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Aliya POV
I had been staring at the clock for so long that the ticking had begun to sound like mockery.
8:47 p.m.
Richard should have been home by now.
I sat on the edge of the bed, my fingers twisted tightly in the hem of my dress, smoothing wrinkles that didn’t exist. I had changed twice already, first into something elegant, then into something softer. In the end, I settled for a simple cream dress. It was the kind he liked. Or at least, the kind I thought he liked.
The house was too quiet. Not the peaceful kind, this silence felt heavy, like it was holding its breath, waiting for something bad to happen.
I told myself I was overthinking. I have been doing that a lot lately.
For three years, Richard had never given me a reason to doubt him. He was always there. Always attentive. He remembered small things, how I liked my tea warm, not hot; how I hated sleeping without the lamp on; how I liked his arm around me even when I pretended I needed space.
He wasn’t loud with his love, but he was steady. Reliable.
Arranged marriage was never meant to be good but mine with Richard was different. He is so sweet and caring.
And somewhere along the way, without realizing it, I had fallen in love with him.
I stood up and walked to the mirror, forcing a smile at my reflection. “Stop being dramatic,” I whispered to myself. “He’s just late.”
The sound of the front door opening cut through the silence.
My heart leapt.
I rushed out of the bedroom, my bare feet barely making a sound on the floor. “Richard?” I called, trying to keep my voice light.
He stood in the living room, still in his suit, his tie loosened. He didn’t look at me immediately. His jaw was tight, his shoulders stiff.
Something in my chest sank.
“You’re home late,” I said softly, stepping closer. “Did something..”
“Aliya,” he interrupted.
My name sounded different on his lips. Heavy. Final.
That was when I noticed the envelope in his hand.
White. Plain. Thick.
I stared at it, my mind refusing to connect the dots. “What’s that?” I asked, though dread was already crawling up my spine.
He finally looked at me then. His eyes didn’t hold warmth. They didn’t hold anything at all.
“We need to talk.”
The room tilted.
I forced myself to laugh, though it came out shaky. “You’re scaring me. What’s wrong?”
He exhaled slowly, like he had rehearsed this moment a hundred times. Then he held out the envelope.
“Sign these.”
I didn’t move.
“What… are they?” My voice was barely a whisper now.
“Divorce papers.”
The word hit me like a slap.
Divorce.
I stared at him, waiting for him to laugh. To tell me it was a joke. A test. Anything.
But he didn’t.
“I don’t understand,” I said, shaking my head. “Did I do something wrong? If I did, we can talk about it. We can fix it.”
“There’s nothing to fix,” he replied calmly. Too calmly.
Tears blurred my vision. “Then why?”
His silence was cruel.
“I’m in love with someone else,” he said finally.
My knees felt weak. I reached for the back of the couch to steady myself. “Someone else?” I repeated. “Richard, we’re married.”
“Yes,” he said. “And our marriage was never supposed to be real.”
The words cut deeper than any blade ever could.
“Not real?” I laughed weakly. “What do you mean, not real? Three years, Richard. Three years of living together. Of sharing a bed. Of...”
“It was an arrangement,” he said firmly. “You knew that.”
“Yes, but...”
“I never stopped loving her,” he continued, his voice colder now. “She was always in my heart.”
I felt foolish. Small. Used.
“So everything you did for me… the care, the kindness… all of it was fake?” I asked.
“It wasn’t fake,” he said. “I respected you. I took care of you. But love?” He shook his head. “That was never yours.”
Something shattered inside me.
“And now?” I whispered.
“She’s back,” he said. “And I want a real life with her.”
I swallowed hard. “So I’m just… what? A substitution?”
His silence answered me.
My hands trembled as I took the papers from him. The words swam before my eyes. I couldn’t even read them properly. All I could see was the end of everything I had hoped for.
“You want me to leave,” I said quietly.
“Yes.”
Just like that.
No apology. No guilt. No regret.
I signed.
Each stroke of the pen felt like I was erasing myself.
When I handed the papers back, my hands were numb. “I hope she’s worth it,” I said, though my voice cracked.
“She is.”
That was the last thing he said to me before I walked out of the house I once called home.
I didn’t go to my parents.
I couldn’t.
I had been so proud. So sure that my marriage was working. I couldn’t face their pity. Their questions. Their disappointment.
So I went to a bar.
The lights were dim, the music loud, the air thick with alcohol and loneliness. I sat at the counter and ordered drink after drink, not caring what it was.
I wanted to forget.
I wanted to feel nothing.
But the alcohol only made the pain louder.
I cried into my glass, silent tears slipping down my cheeks as I remembered the way Richard used to tuck my hair behind my ear. The way he used to hold me when I had nightmares. The way I had believed stupidly that he would one day love me back.
“I’m such a fool,” I whispered.
A man sat beside me.
He was handsome in a quiet way, with kind eyes and a calm presence. He didn’t ask questions. He just pushed a napkin toward me when he saw my tears.
“Rough night?” he asked gently.
I laughed bitterly. “That’s one way to put it.”
I drank more. Talked more. Told him things I would never tell a stranger. Or maybe it was easier because he was one.
I don’t remember when his hand found mine. Or when I leaned into him.
All I remember was the warmth. The comfort. The way he looked at me like I mattered, even if, just for a moment.
I followed him out of the bar.
I needed to feel wanted. Needed to feel chosen. Even if it was only for one night.
In his arms, I let myself forget Richard’s face. Forget the marriage. Forget the woman who had taken my place without even knowing me.
Slowly, my lips found his ways to his and my dress ended up on the floor. The rest history, was on the bed with different positions.
Aliya's POV The words Detective Morris had spoken followed me through every hallway of headquarters, refusing to leave my mind no matter how hard I tried to focus on the present.Margaret Sinclair had always planned three steps ahead of everyone else, and although she was finally behind bars, I couldn't convince myself that she had surrendered quietly. People like her rarely accepted defeat without leaving chaos behind. The thought should have frightened me more than it did, but something inside me had changed over the past few weeks. I was no longer the woman who faced every new threat believing she had to fight alone. As Dylan walked beside me with his hand resting lightly against the small of my back, I found myself drawing strength from his quiet presence instead of fear from the uncertainty ahead.Detective Morris led us through the secured wing before stopping outside an interview room guarded by two uniformed officers.The thick glass window beside the door revealed nothing be
Dylan's POVThe drive back from Blackwater Point unfolded beneath a sky that had finally begun to clear, yetthe silence inside our vehicle carried more weight than the storm clouds that had hovered aboveus earlier that night. Detective Morris rode in the front passenger seat while two officers followedin another vehicle behind us, but none of them attempted to fill the quiet with unnecessaryconversation. Aliya sat beside me in the backseat with her father's journal resting carefully onher lap, her fingers never straying far from the worn leather cover. Every few minutes, sheunconsciously traced the faded initials embossed on its surface as though the simple touchallowed her to remain connected to him. Watching her, I realized that the investigation hadbecome something far more personal than exposing a criminal network; it had become adaughter's final opportunity to understand the father she had lost before she was old enough totruly know him.I gently intertwined my fingers
Martha's POV For years, I imagined this moment would feel different.I thought there would be certainty. Relief. Some overwhelming sense that everything missing in my life had finally fallen into place. Instead, as I stood at the top of the lighthouse stairs staring at Aliya, all I felt was disbelief. She was real. Not a photograph I had secretly collected. Not a face I had searched for in crowds. Not a possibility hidden inside old records. She was standing in front of me, looking at me with the same mixture of shock and emotion that I felt.Neither of us moved at first.The silence stretched between us while years of separation crowded into the space. I studied her face carefully, noticing similarities I had recognized long before this meeting. The shape of her eyes. The way she held herself when nervous. The tiny expressions that crossed her features before she spoke. Seeing those familiar traits in another person felt strangely overwhelming. For most of my life, I believed I wa
Aliya's POVThe drive to Blackwater Point began less than twenty minutes later.Nobody suggested waiting until morning because none of us could afford to lose more time. If my father's letter was correct, Martha had taken Elana to the lighthouse after discovering the truth. That meant they could still be there. More importantly, it meant Martha had trusted my father's instructions enough to follow them decades after he wrote them. The thought stayed with me as our convoy moved through the darkness toward the coastline.Rain continued falling lightly against the windows.The storm that had dominated the past several days was finally weakening, but thick clouds still covered the sky. Headlights cut through the darkness while police vehicles maintained a careful distance around us. The atmosphere inside the SUV felt tense but focused. Everyone understood what was at stake. We weren't chasing a theory anymore. We were following directions left by the one person who seemed to understand th
Dylan's POVThe silence that followed Aliya's words felt almost unreal.Dozens of people stood inside and around the vault, yet nobody spoke. Investigators who had spent entire careers examining evidence suddenly seemed reluctant to move. The significance of the letter had become obvious the moment Aliya read that final sentence aloud. For weeks, every road had led back to Elana. The missing records, the anonymous messages, Martha's actions, and the warnings left by Aliya's father all pointed toward the same person. Now we were finally about to learn why.Aliya held the letter carefully in both hands.I could see the effort it took for her to remain composed. The emotions weren't difficult to understand. She wasn't simply reading evidence. She was listening to her father speak across decades of silence. Every sentence carried the weight of years stolen from her. Watching her stand there, surrounded by proof of his sacrifices, made me admire her even more than I already did."Keep read
Aliya's POVThe drive to the lake felt longer than it actually was.Nobody in our vehicle spoke much during the journey because every person seemed trapped inside their own thoughts. The discovery of the vault had changed the atmosphere of the investigation completely. For weeks we had been chasing people, records, and fragments of history. Now there was something tangible waiting for us beneath the eastern shore of the lake. More importantly, that something had been built by my father. The realization sat heavily in my chest the entire drive.Rain clouds still lingered overhead, although the storm had finally weakened.The gray sky stretched endlessly above the lake when we arrived. Floodlights had already been positioned around the excavation site, transforming the shoreline into a scene that looked more like an archaeological dig than a criminal investigation. Uniformed officers stood near temporary barriers while technicians moved carefully between pieces of equipment. The atmosph







