LOGINCHAPTER 4
Isla's pov
I didn’t want to be here.
Not in this house. Not again.
The air still smelled the same, of waxed wood, old money, and something faintly herbal, like lavender buried under dust. The walls hadn’t changed either. They remained tall, oppressive and lined with ancestral portraits that stared down at you as if you’d already disappointed them. This house was too quiet, too clean, too calculated.
My heels clicked along the marble as the old butler, Bram, as Alaric had called him, led me through the South Wing. The silence between us was brittle but oddly comfortable. He seemed the type who’d spent decades perfecting the art of being invisible.
“This way, Miss Virelle,” he said, stopping in front of a heavy oak door.
He opened it for me, and I stepped inside.
The guest room was beautiful of course. Oversized windows framed with midnight-blue drapes. A fireplace, already glowing. A bed carved from dark wood, dressed in silver linens. There was even a robe waiting for me on the edge of a velvet chaise.
But none of it mattered.
Because I’d been in this room before.
I swallowed hard and took a shaky breath, letting my fingers drift over the edge of the fireplace mantle. The stone was colder than I remembered.
It was here, two years ago, that everything had unraveled.
I had come early to surprise Devon. My flight had landed ahead of schedule, and I’d raced here in a cab, with a fluttering heart and a bouquet in hand. I remember how nervous and excited I’d been. This mansion had intimidated me then, just as it did now, but I’d told myself it didn’t matter. I was going to be his future. The fiancée. The woman who’d fit into this ancient, crumbling portrait of power.
I’d let myself in, laughing at how quiet everything was. Bram had given me a knowing smile. He didn’t warn me. Why would he?
I’d found Devon in this room.
And although he was not alone.
I still remembered the silk of her dress. Gold. Thin as spiderwebs. I remembered how her laughter stopped when she saw me. How Devon hadn’t looked surprised, just annoyed. Like I’d broken something delicate by walking in. Like I’d broken something delicate by walking in. Like I was the one who had trespassed.
He hadn’t apologized nor did he chase after me.
He ended things a week later over coffee. Blamed the pressure. Said I didn’t “get” the world he lived in. That I wasn’t “cut out” for it. But I knew the truth. He wanted less fire, more softness. Less ambition, more obedience. Someone who didn’t challenge him. Someone he could control.
And yet, here I was again, back in the same room, with the ghosts still whispering in the corners.
I sank onto the edge of the bed and dropped my clutch to the floor. My fingers trembled slightly as I reached for the robe. My dress clung like a second skin, still wet from the storm.
I peeled it off slowly, and dropped the silk to the floor, before wrapping myself in the robe, curling my legs beneath me. The warmth of the fire touched my skin, but it couldn’t thaw the ache in my chest.
What was I doing?
I had told myself this was all for closure. For justice. For taking something back. But the moment I stepped foot inside this house again, I realized I wasn’t the one holding the knife.
This place still had power over me.
And Alaric Crest? He was the crown atop it all.
He made me slightly unsettled. Not just because he was powerful, or attractive in that dangerous, knowing way, but because he saw too much. He looked at me like I was a puzzle he already half-solved, like he knew how many pieces I was missing.
What was worse? He seemed amused by me. I hated it. Hated how he saw through the armor I’d so carefully strapped around my ribs. Devon had never looked at me like that. Devon had wanted a version of me that was more sharpened, polished, obedient. Alaric didn’t want a version. He wanted the whole thing, jagged edges and all.
I didn’t trust it…I didn’t trust him.
But I had no other choice tonight. The storm had seen to that. The hotel was too far and my phone had died somewhere between my stubbornness and the thunder. And no Uber in the world was going to find its way to this haunted fortress of stone and secrets at 3 a.m.
I lay back against the pillows, staring up at the carved ceiling. Even the plaster here was too rich. I wondered how many women had cried into these sheets, how many had tried to tame the Crest men and failed.
I wasn’t trying to tame anyone.
I was just trying to win.
But what was the prize? I wasn’t sure anymore.
Maybe it wasn’t about Devon. Maybe it never was. Maybe this whole thing had been about me all along…just trying to prove something, to reclaim something. Maybe I wanted to see if I could walk back into this place and not fall apart.
So far, I haven't been doing very well.
There was a soft and polite knock at the door.
I didn’t move to answer it.
After a moment, I heard footsteps fade down the hall again.
The robe was too warm now. Or maybe it was the memories.
I stood and walked to the window, parting the curtains just slightly.
Rain still fell in fine mist, brushing the glass like breath. The garden below was overgrown and shrouded in fog, but even in the dark I could make out the statue of a woman with no face, standing in the center.
It felt fitting, beautiful, ruined and above all, nameless.
I closed the curtain and went back to bed.
Isla's povThe morning after Marcus signed away his empire, the corporate headquarters felt entirely different. The frantic, heavy energy of the past few weeks had dissipated, replaced by a quiet, industrious hum.I stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows of Alaric’s top-floor office, watching the city traffic crawl below. The high collar of my new silk blouse hid the fading marks on my neck, but inside, I felt entirely transformed. I was no longer just a coordinator surviving a corporate war. I was a full partner.The heavy oak door clicked open, and Alaric walked in. He had discarded his formal suit jacket, his sleeves rolled up to his forearms as he carried two fresh cups of coffee. He handed one to me, his fingers brushing against mine with that steady, grounding warmth that had kept me anchored through the storm."You look deep in thought," he said, standing beside me and looking out over the skyline."Just thinking about how quickly a legacy can change hands," I replied, takin
Isla's pov I sat at the long mahogany table, nursing a cup of black coffee. The dark bruises on my neck were concealed beneath the high collar of my blouse, but the cold clarity in my chest was entirely visible.Alaric was sitting beside me with his posture immaculate, the image of a man who hadn't spent the night hunting down a traitor on a storm-slicked cliffside.The heavy glass doors swung open, and Marcus walked in, flanked by two of his senior legal advisors. Marcus was Devon’s primary political sponsor and the man who had spent the last six months trying to orchestrate a hostile takeover of our joint venture. He wore a smug, patronizing smile, entirely unaware that his entire operation had collapsed hours ago."Alaric....Miss," Marcus said, smoothly pulling out a chair at the opposite end of the table and sitting down with a theatrical sigh."Her name is Isla." Alaric interjected. Marcus nodded his head in acknowledgement. "I must say, calling an emergency board meeting a
Isla's pov The cold rain lashed against my face as Devon lunged up the muddy slope. His eyes were wide, bloodshot, and completely unmoored from reality. The sophisticated political operative who had once moved through high-society galas with effortless grace was entirely gone, replaced by a desperate creature driven by pure adrenaline and fractured ambition. He did not see the weapon in my hands as a genuine threat. He saw me as his property, his final piece of leverage in a game that had already cost him his soul. "Isla, put that down," he shouted over the roar of the wind, his voice cutting through the tempest. "You do not understand what we have here. We are going to be rich. We can leave Alaric bleeding on his own dock and start over where no one can ever touch us." He reached out, his wet fingers grasping for my jacket, his breath coming in ragged, hysterical gasps. My survival instinct took over completely. I squeezed the trigger. The gunshot was deafening, a sharp
Isla's pov The taste of copper and drywall dust coated my tongue. I scrambled up from the shattered marble floor, my breath coming in ragged, shallow gasps. My fingers dug into the ruined fabric of my blouse, my throat burning where Devon’s hands had been just minutes before. The bruising was already setting in, a tight, painful band around my neck. "Isla! Stay down!" Alaric’s voice cut through the ringing in my ears. He was already on his feet, stepping over the glass shards, his face a mask of absolute fury as he racked the bolt of his rifle. Through the gaping, shattered frame of the terrace doors, the storm was howling, driving sheets of rain into the grand foyer. Outside, the dark expanse of the Atlantic crashed violently against the cliffs below. I pushed myself up against a splintered pillar, my knees shaking. "He... he has Vance," I choked out, coughing as the smoke from the collapsed chandelier stung my lungs. "They’re heading for the docks." Alaric didn't answer.
Devon’s pov The red emergency lights strobed against the reinforced steel door, casting long, rhythmic shadows that made the vault feel like a sinking submarine. The hum of the servers died completely, replaced by the high-pitched whine of fried circuits and the deafening, systematic clanging of the estate’s automated lockdown.I was trapped."Isla!" I screamed again, my voice tearing in my throat. I threw my shoulder against the steel shutter, but it was like hitting the side of a mountain.On the secondary monitor, Arthur Vance was frantically pacing his cell, his audio feed cutting through the sirens. *“What did you do? The power grid to my door just bypassed to a mechanical deadbolt! Get me out of here!”*"Shut up!" I roared, sprinting back to the main console.The primary screens were flickering, bleeding data as a hard-wiped safety protocol took effect. Alaric’s system wasn't just locking down; it was purging. The numbers on my phone screen—the millions Vance had transferred—
Devon’s pov The air in Alaric’s private study always smelled like old money and expensive cedar, a constant, suffocating reminder of everything he had and everything I had just lost.My hands shook as I slotted my government-issued biometric key into his desk terminal. If the security team caught me, my political clearance wouldn't just be revoked; I’d be facing a federal penitentiary. But panic had evolved into a cold, clinical fury hours ago. The market crash Alaric engineered had wiped out my accounts, my reputation, and my future. I was ruined. And a ruined man has absolutely nothing left to fear.The terminal chimed softly, recognizing my high-level credentials. I didn’t waste time looking for tax evasions or petty corporate fraud. I needed the kill shot. I bypassed the standard cloud drives and began scanning the physical architecture of the estate. There it was: a massive, off-grid power draw directly beneath the foundations. A subterranean vault.Leaving the terminal lo
Isla's povThe mansion felt different in daylight.Last night, it had seemed mysterious, almost unreal, with its endless corridors and flickering candlelight. This morning, however, every polished surface and towering arch reminded me that I didn't belong here.I stood near one of the second-floor
Isla's povBy the time I made it back to the guest wing, the mansion felt different.It was as if every corridor I passed through now had edges I hadn’t noticed before. The kind that didn’t cut skin, but attention. The kind that made you aware you were being watched even when nothing moved.I told
CHAPTER 3Alaric's povShe stood under the awning like a wounded bird…soaked to the skin, shivering, and still too proud to bend. I watched her for a moment before speaking, more curious than concerned. There was something magnetic about Isla Virelle, even when she was clearly miserable.No, especi
CHAPTER 2The party didn't seem to be coming to an end anytime soon and I figured I would be on my way to my hotel already. Besides, watching Devon and his fiancée dance like two intoxicated flamingos made my heart churn.I brought out my phone to look at the time. It was a minute past two o'clock







