LOGINEve’s POV
I woke to the smell of tea and the distant sound of someone rummaging through my kitchen cabinets. For a moment I just lay there, wrapped in the blanket Devin must have draped over me at some point during the night. The couch cushions were still warm and the pillow still smelled faintly of the cologne I had given him for his birthday three years ago and that he apparently still wore. I made a mental note to buy him more. The man was loyal to a fault, even to his grooming products. The morning light was pale and thin, filtering through the windows in that quiet way light does when the city has not yet woken up enough to fill the streets with noise. I pushed myself upright and found Devin in my kitchen, moving around with the comfortable ease of someone who had done this a hundred times before. Which he had. He knew where I kept my mugs. He knew I took my tea with exactly half a teaspoon of honey and a splash of milk. He knew I needed two minutes of silence before I could form coherent sentences in the morning. He turned when he heard me stir and held out a steaming mug. "You're predictable," he said. "Good morning to you too." "I made eggs and toast. The bread was questionable but I toasted it aggressively enough to kill anything that might have been growing." I wrapped my hands around the mug and let the warmth seep into my fingers. "What time did you get up?" "I didn't really sleep." He shrugged, already turning back to the stove. "I T ook a few showers instead to clear my head." I nodded and did not give it a second thought. Devin was a restless sleeper. He had been that way since college, when exam stress would have him pacing the dorm halls at three in the morning. The showers were just his way of dealing with a bad night. I had shared hotel rooms with him enough times over the years to know his habits, and a midnight shower was far from the strangest thing he did. What I did not notice was the way his eyes flickered away from me when he said it. What I did not catch was the almost imperceptible tension in his shoulders, the way his grip tightened briefly on the spatula before he relaxed it again. I was too tired and too heartbroken to read between the lines, and Devin had spent seven years making sure I never learned to read between them with him. So I just sipped my tea and let him cook for me, I was grateful in the uncomplicated way I had always been grateful for him. He was my best friend. My safe harbor. The one man in the world who had never looked at me like I was a target or a prize or a stepping stone to something better. He was gay, which meant he was also the one man in the world who would never complicate things with feelings I could not return. At least that was what I believed. The tea was perfect. Half a teaspoon of honey, splash of milk and steeped for exactly four minutes. I had not even seen him check the time. We ate at the small table by the window, the city stretching out below us in shades of gray and gold. The eggs were fluffy. The toast was, as promised, aggressively toasted. We ate in comfortable silence for a while, and then Devin set down his fork and looked at me with an expression that made my stomach tighten. "There's something I need to tell you." My mind immediately jumped to the worst conclusions. Delphine was pregnant. Ambrose had already moved on. The wedding vendors were refusing to refund my deposits. "If this is about the cake tasting, I already canceled it." "It's not about the cake." He paused. "It's about your father." My father was not a topic that came up often between us. Devin knew what Gerald Lovelace was. He knew about the years of neglect after my mother died, the eighteen month timeline from funeral to remarriage, the way my father had let Delphine and her mother walk into our home and treat me like furniture they were waiting to replace. He knew all of it, and he had spent years biting his tongue because I asked him to. "What about my father?" Devin leaned back in his chair. His eyes were steady on mine, and I recognized the careful patience in them. It was the same look he got before he delivered bad news to a boardroom. "Do you remember last year, when I mentioned that your father's business dealings looked a little too complicated for comfort?" "Vaguely." "I wasn't vague about it. You just didn't want to hear it." Fair point. My father's business was the last thing I wanted to discuss over brunch, or ever. "What is it, Devin?" "Gerald is in significant debt. And the person he owes the money to is Martin Lovelace." The world tilted. I set my mug down very carefully, afraid I might drop it. Martin Lovelace was my mother's cousin. He had been circling the family fortune since before I was born, positioning himself as the rightful heir if anything ever happened to the bloodline. He was the man Delphine had probably called last night after I walked out of the cottage. I believe he was the reason my mother had written that clause into her will in the first place. "How much debt?" I asked. "Enough that he cannot pay it back without your inheritance." My stomach turned over. "So my own father has been betting against me. He owes money to the man who stands to inherit everything if I fail, and he just conveniently let me waste a year planning a wedding to a man who was never going to marry me." "Your father might not have known about Ambrose." "He might not have. But he knew about the deadline, and he never warned me." I stared at my half eaten eggs and felt the betrayal settle into my bones like a chill. "He never once told me he was in trouble. He never asked for help. He just let me walk toward the edge of a cliff while he stood there holding hands with the people who wanted me to fall." Devin did not say anything. He just reached across the table and covered my hand with his, his palm warm and steady. It was such a small gesture, but it anchored me in a way I could not explain. "I have thirty days," I said, my voice quieter than I meant it to be. "Thirty days to get married or I lose my mother's whole legacy. Every single thing she built all goes to Martin." "We will figure it out." He said it with absolute certainty, like it was a fact as solid as the table between us. "How? Ambrose is gone. My father is compromised. The entire board is probably already placing bets on my failure. I have no options left, Devin." His jaw tightened. "There is always an option." "Name one." He was quiet for a moment. The morning light caught the edge of his jaw and I noticed, fleetingly, that he looked exhausted. The kind of exhausted that went deeper than a single sleepless night. I wanted to ask him what was really going on behind those steady eyes, but I was too afraid of the answer. "There's something else I need to tell you," he said. "About your father's finances. The debt to Martin is just the surface. I have been digging into this for a few months now, and I think there are things Gerald has been hiding from you for a very long time. Things that go back to when your mother was still alive." I went cold. "What about my father?" Devin looked at me and I could tell he was holding back. "It's worse than you think," he said quietly. "And I need you to be ready for it."Devin's POV Mark ran background checks on everyone who had access to our schedules, our security arrangements, and our personal information. The list was small. The security team, all of whom had been vetted by Solomon personally. Priya, whose loyalty was beyond question. Marguerite Chen, who had been protecting the Lovelace estate for decades. A handful of office staff who handled logistics and communications. One name stood out. An administrative assistant in the Lovelace offices named Derek Foster, who had been hired six months ago on a temporary contract and who had access to Eve's calendar and contact lists. His background check had been clean at the time of hiring, but a deeper dive revealed inconsistencies. His previous employer had no record of his employment. His listed address was a vacant lot. His references were dead ends. "He is not who he claimed to be," Mark said. "He was planted in the office, probably by Gregory Hale, to
Eve's POVThe second threat came on a Friday, delivered not by mail or courier but by a voice on the phone.I was working from the dining table, reviewing the quarterly projections that Priya had flagged for my attention, when my cell phone rang with a number I did not recognize. The security team had set up call screening, but this call had bypassed their filters somehow, routed through a series of proxies that made it untraceable. I answered before thinking, still distracted by the columns of numbers swimming before my eyes."Mrs. Cresswell." The voice was male, smooth and educated, with the faint trace of an accent I could not quite place. "You have been very difficult to reach.""Who is this?""You know who I am. You have been looking for me. I thought it was time we spoke directly."Alistair Pembrooke. It had to be him. I gestured frantically at Priya, who was working at the other end of the table, and she immediately began
Devin's POVThe information Victoria gave us was a key, but a key is useless until you find the lock it fits. For three days after that meeting in Greenwich, we searched for any thread connecting Alistair Pembrooke to Martin Lovelace, and for three days we came up empty. Mark pulled every financial record he could access without a warrant, which meant nothing offshore, nothing hidden behind shell companies, nothing that required a court order. Pembrooke's shipping business was legitimate on its surface, a modest operation compared to the Ashford empire, specializing in freight routes between the East Coast and the Caribbean. His tax filings were clean. His corporate structure was unremarkable. On paper he was just another wealthy businessman who had inherited a company from his father and run it competently for thirty years."He is hiding something," Mark said during our fourth briefing call. "No one with this much money operates this cleanly. There are always irregularities. Always.
Eve's POVVictoria Ashford resurfaced on a rainy Thursday afternoon, three days after we returned from Vermont.She called Devin directly, which was unusual because Victoria and I had developed a strange, adversarial respect for each other over the months of our conflict. She did not bother with pleasantries when he answered the phone. She simply said she had information about the silent partner and she was willing to share it in exchange for a private meeting.Devin relayed the message to me with an expression of deep skepticism. "She says she wants to meet at the Ashford family home in Greenwich. Neutral ground, she called it. I do not trust her.""Neither do I. But if she has information about the partner, we need to hear it. Victoria may be manipulative and self-serving, but she is not a killer. She would not threaten our baby.""I am not so sure about that.""Then come with me. We will meet her together, and if she tries anything, the security team will be right outside."The Ash
Devin's POVSolomon found Lydia Vance on a Tuesday morning, ten days after the hospital scare.She was hiding in a small town in Vermont, working as a waitress in a diner off the interstate under a name that was not her own. She had dyed her hair a mousy brown and stopped wearing makeup and developed the hunched, evasive posture of a woman who was afraid of her own shadow. When Solomon's people approached her at the end of her shift, she tried to run. They caught her gently, spoke to her calmly, and convinced her that they were not working for Martin Lovelace.The safe house where they brought her was a cabin in the Green Mountains, surrounded by forest and accessible only by a single dirt road. Eve and I drove up the next day with the security team following at a discreet distance. The autumn leaves were past their peak now, the mountainsides fading from brilliant gold to muted brown, but the air was crisp and clean and smelled of pine.Lydia was waiting for us in the cabin's main ro
Eve's POVI woke up feeling off on a Thursday morning, four days after the break-in at Priya's apartment. The cramping started as a dull ache low in my abdomen that I tried to The cramping started to dismiss as normal pregnancy discomfort. The books had warned me about round ligament pain and bloating and a hundred other minor symptoms that came with growing a human inside your body. I told myself it was nothing, that I was overreacting, that the stress of the past few weeks was making me imagine problems that did not exist.Until I went to the bathroom and saw the blood.It was not a lot. Just a few spots of bright red on the toilet paper, small and innocuous and utterly terrifying. I stared at them for a long moment, my mind refusing to process what my eyes were seeing. Then I called for Devin, and my voice came out high and thin and nothing like my own.He was in the bathroom in seconds, his face pale when he saw the blood on the tissue I was h
Eve’s POV When I arrived at the wedding venue, I spotted Marguerite in the front row, her sharp eyes missing nothing. Mark was beside her, looking surprisingly emotional for a man who knew the marriage was a contract. My father was near the back with my stepmother, who was wearing a hat so large
Devin’s POV I waited until Eve was asleep before I made the call. The apartment was dark and quiet. Her bedroom door was closed. The only light came from the city outside the windows and the glow of my phone screen. I stood in the living room and dialed Mark's number from memory. He answered
Eve’s POV Ambrose's face went pale. "Eve, if you don't help me, Delphine is going to destroy you. Whatever she's planning, it's bigger than just a few embarrassing photographs. She wants to annihilate you." "Then I'll deal with her myself." I opened the door and gestured to the hallway. "Your
Eve’s POV The knock came at ten in the morning, which should have been my first clue that something was wrong. Normal people called first or sent a message. They did not show up unannounced at my apartment three days after I had gotten legally married to someone else. I opened the door and fou







