in the air...the weight of every single eye at that long table. Vincent at the head, his face carved with exhaustion. Dmitri composed and watchful, probably still trying to rewrite his own role in all of this. The neutral parties who have now sat through two tribunals, seeing more of this family’s ugly truth than most outsiders ever do. Daniel beside Ocean. Caruso standing with his hands folded, having just handed me something no one in my life has ever handed me before. A real choice. Real authority over what happens next. I look down at Storm. He’s asleep against my chest, completely indifferent to the gravity pressing down on everyone else in the room. His small fist is curled near his cheek the way it always curls when he’s deep in that committed newborn sleep. Four weeks old. He has no idea that the man at the far end of this table once told me, four years ago, that he hoped I’d die alone and unloved because no one decent
Third Person The recording hits seven inboxes at midnight. By one in the morning, three of them have been opened. By two, the calls start coming in. Not panicked calls, these aren’t men who panic. They’ve been in this world long enough that staying calm under pressure is just how they opera
THIRD PERSON POV It takes nearly two months to put the damn thing together, piece by grinding piece. Not because the escape itself is all that complicated. Ocean has been figuring out ways to slip out of tight corners since he was in his twenties, back when the world felt smaller and his body di
Bryan's POV I've been following Michael Santos for three weeks now. Not every single day. That would be too obvious, and being obvious is the one thing I can't afford right now. Michael is too sharp. He’d spot a full-time tail in a heartbeat. So I do it smart... Tuesday evenings, Thursday afterno
Hannah's POV Ezra arrives on a Wednesday. I hear the car crunching on the gravel and I’m at the window before I even realize I’m moving. It’s embarrassing as hell, but there’s nobody here to see it except Lola, who’s asleep upstairs, and the guard outside who’s professional enough not to comment







