LOGINI closed my eyes and felt tears burning behind my eyelids.
This is my life now. The thought settled over me like a shroud. This beautiful prison. This is perfect hell. And somewhere in the darkest part of my mind, a voice whispered: How much longer can you survive it? The elevator ascended in suffocating silence. Thirty-five floors of polished metal and quiet judgement, my phone still clutched in Alexander's hand like evidence at a crime scene. I counted floors. I tried to breathe. Failed. The doors opened directly into our penthouse—three thousand square feet of minimalist perfection that had never felt like home. Alexander walked inside without looking at me, my phone still gripped in his hand, his silence more terrifying than any words. I followed, closing the door softly behind me. My feet screamed in the Louboutins. I slipped them off immediately and felt the plush carpet beneath my aching soles. Small mercy. Alexander disappeared into his study without a word. Maybe he'd let it go. Maybe he'd had his say in the car, checked my phone, and found nothing because there was nothing to find. Maybe tonight I'll go to sleep. I knew better, but hope was a stubborn, stupid thing. I changed in our bedroom, peeling off the emerald silk dress that suddenly felt like a costume. Hung it carefully in the closet where it belonged, alongside all the other dresses he'd chosen for me. Pulled on soft pyjamas—grey cotton, modest, nothing that could be construed as provocative or suggestive or any of the thousand other things that might set him off. I washed my face. Brushed my teeth. I braided my hair. All the rituals of normalcy. When I emerged, Alexander stood in the living room doorway. My laptop in his hands. My stomach dropped. "I want to see your emails," he said calmly. Too calmly. "You just checked my phone—" "Your work emails, Elena." His voice was patient, like he was explaining something to a slow child. "I want to see your work correspondence." "I don't have work emails anymore." The words tasted bitter. "You had me quit, remember?" His face darkened. Storm clouds gathering. "Are you blaming me for that? I gave you a choice—" "You threatened to have my boss fire me if I didn't resign." The words came out before I could stop them. Truth, sharp and dangerous. Silence. Heavy. Suffocating. Then: "Because that place was full of men who wanted to fuck you. I was protecting you." Protecting. He always called it protecting. He opened my laptop anyway, sat on the couch, and began scrolling. I stood in the doorway, arms wrapped around myself, suddenly cold despite the apartment's perfect climate control. I watched him hunt. Browser history. Documents. Photos. Searching for evidence of sins I hadn't committed. "Who's Thomas Brennan?" he asked suddenly. My mind raced. Thomas Brennan. Thomas... "The gallery owner. Morrison Gallery. I'm on their mailing list." "This email says there's an opening reception next week." He turned the screen toward me, showing me the innocuous gallery newsletter I'd forgotten existed. "Were you planning to go?" "No. I just never unsubscribed—" "Without telling me? You were going to sneak out and see another man?" "Alexander, it's a mass email. They send it to hundreds of people—" "That's not what I asked." His voice was ice. "Were you planning to go see Thomas Brennan?" "No! I wasn't planning anything. I didn't even read the email." "But you got it. You're still on his mailing list. Still maintaining contact with your old life. With men from your past." "It's an automated email list—" "Unsubscribe. Now." He handed me the laptop. I stood there, holding it, fingers hovering over the keyboard. This was insane. This was a gallery newsletter. But I clicked unsubscribe, watched the confirmation message appear, and handed the laptop back. "Better," he said, still scrolling. "What else are you hiding?" "Nothing. Alexander, there's nothing—" "Then you won't mind if I look." He pulled up our phone records. I didn't even know he had access to those. Apparently, he'd always had access. Another thing I hadn't known, another way he'd been watching. "You called your mother three times this week," he said, scanning the list of numbers. "She's my mother. Is that a crime?" "What do you talk about?" "Normal things." I was so tired. Bone-tired. Soul-tired. "Family things." "What kind of family things?" He looked up at me, his eyes cold and calculating. "Are you complaining about me? Telling her lies about our marriage?" "No, Alexander. We talked about her garden. Her book club. Recipes. Normal mother-daughter things." "I want to be on speaker next time you call her." I stared at him. "You're joking." His face was stone. "Do I look like I'm joking?" "You want to monitor my calls with my mother?" "I want transparency in our marriage. If you're not hiding anything, it shouldn't be a problem." There it was again. That logic. If you're innocent, you have nothing to fear. If you object, you must be guilty. "Fine," I said, because what else could I say? "Good." He set the laptop aside, and leaned back on the couch. "Sit down. We need to talk about tonight." I glanced at the clock. One thirty in the morning. "Alexander, can we do this tomorrow? I'm exhausted—" "Oh, YOU'RE exhausted?" His voice rose slightly, the first crack in his careful control. "I'm the one who has to deal with a wife who can't be trusted. I'm the one who has to worry every time we go out in public. But sure, you're tired. How inconsiderate of me." I sat. What choice did I have? "Tell me about David Chen," he said. "I already told you—" "Tell me again. When did you work with him?" "Five years ago. Before we met. He was an intern—" "An intern you supervised?" "Technically, yes, but—" "So you had power over him. Authority." I didn't like where this was going. "It wasn't like that—" "Did he have a crush on you?" "What? No. He was twenty-two and—" "Did he ever ask you out?" "No, Alexander—" "Are you sure? Because you laughed pretty hard at his jokes tonight. Like you have history." "We have work history. That's all." "Work history." He repeated the words slowly, tasting them for lies. "And in all that work history, nothing ever happened? He never made a move? You never encouraged him?" "No. Nothing happened. Ever." "Then why did you look so happy to see him?" "Because—" I stopped. There was no right answer. If I said I was happy to see an old colleague, it proved I'd been thinking about him. If I said I wasn't happy, I was lying because he'd seen my face. "Because it was nice to see someone from my old life. That's all." "Your old life." His laugh was bitter. "The life before me. The life you wish you still had." "That's not what I meant—" "Then what did you mean, Elena? Explain it to me." Two AM became three AM. The questions circled, repeated, and evolved. Same accusations in different words. I answered until my voice went hoarse. He followed me when I went to the bathroom. Waited outside the door. Continued talking through the wood. I changed into pyjamas in the closet, hoping for a moment of privacy. He opened the door midway through. "Are you hiding from me now?" "No, I was just—" "Just what? Avoiding this conversation? Avoiding taking responsibility for your behaviour?" Three AM became four AM. I climbed into bed, hoping it would end. He sat on the edge, still talking. Every time I closed my eyes, his voice cut through the darkness. "Are you listening to me?" "Yes." "Then answer the question." "What question?" "See? You're not even paying attention. This is exactly what I'm talking about. You don't respect me. You don't respect our marriage." "Alexander, please. I'm so tired I can't think straight—" "Maybe that's the problem. Maybe you think too much. Overthink things. Create narratives where you're the victim and I'm the villain." I said nothing. I kept my eyes closed. Prayed for sleep. For silence. For anything. Finally, sometime after four, his breathing evened out. He'd fallen asleep mid-sentence, exhaustion finally claiming him. I lay perfectly still, afraid to move, afraid to wake him, afraid of starting it all over again. My phone buzzed on the nightstand. Sarah. "Are you okay? You looked scared tonight."Elena’s POVBy the time Rosa pulled into the parking lot of the bridal boutique, I had already considered asking her to turn the car around at least three times.“I can still wear the dress I have at home,” I muttered, staring out the window.Sarah laughed from the back seat. “You’ve been saying that for two weeks.”“Because it’s true.”“No,” Rosa said as she turned off the engine. “Because you’re nervous.”“I am not nervous.”All three of them looked at me.Even Sofia.Especially Sofia.“Mama,” she said with the brutal honesty only children possessed, “you’re making your nervous face.”“I have a nervous face?”She nodded vigorously.“You bite the inside of your cheek.”I immediately stopped doing exactly that.Sarah burst into laughter.“Oh, Elena, you’re adorable.”“I am absolutely not adorable.”“You are today.”Before I could argue again, Rosa climbed out of the car.“Come on.”I sighed dramatically.“I suddenly remembered I have work.”Sarah opened my door from the outside.“No,
Elena’s POVI wake before the sun fully claims the sky.For a long moment, I don’t move. I simply lie there with my eyes half-open, watching the pale ribbons of dawn stretch across the ceiling. The room is quiet except for the rhythmic ticking of the clock on the dresser and the slow, steady breathing of the man lying beside me.Alexander.The name settles in my chest with a warmth that feels unfamiliar—not because I don’t love him, but because for the first time in what feels like forever, loving him isn’t tangled with fear.The past twenty-four hours should have broken us.Every secret that had haunted our marriage had finally been dragged into the light. Every painful truth had been spoken aloud. There had been tears, anger, silence, confessions that neither of us could ever take back.Yet somehow…We’re still here.I turn my head carefully.He isn’t asleep.His eyes are already open, fixed on the ceiling as though he’s been awake for hours, wrestling with thoughts only he understa
The apartment was quiet. The girls were asleep—Sofia in her room, Chloe in the guest room, both exhausted by the long day of wedding planning, of family, of hope. The candles on the coffee table flickered, casting soft shadows on the walls. The city hummed beyond the window, indifferent.Elena sat on the couch, her hands in her lap, her heart pounding. Alexander sat across from her in the armchair, close enough to touch, far enough to breathe. He was watching her, waiting. He knew something was coming. She had promised."Tonight," she had said. "After the girls are asleep. I'll tell you everything."Now it was tonight. And the words were stuck in her throat."Elena," Alexander said softly. "Whatever it is, you can tell me."She looked at him. The man who had lied. The man who had changed. The man she had married twice. She had kept this secret for years, through the first wedding, through the divorce, through the healing, through the second chance. She had carried it alone, afraid tha
The park was golden with morning light. The same park where Sofia had learned to swing, where Chloe had first called Elena "Mommy," where Alexander had pushed both girls on the swings until his arms ached. Today, the benches were empty, the playground quiet. The city was still waking up.Alexander sat on a bench near the pond, his hands clasped between his knees. He had been waiting for ten minutes. He knew Marcus would come. Marcus always came when he had something to prove.He heard footsteps on the gravel path. Marcus walked toward him, slower than before, his shoulders straight, his eyes clear. He was wearing a simple jacket and jeans, his hair neatly combed. He looked nothing like the man who had held a knife at their door."Alexander," Marcus said."Marcus."Marcus sat on the bench beside him. Not too close. Not too far."Thank you for meeting me.""I almost didn't.""I know."---They sat in silence for a moment.The pond was still, the water dark. A duck paddled across the sur
---The living room was warm, the afternoon sun streaming through the windows. Sofia and Chloe were on the floor, coloring, their tongues poking out in concentration. Mr. Fluffy and Bunny were between them, serving as both inspiration and audience. The apartment smelled like the cookies Rosa had baked and brought over, still warm in a basket on the coffee table.Elena sat on the couch, a notebook in her lap, a pen in her hand. Alexander sat beside her, close enough to touch, far enough to breathe. Across from them, Rosa was in the armchair, a cup of tea in her hands, watching her daughter with soft eyes."The guest list," Elena said. "We need to decide who's coming."Sofia looked up. "I'm coming."Elena smiled. "Of course, baby. You're the flower girl.""I'm coming too," Chloe said quietly."You're standing with us, sweetheart. Right next to Sofia."Chloe's face softened. "Okay."Elena wrote their names at the top of the list. Sofia. Chloe.---"Rosa," Elena said. "You're walking me d
The studio was quiet. The afternoon light was soft, filtered through the sheer curtains Elena had hung years ago, when this space was just hers. Now it was theirs—her paintings on the walls, Alexander's books on the shelf, the girls' drawings taped to the edges of canvases. But today, she was alone.Sofia was at school. Chloe was with a grief counselor, her first appointment since Isabelle died. Alexander had taken her, promising to be back by noon. The apartment was empty, silent except for the hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of traffic.Elena sat on the floor of her studio, her back against the wall, the letter in her hands. She had been carrying it for three days, unopened. It sat in her purse, then on her nightstand, then tucked between the pages of a sketchbook. She had picked it up a dozen times, turned it over, traced her name in her father's shaky handwriting.Elena.She had not been ready. She was still not ready. But the letter had been waiting long enough.She
Because this wasn't just about me anymore.This was about the tiny life depending on me for everything.And I would not fail her.Not this time.Not ever.The legal assault was relentless.Every day brought new motions, new demands, and new threats. Alexander's lawyers filed for psychiatric evaluat
My hand went automatically to my belly, protective, instinctive."He's awake, but he's experiencing retrograde amnesia. Severe head trauma has caused him to lose approximately six years of memory.""Six years?" Catherine's voice was faint."Right now, he thinks he's twenty-seven years old. The last
"Bathroom. I had to pee."He looked past me, into the bathroom, like he'd find evidence of something. What did he think? That I had a lover hiding in the shower? That I was secretly calling someone? That I was—His eyes fell on the toilet. On the faint smell of vomit still lingering despite the flu
Ice flooded through my veins.He knew.He knew about the baby.How? Had he seen medical bills?Tracked doctor's appointments? Have you gone through my things before I left?My phone rang again. Same number.I answered without thinking. "How did you know?""Did you really think you could hide it fro







