LOGIN(Keyla POV)
The phone lit up again at 11:47 p.m. Adrian. Again. I’d stopped counting after the sixth call but apparently he hadn’t stopped trying. I looked at the notification without picking it up, and then the message came through underneath it. Come downstairs. Don’t embarrass me. I read it twice to make sure I wasn’t misreading the tone. I wasn’t. Didn’t sound sorry. He sounded inconvenienced. Three words, and somehow they told me everything: don’t embarrass me. Like I was a PR problem he needed to manage before the appetizers got cold. Like the embarrassing thing happening tonight was me, standing in his brother’s suite with a torn veil and no ring, instead of him, half-dressed with another woman an hour before our wedding. I set the phone face down on the table. Draxler hadn’t moved from where he was standing near the window. Since I came back out of the bathroom, he’d kept enough distance for me to breathe and enough presence for me to feel him anyway. I was aware of him the way you’re aware of something that doesn’t make noise but still changes the air pressure. “He wants me to come back down,” I said. “I know.” “He said—” I stopped. It felt humiliating to repeat it out loud. “He’s more worried about the guests than anything else.” Draxler didn’t look surprised. He didn’t look much of anything, which should’ve been irritating but wasn’t. There was something almost steadying about the fact that he wasn’t treating this like a catastrophe that needed managing. He was just — watching. Waiting. “Adrian always cared more about the picture than what was in it,” he said. Just that. No elaboration. I looked at him across the room. I’d spent two years half-afraid of Draxler Churchill and not entirely sure why. Draxler didn’t need to raise his voice to make a room feel smaller. His danger was in the way he noticed things people hoped would stay hidden, and being near him made me feel exposed even when nothing was wrong. It felt worse. “Did you know?” I asked. “About Vivienne.” A pause. Short, but real. “I knew Adrian wasn’t ready to be someone’s husband,” he said. Which wasn’t an answer and also somehow was. I picked up the phone again, not to call anyone — just to turn it completely off. Adrian’s name disappeared. The wedding planner’s texts disappeared. My mother’s three unanswered messages disappeared. The unknown number with its warning disappeared. The screen went black and the room got quieter. “I’m not drunk,” I said. Draxler looked at me. “I want to say that clearly, before anything.” I put the phone down. “I had half a glass of champagne at six o’clock and nothing since. I’m not confused. I’m not in shock. I know exactly where I am and who you are.” Something shifted in his expression — not surprise, more like attention sharpening. “Okay,” he said. “And I want to ask you something.” I crossed the room, not all the way, just enough that I wasn’t shouting across it. “If I stay tonight — do you want me, or do you want to take something from him?” The silence that followed was long enough that I almost regretted asking. Then Draxler set down his glass, and when he spoke his voice was quieter than before. “Those aren’t the same question,” he said. “Answer both.” He held my gaze. “I’ve wanted you since the first time Adrian brought you to a family dinner and you told my mother her centerpieces were beautiful and then spent the rest of the night ignoring them.” A pause. “And yes. Taking something from him is part of it. I’m not going to lie to you about that.” It was the honesty that did it. Not the admission — the honesty. The fact that he didn’t dress it up or hand me a version of the truth that was easier to accept. “Say my name,” I said. He frowned, just slightly. “What?” “Not Adrian’s fiancée. Not the bride. My name.” He understood. I saw it happen. “Keyla,” he said, and the way he said it — low, deliberate, like it meant something — was different from every time Adrian had ever said it. Adrian said my name like punctuation. Draxler said it like he’d thought about it. “One more thing,” I said. “If I say stop, at any point—” “Then we stop.” No hesitation. “Immediately.” I reached up and pulled the remaining pins from my veil. It came loose and I set it on the chair behind me, the torn edge dragging across the armrest. The wedding dress zipper was at the back. I couldn’t reach it alone. I didn’t have to ask. He crossed the room and stopped behind me, close enough that I could feel the warmth of him, and waited. “Still your choice,” he said quietly. “Every step.” “I know,” I said. “That’s why I’m making it.” The zipper whispered down my spine, inch by inch, his knuckles brushing bare skin like he was unwrapping something fragile and forbidden at the same time. Cool air hit my back. Then his breath, warmer, slower, right against the nape of my neck. I shivered hard enough that he noticed. “Keyla.” Again, that voice—rougher now, like my name cost him something. His palm settled flat on my lower back, not pushing, just resting there. Claiming the heat of my skin. The weight of it made my thighs press together. I let the dress fall. Heavy silk pooled at my feet like surrendered armor. Stepping out of it felt like stepping out of the last version of myself that still belonged to Adrian. Naked except for the lace panties I’d chosen this morning thinking I’d wear them for my husband tonight. The irony burned low in my stomach. Draxler’s hands found my waist, turning me slowly to face him. His eyes dragged over me—hungry, but not rushed. Like he was memorizing every tremble, every place my skin flushed under his stare. One thumb traced the underside of my breast, slow, deliberate, and I sucked in a sharp breath when his mouth followed, hot and open, tongue circling my nipple until my knees almost gave out. I grabbed his shoulders, nails digging in. “Don’t be gentle,” I whispered, voice cracking. “Not tonight.” Something dark flickered in his eyes. He lifted me like I weighed nothing, carrying me to the bed and laying me down. His shirt came off in one rough motion. The rest of his clothes followed, revealing the kind of body that spoke of control and restrained violence—broad chest, tight stomach, cock heavy and already leaking at the tip. The sight of it made my mouth go dry with a mix of want and guilt so sharp it hurt. He crawled over me, caging me with his arms. When he kissed me this time it was deeper, slower, like he was trying to drink every sound I made. His hand slid between my legs, finding me soaked, and he groaned against my mouth—low, broken. Two fingers pushed inside me without warning, curling just right, and I arched hard, moaning into him. “Fuck, you’re tight,” he breathed against my throat. “So fucking wet for me already.” I rocked against his hand, chasing the pressure, shame and pleasure twisting together until I couldn’t tell which was which. Every thrust of his fingers reminded me whose brother he was. Every gasp reminded me I was choosing this. He pulled his fingers out, replaced them with the blunt head of his cock, rubbing it against my clit until I was shaking. “Look at me.” I did. Eyes locked, he pushed in—slow, thick, stretching me open in one long stroke that stole my breath. The fullness was overwhelming. Perfect. Wrong in the best way. He stayed buried deep, forehead pressed to mine, breathing ragged. “Say it again,” he demanded quietly, hips barely moving, torturing us both. “Keyla,” I gasped. “I’m Keyla.” He rewarded me with a deep thrust that made stars burst behind my eyes. Then another, and another—harder, faster, the slap of skin and broken moans filling the suite. One hand pinned my wrist above my head, the other gripped my thigh, spreading me wider so he could fuck me deeper. Possessive. Desperate. Like he’d been starving for this longer than he’d ever admit. I came first, clenching around him so hard my vision blurred, his name ripping from my throat like a confession. He followed right after, burying himself to the hilt and spilling inside me with a guttural sound that sounded almost painful. We stayed like that for a long time—sweaty, trembling, his weight pressing me into the mattress. He didn’t pull out immediately. Just kissed my temple, my cheek, the corner of my mouth, like he was afraid the moment would shatter if he moved too fast. Keyla woke at 4:17 a.m. She knew because the hotel clock on the nightstand said so, its numbers pale green in the dark. The curtains weren’t fully closed — a strip of city light cut across the floor near the foot of the bed. Draxler was asleep beside her. On his back, one arm loose at his side, breathing slow and even. His face looked different without the controlled stillness he wore when he was awake. Younger, maybe. Or just — human. She looked at him for a moment longer than she should have, then looked away. The wedding dress was on the chair. The torn veil had slipped to the floor. And there, on the carpet near the nightstand, was his cufflink. Black, small, the letter D engraved into the face of it. It must have come off during the night. She picked it up and it sat heavy in her palm, heavier than something that small should feel. She looked at Draxler again. Still asleep. Keyla got up quietly. Found what she needed. Left the ring where she’d put it the night before — she wasn’t taking that. But the cufflink she closed her fingers around and kept. She didn’t know why. Maybe she would mail it back. Maybe that was only the first lie she needed in order to keep moving — through the elevator, through the grey pre-dawn lobby, and into the first cab she flagged on the street outside. By the time the city was behind her, she’d stopped explaining it to herself. She just held onto it.(Keyla POV) Eleanor had planned this before I arrived. Tea had already been arranged. Not casually — Everything had been placed with intention. Quiet enough that every word would stay between us, the small sitting room on the first floor, curtains half-drawn against the grey afternoon, a porcelain service on the low table with two cups already poured, steam still curled from the cups, and a silver spoon laid beside each. She'd already decided how this conversation was supposed to happen that Keyla would sit across from her and they would have the conversation Eleanor had been working toward since yesterday. I didn't even reach for the chair. I took one look at the room. Then I moved to the window instead. Nothing flickered across her face. She carried on anyway and picked up her own cup, crossed her legs, and settled into the chair with the ease of someone for whom the chair had always belonged to her. She waited until I stopped moving. "I thought we might speak privately," she
(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) The article used my wedding photo. It wasn’t a stolen candid or some blurry shot from across the street. It was the engagement portrait Adrian’s family had commissioned six months ago and handed to the press themselves. Me in a cream dress, hair done, smiling at something off-camera.
(Keyla POV) “She boarded,” Marcus said from the doorway. “Twenty minutes ago. Flight’s in the air.” He stood in the doorway of the temporary office I’d taken over on the hotel’s executive floor. The room smelled of stale coffee, carpet cleaner, and decisions made by people who never had to clea
(Keyla POV) I saw him before Nora did. Dark suit. No luggage. He stood near a pillar at the far end of the check-in hall, close enough to watch every line without belonging to any of them.The pin on his lapel was small, a flat silver disc most people would miss. I didn’t. I had spent two years a
(Keyla POV) Nora found the post before I did. She had been watching both phones while I showered. Nora’s apartment was small enough for me to hear the kettle clicking and her fingers moving over the keyboard from the bathroom. When I came out with wet hair and one of her old T-shirts, she hel







