LOGINThe envelope was in my hand when I heard the front door.
I didn't move. I stood in the hallway with the investigator's package pressed against my palm and listened to his footsteps cross the foyer, slow and deliberate, the way Darius moved when he already knew something and was deciding how to use it. I had learned that particular rhythm over three years. The measured pace of a man who never needed to rush because rooms rearranged themselves around him before he arrived. He appeared in the doorway. His eyes found the envelope immediately, the way they always found the thing in a room he most wanted to control. "Give me that." I took a step back. "No." Something shifted in his expression. Not surprise exactly, more like recalibration, the slight adjustment of someone who has encountered an unexpected variable. In three years of marriage I had never once said no to him directly. I had softened things, redirected things, swallowed things whole and smiled while doing it. The word sat between us now, small and irreversible, and I watched him decide what to do with it. He crossed the room. I moved back again, keeping the distance, keeping the envelope behind me, pressed to the small of my back. "Brynn." His voice had that particular flatness, the one that used to make me apologize before I even fully understood what I'd done. "Don't make this embarrassing for yourself." "For myself," I repeated. "Right." He reached for it. I pulled back sharply and we were suddenly in something ugly, his hand closing around the edge of the envelope, my grip locked on the other end, both of us holding on with the specific stubbornness of people who understand that this moment means something beyond the object itself. Three years of distance and contempt and careful cruelty, and it had come down to both of us holding either end of a manila envelope in a hallway. The envelope tore. He got the bulk of it. The outer pages, the cover letter, the summary the investigator had prepared for easy reading. In the half-second of the struggle I had pressed the key document flat against my ribs beneath my jacket, a single folded page, the one that held the witness statements and the timestamped footage location and the financial records that showed Cassia had been planning her disappearance for months before that hiking trip. He didn't notice. He was already scanning what he'd taken with the practiced speed of a man accustomed to reading things he intends to make disappear. He set the pages down on the side table without a word and reached into his jacket pocket for his lighter. I watched the paper catch. I watched three years of someone else's careful, patient work curl and blacken and turn to nothing in a brass dish. The smell of it reached me, sharp and acrid, and I thought about the investigator sitting in that café, about the months of work those pages represented, about every door that had just been closed. I kept my face very still. "The divorce papers were filed this morning," Darius said, without looking at me. "My lawyer will be in touch about the remaining details." The remaining details. As though our marriage was an agenda item with a few outstanding action points to be resolved before the project could be closed. I looked at him. At the clean line of his jaw and the expensive cut of his suit and the complete, total, untroubled absence of guilt in his posture. He stood in the light from the hallway lamp and looked like a man who had done nothing wrong, and I understood then that he genuinely believed that. That in the version of events he carried, he was the wronged party in all of it. "Is she worth it?" I asked. He looked at me. "All of it. Everything you burned down to get here. Is she worth what it cost?" I held his gaze. "I want to know if you even asked yourself that. Once. Before any of it." He didn't answer. I watched him search for something to say and find nothing, watched the silence expand between us until it had its own weight, its own shape, until it became more honest than anything he could have offered. The absence of an answer was the answer. He had never asked himself that question because questions like that required a kind of accounting he had never applied to his own choices. I picked up my bag from where I had set it on the floor. I walked past him into the hallway. My hand found the door handle. The document was still pressed against my ribs, warm from my skin, the last surviving piece of evidence that the truth had ever existed at all. It wasn't enough to clear my name. It probably never would be now. But it was mine, and I was keeping it, and I was leaving, and neither of those things required his permission. I opened the door and walked out of my own house without looking back.Madame Loretto's cane tapped against the floor.Tap. Tap. Tap.Ava remained in third position in the center of the studio, arms extended, while the other dancers moved toward the barres along the walls. The afternoon light filtered through tall windows, illuminating dust and the accumulated residue of rosin and sweat. The air tasted like pine and exhaustion.Tap. Tap. Tap."Your landing, Ms. Chen." Madame Loretto didn't raise her voice. Her voice never rose. That was what made it worse. "The fouetté itself was adequate, your extension acceptable. But the landing." She tapped her cane once more against the hardwood. "The landing was imprecise."Ava kept her arms in position. Her muscles were screaming. Lactic acid burned through her calves and thighs, the kind of burn that came from six hours of repetition, six hours of trying to perfect something that still wasn't perfect."Odette does not tolerate imprecision," Madame Loretto said. "You will remember this when you perform the role, i
I fell asleep at my desk again.I knew it even before I fully woke up, the way your neck tells you before your brain catches up, that dull ache spreading from the base of my skull down between my shoulder blades. My cheek was pressed against the corner of a fabric swatch book, and the imprint of it was probably going to stay on my face for the next twenty minutes. I'd knocked over my pencil cup at some point and a dozen colored pencils had rolled across the blueprints I'd been trying to finish since eleven.It was past two in the morning. The loft was quiet except for the hum of the city seven floors below, that low constant sound that Los Angeles never fully turned off, and the desk lamp I'd forgotten to angle away from my eyes was throwing a warm yellow circle across the scattered fabric samples and paint chips and almost empty coffee mug that had been full when I sat down.I didn't move yet.I knew what was waiting in that place just before full waking, the tail end of the dream I'
Project R4 C1-C6Chapter 1 She Couldn't Be PregnantLin Shiyan pushed open the door to the private room and went in. She saw Feng Xingzhi sitting lazily on the sofa, with a young and charming girl nestled softly in his arms.When the girl saw Lin Shiyan walk in, she grabbed a document and threw it at her, saying arrogantly, "I'm three months pregnant, and I've already had the fetal sex determined at the hospital. It's a boy. Lin Shiyan, if you know what's good for you, you should take the initiative to divorce me."Lin Shiyan grabbed the test results and glanced at them; she was indeed pregnant."Let's go," Lin Shiyan said to the young woman. "It's still early; we can still go to the hospital for an abortion.""Lin Shiyan, you are incredibly audacious! How dare you abort the eldest grandson of the Feng family!" The woman's expression changed drastically. She stood up abruptly and slapped Lin Shiyan.Lin Shiyan grabbed the woman's wrist and forcefully flung her away.Looking at
The soap burned the small cut on my knuckle as I scrubbed the last plate in the massive pile the household staff had deliberately left for me.Three years of this and you’d think I’d be used to it by now, but the casual cruelty still managed to sting in ways I didn’t want to examine too closely.I rinsed the plate and set it carefully in the drying rack, my hands moving with the efficiency of someone who’d done this hundreds of times before, then dried my hands and headed upstairs to tackle the next task on my invisible list of duties.Aurelia’s laundry sat in a delicate heap on our bedroom floor, silks and cashmeres that required hand washing because the dry cleaners could never get them quite right according to her exacting standards.I filled the basin with cool water and special detergent, working the fabric gently between my fingers while my mind drifted to the dinner I’d planned for tonight.Today was our anniversary. Three years since her grandfather had asked me to marry into
“You’re hurt.” He says walking up to me.“It’s just a scratch,” I told myself to be unfazed that he just fought off three men without even shifting to his wolf form, but I couldn’t help being impressed.He takes my forearm to examine the back of it where the bastard had attacked me from behind. Once again I was affected by him. He stood so close to me I could see the flecks of green in his amber eyes, his proximity had my thoughts in shambles.“I’m fine.” I swallowed nervously and tried to pull away but his grip was firm. I’ve never been so aware of anyone like this and it scared the shit out of me.“So much for being able to take care of yourself.”He said referring to what I said to him the first time we met and I reddened.I barely noticed when he pulled out a handkerchief from his pocket and used it to stifle the bleeding. I was still high on adrenaline and this wasn’t my first time being beaten up so I was able to marginally keep it together when he tied the handkerchief around m
She was awake at the crack of dawn, earlier than he usually woke up for his prayers. She searched, all her bags, every inch of her room even under her bed, as though she might have sleep walked and kept it there.After turning her room insude out she went out to the car, creeping like a thief in the darkness.She rummaged through the seats praying she hadn’t left it in her apartment, but it wasn’t there. She opened the boot of the car and saw a brown package there.She knew that couldn’t be it because it wasn’t wrapped but deeperatioj made her tear it open.She stepped back when red fabric fell to the good of the car.She picked it up what seems to be a garter and unfolded the rest of it.Lingerie. Her husband’s possibly ex paramour gifted her lingerie. Huh.She gave up the search making a mental note to call her former landlord the next day and went back to sleep.When she wone up, It was as if the previous events had never happened, if there wasn’t a missing plate in the set of 12
Darius’s POV I paid attention. That was the thing Brynn didn’t seem to realize, the detail she’d either forgotten or never known about me in the first place. I had always been capable of paying attention, of noticing details and patterns and the small tells that revealed what people really wanted
Brynn pov Two or three evenings a week, sometimes at his place after I’d dropped the twins at the hotel with Seth, sometimes at mine during the rare nights they stayed with my parents. Sometimes I stayed until morning, slipping out before dawn to make it back in time for the twins’ breakfast routi
Darius pov. She said she wanted my opinion on something important but we both know that was just an excuse to come to my place. We were in the kitchen. She had been helping Jake with a school project earlier in the evening, something about ecosystems again, and the remnants of it were still on the
Brynn povI stared at the name for a long moment.I answered because I wanted to know what angle was coming. That was the honest reason. There was a version of not answering that felt like protection and a version that felt like avoidance and I had committed to telling the difference between those







