Mag-log inELENA
Week one passes in a blur of controlled chaos. I barely see Damien. Not alone, anyway. He's suddenly impossible to pin down—always in meetings, always with other people, always maintaining the professional distance we agreed on. It should be a relief. It’s not. Instead, I throw myself into the campaign with manic energy that makes Rachel ask if I’m “doing okay” and David stage a coffee intervention after he finds me on my fourth espresso before noon. “You’re going to vibrate through the floor,” he says, prying the cup from my hand. “I’m fine. I just need to—” “Need to what? Work yourself into a hospital stay? Elena, the campaign doesn’t launch until Friday. You have time.” But I don’t. Not really. Every day that passes is another day of Marcus watching me like a hawk. Claire delivering subtle digs about “special projects” and “preferential treatment.” Brian Chen circling like a shark scenting blood. By Wednesday, I’ve contacted fifteen micro-influencers, negotiated partnerships with eight, and designed content frameworks for each platform. The work is good. Better than good. It’s also not enough. “You need to eat something that’s not from a vending machine,” Sophia announces, appearing in my office at 2 PM with Thai takeout. “And before you say you’re not hungry, I will physically force-feed you pad thai. Don’t test me.” I save my work. “You’re bossy.” “I’m concerned. You look like you haven’t slept in three days.” “I slept.” Four hours. Maybe five. “I’m fine.” “Uh-huh.” She sets out containers, hands me chopsticks. “Eat. And tell me why you’re killing yourself over a campaign that doesn’t launch for two more days.” Because if I stop working, I start thinking. About Damien’s voice dropping low in his office. About the way he almost touched my face. About the email he sent, which I deleted like it could erase the way my heart jumped when I read it. “I just want it to be perfect.” “It’s already perfect. You’ve shown me the materials. They’re brilliant.” She studies me. “This isn’t about the campaign, is it?” “Of course it’s about the—” “How many times have you seen him this week?” My chopsticks pause halfway to my mouth. “That’s not relevant.” “That’s completely relevant. You said you’d keep distance. Are you?” “Yes. He’s barely spoken to me outside of group meetings.” “And how does that feel?” Like I’m suffocating. Like every time I see him across a conference room, carefully not looking at me, something in my chest cracks a little more. “Fine. It feels fine.” Sophia’s expression softens. “Oh, honey.” “Don’t. Don’t look at me like that.” “Like what?” “Like I’m already in too deep. Like this is going to end badly. Like—” “Like you’re falling for him?” The words hit like a slap. “I’m not.” “Elena—” “I’m not,” I repeat, more forcefully. “It was one night. One impulsive, reckless night, and now we’re both being professionals about it. That’s all.” “Is that why you’ve lost five pounds this week? Why you look like you’re about to shatter? Why you’re working yourself into the ground trying to prove something?” “I’m trying to prove I deserve this job.” “You already deserve it! You’ve done more in one week than the last marketing strategist did in six months. Everyone knows it. Even Marcus is starting to come around—I heard him admit your influencer strategy was ‘not completely terrible,’ which from Marcus is basically a love letter.” Despite everything, I smile. “High praise.” “Exactly. So stop trying to be superhuman. Eat. Sleep. Take a breath.” She leans forward. “And maybe admit that keeping distance from Damien Blackwood is killing you a little.” I set down my chopsticks. “It doesn’t matter how I feel. It can’t. Not while I’m on probation. Not while people are looking for any excuse to prove I don’t belong here.” “And after probation?” “After probation, I…” I trail off. What happens then? Do we try this—whatever this is? Do we stay professional? Can we? My phone buzzes. Text from an unknown number. Campaign launch moved to tomorrow. Board wants to see results faster. Meet in Conference Room A at 6 PM to discuss revised timeline. -DB “Shit.” I’m already standing, gathering papers. “What?” “Launch is tomorrow. Not Friday. Tomorrow.” Sophia’s eyes widen. “Can you be ready?” “I have to be.” I spend the next three hours in a frenzy. Calling influencers to move timelines. Reworking the rollout schedule. Coordinating with David on creative assets. By 5:45, I have something resembling a plan. By 5:55, I’m racing to Conference Room A with my laptop, three energy drinks, and what’s left of my sanity. I’m first to arrive. The room is empty, lights dimmed, the evening sun casting long shadows across the table. I set up my presentation. Check it twice. Three times. At 6:03, the door opens. Damien walks in. Alone. No Marcus. No David. No Rachel. Just him. “Where is everyone?” I ask. He closes the door. “There is no everyone. The board didn’t move the timeline.” Understanding dawns slowly. “You lied.” “I needed to talk to you. You’ve been avoiding me.” “I’ve been working. And we agreed—” “I know what we agreed. Professional distance. No private meetings.” He loosens his tie, runs a hand through his hair. He looks exhausted. “But I can’t—I need to know if you’re okay.” “If I’m okay?” “You look like you haven’t slept. Haven’t eaten. Rachel said you’ve been here until midnight every night this week.” “Because I’m working on the campaign you gave me three weeks to complete!” “You could finish that campaign in your sleep. This isn’t about work.” He crosses the room. “This is about you punishing yourself.” “For what?” “For wanting something you think you shouldn’t want.” The accusation hangs in the air. True. Devastating. “You don’t know what I want.” “Don’t I?” He’s close now. Too close. “Because I know what I want. And I know that keeping distance from you is the right thing, the smart thing. And I hate it.” “Damien—” “Do you know what this week has been like? Seeing you in meetings and having to pretend you’re just another employee? Watching you work yourself to exhaustion and not being able to—” He stops. Jaw clenches. “I hired you because you’re brilliant. But I’m starting to realize that was a mistake.” The words cut. “If you’re firing me—” “I’m not firing you. I’m saying hiring you was a mistake because now I have to see you every day. Watch you be everything I knew you were. Pretend that night didn’t happen when it’s all I think about.” My breath catches. “You said you regretted it.” “I lied. I’ve been lying. To you, to myself. Because the truth is terrifying.” “What truth?” He’s inches away now. Close enough to see the rapid pulse at his throat. Close enough to touch. “That I want you. Still. More than I should. More than is wise or professional. And I think you want me too.” His voice drops. I should deny it. Should step back. Remember all the reasons this is impossible. Instead, I whisper, “What if I do?” His eyes darken. “Then we’re both in trouble.” “We’re already in trouble.” “Elena—” “You lied to get me here. Alone. Why?” “Because I needed to see if I was imagining it. This—” he gestures between us, “—this pull. This constant awareness. I needed to know if it was real or if I was just—” “It’s real.” The admission escapes before I can stop it. “God help me, it’s real.” For one suspended moment, we just stare at each other. Two people on the edge of something irrevocable. Then his phone rings. The spell shatters. He steps back, pulls out his phone, and curses softly. “It’s Marcus. He probably heard I’m in the building.” He looks at me. “You should go. If he finds us alone in here—” “Right. Yes.” I’m already gathering my things, hands shaking. “The launch is still Friday?” “Friday. But Elena—” The door opens. Marcus walks in, stops short. “Damien. Ms. Martinez.” His eyes narrow. “Evening meeting?” “Campaign review,” Damien says smoothly. “Ms. Martinez was just leaving.” “Of course.” Marcus’s smile doesn’t reach his eyes. “Elena, I’ve been meaning to speak with you about budget expenditures. Several influencer payments seem… excessive.” “They’re within approved parameters.” “Barely. I’d like to review each contract personally.” Translation: I’m looking for reasons to prove you’re wasting money. “I’ll have everything on your desk tomorrow morning.” “See that you do.” He turns to Damien. “We need to discuss Q4 projections. Now?” Damien’s jaw tightens. “Of course.” I leave before being dismissed. In the hallway, I lean against the wall and try to catch my breath. It’s real. I said it out loud. Admitted it. And he didn’t deny it. My phone buzzes. That was too close. But I meant what I said. Every word. -DB I stare at the message. Should delete it. Should tell him to stop. Instead, I type back: So did I. I hit send. His response comes immediately. Two more weeks until probation ends. Then we figure this out. Together. Together. The word feels like a promise. And a threat. In two weeks, everything changes. Either this campaign succeeds, and I prove I belong here. Or it fails, and I lose everything. Including him. I head back to my office and work until midnight. The campaign launches in sixteen hours. And I have no idea if I’m more terrified of it failing or succeeding. Because either way, I’m in too deep to find my way back to safe ground. And the worst part? I don’t think I want to anymore.Elena The reporters don’t leave.By Wednesday, they are still there. Three vans parked like they own the street. Cameras lifted every time the gate moves. Microphones waiting for words we never agreed to give.“Blackwood’s secret family,” they call us.The twins stop going outside.They stop asking.Inside the house feels smaller each day, like the walls are quietly learning our fear.Luna presses her face against the curtain. “Why are those people here?”“Because they’re nosy,” I say. “And they don’t know when to stop.”“Are we famous?” she asks, too softly.“No, baby. Your father is. We’re just… caught in it.”Lucas doesn’t look away from his tablet. His fingers move fast, scrolling.I already know what he’s reading before he speaks.“Mommy,” he says, voice flat. “It says you’re a ‘small-town marketing consultant who allegedly trapped billionaire Damien Blackwood with a pregnancy.’”My stomach tightens. “Lucas, stop reading that.”“What does allegedly mean?”“It means they’re accus
Elena The media scandal explodes, paparazzi invade their lives, and Elena begins regretting letting Damien back into their world.The next morning begins normally.Grandmother Rosa stretches carefully in the kitchen while Elena prepares breakfast.Coffee brews. Toast burns slightly. Luna argues with Lucas about strawberry jam.For ten quiet minutes, life feels almost ordinary again.Then Sophia calls."Have you seen the news?"Elena frowns. "What news?"A pause.Then Sophia says carefully, "You need to check your phone."Cold dread spreads instantly through Elena's stomach.She opens TMZ.And stops breathing.Photos cover the screen.Damien holding Luna's hand outside a museum.Lucas beside him at a restaurant.The three of them walking through a park.The headline screams across the page:BILLIONAIRE'S SECRET TWINS REVEALED!Elena's fingers go numb.The article tears through every private part of her life with horrifying confidence."Sources claim billionaire Damien Blackwood recent
Elena Damien constantly extending the twins’ stay, the emotional strain on Elena, and the first visible cracks in co-parenting.Sunday comes and goes. The twins don't come home."Just one more day," Damien says on the phone Sunday night. "There's a theater production. Children's Shakespeare. Lucas wants to analyze the dramatic structure. Luna wants to study the costumes. I already bought tickets.""You said Sunday night.""I know. I'm sorry. But Elena, they're having the time of their lives. Can we do Monday evening instead? I'll have them back by bedtime. I promise."Elena closes her eyes.Outside, the evening wind moves softly through Grandmother Rosa's garden. Somewhere nearby, dogs bark at passing bicycles. Everything feels normal except her chest.She wants to say no.Wants to remind him that promises matter. That children need routine more than excitement.But then she hears the twins in the background."Please, Mommy! Just one more day!"Luna sounds breathless with excitement.
Elena"He's trying," Andre observes as I help Grandmother Rosa into the house."I know.""You're allowed to be upset about it.""I'm not upset.""Elena, you've been crying for the last twenty minutes."I touch my face. Wet again. I've been crying and didn't even notice."I just—I worked so hard to give them a good life. To make up for not having a father. And now he shows up and in two weeks they love him.""They love you too.""But for how long? Before they realize his life is more exciting? More expensive? More everything?"Andre pulls the car over. Turns to face me fully. "Listen to me. You are irreplaceable. You're their mother. The woman who's been there for everything. No amount of museums or ice cream or fancy apartments changes that.""You don't know that.""I do. Because I've seen you with them. I've watched you build a life that's rich in everything that matters. Love. Stability. Community. That's not something Damien can buy.""But he can offer them opportunities I can't. B
ELENAGrandmother Rosa is discharged from the hospital on a Tuesday, exactly two weeks after her surgery."Finally," she declares as the nurse wheels her to the car Andre has driven up from San Esperanza. "Freedom from bland food and people waking me every two hours to ask if I'm sleeping.""You need rest, Abuela," I remind her for the hundredth time."I'll rest at home. In my own bed. Without machines beeping."The twins hover, careful not to jostle her but clearly excited to have her coming home."We made welcome home signs!" Luna announces."With scientifically accurate hearts," Lucas adds. "Not the cartoon kind. Real anatomical hearts.""Of course you did," Grandmother Rosa laughs, then winces. "Don't make me laugh yet. Stitches."Andre helps settle her into the passenger seat with practiced efficiency. He's been coming to the city every few days, checking on Grandmother Rosa's recovery, pointedly not mentioning the kiss or his declaration of love.Professional. Distant. Exactly w
Elena At 3:45, Margaret meets us in the lobby of Blackwood Enterprises. The entire building smells expensive. Polished marble. Coffee. That faint scent of wealth and power that clings to places where billion-dollar decisions are made every day.The twins stand close to me, unusually quiet."Ready?" Margaret asks gently.They nod together.Nervous. Excited. Hopeful.Lucas adjusted his tiny button-down shirt at least six times on the drive here. Luna insisted on wearing her favorite blue dress because, according to her, "important days deserve pretty clothes."This is important.Life-changing important."Do you think the test will say what we already know?" Lucas asks as we walk toward the elevators.Margaret presses the button. "I think science doesn't lie. And science is about to confirm what your mother has been saying for five years."The elevator ride is silent except for the soft hum of movement.Lucas grips my left hand.Luna holds the other so tightly my fingers ache.I don't t
Elena "I've loved you since you came back from the city, broken and pregnant and determined to build a life anyway. I've loved watching you raise those incredible children. I've loved your strength, your intelligence, your refusal to let circumstances defeat you.""Andre, I care about you, but—""
Elena The Saturday market in San Esperanza's town plaza is my favorite chaos.Vendors shouting prices, children weaving between stalls, the smell of fresh bread and roasting corn mixing with mountain air. I have a booth here twice a month—selling Grandmother Rosa's preserves and herbal remedies wh
ElenaAfter lunch, while the twins “help” with baking — which really means eating chocolate chips and coating the kitchen in flour — a knock sounds at the door.Dr. Andre Castellano stands on the porch. Medical bag in hand. Warm, genuine smile.“Elena. I was in the neighborhood, thought I’d check o
ElenaThe thing about raising brilliant children is… they eventually start asking the questions you’ve spent years praying they’ll never think of."Mommy, what's DNA?"I nearly drop the basket of laundry I'm folding. My heartbeat jumps to my throat."DNA?" I repeat, pretending confusion. "Where did







