LOGINThe meeting was set for seven o'clock. By six forty-five, the entire thirty-second floor of Blackwood Tower had been cleared of everyone except Marcus, two lawyers whose names I had already forgotten, and a security operative who stood just inside the elevator bay with the stillness of a man who had hurt people professionally and felt no particular way about it.I was not supposed to be there.Killian had told me, with the same quiet authority he used for all his commands, to rest. He had said the word in the way wealthy men say words they consider final—gently, as one might tell a child the stove was hot. Rest, Evelyn. As if I were a piece of expensive machinery he was placing in storage until he needed it again.I had nodded. I had gone to the guest room. I had looked at the city sprawling forty floors below and felt the blue diamond press cold and heavy against my finger.Then I had put on the soft grey cashmere blazer hanging in the wardrobe, smoothed my hair, and taken the privat
The echo of the heavy bronze doors sealing behind us lingered in my chest long after we bypassed the courthouse corridors. Killian’s security team had cleared a private path through the building’s secure lower levels, leading us straight back to the subterranean garage. Within minutes, the roar of the media storm was replaced by the low, smooth hum of the SUV’s engine as we tore away from the plaza.I stared down at my left hand. The blue diamond caught the dim artificial lights of the passing tunnels, casting fractured, cold glints across the leather interior. It felt heavy. Too heavy."You're very quiet," Killian observed from the seat beside me. He had already unbuttoned his vest, loosening his silk tie with a practiced, casual elegance that contrasted sharply with the calculated violence of his public display."You blindsided me," I said, my voice barely louder than the hum of the tires. "And you blindsided Julian. You turned a legal battle into a public spectacle.""Julian chose
The flashbulbs were a blinding, synchronized assault. Even behind the dark designer sunglasses Killian’s team had provided, the light pierced through, turning the world into a fractured blur of white and grey.The steps of the state courthouse were swarming. Dozens of reporters, camera crews, and curious onlookers had choked the plaza, tipped off by a single, untraceable press release from Blackwood Industries. Julian’s media spin had been masterful—painting himself as the devastated patriarch whose pregnant wife had been torn from their home—but Killian was about to hijack the narrative completely."Stay close, Little Bird," Killian’s voice was a low, steady anchor over the rising din of the crowd.His large hand was firmly planted on the small of my back, guiding me through the sea of lenses. He wore a dark, impeccably tailored three-piece suit, looking less like a man defending himself against a kidnapping charge and more like a monarch reclaiming his territory.As we reached the b
The sun did not rise over the city; it merely bled through the smog, casting long, sickly shadows across the polished concrete floor of Killian’s penthouse. I hadn't slept. Every time I closed my eyes, I heard the heavy click of the locks at the Vance estate, or worse, the triumphant, terrifying rumble of Killian’s voice as he laid claim to the child inside me.By 8:00 AM, the glass fortress was buzzing with quiet, lethal activity. Killian’s security team moved like ghosts in tailored suits, checking monitors and whispered updates into their earpieces.I sat at the massive kitchen island, a mug of herbal tea growing cold between my palms. I was wearing a soft, oversized cashmere sweater his staff had provided—it felt like a plush armor, hiding the flat stomach that had suddenly become the most dangerous piece of territory in the city.Killian walked into the room, his phone pressed to his ear. He had already discarded his jacket, his white shirt crisp, the sleeves rolled up to reveal
The silence of the Vance mansion was a suffocating shroud. I moved through the darkened hallway with my breath held tight in my chest, every creak of the floorboards sounding like a thunderclap in the dead of night. I carried nothing but a small silk clutch containing my passport, the grainy ultrasound photo, and the burner phone Killian’s man had slipped into my hand during the chaos of the gala’s end.I didn't take the diamonds. I didn't take the designer clothes. Those were the chains Julian had used to tether me to his sinking ship, and I wanted to leave them behind like a molted skin.As I reached the grand staircase, I paused, looking toward the heavy oak doors of the master suite. Behind them, Julian was dead to the world, blissfully unaware that the "trophy" he had so carelessly traded was walking out of his life forever. A week ago, the thought of leaving would have terrified me. Tonight, staying was the only thing that felt like death.I slipped out the service entrance, the
The scent of gardenias and expensive champagne usually made me feel like royalty. Tonight, it smelled like a funeral.The Grand Crystal Gala was the social event of the year, a sea of silk, lace, and hidden identities. Every guest was required to wear a mask—a fitting requirement for a room full of people who spent their lives lying to one another. Julian had insisted on a theme of "Gold and Shadow." He looked striking in his tailored tuxedo, his face partially obscured by a mask of burnished gold leaf. He looked like a god. He acted like a king.I, however, felt like a ghost draped in silver. My dress was a custom-made column of shimmering sequins that clung to every curve, cinched at the waist by a delicate diamond belt. My mask was a filigree of silver wire that felt like cold claws against my temples."Smile, Evelyn," Julian murmured, his hand tightening on my waist as we stepped into the ballroom. His grip was firm, a silent command for me to play the part of the devoted, happy w
The first light of morning was not a herald of hope; it was a cold, grey blade cutting through the heavy velvet curtains of Killian Blackwood’s master suite. I lay perfectly still, my eyes tracing the intricate carvings on the ceiling, afraid that if I moved, the fragile glass of my reality would s
The rain lashed against the panoramic windows of the Vance estate, mirroring the storm brewing in my chest. I stood before the full-length mirror, smoothing the emerald silk of a dress that cost more than my father’s medical bills for a year. It was backless, dangerous, and utterly unlike me."You







