تسجيل الدخولCarmen’s POV
I called Mirabel at seven in the morning, three days after she left my apartment. Elena's surgeon had already called twice about the outstanding balance on her post-op care, politely the first time, less so the second. Mateo's academy fees were due at the end of the month and I had already moved money around twice to cover the last one. There were no more corners to cut. There was no freelance job I could pick up in time, no loan I could qualify for without a cosigner, no version of the next six weeks where I looked at all three of those things at once and found a way through without help.
I sat on the edge of my bed with my phone in my hand for ten minutes before I dialled. I thought about every single thing I hated about Mirabel's proposal and what it would mean to say yes to it, and then I thought about Mateo being told his placement had been pulled, and I pressed the call button.
Mirabel picked the call on the second ring.
"I'll do it," I said.
A beat of silence. Then: "I knew you'd come around."
"I have conditions."
"Of course you do." I could hear the smile in it, the warmth she reserved for moments when she had already won. "Tell me your conditions, Carmen."
"Everything you promised. Tuition, Elena's bills, Mateo's fees. All of it confirmed before Friday, not after. I'm not walking into that nightclub on the assumption that you'll follow through."
"Done."
"And you don't contact me again after this. Whatever comes next for your career, you handle it without involving me."
Another beat. "Agreed."
She told me to come to her apartment Friday afternoon so she could prepare me for the club in the evening. She would handle everything else in the meantime, which I understood to mean she would verify the payments and I would verify the receipts before I put on a single item she handed me. We said goodbye without warmth and I put the phone down on the bed beside me and sat there for a while, looking at nothing in particular, listening to the building settle around me. I had said yes. That was the thing I had to live with now.
I told Antonia that afternoon because I could not afford to not involve her. She was the only person whose reaction I could take honestly without it making everything worse, and sitting alone with what I had agreed to felt like a slow erosion. She listened to all of it without interrupting, which was unusual for Antonia, who was not typically a silent listener.
When I finished she didn't put her coffee cup down gently. She set it on the table hard enough that the liquid sloshed over the rim.
"Absolutely not!" She said.
"Antonia..."
"No. Carmen, no. Are you hearing yourself right now? Your half-sister, who shares a father with you and has never once done a single thing for you out of kindness, is asking you to go to a nightclub and seduce a stranger and sleep with him so she can steal his professional connection? And she threatened your mother's surgery to make you agree? She threatened Mateo?"
"Yes."
"That's blackmail. That is actual blackmail. You need to go to the police."
"And tell them what? My half-sister said she wouldn't help pay for my mother's medical bills unless I did her a favour? That's not how it works. She's not withholding something she's legally obligated to give. She offered money and attached conditions. The police will tell me it's a family dispute."
"Then we go to the university. We explain the situation with your fees. We ask for an extension, a payment plan, something."
"I've already asked. Twice. The deadline is the deadline. They've been clear about it."
"What about a loan?"
"I can't qualify without a cosigner and Elena's credit is destroyed from the medical bills."
"Crowdfunding. I'll put it on my I*******m. My followers..."
"Antonia, your followers are fashion students and emerging designers. I love them. They are not going to crowdfund thirty thousand euros in six weeks."
She went quiet. I watched her cycling through options the same way I had cycled through them for seventy-two hours, watching each one arrive and collapse.
"What about Mateo's coach?" she said. "If Mirabel tries to pull his academy funding, his coach could advocate for him. Get a scholarship, a sponsorship, something."
"Maybe. Eventually. But not by the end of the month, which is when the fees are due. And if the fees aren't paid, the placement is gone. There's a waiting list. They'll give his spot to someone else the same week."
"This is insane, Carmen."
"I know it's insane."
"Mirabel is such a bitch for involving you in this. She is manipulative, scheming, selfish..." Antonia said several more things about Mirabel in rapid Spanish that were all accurate. She pulled out her phone like she was about to call someone, thought better of it, put it down, picked up her coffee, put it down again.
"Damn it," she said.
The silence that followed was different from the angry silence before it. This one was heavy with the weight of two people arriving at the same conclusion from opposite directions. There was no other option. We both knew it. Antonia had just needed to walk through every alternative herself before she could accept it.
She sighed and looked at me for a long time.
"I am sorry this is happening to you," she said quietly. "If you change your mind before Friday, at any point, please do. I mean that. But if you go through with it, then you need to walk in there and be completely sure of yourself. Not performing, you need to actually be sure."
I thought about that for the rest of the day.
Mirabel's apartment was in Salamanca, on a street where the buildings were old and the lobbies were very clean. Everything about the exterior was designed to communicate an arrival of a kind. I rang the buzzer and she let me up.
She opened the door already dressed, hair up, her own makeup done to something approaching perfection. She looked me over once and stepped back to let me through. Her bedroom had been converted into a staging area, the way she had laid things out across the bed with a precision that told me she had been planning this for longer than three days. A dress in deep emerald green, cut in a completely simple design. Shoes beside it. A small clutch. A velvet bag on the side table that I assumed held jewellery. Everything arranged with the focused attention she brought to things she cared about enough to do properly.
"Sit," she said, and directed me to the vanity.
I sat.
What happened over the next two hours was Mirabel being more thorough than I had expected. She did my hair herself, which surprised me, and she did it well. She did my makeup with the focus of someone who knew exactly what she was trying to achieve, which was to make me look like the best version of a face she had decided was workable.
I watched my reflection change over those two hours and tried to stay neutral about what I was seeing. She was good at this. The woman looking back at me from the mirror when she finished was still me, but she was a version of me that the last year of early mornings and deliberate choices had been building toward. The figure the dress revealed when I put it on was the figure I had worked for without ever letting myself fully acknowledge what I was working toward.
The emerald green sat against my skin exactly as Mirabel had known it would.
I looked in the full-length mirror on the back of her wardrobe door and thought, briefly and despite everything I felt about this situation, that Russell James had been wrong about a lot of things.
Mirabel came to stand beside me in the reflection. Neither of us spoke for a moment.
"Connor Vega," she said, and held out her phone.
The photograph was a man in his mid-thirties with brown hair worn slightly longer than most, a jawline well defined. He was caught mid-turn toward the camera. I stared at it long enough to be sure I had it.
"He'll be in the VVIP section," Mirabel said. "He goes to Noche every other Friday and always takes the same section because he's known the club manager for years. Dark brown hair, always wears something dark, talks to people like he's doing them a favour." She took the phone back. "Don't overthink it. Just find him."
"And when I do?"
"Be sexy," she said, as though it were the most obvious thing in the world.
I looked at her.
"I mean it. Connor Vega does not suffer boring women. He has too many options for that." She sat down on the edge of the bed and crossed her legs. "You don't go in there and wait for him to notice you. You make him notice you."
"I understand the concept."
She ignored that. "Don't face him directly when you first see him. Let him catch you from the side. Men like him are used to women who come straight at them, it doesn't register anymore. You want him to see something he has to turn toward." She tilted her head. "And when he does come over, which he will, you don't give him everything at once. You listen more than you talk. Ask him something about himself and then actually look interested in the answer. That could make you different from the other girls he is used to"
"Mirabel."
"He always has women around him," she continued, as though I hadn't just spoken. "That's just who he is. So you can't play the same game they're playing because you'll lose. You have to make him feel like you're not playing at all. Like you happened to him." She stood up and smoothed her dress. "Can you do that?"
"Yes."
She studied me for a moment, then handed me the clutch. Inside the clutch was a pass for the VVIP entrance, enough cash to cover a drink I'd never finish, and a small slip with a number to call the moment I had confirmed the situation.
"You better not mess this up," she said.
I picked up the clutch and left.
The cab ride lasted twenty minutes. I spent most of it watching the city move past the window. Friday night traffic, restaurants with their outdoor tables still full this late. Noche was on the ground floor and basement of a building in the kind of neighbourhood where you needed to already know where you were going. It had a small sign. There were two hefty bouncers standing by the door. A line to the left that moved slowly, full of people who were dressed well enough but still waiting. I walked to the door, not the line, the way Mirabel had told me to, and showed the pass to one of the bouncers.
The man looked at it, looked at me, and stepped aside. The second bouncer, the one who had been looking elsewhere, turned at the small movement and looked at me as I passed. I kept walking.
Inside, the music was low and textured. The lighting was dim but not dark, the calibrated kind that made everyone look like a slightly better version of themselves. The main bar ran along the far wall, backlit and busy. Tables sat in curved arrangements in the middle. To the right, slightly raised and separated by a velvet rope, was the VVIP section.
I moved through the room without rushing. I took in the space the way I usually took in architecture. The VVIP section had six or seven tables, maybe thirty people across the whole space, small groups arranged for privacy. I found a spot at the bar where I could see the section without looking like I was watching it. A glass of water appeared in front of me without my asking. I began to look.
“Connor Vega, where…. are… you….?” I whispered gently.
I found him near the back of the section, seated with two other people, leaning in to hear something one of them was saying. I could only see his profile from where I was. I noticed the brown hair and the dark jacket. That was Connor Vega. But I wondered why he didn’t have women surrounding him like Mirabel had described.
“Perhaps, he just arrived? They’d surround him in no time.” I took this as an opportunity to immediately pull his attention and get him out of the club.
The bartender appeared. "Can I get you something?"
I turned from the section and said, "Something light. Surprise me."
He nodded and got to work. I settled onto the bar stool. My hands became still. I had found the man I was looking for. The next part of the evening could begin. I was not going to think about the thing sitting
underneath the stillness. I picked up the drink when it came and waited.
Andre's POV"Sir, the internet is in chaos and they are calling you a womanizer after last night's kiss."I sat up in bed so fast the sheets came with me. "What?"That was Victor Salazar, my PR manager, calling at 7:15 in the morning. Victor did not exist before nine unless something had gone public and his definition of "gone public" was limited to things that threatened money, reputation, or both."There are photographs from the gala," he continued, his voice carrying the clipped urgency of a man who had already been awake for hours. "You kissing an unidentified woman, along with a video from the red carpet that has gone viral. Both pieces of content are trending nationally and gaining international traction. I just got off a call with your agent."I was still half asleep, still thinking about the kiss, about Carmen's mouth on mine, about the way she had gripped my shoulder like I was the only thing keeping her upright. The words "womanizer" and "viral" were fighting for space in my
Russell James was eating lunch in the Merseyside FC canteen when Gareth slid into the seat across from him with his phone face-up on the table and a grin that immediately told Russell he was about to see something he didn't want to see."Have you seen this?"Russell glanced at the screen and stopped chewing. The photograph loaded in full resolution and his brain identified the woman before it processed anything else about the image. Andre Fernandez's back to the camera, broad shoulders in a dark suit, and pressed against the wall in front of him, her hand gripping the fabric at his shoulder, her face visible over his shoulder with her eyes closed and her lips parted, was Carmen.Carmen Lopez. His Carmen. The girl he had dated for two years. The girl he had left standing in a hallway in Liverpool after saying things he still couldn't think about without his stomach turning."Mental, right?" Gareth said through a mouthful of pasta, completely unaware that he had just detonated a bomb at
Carmen's POVSeventeen notifications were waiting on my phone when I opened my eyes at 6:47 on a Sunday morning, which was fourteen more than I had ever received in a single night and that immediately told me something had gone very wrong or very public or both.I blinked at the screen. Instagram, Twitter, WhatsApp, three missed calls from numbers I didn't recognise, two from Antonia, one from Mateo, one from mum. My stomach tightened before I even opened anything because that combination of people trying to reach me at the same time had never happened before and could not mean anything good.I opened Instagram first and the first thing I saw was my own face staring back at me from a gossip account with 3.2 million followers.The photograph was clear and sharp and intimate and undeniable. Andre's back to the camera, broad shoulders in the dark suit, my hand gripping the fabric at his shoulder, his hand on my waist pulling me close, my face visible over his shoulder with my eyes closed
Carmen's POVThe eye contact across the room had lasted maybe two seconds and it had rattled me so badly that I was now standing on a terrace in the cool night air trying to remember how breathing worked.One second I was sitting at my table with my wine, minding my own business, pretending to be a normal person at a normal party. The next second I looked up and Andre Fernandez was looking directly at me from across the room and every nerve in my body fired at once. I looked away first because looking at him felt like staring into the sun and I was not equipped for the damage that kind of sustained eye contact would do to my decision-making.After that I spent an hour pretending he didn't exist while being aware of his exact position at every moment, which was exhausting and pointless and made me feel like a woman slowly losing a war she had started with herself. When that sponsor put his hand on mine and leaned in to tell me about his company's architecture division, I could feel And
Andre's POVDiego was in the middle of telling me about a new restaurant in Malasaña when I lost the ability to hear him, or anyone else, or anything at all, because Carmen had just stepped onto the red carpet twenty metres away in a butter yellow dress that made the rest of the evening irrelevant.I was standing outside the venue with Diego, Alejandro, and Jadon, drink in hand, mid-conversation about something I would never remember. She appeared at the far end of the carpet and my mouth stopped working. It just stopped, mid-word. I literally felt cold water being poured on my skin. My drink stayed raised halfway to my mouth because my arm had forgotten it was holding anything.She was walking slowly, chin up, shoulders back, the dress moving fluidly with her body, making every photographer on that carpet lean forward. The butter yellow glowed warm against her skin under the venue lights, and her hair was pinned up in a way that showed her neck and her jawline and I wanted to put my
Carmen's POV"Carmen! Carmen! Carmen! Pick up the phone! Oh my God!"That was the voicemail Antonia left at 8:47am on a Thursday, which was alarming because Antonia before ten in the morning was like a cat in water, miserable and hostile and not to be approached. Whatever had happened was big enough to override her biological clock.I called her back."The Meridian Gala!" she screamed before I could say hello. "One of my styling clients just pulled an invite for me. Plus one. Saturday night. Carmen, do you understand what this means?""Good morning to you too.""This is the fashion and media industry event of the season. Every photographer in Madrid will be there. Designers, editors, stylists, press. And there is a red carpet. A red carpet, Carmen!""That's great for you.""That's great for us. Because you are coming with me and you are wearing the butter yellow dress."The butter yellow dress was Antonia's masterpiece. Three months she had spent on it, cutting and re-cutting the patt







