LOGINFor ten years, Elara lived like a ghost in her own marriage. Once destined to become one of the greatest pianists of her generation, she gave up everything for the man she loved only to disappear behind Adrian’s name, Adrian’s world, Adrian’s indifference. In return, she asked for very little: a glance, a kind word, something that proved she had not sacrificed her life for nothing. Then Adrian’s first love returned. And he chose her. Years later, Elara is reborn. No longer the forgotten wife hidden in her husband’s shadow, she is now a pianist the world cannot ignore. Only after losing her does Adrian realize what she truly was to him. Now obsessed with winning her back, he refuses to let her go again. “Divorce?” he says, his voice dark with desperation. “Impossible. Until I sign those papers, you are still my wife.”
View MoreElara 's POV.
“A wife of mine doesn’t need a career.” The words don’t just echo, they settle into my bones as I stand in his study room, my back presses against the cold wall. I bring him the invitation, the Philharmonic, asking me to play. A single concert. I thought he would be proud, he might finally look at me the way he used to, before the ring was on my finger. He looks at me like I’ve handed him something embarrassing. “I don’t understand,” I say. “This is what I trained for. This is who I am.” “You’re my wife now.” He doesn’t look up from his papers. “That’s who you are.” “But Adrian…” His fingers pause briefly on the paper before he speaks. “I don’t care about your little hobby. The conversation is over.” I open my mouth to argue. To tell him that music isn’t a hobby, it’s my blood, my breath, the only thing that makes me feel like myself. He stands. Walks past me without a glance. The door closes behind him, and I am alone in his study, holding an invitation that suddenly feels like a joke. My feet carry me to the end of the corridor, where a closed door waits. My music room. I haven’t opened it in ten years. Not since the day he told me I needed to be submissive. My hand rises. My fingers touch the brass handle. I could open it. I could sit at the piano and let my fingers find the keys, let Chopin remind me who I was before I became Mrs. Sterling. I pull my hand back and walk away. Near the kitchen, voices slip through a door left slightly open. “Does she even do anything all day?” A maid. I recognize the voice. “Nothing,” another answers. “Just walk around. Like she’s waiting for something.” A low laugh. “Sometimes I forget she’s even here.” My feet stop. My hand grips the doorframe. I could step forward. I could show them I am flesh and blood, that I have a name and a history and fingers that once made audiences weep. Instead, I turn and walk back the way I came. I don’t know how long I’ve been dozing on the couch, but I am jolted awake by the bang of the door. Adrian walks in. My eyes dart to the clock. Nine o’clock. I have been waiting since six. The dining table is set with his favorites, lamb, roasted potatoes, and a red wine from the bottle he opened on our anniversary. Candles burn low, their light flickering against the silverware. I hear his key in the lock. I straighten my dress. A bum short and hoodie, because he never notices what I wear anyway. He walks past the dining room without slowing. “Adrian.” My voice comes out thin. “I made dinner. Your favorite.” He stops. For one breath, hope flickers. He doesn’t turn around. “I ate out. Don’t wait for me.” His footsteps fade down the hall. A door opens, then closes. His study. The lock clicks. I stand in the dining room alone. The candles gutter. The lamb grows cold. I pull out my chair and sit because my legs won’t hold me anymore. I eat nothing. I drink the wine. Before bed, I find myself outside his study. I tell myself I am only passing by. I pretend I don’t expect anything. But my feet have carried me here, to this door,.to the sound of his voice inside. I raise my hand to knock. Then I hear him let out a low and easy laugh. I haven’t heard him laugh like that in years. I don’t recognize the voice on the other end of the phone, but I recognize the warmth in his tone. The warmth he used to give me. Before. I lower my hand and I turn away. And that’s when I see it. A small bottle on the side table, the vitamins. He started me on them early in the marriage. "For your health," he said. "I want to take care of you." I have taken one every night for ten years without question. I picked up the bottle and unscrew the cap and shake one pill into my palm. He said they would keep me healthy. I place it on my tongue and swallow. Ten years of these little white tablets. I wonder, sometimes, if I am being treated like this because I can't bear children for him. I go to bed alone as usual. The next morning, I found his phone on the kitchen counter. I never touch his things. I learned early that my presence in his world is tolerated only within certain borders. But the screen lights up as I pass, and my eyes catch the notification before I can look away. “I’m coming home. Will you be there to meet me?” The contact is a single letter. S. My hand trembles. I set down the tray I was carrying, coffee sloshes over the rim. I stare at the message. Sophia. Her name rises from a place I’ve tried to bury. My hand drops from the phone. I walk to the window and press my forehead against the cold glass. If I am nothing to him now, what will I be when she arrives? The answer sits in my chest like a stone I’ve been swallowing for ten years. I already know.Elara's POV.I stood in front of the mirror, studying my reflection with cold calculation. Tonight, I would become the devoted wife again, the woman who could make his heart race and his thoughts scatter. I needed him drawn to me completely, irrevocably. And I intended to make sure of it.I chose a deep burgundy dress that clung to my curves like a second skin, the neckline plunging just enough to hint without revealing. I curled my hair so it cascaded over one shoulder, applied red lipstick with careful precision, and added a touch of perfume to my wrists and neck.The woman staring back at me was no longer the one who had worn gray for a decade. She was dangerous, beautiful, composed, and ready.By seven, I was descending the staircase, my heels clicking against the marble with each deliberate step. Adrian stood at the bottom, one hand gripping the banister, his eyes fixed on me with an intensity that made my stomach tighten.He looked at me like a man watching a storm approach,
Elara's POV.I stood at the bedroom door, my hand hovering over the handle, contemplating whether to leave a message for Adrian.But I stopped myself. Why should I act like a good wife? Why should I explain myself to a man who never explained himself to me? He didn't ask permission when he met Sophia. He didn't inform me when he made plans. So why should I?I pulled my hand back and walked out of the house without a backward glance.****Victor's Academy of Music stood in the heart of the city, a grand building of glass and steel gleaming beneath the afternoon sun. I paused at the entrance, my breath catching as memories rushed back.Years of practice. Endless hours of discipline. The weight of trophies in my hands. The sound of applause echoing through crowded halls.This was my world before Adrian.This was who I was before I became Mrs. Sterling.A bitter ache settled in my chest. Ten years of sacrifices, compromises, and abandoned dreams for a marriage that had given me far less t
Adrian’s POV.I sat at the dining table for a long time after she left.The eggs had gone cold and the toast had turned dry, but neither held my attention as much as the empty chair where she had sat and the painful twist in my chest.A pain I wasn't supposed to feel. I didn't love Elara. I was just trying to be a better person. That's all.I was just trying to be decent until I found the truth about my past. Yet why did this hurt? Why did her pulling away feel like she was taking something vital with her?I groaned, running my hands through my hair. This was supposed to soften her. The breakfast, the smile, the careful way I had arranged the fruit. But it didn't.She had looked at me like I was a stranger wearing her husband's face.I cleared the dishes. The sink filled with water. I washed each plate slowly, methodically, trying to empty my mind.When I finally walked into the bedroom, she was lying on the bed, flipping through a book. Her legs were tucked beneath her. Her hair fell
Elara's POV.I adjust my hoodie, pulling the cap lower over my face. Then I slide into the booth behind them, my back to their table, close enough to hear.Come on. Say something useful.But the more I strain my ears, the more I hear nothing but whispers. Soft. Intimate. The kind of whispers that belong in bedrooms, not restaurants.Sophia leans in, her hand brushing his arm as her fingers trail slowly up his sleeve, and she laughs—a low, breathy sound that makes my teeth clench.Who whispers in a public place? Who does that? It's like she's trying to be mysterious. Or annoying. Probably both.A waiter passes. A tray wobbles. Hot coffee sloshes over the rim and splashes across my table and my lap."Holy shit!"The words explode out of me before I can stop them. Heads turn. The entire restaurant freezes.Sophia looks over, confused. And Adrian... Adrian's head whips toward the sound. His eyes scan the figure in the hoodie. Something flickers across his face. Recognition? No. Impossibl
Adrian’s POV.The empty bottle sits on the dining table. Vitamin B, the label says. I found it in the dustbin.“What is this really?”My mother doesn't look up from her tea. She shifts in her chair, bracing herself. “Vitamins. I told you. For that wife of yours.”“She has a name,” I say quietly. “
Elara’s POV.Somewhere, a phone is ringing. No….. not ringing. Someone is shouting. A voice I know."Elara! Elara, answer me! Where are you? Pull over!” His breath is uneven, like he’s been running.Adrian! I have never heard him sound like that. Afraid and desperate. He sounds like a man who migh
Elara’s POV.The gala is held in the Sterling Hotel's grand ballroom. Crystal chandeliers. Champagne flowing. The city's elite gathered in their finest, here to see and be seen.I stand at the edge of the room, the emerald dress hugging my body, my hair swept back, my hands steady.Adrian approache
Elara’s POV.The brunch is held in the grand dining room. Crystal chandeliers, a table long enough to seat twenty, though only eight sit at it.I walk in on Adrian's arm. I feel Agatha's eyes on me before I see her.She sits at the head of the table. Diamond rings weighing down her fingers, her ga












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