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How did it all happen? It started on the day I was meant to meet my boyfriend.
I hummed along to the silly love song Ethan had sent me that morning as I climbed the stairs. My feet were killing me after pulling a double shift at the café, but the ache didn’t matter. Ethan had promised he’d be waiting when I got home. For the first time in weeks, I felt light. Wanted.
The house was quiet when I stepped inside, which wasn’t unusual. My step mom, Isodora and step sister, Natalia were probably out shopping again, and Father was likely still at the office. I kicked off my shoes by the door and headed straight for my bedroom, a small smile tugging at my lips. Maybe tonight we could order takeout and watch that movie he kept talking about. Normal couple stuff. The kind of normal I craved.
I pushed the door open without knocking.
The first thing I heard was moaning. Loud. Breathless. Familiar.
My brain froze.
Ethan was on my bed, hips moving between Natalia’s spread legs. Her hair spilled across my pillow like she owned it. One of her hands gripped his back, nails digging in, while the other clutched the sheets. They were so into it they didn’t notice me at first.
Then Ethan glanced over.
He didn’t stop.
He slowed down, sure, but he kept thrusting into her, eyes half-lidded with pleasure. “Shit, Rory,” he panted, voice rough. “You’re home early.”
Natalia turned her head and laughed. Actually laughed. She wrapped her legs tighter around his waist and arched up to meet him. “Oh, don’t stop on her account, baby. Let her see how it’s done. Poor little Aurora never could keep a man satisfied anyway.”
The shopping bags slipped from my fingers and hit the floor. Something inside my chest cracked wide open. I couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t speak. All I could do was stand there, staring at the only person I thought truly loved me fucking my stepsister in the bed where he used to hold me.
“Why?” The word came out small.
Ethan finally pulled out, not even bothering to cover himself properly. He sat, still breathing hard. “Look, Rory… it’s not what you think.”
Natalia snorted, stretching lazily like a cat. “It’s exactly what she thinks. We’ve been doing this for months. You really believed he loved you? Cute.”
Tears burned my eyes. I wanted to scream. I wanted to throw something. Instead, I just turned around and ran.
I didn’t stop until I reached the old garden shed at the far end of the house. I collapsed on the floor. My knees hit the concrete hard, but the pain didn’t register. All I could feel was the image of them burned into my brain, Ethan’s face, Natalia’s smirk, the way they didn’t even care that I saw.
Sobs tore out of me. Ugly, choking sounds that made my whole body shake. I pressed my forehead against my knees and cried until my throat felt dry.
Why did it have to be my room? Why did they have to let me see? The way Natalia had laughed… like she wanted me to watch. Like it was part of the fun.
Footsteps approached outside. The shed door opened slowly. Evelyn stepped in, her maid uniform slightly wrinkled from the day’s work. She took one look at me and closed the door behind her. Without a word, she lowered herself onto the floor beside me, ignoring the dust on her clothes. She pulled my head onto her shoulder the way she had done a hundred times before, ever since I was a little girl with scraped knees.
I buried my face in her neck and cried harder.
“He said he loved me,” I gasped between sobs. “He told me I was beautiful. That I was enough. Why would he do this? Why in my room, Evelyn? They didn’t even stop. They just… kept going.”
Evelyn’s arms tightened around me. Her hand stroked my hair in slow, soothing motions. “Because they’re cruel, Aurora. Some people get pleasure from watching others break. Especially when they think they’re better than you.”
I clutched her uniform like it was the only solid thing left in my world. “I thought he was different. After everything with Mom dying and Isadora changing and Natalia always hating me… he was supposed to be my one good thing. Now even that’s gone.”
She was quiet for a long moment, just holding me while I fell apart.
“You deserve better than him,” she said finally, her voice low and steady. “You’ve always deserved better. Don’t let their poison make you think otherwise.”
I pulled back slightly to look at her. Evelyn’s kind eyes were filled with something deeper than sympathy, something like fierce protectiveness. She wiped the tears from my cheeks with her thumbs.
“How long has this been going on?” I whispered.
“Months, from what I’ve seen,” she admitted gently. “I didn’t want to tell you until I was sure. I’m sorry, sweetheart.”
We sat there in the shed for what felt like hours. Evelyn didn’t rush me. She just stayed, rubbing my back, letting me cry until there were no tears left.
Eventually, she helped me stand and brushed the dust off my dress.
“Let’s get you cleaned up before they notice you’re gone,” she said. “I’ll sneak some warm soup to your room later. You don’t have to face them tonight if you don’t want to.”
I nodded numbly. As we walked back toward the house through the garden, I felt completely empty. The necklace my mother left me felt heavy against my chest.
Everything I thought I had, love, security, a place where I belonged had just been ripped away in the most humiliating way possible.
And deep down, I had this sick feeling that this was only the beginning.
That the people who were supposed to be my family still had so much more pain waiting for me.
I ended the call and stared at my phone for a moment. Evelyn’s words kept echoing. Things still coming. Don’t give him your whole heart. I tossed the phone onto the bed and dragged my suitcase out of the closet.I folded sweaters, then unfolded them again, my hands moving on autopilot. Geneva. Two nights. I picked up a black coat, then put it back. Lucian had almost told me what to wear earlier. The memory made my lips twitch despite everything.A knock sounded on my door.“Come in,” I said.Lucian stepped inside, already in a dark button-down with the sleeves rolled up. He looked at the open suitcase, then at me.“You’re actually packing without burning the place down,” he said. “I’m impressed.”“Don’t get used to it.” I held up two pairs of boots. “Which ones make me look less like your property?”He leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed. “Both do. But the ones on the left are better for walking if we end up outside.”I raised an eyebrow. “We?”“I adjusted the schedule.” He sai
Aurora's POVThe meeting was on the fourteenth floor of a building whose name I didn't catch because Lucian hadn't told me where we were going, only that I needed to look presentable and be quiet.His exact words. Be quiet, Aurora..The room was full of men in expensive suits who all stood when Lucian walked in, which told me everything I needed to know about the kind of power he carried without announcing it. He introduced me once, "my wife" and after that I ceased to exist as a person and became a decorative fixture he occasionally glanced at to confirm I was still in the correct position.I sat. I smiled. I watched him work.And God, he was good at it.I hated how much I was paying attention.Then a grey-haired man looked at me."Aurora." Too familiar. "Lucian really is something, isn't he. You must be very proud."Before I could open my mouth, Lucian's hand was on my thigh under the table.Not moving. Just there. A weight that said don't and mine in the same breath."She is," Luci
Aurora's POVHe acted like it hadn't happened.That was the first thing I noticed the next morning, the way he sat across the breakfast table with his coffee, phone, carefully assembled distance and looked at me the way he might look at a piece of furniture he was faintly surprised to find still in the room.No acknowledgment. No reference. Nothing in his expression that admitted the previous evening had occurred at all.I poured my coffee and sat down and decided, quietly, that I was not going to be the one to bring it up. If Lucian wanted to pretend he hadn't kissed me twelve hours ago, that was his decision to make and his loss to carry. I had my own dignity and I intended to keep it.I lasted approximately four minutes."Are we not going to talk about last night," I said.He turned a page on whatever he was reading. "What about it?""What about it," I repeated. Flatly."We had a moment," he said. "It happened. It doesn't need to be discussed at breakfast."Something hot moved thro
Aurora's POVThe house had a rhythm now and I had learned to move inside it.Mornings were mine. I woke before Lucian most days or before he emerged from the study and I had the kitchen to myself for an hour with coffee.Afternoons belonged to whatever work Lucian was doing behind closed doors, which I had stopped trying to map precisely. I understood that the empire Evelyn had referenced was not the Draven name, not Sebastian's carefully constructed legacy, but something Lucian had built independently and quietly over the better part of a decade. Lucian Draven had a specific yield and it was rarely the thing you actually wanted.Evenings we spent in my same room.On the sixth evening, I was on the sitting room floor with my sketchbook."You're holding the pencil wrong," he said.I turned around. He was looking at my hand, not my drawing."I've been drawing since I was eight," I said."I know. You're still holding it wrong." He pointed out. "You grip too hard. See how your knuckles ar
Aurora's POVThree days passed without either of us acknowledging what had been said in the garden.Not because we were avoiding it or not only because of that. More because the house had settled into a rhythm that neither of us disrupted, and disrupting it felt like breaking something that was, for now, holding us both upright. We moved around each other with a careful, unspoken consideration. Meals at the same table. Coffee in the mornings. The occasional exchange that was about nothing important and therefore safe.I was learning the house. That was how I spent the days. Small things. Solid things. The kind of things you reached for when the large things were too large.On the fourth morning I came downstairs to find something on the kitchen table that hadn't been there the night before.A bowl, filled with the specific brand of honey-roasted cashews that I had eaten during the first weeks at the Draven mansion.I stood at the table and looked at the bowl for a long moment.Margare
Aurora's POVEvelyn arrived at seven.Sebastian was still in the house. He'd spent the afternoon in the study with Lucian, the door closed, voices too low to make out from the hallway. I hadn't tried to listen. I'd sat in the sitting room with the unread book.Evelyn came in from the cold with her coat still on and found me in the hallway.She stopped when she saw me. "You're alright," she said."Mostly," I said.She crossed the distance between us and took both my hands in hers, briefly, firmly, the way she'd done since I was small when she needed me to understand she was serious. Then she let go."Where is he?" she asked."Study. With Sebastian."Something shifted in her expression at that. "Sebastian is here.""He arrived this afternoon. He said he's been making enquiries." I watched her face carefully. "You don't look surprised.""I'm not," she said. "Sebastian has been moving toward this for some time. He just needed something to catalyse it." She began unbuttoning her coat. "Luc
My eyes felt gritty from all the crying the night before. I lay there for a long minute, staring at the unfamiliar ceiling, trying to convince myself that yesterday had been some kind of nightmare. The bed, the quiet room, the echo of Lucian’s rough voice telling me to go back inside… it was all re
The guest room felt too big. Too quiet. Too empty. I stood in the middle of it for a long time after the housekeeper left, my small suitcase still sitting unopened by the foot of the bed.I finally moved, unzipping the suitcase and pulling out my clothes one by one. A couple of simple dresses, jean
The morning after Father’s ultimatum, I barely slept. I kept replaying the conversation in the study and hoping something would change, that maybe the Dravens would need weeks or months to arrange things. Time for me to breathe. Time to find another way out.But by ten o’clock, the doorbell rang.M
Natalia’s taunts had become background noise, and Isadora’s cold stares barely registered anymore. But the ache in my chest never left. Every time I passed my bedroom door, I remembered Ethan and Natalia. Every time Father smiled at me, I clung to that small comfort.The next morning, I was in the







