LOGINMaya Collin’s thought the hardest part of divorce was signing the papers. She was wrong. Six years after ending her marriage to Ethan Harrington, Maya has rebuilt her life from the ground up. Raised by a hardworking single mother in Newark, she fought her way to becoming one of Manhattan’s most respected attorneys. Focused, ambitious, and determined never to depend on anyone again, Maya spent six years pretending Ethan no longer mattered. Most days, she almost believed it.” Then Ethan walks back into it. During the biggest case of her career,Maya is stunned to discover that the opposing counsel is her ex-husband. Calm, intelligent, and impossible to forget, Ethan represents his family’s powerful company — the very corporation Maya has been hired to expose in a high-stakes patent theft lawsuit. Forced onto opposite sides of the courtroom, old wounds quickly resurface. Beneath their sharp arguments and professional composure lingers a connection neither of them truly escaped. But as the case unfolds, Maya begins to uncover dangerous inconsistencies hidden beneath the evidence. What first appeared to be corporate theft soon reveals something far more complicated. Someone manipulated the case from the beginning — and somehow ensured that Maya and Ethan would face each other again. The question is why?
View MoreMy name is Maya Collins, and I have exactly three rules I live by.
Rule number one: never let anyone see you cry at work. Rule number two: always be the most prepared person in the room and Rule number three: never, under any circumstances, think about Ethan Harrington. I have broken rule number three more times than I can count. But today, I'm only focused on rule number two. I'm standing in front of my bathroom mirror at six in the morning, trying to even down the collar of my navy blue blazer. My natural hair is pulled back and tied into a low bun, I made sure it was tight and clean. No stray curls hanging. No softness. Not today. Today is the day I walk into Caldwell & Associates and officially take over the Mercer Tech case — the biggest case our firm has seen in three years. My boss, Patrick Caldwell, told me last night when we spoke over the phone that landing this one could make me a senior partner before I turn thirty-two. I'm thirty-one by the way. I look at myself in the mirror for a long moment. "You worked for this," I tell my reflection. "Don't mess it up." My phone buzzes on the sink. I turn and looked at the screen and It was Jade. “You up? Call me when you're dressed. I have huge news.” Jade Washington has been my best-friend since freshman year at NYU. She was my roommate in the dorms, the girl who let me cry into her pillow when I missed my mom, the same girl who dragged me to every house party even when I had three assignments due the following day . Now she runs her own small PR firm in Manhattan and still texts me like we're still nineteen years old. I took up my phone and call her while I make my coffee. "Tell me," I let out the moment she picks up. " Wow! Good morning to you too," she says laughing. "Jade." "Okay, okay." She takes a breath.l that lasted a few seconds "I was at the Meridian Awards dinner last night. You know, the one for corporate innovation?" "I know it." I didn’t hesitate to respond at once. "Maya." I noticed her voice dropping a little. "Harrington Group was there. They picked up the award for Business Expansion of the Year." I stop stirring my coffee. "And?" I kept my voice even. "And Ethan was there to accept it. I saw him. In the flesh. Grey suit. He looked—" she pauses. "He looked really good, Maya." I don't say anything for a moment. I watch the steam rise from my mug. My palms suddenly feel cold and sweaty. "Why are you telling me this?" I asked. "Because I'm your best friend and I thought you should know. I didn't want you to see it somewhere and be caught off guard." I took and deep breath in and out. "I haven't thought about Ethan Harrington in a long time," I say, and even I don't believe my words. Jade makes a sound that tells me she doesn't believe it either, but she's too good a friend to say it out loud. After we hang up, I sit at my kitchen counter with my coffee and let myself do the one thing I almost never allow. I let myself remember. I was eighteen the first time I saw Ethan Harrington. It was my first week of college. NYU orientation. I had arrived on campus with two suitcases, a backpack, and a scholarship that covered exactly my tuition and nothing else. My mom, Linda Collins, had driven me from our apartment in Newark in “old Betty” our old Honda Civic she often made a weird knocking sounds after every traffic light but we didn’t care , she was part of our little family. My mom cried as she dropped me off. I tried to be strong in front of her and told her I was fine. I stood on the sidewalk and watched her drive away, I felt warm tears as they ran down my face, just for about two minutes, I stood right there on the street with my suitcases on either side of me until I couldn’t see the back of old Betty again. Then I picked myself up and walked inside. I met Jade that same day. She was from Atlanta, funny, loud in the best way, and she had brought so many bags that we spent forty minutes rearranging our room just to fit everything. By the end of the first night, it felt like I had known her for years. Ethan I met on a Thursday. I was in the library. A quiet corner on the second floor where not many people came. I liked it there because it was away from the noise of the common areas, away from the groups of students who all seemed to already know each other, already have their people as they chuckled and talked not minding where they are. I was reading through my economics textbook, making notes in the margin, when someone sat down across the table from me without asking. I looked up. He was tall even when sitting down. Dark hair, a little messy like he hadn't paid it much attention. Sharp jaw. Eyes that were a warm brown, the kind that looked like they were always in the middle of figuring out something. He had a textbook under his arm and a coffee cup in one hand, and he looked at me like sitting across from a stranger was the most normal thing in the world. "Is this seat taken?" he asked. After he had already sat down. I stared at him. "You already sitting on it ." "I know. I'm asking to be polite." He smiled. I looked back at my book. "It's a free country." He laughed at that. Not a big laugh. Just a quiet one, like something I'd said really amused him. He opened his own textbook and we sat in silence for almost an hour. When he got up to leave, he said, "I'm Ethan." "I know how introductions work," I said. He smiled again. "And you are?" I looked up at him. "Maya." "Maya," he repeated, like he was trying to let it sink into his head . "I'll see you around, Maya." I watched him walk away and told myself I didn't care. I saw him in that same corner the next Thursday. And the one after that. By the fourth week, we were sharing notes. By the sixth, we were getting coffee after. By November, I had somehow fallen for a boy I barely understood — a boy who laughed easily and listened like I was the only person in the room, who didn't seem to notice or care that my shoes were worn down at the heel or that I worked two part-time jobs while he never seemed to work at all. I didn't know then what his last name meant. I didn't know about Harrington Group, about the hotels and the real estate and the old money that went back two generations. I just knew Ethan. The one who saved me a seat and always remembered how I took my coffee. I should have asked more questions. I should have known that in stories like ours, the beginning is almost never the hardest part. I finish my coffee, rinse the mug, and pick up my bag. I have a case to win. I have a career to build. And somewhere on the other side of this city, Ethan Harrington is accepting awards in grey suits and looking, like he's doing just fine according to Jade. Good for him. I step out of my apartment into the crisp October morning and pull my coat tight. The subway is two blocks away. I walk fast, the way I always do. At the bottom of the stairs, my phone buzzes again. I took it out from the pocket of my coat and checked , this time it's not Jade, it's Patrick. Call me before you come in. There's been a development with the Mercer case. Big one. I stop walking.Two weeks passed.I know that sounds like I’m skipping ahead, like there should be some dramatic story tucked into the gap between the first hearing and the third. There wasn’t.From the outside, those two weeks looked exactly the way they felt. Early mornings. Late nights. Work that seemed to expand the longer we stared at it.Priya and I practically lived in the war room, surrounded by Mercer files, armed with two highlighters and a running list of questions that only seemed to grow. Every answer uncovered three more things we needed to understand.Patrick checked in now and then. There was something different about him lately, a carefulness, a distance. As if he was standing far enough back to see a picture the rest of us couldn’t yet make out, waiting for the right moment to tell me what he saw.I still hadn’t replied to Thomas Mercer’s email.On paper, that probably looked irresponsible. It wasn’t. It was deliberate.Before I sat down with the ousted founder of my client’s compan
The room seemed to quiet around us.“I saw things.” I met her eyes.“What things?” She hesitated.“Diana.”Just that. Just her name.And somehow it was enough.“I watched the way she treated you. The little comments. The pressure. The way she made you feel like you were constantly being evaluated.”I felt my jaw tighten.“I saw it happening,” Simone continued. “And I said nothing.”Her voice dropped.“Because they were my family.”She swallowed.“And you weren’t.”The honesty of it landed harder than an excuse would have.I looked at her for a long moment.At the woman she’d become.Not the girl I remembered.Someone older now. Maybe wiser. Maybe just tired of carrying old mistakes.Finally, I spoke.“Why are you telling me this now?”Simone looked down for a second before answering.“Because you’re going to spend the next several months across courtrooms and conference tables from Ethan.”She met my eyes again.“And I think you deserve to know the whole story before that happens.”A
I didn’t reply to the email that night. For about ten minutes, I considered it. Then I moved it into a separate folder, set my phone on the nightstand, and forced myself to leave it alone until morning. That sounds more disciplined than it felt. The truth is, every few minutes I wanted to pick up my phone and read it again. But after ten years of practicing law, I’ve learned that not every problem needs to be solved immediately. Sometimes the smartest thing you can do is put something aside and come back to it when you’re rested and thinking clearly. It’s a useful skill. It’s also one of the hardest things I’ve ever taught myself. I slept maybe five hours. Not ideal, but I’ve survived on worse. The next morning, I was at my desk by seven-thirty with a large coffee from the café downstairs—the one place in the neighborhood that somehow gets it right every single time. I spent the next hour buried in Mercer documents, reading through the same files for wh
I stood outside the courthouse and stared at Patrick’s text for almost half a minute before calling him back.Around me, Manhattan was as busy as ever. Taxis rushed by. People hurried along the sidewalks. Someone struggled to control a huge dog. Normally I barely noticed the noise.Today, I didn’t hear any of it.I hit the call button.Patrick answered almost immediately.“I found something,” he said.No greeting. That was typical Patrick.“There’s a company registered in Delaware. On paper, it looks like a small software business. Nothing unusual.”I started walking. I always walk when I’m stressed. It helps me think.“What’s unusual about it?” I asked.“It has financial connections to both Mercer Tech and Harrington Holdings.”I stopped.“Both companies?”“Yes. They’ve both been sending money to the same company for about three years. Different amounts, but a similar pattern.”For a moment I just stood there, staring at the traffic light across the street.“Are you saying our client






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