LOGIN(Keyla POV)
The door opened before I could decide whether to knock. Draxler Churchill stood in the frame, jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow, a glass of whiskey in one hand that he hadn’t touched recently enough for the ice to melt. He looked at me the way people look at things they were half-expecting — not surprised, just confirming. I took a step back. The heel of my shoe caught the carpet. “Wrong floor,” I said. He didn’t move. His eyes moved from my bare hand to the torn edge of my veil, then finally to my face. It didn’t feel like scanning. It felt like cataloguing the damage. “The elevator’s behind you,” he said. His voice was low, quiet in the way a room gets quiet when something’s about to be decided. “I know where the elevator is.” I held up the keycard. “I grabbed this by accident. I’ll go.” He looked at the keycard. Something moved across his face that I couldn’t read, and he didn’t reach for it. “Keyla.” Just my name. He looked at me once and seemed to understand more than I wanted him to. In the two years I’d been with Adrian, I’d met Draxler only four times — across family dinners and one Churchill company event where I’d been brought along like a prop. Unkind was never the word for him, but neither was welcoming, which at the time I’d taken as arrogance. Now I wasn’t sure what it was. “Don’t ask me anything,” I said. Instead, he stepped back from the door and left it open. I knew I shouldn’t have gone in, but the corridor was exposed — camera dome at each end, anyone from the family could come up at any second — and my dress was white and enormous, about as subtle as a headline. The alternative was standing in a Churchill hotel hallway looking exactly like what I was: a bride who’d just seen something she couldn’t unsee. The suite was quieter than the corridor. Darker, too — one lamp on, his jacket over the back of a chair, a folder of documents on the table that he’d clearly been working through before I arrived. The whiskey glass sat on the edge of a side table, the ice still intact. Untouched since he’d poured it. I stopped near the door and didn’t go further. “Bathroom,” I said. “Two minutes. I need to fix my face before I go back downstairs.” He gestured toward the hallway on his left without a word. I went in, closed the door, and looked at myself in the mirror under the bathroom lights. Mascara still intact, which was almost funny. I looked completely fine on the surface. Dress perfect, hair still pinned, veil just slightly wrecked at the edge where it had caught. Nobody downstairs would know anything was wrong if I walked back in there right now and smiled. That thought made me feel sick. My phone started going off in my hand. Adrian’s name came first, three times in a row, followed by the wedding coordinator: Keyla, guests are seated, we need you at the top of the stairs in ten minutes. My mother was next: Sweetheart, is everything alright? Your father is asking. I stared at the screen. Then one more message, different number. Unknown. The kind of format that looked internal — no name, just a string of digits that didn’t belong to any contact. If you go downstairs, they will blame you first. I read it twice. Then I walked back out of the bathroom. Draxler was standing near the window, not looking at me. His cufflinks caught the low light — black, simple, a small D engraved on each one. He turned when he heard me come back in. I held out my phone. “Someone just sent me this.” He looked at the screen. His expression didn’t change much, but something in his posture did — a small, precise stillness, like a person who recognizes something they weren’t expecting to see in someone else’s hand. “Don’t answer it,” he said. “Do you know who—” “Don’t answer it.” He handed the phone back. His fingers didn’t touch mine. “And don’t go downstairs yet.” “I have to. The ceremony—” “Is not happening.” He said it simply, like it was already fact. Like he’d known it before I had. “Not tonight.” I looked at him. He was watching me with that same unreadable expression, calm in a way that didn’t feel like peace — more like someone who’d already run the calculations and was waiting for everyone else to catch up. It made me want to ask how long he’d known about Adrian and Vivienne. It made me not want to know the answer. “I’m not staying here,” I said. “I know.” “And I’m not going to—” “I’m not asking you to do anything.” He picked up his whiskey, finally, and took a short drink. Set it back down. “I’m telling you that if you walk out of this building right now, in that dress, with no ring and a half-torn veil, the story they build around you will follow you for years. That’s not a threat. That’s just how this family works.” My hands were shaking. I noticed them finally, now that he’d said it out loud — the thing I’d been holding back since the moment I walked out of Adrian’s suite. “So what am I supposed to do,” I said, though the question wasn’t really for him. Maybe it wasn’t for anyone. Draxler set the glass down and looked at me for a long moment. “If you want revenge,” he said, “don’t go back downstairs as his bride.” “What does that mean?” He reached past me and pushed the suite door open wider, leaving space between us while making the choice impossible to ignore. “Stay,” he said. The word hung between us like smoke. Thick and heavy. I should’ve walked out right then. Instead I let the door click shut behind me. Draxler didn’t move closer, but the air between us suddenly felt smaller. Without the jacket, he seemed taller than I remembered, broader through the shoulders, the rolled sleeves exposing forearms corded with restraint. His eyes trace traced the line of my neck, the rapid rise and fall of my chest under all that white silk, then back up to my mouth. My pulse hammered so hard I could feel it in my throat. This was wrong. This was Adrian’s older brother. The one who always looked at me like I was temporary. And yet here I was, still in my wedding dress, veil torn, heart shredded, standing in his suite while the man I was supposed to marry waited downstairs with his mistress. “You’re shaking,” he said quietly. Not a question. I looked down at my hands. “I’m angry.” “Good.” The corner of his mouth twitched, not quite a smile. Something darker. “Stay angry.” Wrong didn’t even begin to cover it. Draxler was Adrian’s older brother, the one who had always looked at me like I was temporary. I didn’t. My back hit the wall beside the door before I realized I’d been moving backward. Draxler stopped just inches away, close enough that I could smell the whiskey on his breath and the faint, expensive scent of his cologne—something woody and sharp that made my stomach tighten. His hand lifted, hesitated, then brushed a loose strand of hair from my cheek. The touch was barely there, but it burned. Calloused fingertips against my skin, warm and steady while everything inside me felt like it was fracturing. I hated how good it felt. How desperately I wanted more of it. “Don’t,” I whispered, even as I leaned into his hand. His thumb traced my lower lip, slow, like he was memorizing the shape. “Tell me to stop and I will.” I didn’t tell him to stop. Instead I grabbed the front of his shirt, fingers curling into the crisp fabric, pulling him closer. Our mouths crashed together—messy, desperate, nothing like the careful kisses I’d shared with Adrian. Draxler kissed like a man who’d been waiting for permission he never expected to get. One hand slid into my hair, gripping just hard enough to tilt my head back. The other pressed against my waist, bunching the layers of silk, anchoring me against him. I gasped into his mouth when I felt how hard he already was, the thick line of him pressing against my stomach through his trousers. Heat flooded between my legs, sharp and sudden, shame twisting right alongside the want. This was revenge and grief and need all tangled together, ugly and honest. He broke the kiss only to drag his mouth down my neck, teeth grazing the sensitive spot just below my ear. A low sound escaped me—half moan, half sob. His hand moved lower, palm sliding over the curve of my ass, pulling me tighter against him. “Keyla,” he breathed against my skin, voice rough, almost broken. “You have no fucking idea what you’re doing to me right now.” I could feel the control he was fighting for—the way his fingers trembled slightly where they gripped me, the way his breath hitched when I rolled my hips against him experimentally. My hands moved on their own, sliding under his shirt, nails dragging over warm skin and tight muscle. He shuddered. We were still fully dressed. My ridiculous wedding gown crushed between us, his shirt half-unbuttoned now from my frantic fingers. But it already felt more intimate than anything I’d ever done with Adrian. Dangerous. Addictive. Draxler pulled back just enough to look at me, eyes dark, pupils blown wide. His thumb wiped a tear I didn’t realize had fallen from my cheek. “You can still walk away,” he said, voice low and strained. “Say the word.” I stared at him—chest heaving, lips swollen, the careful mask he always wore completely shattered. For the first time, I saw the hunger he’d been hiding behind all that cold control. I didn’t say the word. Instead I kissed him again, harder this time, and felt the last thread of his restraint snap.(Keyla POV) Nora appeared beside me without a word and shoved her phone into my hand. "Don't read the comments." Which meant I read them immediately. Of course I did. The article had gone up sometime in the last two hours — I didn't know the outlet, one of those gossip sites pretending to be society news. It hit me before the article did. The names looked fake enough that no one could be held accountable.. The headline was: *Churchill Funeral Draws Unexpected Guest: Runaway Bride Returns — With a Child.* The article wasn't long. It didn't need to be. Every sentence knew exactly where to cut. Somebody had fed them exactly what they needed. It mentioned my name. Then Leo. — not by name, which was the only mercy, but as "the mystery child accompanying Ms. Tamara," enough detail that anyone from today would've recognized him. I dragged my eyes away from the screen. "How long has it been up?" I asked. Nora didn't stop scrolling. "Forty minutes, maybe." She glanced up at me. "I found
(Keyla POV) The smile was already there before she spoke. Vivienne smiled at me like the wedding night had never happened, either she'd forgotten, or she expected me to. I heard her heels before I saw her. She'd found me in the garden corridor during the half hour between meetings — the passage that ran along the back of the house, open to the garden on one side, with windows onto the frost-killed hedgerows and a runner that had been there long enough to show paths in it. More to avoid thinking than because I expected an immediate reply. I'd been checking my phone, waiting for a response from Priscilla about the afternoon's legal schedule. Vivienne appeared from the far end with the unhurried pace of someone who'd timed the encounter. She didn't call my name right away. "Keyla." Warm. Genuinely warm-sounding, which was the thing about Vivienne — She'd always known exactly how much warmth to put into her voice with enough technical accuracy to delay the moment of recognition. Her e
(Keyla POV) I looked up when the shadow stopped outside the door. He found me in the small sitting room off the east corridor, which I'd been using as a base between meetings because it had a door that closed properly and a window that faced the garden rather than the driveway. It was the only room that didn't make me feel like someone was about to walk in. Leo was in the hallway with Nora — Leo's voice drifted in from the hallway before I saw either of them. I could hear him through the wall, asking her something about whether the carpet pattern meant anything. It almost made me smile. The way he asked about most patterns. I'd left the door ajar specifically so I could hear him. As long as I could hear his voice, I could breathe. The door opened before I could call out. Draxler came in without knocking, which told me he'd been waiting for a moment when I was alone. He'd chosen this moment carefully. The paper slid across the table without a sound. He set Augustus's note on the tab
(Draxler POV) The study Holt led us to wasn't Augustus's — I'd only ever been brought here when something was about to change, it was one of the smaller working rooms on the east side of the house, a room that had always felt like a holding space between decisions rather than a place where decisions were made. Two chairs. A writing desk. Outside, the kitchen garden had already begun turning brown along the edges Marcus came in behind me. Holt placed the folder carefully on the desk, "I'll give you some privacy." He excused himself. I couldn't tell whether he was being polite or making sure whatever came next happened without witnesses. Then I opened the folder. The first document was a search report. It was a search report — the one Marcus had commissioned eighteen months ago through the private investigative network we used for sensitive matters. I recognized the layout immediately, the specific layout of the header, the reference numbers in the upper right corner. It had been m
(Keyla POV) I felt the change in the room before I saw where everyone was looking. Not dramatically. It happened quietly enough that someone outside the room might have missed it. But the attention moved, all of it, like water finding the lowest point, and somehow Leo noticed it before I did. He looked up from where he'd been examining the stitching on the arm of his chair and found four adults looking at him, and he did what he always did under unexpected scrutiny: he went very still and looked back. His fingers stopped playing with the stitching. By the time I realized what I was doing, my arm was already around him.. My arm went around him and he came without resistance as if he'd been waiting for permission. I kept my hand on his shoulder while Holt quietly rearranged the documents and the silence settled into something heavier. Holt adjusted the top page before speaking, "To clarify the language," Holt said, "and I should note that this is the limited language I'm authorize
(Keyla POV) Holt glanced once around the room before opening the folder in front of him "Before the will can be read," Holt said, "we must confirm all named parties are present." Nobody answered. A chair creaked somewhere to my left. The room he'd chosen for the preliminary meeting was the small sitting room off the library — which was probably deliberate. Nobody would mistake this room for somewhere people came to win arguments.. There were eight chairs arranged in a loose formation, a side table with water, and no flowers, which made it feel more like a boardroom than a house. The room had been stripped of anything that might soften what was about to happen. Eleanor had arrived first and taken the chair that communicated she'd arrived first. She sat with the quiet certainty of someone who expected everyone else to arrange themselves around her. Adrian was beside her, still performing grief in the slightly overworked way he'd been performing it all morning, the expression too cont
(Keyla POV) Adrian’s statement hit the news Tuesday morning at exactly the hour people were commuting, scrolling, and half-paying attention. Someone had coached him well, because left alone Adrian would have posted something emotional at midnight and regretted it by sunrise. Instead, the statemen
(Keyla POV) Nobody looked at me when I landed. Two weeks earlier, that would not have meant anything to me, but after two weeks of being the Churchill wedding scandal — the unstable bride, the missing woman, the cautionary headline — walking through an arrivals hall where nobody recognized me fel
(Keyla POV) The contractions started at 2 a.m. on a Wednesday, which would have been annoying under any circumstance. Unfortunately, labor did not care about my plans. I called Nora first. It rang six times before going to voicemail, and those six rings scared me more than the contractions had
(Keyla POV) The email was still there in the morning. I had half-expected it to disappear overnight, which was stupid. Emails didn’t disappear just because I was too tired to decide what to do with them. Still, for one second after I opened the laptop, I wished the inbox would be empty— It wasn’t







