LOGINCharlotte's POV
By 8:54 p.m., I was standing alone in the quiet hallway of Olive Hotel, staring at the brass plate that carried the number 2206. My heartbeat was steady, not because I felt brave, but because I felt empty. I didn’t know why Nathan wanted me here, and honestly, a part of me didn’t even care anymore. Yet something pushed me to turn the knob. I hesitated for one last second, then pulled the door open. The smell hit me first—strong perfume mixed with something heavier. My eyes dropped to the floor, and my breath caught. Men’s clothes. Women’s clothes. Shirts, trouser, underwear scattered everywhere like someone had tossed them carelessly in the middle of desperation. My chest tightened. And then I heard it. Wet, greedy sounds. Mouth meeting mouth, breath swallowed into breath. I looked up. On the bed, half-covered by crumpled sheets, were Nathan and my sister, Celine, entwined so deeply that they didn’t even notice I had walked in. His hand cupped the back of her neck, dragging her mouth harder against his. It baffled me how they’d gotten so close in just four months. And here I was, after three years I spent with him, abandoned like trash. Her legs wrapped loosely around him. Their bodies moved in a rhythm I once thought belonged to me. My feet refused to move. My throat burned. Suddenly, Celine’s eyes flicked in my direction. She froze. Her lips hung open under Nathan’s. “Charlotte?” she gasped. “Why are you here?” Nathan didn’t even jerk or step away. He simply turned his head slightly, looked at me with cold disinterest, then returned his attention to her as if I was an inconvenience that had walked into his shadow. “Relax,” he said, his voice flat. “I invited her.” His words slapped me harder than his hand ever did. I gasped but kept my mouth shut. Speaking felt like swallowing fire. Celine let out a soft, trembling sigh, the kind she used whenever she wanted sympathy. “Nathan, why didn’t you tell me?” she asked, leaning into him with that practiced innocence that always fooled everyone but me. “Now she has seen us like this. How awkward.” Nathan chuckled, still holding her neck possessively. Instead of comforting her with words, he kissed the side of her throat as if reminding her she was his priority. “Cel,” he murmured against her skin, “I wanted her to know you’re the one I love.” Then he turned his gaze back to me, sharp and dismissive. “So she would stop having those thoughts she shouldn’t.” Celine laughed quietly and tapped his chest playfully. “You’re terrible.” Terrible. That was their joke, their bond, their world. Together, they stepped down from the bed. Their bodies still brushed lightly as if gravity itself insisted on keeping them close. Nathan took her hand without a second thought and guided her forward until they were standing right in front of me, facing me like a pair of victors showing off their trophy. “Charlotte,” Nathan said, looking straight into my eyes, “did you see it clearly? The only one I love is Celine. The only woman who was there for me in my critical moments.” His tone was final. Personal. Almost cruelly satisfied. He squeezed her hand. She looked up at him and smiled. “Don’t you ever think of me that way again.” I swallowed hard. My throat felt tight, but I kept my chin lifted even though my chest was shaking inside and my heart pounding so hard like it was going to escape from my ribcage. “Rest assured,” I said quietly, “I’ll never bother you again.” For the first time that night, Nathan hesitated. His eyes lingered on me a second too long, as though he was trying to place something different about me. Something he couldn’t name. Then he scoffed, turned away, and picked up a silver-edged card from the bedside table. “Good.” He returned and extended the invitation towards me. “In half a month, Celine and I will have our wedding. You are invited.” My fingers trembled slightly as I collected the card. When I opened it, I saw their names in bold elegant calligraphy— Nathan Mills & Celine Dean. The gold lettering blurred for a moment. This was supposed to be mine. My place. My life. My future. But here it was in my hands, belonging to someone else again. Well, to the woman I called my sister. Someone who already had everything. Who took everything from me. The tears I had forced back since I entered the room slipped free. They dropped silently, warm, sliding down my cheeks. I didn’t bother to wipe them. “I will be there,” I said, my voice unsteady but clear. “To give you my blessings.” Celine shifted slightly, hiding a smirk that she probably thought I couldn’t see. Nathan stared at me longer this time, his expression unreadable, almost troubled. “She’s acting strange today,” he murmured under his breath, more to himself than anyone else. “Too calm.” Before I could respond, thunder cracked outside, loud enough that the chandelier above us trembled. I didn’t even look up until I heard metal snapping. The chandelier broke free. “Nathan!” Celine screamed. Nathan reacted instantly, grabbing her and pulling her away with all the strength I once believed he would use to protect me. “Watch out!” he shouted, only at her. I tried to step back, but the falling chandelier was faster. A sharp edge hit my shoulder and my head as it crashed against the floor, sending me flying sideways and my head landed on the scattered glasses. Pain burst through my arm and ribs, as I collapsed. The room spun around me. My hands and knees scraped against the floor, bleeding. Through the ringing in my ears, I saw them, Nathan hunched over Celine, checking her for injuries, embracing her tightly. His voice was frantic. “Are you okay? Cel! Are you hurt?” She melted into his arms dramatically, clutching him as though she might faint. Over her shoulder, her eyes met mine, and the satisfaction in her expression was unmistakable. From my place on the cold floor, I stared at the man who once promised me a future. Suddenly, a memory snapped open inside me with painful clarity. Three years ago, before everything broke, when we were still together but before promises meant anything permanent… We were walking down the street, hand in hand. A bike swerved suddenly towards us. Before I even processed what was happening, Nathan pulled me sharply into his arms, shielding me. “Don’t worry,” he told me then, breath warm against my forehead. “I’ll always protect you.” Back then, his eyes were soft. His voice held certainty. I believed him with the whole of my heart. I doubt he still remembered that. Or if he even wanted to. And now… Here we were. A reversed version of the past. “Nathan…” I whispered weakly, my voice trembling, “you broke your promise.” He didn’t hear me. He didn’t even look in my direction. My vision blurred. The room dimmed further. Celine looked at me again, this time without pretending. “Maybe it’s for the best,” she said coldly, lips curling. “I can finally move forward without you.” My head fell sideways. My body grew heavier. The pain numbed into something distant. My eyes closed and darkness swallowed everything.The large glass doors of the executive office suddenly flew open.Nathan, who had been reviewing documents behind his desk, looked up sharply.Armed police officers stormed into the office.Leading them was Inspector Gerald.Nathan's expression immediately darkened."Mr. Nathan Mills, you're under arrest for illegal and forceful possession of someone else's properties and attempted murder." Inspector Gerald said immediately they burst into Nathan's office. "You have the right to remain silent or whatever you say or do can be used against you in the court of law.""What?" Nathan snapped with furrowed eyebrows. "This is ridiculous. Me? Illegal and forceful possession of someone else's properties? Attempted murder? Are you even okay?"He slowly rose from his chair, laughing sarcastically."This has to be some kind of joke."His gaze fixed coldly on Gerald.He shook his head, pointing at Gerald."Besides, I remember you were dismissed and declared wanted by the police. Who the fuck do you
Charlotte stood frozen at the door, staring in complete shock at Oscar—her husband, the man who was supposed to be dead.Beside him on the couch sat Inspector Gerald, his expression calm as though he had been expecting this exact reaction.Oscar slowly rose to his feet."It's me, baby." Oscar said, his voice a bit hoarse, tugging a small smile."You're alive?" Charlotte muttered, her hands shaking. "How?"Oscar moved towards her, reaching for her hand.But she instinctively took several steps backward, her eyes nearly popping out of their sockets.After all, who would see the man they personally buried standing inside their living room and casually think, Oh, welcome back?Charlotte's heart pounded wildly.She even glanced behind herself as though calculating whether she could reach the front gate before the ghost floated after her.For one terrifying second, she almost considered grabbing the flower vase beside the entrance to throw it and create enough distraction to escape.Oscar s
The London Business Leadership Summit opened with its usual noise — camera flashes, the murmur of international delegates, the mix of ambition and rivalry thick in the air.But Charlotte barely felt any of it.She sat in the third row of the main conference hall, her fingers lightly gripping her notepad, her mind drifting back to the same place it always returned to now — Caleb, the investigation, and the haunting silence that followed his death.She tried to breathe steadily. Megan's voice echoed in her head: "Go. Clear your mind. Just go." Nelly had said the same thing.They all believed London would give her space, but instead, the noise inside her heart only grew louder.The bustling atmosphere around her only sharpened the emptiness within. Every cheerful conversation, every confident laugh from passing delegates, reminded Charlotte how isolated she truly felt. No change of scenery could silence grief that had settled so deeply inside her, refusing to loosen its grip.Every step
Nelly sat stiffly in the passenger seat, her fingers trembling against her lap as Marcel drove in silence toward the station.The morning traffic flowed steadily around them, but neither of them paid any attention to it. Nelly kept staring ahead through the windshield, her mind replaying everything that had happened over the last two days.He had argued with her for almost an hour earlier, insisting that they had pushed the line too far already.His words had been firm, leaving little room for negotiation. He had repeated himself over and over, trying to make her understand that what had started as a desperate search for justice had become something far more dangerous.She wanted to keep digging, convinced she could find just one more clue that would break everything open, but Marcel wouldn’t hear it.He told her she had no training, no protection, and no idea how violent men like Roland could be.Each warning had sounded painfully reasonable, yet it did little to quiet the determina
The night in New York was unusually quiet, but Marcel’s apartment was alive with tension. The laptop screen glowed between him and Nelly, casting pale light across their tired faces, while the air remained thick with fatigue, frustration, and the pressure of a mystery that refused to loosen its grip.Two days had passed since Nelly’s narrow escape at the bar, and the footage she’d recovered was now their only lead.The small apartment looked more like an investigation room than a home. Empty coffee cups sat on the table. Notes were scattered across every available surface. Neither of them had gotten much sleep, yet neither was willing to stop.Marcel scrolled through the files again, replaying the video of the shooting — frame by frame. Roland’s face appeared clearly this time, frozen in the act of pulling the trigger.Nelly’s hands tightened on the edge of the table. “That’s him,” she said under her breath, her voice trembling slightly. “The man who killed Caleb.”Marcel leaned clo
Charlotte sat quietly in her office, the letter of invitation lying open on her desk. The cream-colored paper rested beside a stack of untouched files and reports that had been gathering for weeks. It was from the Global Business Alliance, inviting her to speak at their annual summit in London.For a long time, she said nothing, only stared at the paper as if it were asking too much of her. The past months had left her hollow, and business felt like a foreign language. Once upon a time, an invitation like this would have excited her. She would have studied every detail, prepared for every session, and looked forward to the opportunity. Now, all she felt was exhaustion. The words on the page blurred together as her mind drifted elsewhere, toward memories she could neither silence nor escape.Megan leaned on the doorframe, watching her. Concern lingered in her eyes as she took in Charlotte's withdrawn appearance. “You should go,” she said softly. “You need this, Charlotte. You’ve be
"Come, Nathan," Johnson said again quickly, his voice warm and persuasive as he reached for his spoon. He scooped a generous piece of meat from the dish before him and dropped it neatly onto Nathan's plate with practiced ease. "Have some."Nathan glanced down at the plate, then back up at Johnson.
But just as Nathan was about to pull the door open fully, his phone started ringing inside his breast pocket. The sharp sound cut through the storm raging in his head. His hand froze on the doorknob. For a brief second, he considered ignoring it. Whatever was inside that room could no longer be u
“Charlotte is actually allergic to peas?” Megan thought, her eyes still widened in shock, her spoon frozen midway to her mouth. For a brief second, her carefully composed face cracked, revealing panic buried deep beneath years of calculation.How unfortunate it was that even a mother did not know
That night, the black SUV rolled smoothly through the grand iron gates of the Dean family mansion. The car came to a slow halt in front of the entrance, gravel crunching softly beneath its tires.The driver stepped out first and opened the back door. Nathan emerged calmly, adjusting his suit jack







