LOGINChapter 5: The Confrontation
She walked down the corridor, past assistants' desks (empty now, probably at lunch), past the small kitchenette, past the conference room where she'd once thrown a glass of water at him in front of an entire board of directors. The memory made her stomach turn. And then she was there. The door to his office stood slightly ajar, and through the gap she could see him. Lucian Blackwell sat behind his massive desk, his attention fixed on a stack of documents, his pen moving in precise, efficient strokes. His jacket hung over the back of his chair, his sleeves were rolled to his elbows, and his tie was loosened—small signs of dishevelment that, on him, were practically a scream of distress. He looked exhausted. Dark circles shadowed his eyes. His jaw was tight with tension. And yet he worked on, a machine built to process paperwork and bury emotion under endless tasks. Just like in my past life, Aveline thought. Every time I hurt him, he came here and worked until he couldn't think anymore. She pushed the door open. Lucian's head snapped up, his eyes instantly alert—the reaction of a man who'd learned to expect danger from every direction. When he saw her, something flickered across his face. Shock, yes. But beneath it, something else. Something that looked almost like relief, quickly suppressed. "Aveline." His voice was hoarse, rougher than she remembered. "You should be in the hospital." She didn't respond to that. Instead, she walked directly to his desk, her legs threatening to give way with every step. The divorce papers—the ones Mr. Matt had delivered—were clutched in her trembling hands. She slammed them onto the desk between them. "Explain this." Lucian's gaze dropped to the papers, then rose to meet hers. His expression was carefully, painfully neutral—the mask she'd always hated, the wall she'd never been able to breach. "You know what it is. You've been asking for it since the day we married." "Don't give me that." Aveline's voice shook, but not with the usual rage. This was something else—fear, desperation, a frantic need to buy time. "Is this what you want? To be free of me?" Something shifted in his eyes. Pain, quickly hidden. "It's what you want. It's always been what you want." "And you're just giving in? Just like that?" She laughed, but it was bitter, hollow. "All those times you told me you'd never let me go. All those promises. Were they all lies? Was I just another business deal to you?" Lucian rose slowly from his chair, his tall frame casting a shadow across the desk. "You know they weren't lies." "Then why?" Aveline's voice cracked. "Why are you signing them now? Are you so intimidated by me? So scared of what I might do next that you'd rather just wash your hands of me?" His jaw tightened. "That's not—" "You promised me, Lucian!" She was shouting now, but the tears streaming down her face told a different story than anger. "You stood in front of everyone and promised to love me forever. You said you'd never leave me, never divorce me, no matter what. Was any of it real?" "You tried to kill yourself, Aveline." His voice was raw, stripped of its usual control. "You tried to die rather than stay married to me. What was I supposed to do? Keep you trapped in a marriage that was destroying you?" The words hit her like physical blows. He let me go because he loved me. Because he thought it would save me. Just like in her past life. Just like she'd been too blind to see. "Maybe I don't want to be saved," she whispered. Lucian stared at her, confusion breaking through his mask. "What are you saying?" Aveline's mind raced. She couldn't tell him the truth—that she'd lived another life, that she'd been betrayed and murdered, that she'd been given a second chance. He'd think she'd lost her mind. He'd probably have her committed. But she couldn't just surrender either. She had to fight. She had to make him fight. "You've ruined my life," she said, her voice hardening into something cold and sharp. "You married me against my will. You kept me from Damien. You made me hate you." Each word felt like a knife in her own chest, but she forced them out. "And now you think you can just... what? Sign some papers and walk away? Let me go live happily ever after with someone else?" Lucian's face had gone pale, his hands clenching at his sides. "What do you want, Aveline?" She leaned forward, her palms flat on his desk, her eyes blazing with a fire that had nothing to do with hatred. "I want to make you suffer. The way you've made me suffer." She shoved the divorce papers toward him. "I'm not signing these. Not now. Not ever. You wanted to marry me? Fine. You're stuck with me. And I'm going to make your life so miserable that you'll wish you'd never heard my name." Lucian stared at her as if she'd grown a second head. "You're not making sense. You've been asking for a divorce for two years—" "Well, now I'm not asking." She crossed her arms, ignoring the way her body swayed. "I'm staying. And I'm going to make sure you regret every single day of this marriage." "Aveline, you're clearly not well—" "Don't." She pointed a shaking finger at him. "Don't you dare dismiss me. Don't you dare treat me like I'm fragile or crazy or whatever excuse you want to use. I know what I'm doing." "You're pale as death and you can barely stand," he said, his voice rising with concern he couldn't quite hide. "You should be in a hospital bed, not here, starting fights you don't mean." "How do you know I don't mean it?" "Because I know you." He moved around the desk, slowly, carefully, as if approaching a wounded animal. "I know that when you're truly angry, you're cold, not hot. You scheme, you don't shout. This—" He gestured at her, at the tears on her cheeks, the trembling of her hands. "This is something else." Aveline's resolve wavered. He saw too much. He always had. "You don't know me at all," she whispered, but even she didn't believe it. Lucian stopped inches from her, close enough that she could see the exhaustion etched into every line of his face. Close enough to feel the warmth radiating from his body. "Then tell me," he said quietly. "Tell me what this is really about. Tell me why you're here, fighting to stay married to a man you claim to hate." She opened her mouth, but no words came. What could she say? I died and came back? I know now that you're the only one who ever truly loved me? I'm sorry for everything, every cruel word, every betrayal, every baby I killed? The weight of it all crashed down on her at once. The room tilted. Her vision blurred at the edges. "Aveline?" Lucian's voice came from far away, sharp with alarm. She felt her knees buckle, felt herself falling, felt the divorce papers slip from her fingers and scatter across the floor like broken promises. But she never hit the ground. Strong arms caught her, cradling her against a chest she'd pushed away a thousand times. The same arms that had held her in the fire. The same voice, desperate and raw, calling her name. "Aveline! Aveline, stay with me!" I'm sorry, she wanted to say. I'm so sorry for everything. I'll make it right. I swear I'll make it right. But darkness was already claiming her, pulling her down into its embrace. The last thing she heard was Lucian's voice, breaking as he shouted for help. And then, nothing. [The office fell into silence once more.The lunch plates had long been emptied. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the afternoon sun drifted westward, casting long shadows across the skyline. The city bustled beneath them, oblivious to the strange stillness inside the executive office.Neither of them spoke.Lucian sat behind his desk, one hand resting lightly against the armrest of his chair. His documents remained open before him, untouched. His attention had not returned to work.Across from him, Aveline sat quietly, her fingers loosely folded in her lap.The silence wasn't comfortable.But neither of them seemed willing to disturb it.Several long moments passed before Lucian lifted his eyes.His gaze settled on her. Calm. Unreadable."What do you really want?"His voice was low, carrying through the quiet office with effortless authority."You've been acting differently ever since you woke up."His eyes flickered briefly toward the empty lunchbox."You cooked. You came here. Y
Lucian held Aveline's gaze for a second.Then his eyes shifted.He looked at Katie. His voice was flat, devoid of inflection—the kind of cold that didn't need to raise itself to be felt."Get out."Katie blinked. Her mouth opened, then closed. She looked at Aveline—a quick, instinctive glance—waiting. In the old days, Aveline would have defended her. Would have said she's my friend, Lucian, you can't speak to her like that. Would have turned on him, as she always did, and made him the villain.But Aveline didn't look at her.Didn't move.Didn't speak.Her eyes were fixed on something in the middle distance—the window, the city, nothing. She might as well have been alone in the room.Lucian's voice came again, each word distinct and deliberate."I said. Get. Out."Katie's hand clenched at her side. She walked to the door without looking back. The click of her heels faded down the corridor.The door swung shut.Silence.Lucian exhaled slowly through his nose. Not a sigh—just a breath. H
The days passed in a particular kind of silence. Not the silence of peace. The silence of absence. Aveline counted it by the light moving across her bedroom floor. Morning—pale gold through the curtains. Afternoon—long shadows stretching toward the door. Evening—the slow grey dimming that meant another day had closed without him in it. She asked the housekeeper. At work, madam. She asked the butler the next morning. Not yet, madam. She stood at the window each evening and watched the gates at the end of the drive. They opened sometimes—for deliveries, for staff. Each time, her chest did something involuntary. Each time, it was not him. On the second night she fell asleep in the chair by the window, her cheek pressed against the cold glass. She woke at some grey early hour to find the drive empty and the lamp still burning and nothing changed. She didn't ask again after that. The following day, Aveline went to the kitchen before the staff arrived. The room was vast—i
The days blurred.Wake. Eat. Sleep. Watch him work. Exchange a few quiet words. Eat again. Sleep again.The nurses came and went. They checked her vitals, changed her IV, adjusted her pillows. They moved with hushed efficiency, their eyes careful to avoid the man in the corner.Lucian's orders. No visitors. No exceptions.Damien and Katie didn't come back.Aveline didn't ask about them. She didn't care.---On the fifth day, she tried to sit up too quickly.Her vision went grey. The room tilted. She reached for the bedside table to steady herself—and missed.A hand caught her before she fell.His grip was firm around her arm. Steadying. His other hand pressed against her back, guiding her upright. She felt the heat of his palm through the thin hospital gown. Felt the strength in his fingers."Slowly," he said.His voice was close. She looked up.His face was inches from hers. Close enough to see the faint shadows beneath his eyes. Close enough to count the lines of tension around his
The door clicked shut. The sound was soft, final—a seal between them and the world outside. Aveline felt Lucian's hand still at her waist, steadying her, waiting for her legs to hold her weight. She leaned into him without thinking, and he absorbed her weight without comment. Then he guided her forward. His steps were measured, unhurried. Each footfall deliberate. When they reached the bed, he turned her gently, his hands finding her shoulders, easing her down onto the mattress. The sheets rustled beneath her. He lifted her legs, one at a time, and swung them onto the bed with the same impersonal efficiency a nurse might use. The blanket came up. He tucked it around her hips, then her waist. His fingers brushed her shoulder as he adjusted the pillow behind her head. He didn't meet her eyes. "There," he said. Quiet. Flat. He turned. His footsteps crossed the room—seven strides, she counted—and stopped at the window. The chair scraped against the floor as he pulled it out. He sat
The silence that followed was complete. Katie's smile froze. Damien's carefully composed concern flickered—just for a moment, just a crack—before he smoothed it back into place. Aveline stood in the doorway and said nothing. She didn't need to. That look—cool, unhurried, ancient with a knowledge they couldn't name—passed over them both like a blade drawing slowly across skin. Not angry. Not wounded. Just... aware. Terribly, quietly aware. Then she blinked, and it was gone. What replaced it was exhaustion. Real, bone-deep exhaustion that buckled her knees without warning. Lucian moved before she could fall. He was at her side in three steps, one arm sliding around her waist, drawing her weight against him with the practiced steadiness of a man who had caught her before and intended to catch her again. His hand settled at her side—careful, firm—and he said nothing. Just held her. Aveline let herself lean into him. It was the easiest thing she had done in three years.
Chapter 4: The Hospital Escape The moment the door clicked shut behind Mr. Matt, Aveline's mind began racing.She couldn't stay here. Every minute in this hospital bed was a minute Lucian spent believing their marriage was over. A minute closer to the divorce being finalized beyond recall. A minut
Chapter 2: Walking UpWhite. Everything was white. Aveline's eyes fluttered open, squinting against the harsh brightness surrounding her. White ceiling. White walls. White sheets tucked tightly around her body. Heaven? The thought came unbidden, almost laughable. But then reality crashed down l
Chapter 3: Rebirth The doctor pulled up a chair and sat down beside her bed, setting his tablet aside. His voice became gentler, more human."I'm very sorry, Mrs. Blackwell." He paused, choosing his words with care. "You were approximately eight weeks pregnant when you were admitted. The trauma an
Chapter 1: Truth and DeathThe divorce papers trembled in Aveline’s hands as she stood outside Damien’s apartment door. Her heart pounded — not with fear, but with a wild, breathless hope she hadn’t felt in years.Finally. I’m free.Free from Lucian Blackwell — the cold, commanding man her family h







