LOGINHe sat on a white couch, looking relaxed and handsome in a tailored suit. And beside him, holding his hand—
Cassia. “—so grateful to have her back,” Darius was saying, smiling at her with such warmth it made my chest ache. “I thought I’d lost her forever.” “And what about your wife?” the interviewer asked. “Brynn Haverton?” The smile dropped from Darius’s face. “That,” he said coldly, “will be handled soon.” The café felt too small, too bright and too loud. Everyone was staring at the television now, at Darius and Cassia, the perfect couple, sitting on that white couch like they belonged together, like they’d always belonged together. The interviewer leaned forward, her expression sympathetic. “I can imagine this is a complicated situation. Your wife—Brynn—she must be devastated.” Darius’s jaw tightened. “Brynn and I, our marriage was a mistake from the beginning.” A mistake. “How so?” the interviewer pressed. Darius glanced at Cassia. She gave him the smallest nod, her expression encouraging, supporting him. The way I used to. Before she came back and took my place. “Cassia and I were together before,” Darius explained, his voice steady, certain. “We were in love, planning our future. And then she had an accident, fell off a cliff during a hiking trip. I thought she was dead.” The audience made sympathetic noises. “I was destroyed,” he continued. “Completely broken. And Brynn, she was there, always there.” He made it sound like a bad thing. “She took advantage of my grief,” Darius’s eyes hardened. “Manipulated me when I was vulnerable, convinced me that marrying her would somehow honor Cassia’s memory, that Cassia would have wanted me to move on.” I couldn’t believe the lies he was telling. He had proposed to me, he’d asked me to marry him, I’d never manipulated— “So you married her,” the interviewer said. “I did.” Darius’s voice was full of regret. “And I’ve regretted it every single day since.” “But now,” the interviewer’s tone shifted, becoming hopeful, “Cassia is back, alive. What happens now?” Darius turned to Cassia, and his entire expression softened, became tender, became everything he’d never been with me. “Now,” he said, “I fix my mistake.” He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a small velvet box. No. My hands clutched the edge of the table, knuckles white. Around me, the café erupted in excited whispers. Everyone leaning closer to the screen, everyone watching. Everyone except me wanting this to happen. “Cassia Moreau,” Darius said, his voice thick with emotion, with love. “I should have done this three years ago, I should have married you instead of—” He didn’t even say my name, just stopped, like I wasn’t worth mentioning. “I love you,” he continued. “I’ve always loved you, only you. And now that you’re back, I don’t want to waste another moment.” He opened the box. Inside was a ring, a massive diamond that caught the studio lights and threw rainbows across the screen. I knew that ring. I’d seen it two years ago in a jewelry store window, had stopped and stared at it, mesmerized by its beauty. Had shyly mentioned it to Darius on our anniversary, hoping, praying that maybe he’d surprise me with it. He’d looked at me with such disgust. “You?” he’d laughed. “You’re not worthy of something that beautiful, Brynn. That ring is for someone special, someone who deserves it.” Someone like Cassia. The camera zoomed in as Darius slid off the couch and knelt on the floor, knelt in front of Cassia, in front of the whole world. “Will you marry me?” he asked. The studio fell silent. Cassia’s hands flew to her mouth, tears streaming down her perfect face. “Darius…” “Say yes,” someone in the café whispered. “She has to say yes,” another person agreed. I sat frozen, unable to move, unable to breathe, unable to do anything but watch. “Yes,” Cassia whispered. Then louder: “Yes! Yes, a thousand times yes!” The studio erupted in applause and the café erupted in cheers. Darius slipped the ring onto her finger—my ring, the one I’d never been worthy of—and pulled her into his arms. “Oh my God, that was beautiful!” the woman at the table next to me gushed to her friend. “I know! True love always wins!” “They’re perfect together.” “That poor man, being trapped with that awful wife for so long…” My chest hurt, actually physically hurt, like someone had reached inside and crushed my heart in their fist. The interview continued, but I couldn’t hear it over the ringing in my ears, couldn’t focus on anything except Darius and Cassia, still kissing, still holding each other like they’d never let go. My phone buzzed. A notification, then another, and another. Social media. I shouldn’t look, knew I shouldn’t look. But I did anyway. My social media was exploding, tagged in thousands of posts, photos of the proposal, videos of the kiss, comments, so many comments. “Finally Darius is getting his happily ever after!” “Cassia and Darius are GOALS” “Brynn needs to sign those divorce papers and disappear” “She trapped him in that marriage. So pathetic” “I hope Darius makes her life hell for what she did to Cassia” More and more, an avalanche of hatred, of judgment, of people celebrating my pain. “Excuse me.” I looked up. A young woman stood over my table, her phone pointed at me, recording. “You’re Brynn Haverton, right?” she asked loudly, loud enough for everyone to hear. “Darius Blackwood’s wife?” The entire café turned to stare. Oh no. “I…” my voice came out as a whisper. “It is her!” someone else shouted. “That’s the woman who tried to kill Cassia!” Suddenly everyone was pulling out their phones, pointing them at me, recording. “How could you try to ruin their love?” “You’re pathetic!” “Darius deserves so much better than you!” I stood up too fast, knocking over my tea. It spilled across the table, dripping onto the floor. “I didn’t—” I tried to say. “I’m not—” “Look at her,” the first woman sneered. “She can’t even deny it.” “Murderer!” “Home wrecker!” The voices came from all sides now, surrounding me, trapping me. “You need to leave.” The café owner appeared, his face twisted with disgust. “Now.” “But I—” “Your presence is causing problems.” He grabbed my arm, pulling me toward the door. “Get out and don’t come back.” “Please, I just—” “OUT!” He shoved me through the door and I stumbled onto the sidewalk, nearly falling.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
Brynn’s pov.I got to the hospital before dawn, when the world was still caught between night and morning and everything felt suspended in that quiet, fragile in-between. The air carried that sharp, sterile scent hospitals never quite hide, and the fluorescent lights hummed overhead like they were
Marcus had gone home at six, as he did every evening, and the cleaning staff had been and gone, and by nine the house had the particular quality of a large space with no one in it, the kind of quiet that amplified small sounds, the settling of the building, the low hum of the refrigerator two floor
We were standing in the corridor outside the consultation suite, going through the pre-procedure timeline, and I was writing things down in the small notebook I kept in my bag for exactly this kind of conversation because I had learned early in this process that I retained information better when I
Darius’s POVThe doctor’s office was understated and expensive in the way medical spaces always were when you had money, all clean lines and soothing colors designed to make difficult conversations feel manageable.Dr. Raman sat across from me explaining the procedure in clean, clinical language th







