LOGINAva’s POV
The door closes behind me, soft and almost weightless against the storm building inside my chest. I keep walking, one step after another, my heels striking the floor in a steady rhythm that doesn’t match the chaos in my pulse. I don’t stop in the hallway, not when the receptionist glances up, not when the elevator doors slide open. I step in alone, and the moment the doors shut, the control slips.
My fingers press hard against my lips like I can erase what just happened, like I can undo the way he kissed me. God, that wasn’t supposed to happen, not again, not with him of all people. I squeeze my eyes shut, leaning back against the cold metal wall as the elevator begins to descend. My reflection stares back at me, composed on the outside but completely shattered underneath.
“Get it together, Ava,” I whisper, the words sounding weaker than they should. This is how women lose, not in loud, dramatic moments, but in quiet lapses where logic disappears and something reckless takes over. Adrian Blackwood is a mistake I already made once, and I refuse to repeat it. I’m not that careless, not anymore.
The elevator dings, and I straighten instantly, pulling myself back together piece by piece. By the time the doors open, my expression is smooth, controlled, unreadable. I walk out like nothing happened, like my heart isn’t racing, like I can’t still feel his touch lingering. Like I don’t remember the exact way his voice dropped when he said my name.
Liar.
By the time I step outside, the air hits me, warm and heavy, but it does nothing to steady me. I inhale anyway, forcing my lungs to work, forcing my body to cooperate. It doesn’t help, but I don’t have the luxury of falling apart. Not here, not now, not because of him.
“Ms. Sinclair?” a voice calls, pulling me back.
I turn slightly, my expression already in place as one of the junior staff approaches with a clipboard clutched tightly to her chest. She looks at me like I’m still the same composed woman who walked in earlier, and I let her believe it. That version of me is the only one anyone is allowed to see.
“There’s a revised schedule for tomorrow’s meeting,” she says quickly, her tone careful. “Mr. Blackwood asked that you review it tonight.”
Of course he did.
I take the file without hesitation, my face giving nothing away despite the way his name settles heavily in my chest. “Send a digital copy as well,” I reply smoothly, already turning away. “I’ll go through it tonight.”
She nods and leaves, and the moment she’s gone, my grip tightens around the file.
Work is what this is supposed to be.
Not tension, not distraction, not whatever that moment in his office was. I start walking again, faster this time, like distance alone can fix what just happened. This ends now, no more slipping, no more reacting, no more him.
By the time I get home, I almost believe I’m back in control.
Almost.
The apartment is quiet, the kind of silence that makes thoughts louder if you let them. I drop my bag on the table, set the file beside it, and head straight for the kitchen without thinking. Water first, then distance, then clarity.
That’s the plan.
I fill a glass and take a long sip, letting the cold settle in my chest. It doesn’t work, because the second I set it down, my mind drifts right back to him. The way he looked at me, the way he said my name, the way he—
“No,” I say sharply, cutting the thought off before it finishes.
I walk back into the living room, forcing myself toward the file like it’s the only thing that matters. Work, focus, discipline, that’s what I need right now. I open it, read a line, then another, but the words blur together uselessly. My mind refuses to cooperate.
My phone buzzes against the table, snapping my attention instantly.
Unknown number.
Something uneasy settles in my chest as I stare at the screen for a second too long. Then I pick it up anyway, because ignoring it somehow feels worse. “Hello?” I say, my voice steady despite the tension creeping in.
Silence answers me.
My grip tightens slightly as I straighten. “Who is this?” I ask again, sharper this time.
A soft breath comes through the line, followed by a single word.
“Ava.” Everything in me freezes. That voice. “I was wondering how long it would take before you started pretending I don’t exist,” he continues calmly.
Ice spreads through my veins as recognition hits.
Ethan.
For a second, I can’t speak, my pulse climbing so fast it almost drowns him out. I force my expression to settle even though no one can see me. “Wrong number,” I say flatly, pulling the phone away.
“Ava.” That one word stops me.
I bring the phone back slowly, my jaw tightening. “What do you want, Ethan?”
“I was starting to think you’d never ask,” he replies, too casual, too familiar.
“I’m busy,” I cut in immediately, sharper now. “Say what you called to say or don’t call again.”
A quiet chuckle follows, arrogant and unchanged.
“I heard you’re working for him.”
My stomach tightens instantly.
“That’s none of your business,” I reply coldly.
“It becomes my business when you start getting involved with people like that,” he says.
The audacity makes my fingers curl tighter around the phone.
“You lost the right to comment on anything I do the moment you decided to entertain another woman in our bed,” I fire back.
Silence follows, heavier this time.
“That’s not what happened,” he says finally. “You don’t get to rewrite history,” I snap. “Not with me.”
“You kissed him already, didn’t you?” he asks suddenly. Everything in me goes still.
“You don’t know anything about me anymore,” I say, my voice lower now.
“Then prove it,” he replies. “I’m not meeting you,” I say immediately.
“You will,” he says calmly.
The confidence in his voice makes something cold settle in my chest.
“You don’t get to decide that,” I reply.
“No,” he agrees. “But I do get to decide what happens next if you don’t.”
My movements slow. “…What did you do?” I ask quietly. “Check your email,” he says. The line goes dead.
Silence fills the apartment again, heavier than before.
I stare at my phone for a long second before lowering it slowly. My heart is racing again, but this time it has nothing to do with Adrian. Whatever Ethan just started, it’s not small, and I can feel it already.
I grab my laptop and open it, my fingers hesitating briefly before I log in. One new message sits in my inbox, from an unknown sender with no subject. That alone is enough to make my chest tighten.
I click it.
The file loads slowly, like it’s dragging out the moment on purpose. My eyes scan the screen, trying to make sense of what I’m seeing. And then it clicks.
Adrian’s POV The city had surrendered completely to the night. Manhattan glittered beneath the floor-to-ceiling windows like a sea of fractured diamonds, its endless stream of headlights weaving through the streets below while distant sirens echoed faintly through the silence. Yet none of it could pull my attention away from the reports scattered across my desk. I had been buried in financial projections for nearly an hour. So when Noah interrupted me after business hours I knew it was because whatever he carried couldn’t wait until morning. “Come in.” The door opened with barely a whisper. He stepped inside carrying a thick brown file tucked securely beneath his arm instead of the tablet he usually preferred. His expression remained unreadable, his shoulders straight and composed, but after years of working together, I had learned to recognize the smallest shifts in his demeanor. The slight tightening around his jaw and the unusual silence before he spoke told me everything
Ava’s POV Luckily for me, the investigation had finally pointed to someone. Daniel Brooks, one of the junior employees from the Finance Department, had been taken in for questioning after evidence placed him inside the building the night the acquisition proposal disappeared. I didn’t know everything he had confessed, but judging by the determined look on Noah’s face every time he walked past my desk, I knew the investigation had finally begun moving in the right direction. Adrian hadn’t shared many details with me, and I understood why. Whoever was behind the attacks had managed to stay hidden for months, sabotaging Aurelius deal after deal without leaving much behind. If Daniel had truly been working for someone else, then whoever had hired him was still out there, and Adrian wasn’t about to show his hand until he knew exactly who he was dealing with. For the first time in weeks, I allowed myself to believe this nightmare might actually end. I caught myself smiling at the thoug
Adrian’s POV With everything happening at Aurelius Group, one truth became impossible to ignore. Whoever was orchestrating this chaos wasn’t trying to destroy Ava alone—they wanted to punish me too, as though I had committed some unforgivable crime against them. Every stolen file, every calculated move, every carefully planted doubt carried the unmistakable scent of revenge, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was only seeing the surface of something much darker. Ethan had resented me since we were children, so discovering he had been communicating with Serena wasn’t exactly shocking. What kept gnawing at the back of my mind was the question of who had manipulated him into taking things this far because Ethan had always been impulsive, but never strategic. Whoever was standing behind the curtain understood exactly how to exploit old wounds, and being family wouldn’t spare Ethan from the consequences of the choices he had made. The truth was, I didn’t have many enemies. If an
Adrian’s POV I had told Ava she could go home if she wanted but knowing her, I was sure she was somewhere now trying to figure out where the file had gone. The moment the meeting ended, I turned to Noah. “My office.” He gave a single nod and fell into step beside me. Neither of us spoke as we crossed the executive floor. Employees looked up as we passed before quickly pretending to be busy. News traveled fast inside a company, especially after a board meeting delayed without explanation. By the time we reached my office, I already knew half the building would be speculating about what had happened. Noah shut the door behind us. I walked straight to my desk without sitting down. “Have Marcus from Security, Olivia from IT, and Human Resources meet me in my office.” I paused. “Five minutes.” After hanging up, I looked at Noah. “Until we know who’s behind this, the fewer people involved, the better.” He understood immediately. “If there’s a mole…They’re already watching u
Ava’s POV For a second, nobody spoke. I wasn’t sure what shocked the room more—the missing acquisition proposal or Adrian believing me without asking for proof. The silence felt louder than any accusation. Adrian turned toward the board as though nothing extraordinary had happened. “We’re delaying the meeting by twenty minutes,” he announced calmly. A director immediately protested that investors had flown in from Zurich, but Adrian simply replied, “I know.” “The proposal is the foundation of today’s discussion,” another director insisted. Adrian met his gaze without raising his voice. “We’re delaying the meeting.” No one argued after that because no one challenged Adrian Blackwood twice. The boardroom erupted into controlled chaos as assistants called investors, Legal searched for backups, and IT rushed to investigate. I remained frozen beside the conference table, staring at the empty folder on my laptop. It wasn’t possible. I knew my routine by heart—draft, review, save, u
Ava’s POV Monday arrived whether I was ready for it or not. I must have woken up four different times during the night. Every time I managed to fall back asleep, my mind carried me to the exact same place. The Blackwood Estate. The long dining table. Aunt Margaret laughing so hard she nearly spilled her wine while Adrian sat there looking like he regretted ever introducing me to his family. Despite everything, a smile tugged at my lips. Rebecca. Whoever she was, she’d managed to embarrass Adrian Blackwood so thoroughly that his family was still talking about it years later. The memory warmed me. Then, almost instantly, it disappeared. Replaced by another. “You don’t spend years tracking someone you don’t care about.” Ethan’s voice. Followed by Adrian’s. “You weren’t invited because of Victoria.” Then the one sentence that refused to leave me alone. “I can’t answer that.” I groaned quietly into my pillow. “This has to stop.” I said but talking to myself wasn’t help
Ava’s POVIt’s been one week working for him. One week pretending I don’t remember the night we shared. One week of acting like nothing happened when everything changed. And the truth is, pretending is getting harder.Adrian Blackwood doesn’t miss a thing. Not the way my focus slips, not the way I
Adrian’s POVI see her the second she looks up, I recognize her instantly. The woman from the club. Same eyes. Same composure. But this time, there’s no alcohol to soften the edges. No dim lights to blur the details.I don’t break stride as I walk into the room. I can feel the shift around me—conve
Ava's PovMia didn’t say anything at first. She just stared at me from across the kitchen, her fingers wrapped tightly around a mug of coffee that had long gone cold, like she’d forgotten it existed. Her eyes were locked on me—searching, calculating, waiting for me to say something that would make
Ava's PovI thought the sound of laughter coming from our bedroom was the TV I’d forgotten to turn off. But as I pushed the door open, I realized the sound was much deeper, much more intimate, and coming from a man whose voice I didn’t recognize, wrapped in the arms of the man I was supposed to mar







