LOGIN
Serena’s POV
“You really outdid yourself this time, Serena. I have attended every Rhodes event for the past three years and this is by far the best one yet.”
I smiled at David Chen, Rhodes CFO and head of partnerships, and raised my glass. “Three months of planning. Every detail matters.”
“Three months.” He shook his head, laughing. “Killian is the luckiest man in this industry and he doesn’t even know it.”
I laughed with him because it was easy and because I believed it. Killian knew. He always knew. He had told me once, very quietly, that the company would have been dead in the water without me. That I was the reason any of it worked. I had held that sentence close for three years like something precious.
David moved on to greet someone else and I stood at the edge of the ballroom and looked at everything I had built.
The white dahlias on every table. I had spent eleven days sourcing them from a farm in California because Killian had mentioned once, years ago, that his mother grew them in her garden. The lighting I had adjusted myself during setup because the original team got the temperature wrong. The guest list I had curated over six weeks, every name chosen deliberately, every table placement considered.
Three years ago, Rhodes Incorporated was a failing startup operating out of a single room in Midtown with two employees and a debt that would have buried most people.
I had walked away from an Oxford scholarship for this. I had taken every dollar my grandmother left me and poured it into Killian’s vision when the banks wouldn’t touch him and his own family told him to quit. I wrote the pitch decks he presented as his own. I sat across from investors who underestimated me and I charmed them into writing checks. I built everything while he stood on top of it and collected every headline, every handshake, every cover story.
I did not mind. I loved him. I had always loved him.
“This place looks incredible.” Vivian appeared at my side, looping her arm through mine the way she had done since we were nineteen. Six years of friendship. My person. “Serena, you are genuinely extraordinary. You know that?”
“Stop it.” I bumped her shoulder. “Have you seen Killian? He was supposed to give the opening remarks twenty minutes ago.”
“He’s around.” She paused. “Actually can we talk for a second? Just us?”
Something in her voice made me look at her properly. She was smiling but her eyes were doing something else entirely.
“What’s wrong?”
She steered me toward the quiet end of the bar, away from the nearest guests. When she turned to face me her expression was careful in a way that Vivian’s face had never needed to be careful with me before.
“I have been hearing things tonight,” she said. “About the Mercer account. About missing funds. About leaked projections ending up at Hartwell Group.” She held my gaze. “Your name keeps coming up Serena.”
I stared at her. “My name.”
“I know how it sounds. I am telling you because I love you and you need to get ahead of this before…”
“Vivian.” My voice dropped. “I gave up Oxford for this company. I invested my entire inheritance when it was worth nothing. I have given three years of my life to Killian and to Rhodes Incorporated. What are you saying to me right now?”
“I am saying people are talking.” She put her hand on my arm. Her eyes were warm and concerned and completely, perfectly lying. “I am saying you need to be careful tonight.”
I looked at her hand on my arm. I looked at her face. And something cold moved through my chest, slow and certain, the way water moves through a crack in stone.
“You did this,” I said.
“Serena…”
“How long?” My voice cracked. “How long have you been planning this? How long have you been sitting in my home and calling yourself my best friend while you…”
“Long enough, sweetheart.”
My mouth fell open in shock, not expecting her to actually confess. I picked up the nearest champagne glass and threw it at her chest. It shattered, champagne soaking through her red dress, and she stumbled back with a shriek that turned every head within twenty feet.
“Are you insane?” She pressed her hands to the soaked fabric, her eyes wide and performing shock beautifully.
“You destroyed everything!” I was crying now, fully, in front of everyone, and I could not stop and I did not care. “How could you do this to me?”
“Someone help please!” Vivian’s voice rang out across the room. “She just attacked me!”
Hands closed around my arms. I fought them. I heard my own voice screaming Killian’s name across the ballroom and I watched him appear through the crowd with two security guards flanking him and an expression on his face that stopped my heart completely.
Not anger. Not confusion. A decision already made.
“Killian.” I pulled against the hands holding me and reached for him. “Please. Whatever she told you it is a lie. I would never steal from you. You know me. Three years. You know me.”
He looked at my outstretched hand. Then he looked at my face.
“The Mercer account,” he said quietly. “The wire transfers. The leaked documents.” His jaw tightened. “I have everything Serena.”
“She planted it.” I was sobbing so hard I could barely form words. “She planted all of it Killian please. I love you. I built everything you have and I would never, I swear to you I would never…”
“Remove her.” He said it to the security guards without looking away from me. “Now.”
They dragged me backward through the crowd. I screamed his name until my voice gave out. Three hundred people watched in complete silence. Not one of them moved.
The last thing I saw before the doors closed was Vivian stepping to Killian’s side and placing her hand flat against his chest and looking at me over his shoulder with those warm familiar eyes.
“I really did love her,” she said softly, to the room. “This breaks my heart.”
The doors shut in my face.
I collapsed against the wall of the service corridor and slid down it and sat on the cold floor and sobbed until I had nothing left inside me.
Then I got up. Because I was Serena Cole and Serena Cole did not stay on the floor.
I walked to my car. I got in. I put my hands on the wheel.
My phone lit up. Killian’s name, over and over.
I drove out into the rain and did not answer.
It was only when I reached the first intersection that I noticed it.
A black car. No headlights. Tailing me.
I changed lanes. It changed lanes.
I took a turn I had not planned to take. It took the same turn.
My hands tightened on the wheel. I pressed the accelerator and watched my speedometer climb and reached for my phone to call someone, anyone, and that was when I pressed the brakes.
Nothing happened.
I pressed them again. Harder. The car did not slow.
The intersection ahead was coming up fast. Too fast. A red light and cross traffic and I was pressing the brakes with both feet now and nothing was happening and I finally understood.
The car was coming straight at me and there was nothing I could do.
But in the half second before impact, caught in the wash of headlights, I saw the driver.
My blood went colder than the brakes that had already failed me.
I knew that face.
Then the world ended.
Serena’s POVA wave of skeptical murmurs swept through the room almost immediately. Several directors exchanged uneasy glances, while Derek leaned back in his chair with a deep frown settling across his face.“Another way?” he repeated, his tone thick with disbelief. “Pardon me, but what exactly is that supposed to mean? We’re under a federal restriction.”“I agree with you, Derek. We cooperate fully with the federal authorities,” Killian replied, his voice calm enough to steady the room despite the tension. “They’ll have every document they ask for, and we’ll comply with every legal requirement. But cooperation doesn’t mean we have to bring our entire operation to a standstill. Our cargo can still move. It’ll cost us more, but if we reroute strategically, we can keep our contracts alive while the investigation runs its course.”Derek practically exploded in his seat, leaning forward so aggressively his chair scraped against the floor. "This is a completely reckless proposition!” he
Serena’s POVThe first thing I noticed was that the room felt different.Killian’s office was usually the kind of space that matched him perfectly. Orderly and spotless. The kind of room that made you stand up straighter just by walking into it. But this morning it looked like someone had finally found a crack in all of that and pried it open. The curtains were only halfway drawn, the grey morning light cutting across the floor at an uneven angle. His jacket was thrown over the back of his chair like he had forgotten it existed. His sleeves were rolled to his forearms, his tie was loose, his collar undone, and his hair had clearly been through several rounds of his own hands.He was pacing when I walked in, phone pressed to his ear, completely absorbed. Then he looked up.The moment his eyes found me, he stopped pacing altogether.Something shifted across his face. It was fleeting, gone almost as quickly as it appeared, but I caught it because I’d spent years watching this man who
Serena’s POVThe first thing I noticed was that the room felt different.Killian’s office was usually the kind of space that matched him perfectly. Orderly and spotless. The kind of room that made you stand up straighter just by walking into it. But this morning it looked like someone had finally found a crack in all of that and pried it open. The curtains were only halfway drawn, the grey morning light cutting across the floor at an uneven angle. His jacket was thrown over the back of his chair like he had forgotten it existed. His sleeves were rolled to his forearms, his tie was loose, his collar undone, and his hair had clearly been through several rounds of his own hands.He was pacing when I walked in, phone pressed to his ear, completely absorbed. Then he looked up.The moment his eyes found me, he stopped pacing altogether.Something shifted across his face. It was fleeting, gone almost as quickly as it appeared, but I caught it because I’d spent years watching this man who
Serena's POV“…shares of Rhodes Incorporated dropped nearly twelve percent in pre-market trading following the announcement,” the news anchor’s voice cut through the silence in the kitchen, competing with the hum of the espresso machine. “Federal authorities have refused to comment on the full scope of the investigation, but sources confirm that all cargo movement at the primary terminals remains frozen pending a complete regulatory audit.”I leaned against the counter, my fingers tightening around my mug as I stared at the screen. I hadn’t slept all night because the moment the news had appeared on my phone thanks to my informant, my mind had started dissecting every detail, turning every possibility over and over, searching for any piece that didn’t fit.A federal emergency freeze wasn’t something that happened because of a simple administrative mistake. It was too sudden. Too severe. The official statement mentioned an anonymous tip regarding major safety violations, but the speed
Killian’s POVThe drive back to Vivian’s apartment was quiet, filled only with the sound of her ragged, uneven breaths as she drifted in and out of consciousness against the passenger window. I kept one eye on the road and one eye on her, watching her head loll forward every time I slowed for a light, and by the time I pulled into the basement parking of her building I had already resigned myself to what came next.After two failed attempts to keep her on her feet, I had to practically carry her into the elevator. She mumbled something against my shoulder that might have been my name, might have been nothing at all, and I held her upright with one arm banded around her waist while I pressed the button for her floor with the other.Her penthouse was exactly as pristine as I remembered it, a stark contrast to the woman currently sagging against me in a dress that had survived the night far better than she had. I guided her into the master bedroom and she dropped heavily onto the edge
Killian’s POVThe neon yellow ball shot past David’s racket, clipping the back line with a sharp, satisfying smack.“Jesus, Rhodes,” David breathed, bracing his hands on his knees as he tried to catch his breath. He dropped his racket onto the clay court with an exaggerated sigh. “That was a brutal pass. For someone who claims he barely plays anymore, you’re making me look terrible.”I laughed, wiping the sweat from my forehead with the back of my wrist. “You’re only three years older than me, Chen, but you act like you’re twelve years ahead of me. Stand up and hit the ball. Stop moving like you need a retirement home.”David slowly straightened, picking up his racket as his eyes narrowed with fake offense. “I’m going to ignore the fact that you just insulted me while I’m physically exhausted.”“Good. Stop being a pussy.”His mouth twitched before he shook his head. “Oh, I’ll show you who’s pussy.”He bounced the ball twice, tossed it into the air, and served hard down the line. I mov
Killian’s POV“You strike me as the kind of man who likes winning so much he forgets to ask whether the prize survives you.”The sentence replayed in my head with brutal, mocking clarity.Again.Again.Crack.The yellow tennis ball slammed against the concrete wall, ricocheting back with a vicious
Serena’s POVRain hammered against the windshield, a violent drumming that made my body shake with terror.My hands slipped on the leather steering wheel. I could smell the ozone, the wet pavement, and the metallic tang of fear rising in the back of my throat. I pressed the brakes.They screamed on
Serena’s POV“I just want to say for the record,” Chloe said from the bed, watching me step into my heels, “that the Elena I know would rather eat glass than attend a work gala.”“People change.”“You keep saying that.” She sat up and crossed her legs. “Before the accident you wouldn’t even work at
Serena’s POVThe first thing I noticed was the ceiling.White. Smooth. A water stain in the far left corner shaped like nothing in particular. I stared at it for a long time before I understood that I was staring at it, that my eyes were open, that I was somewhere.I turned my head.Machines. Tubes







