LOGINJADEN’S POV
The city always looked different from the top floor. Very clean and quiet. Like all the filth and desperation below couldn’t quite reach the glass walls of my office.
I stood beside the window with one hand tucked into my pocket while the other lazily swirled the whiskey in my glass, my attention fixed on the massive screen mounted across the room.
The wedding clip replayed again, again and again.
Adrian Cross smiled for the cameras like a man who had just conquered the world.
Beside him stood Elena Langford, glowing beneath the flashes of expensive cameras and media attention, every inch the perfect rich man’s bride.
The internet was obsessed already. Business blogs called it the union of the year. Investors called it strategic.
The public called it romantic. I called it predictable.
A humorless smile tugged briefly at my lips before disappearing just as quickly.
Adrian had always been ambitious, but the problem with ambitious men was that they eventually confused greed for intelligence.
Marrying Leonard Langford’s daughter was not love. It was business. A move. A transaction wrapped in diamonds and wedding vows. And Adrian was stupid enough to think nobody could see through it.
The office doors opened quietly behind me.
I didn’t turn around.
“Sir,” Ethan said carefully, stepping inside with his tablet pressed against his chest.
“The Langford shares Elena six percent after the wedding announcement this morning.”
“Expected.”
“And the media is heavily backing the merger rumors.”
I took a slow sip of whiskey.
“Of course they are. People love fairy tales when money is involved.”
Ethan stayed silent for a moment before speaking again.
“There’s something else.”
That finally got my attention. I glanced at him over my shoulder.
“What?”
His expression shifted slightly.
Subtle.
But noticeable.
“The woman from the registry earlier…”
My gaze hardened instinctively.
“Which woman?”
“The ex-fiancée.”
Olivia.
The name slipped into my mind too naturally. Too smoothly. I didn’t like that. Ethan stepped closer and handed me the tablet silently. The screen displayed several photos already circulating online.
Most of them focused on Adrian and his new wife.
But one picture caught my attention immediately.
Olivia.
Standing near the back of the registry hall in a pale dress, her face drained of color while everyone around her celebrated.
Even in a still image, the betrayal was obvious. I stared at the photo longer than necessary.
Not because she was beautiful, though she was. It was the look in her eyes. Shock and humiliation.
Pain she was trying desperately not to show publicly.
Most women would have caused a scene.
Cried, begged or even slapped someone but she didn't.
She stood there quietly while her entire world collapsed in front of her.
There was something unsettling about that kind of restraint.
“Media outlets are beginning to pick up her identity,” Ethan continued carefully. “Apparently she dated Adrian for six years.”
Six years.
I let out a quiet scoff. And he still discarded her that easily.
Cold.
Even for Adrian.
“Anything else?” I asked.
Ethan hesitated.
“She left the registry crying.”
For some reason, that irritated me more than it should have. Not the crying itself. The fact that Adrian caused it and walked away untouched.
I turned away from the screen and walked back toward my desk slowly.
The office fell quiet except for the soft tapping of rain beginning against the glass windows.
New York rainstorms always arrive dramatically.
Sudden, violent and unpredictable.
Much like the mess Adrian had created for himself.
“You sent the flowers?” I asked.
“Yes.”
“And the hospital bills?”
“They’re still pending review, sir.”
I nodded once.
“Pay half anonymously.”
Ethan blinked.
That reaction alone annoyed me slightly.
“What?”
“Nothing, sir. It’s just…” He stopped himself quickly.
“Just what?”
He cleared his throat awkwardly. “You usually don’t involve yourself personally in situations like this.”
A faint smile touched my lips.
“That’s because situations like this are usually boring.”
And this one wasn’t.
Not even close.
I walked around the desk and sat down slowly, loosening the cuffs of my shirt.
The truth was, Olivia wasn’t supposed to matter.
She was simply collateral damage in Adrian’s latest performance. Unfortunately for Adrian, I had spent years studying him closely enough to know one thing:
His weaknesses were never in business.
They were always people.
And people made mistakes.
Especially arrogant men who believed money could erase consequences. My phone buzzed softly against the desk.
A message notification.
Unknown Contact.
I opened it immediately.
No response from Olivia yet.
Interesting.
Most desperate people answered quickly when money was involved. But she hadn’t. Which meant one of two things.
Either she was smart enough to be cautious…or proud enough to suffer alone.
Both possibilities interested me.
Ethan shifted slightly. “There’s another issue you should know about.”
I looked up.
“The Cross are pushing aggressively for the Langford merger. If the deal goes through, they’ll control almost thirty percent of the shipping ports by next quarter.”
“Not if I destroy the deal first.”
The words left my mouth calmly.
Casually.
Like I was discussing the weather.
But Ethan knew me well enough to hear the warning underneath.
He exhaled slowly. “You think Olivia can help with that?”
I leaned back in my chair thoughtfully.
“No.”
He looked confused.
“She won’t help me destroy Adrian.”
I picked up my phone again, staring briefly at her unanswered chat.
“She’s going to help me destroy him without realizing it.”
Silence settled heavily across the office.
Outside, thunder cracked across the dark sky.
Ethan rubbed the back of his neck carefully. “And if she refuses?”
I smiled slightly.
That question had crossed my mind already.
Because despite everything I’d read about Olivia tonight, one thing remained obvious.
She loved deeply.
Women like that were dangerous in their own way. Not because they were weak. But because betrayal changed them completely.
And a wounded heart was easier to redirect than a healed one.
“She won’t refuse,” I said calmly.
“You sound certain.”
“I am.”
“How?”
I looked up slowly.
“Because life has already cornered her for me.”
Ethan didn’t respond after that.
Probably because there was nothing to say.
The room fell quiet again while rain battered harder against the windows. I glanced once more at the paused image on the television screen.
Adrian looked victorious. Untouchable and happy.
But victory looked ugly on men like Adrian. Maybe because I had seen what the Langford family’s victories did to people.
My father used to smile like that too once. Before Adrian’s father destroyed him. Before forged contracts, stolen shares, and boardroom betrayals turned a respected man into a cautionary tale whispered about in business circles.
People said my father drank himself to death.
What they never talked about was why. They never talked about the night he sat in his office staring at bankruptcy papers while the Cross celebrated buying everything he had built.
I was twenty-three when I buried him. And standing beside his grave, I made myself one promise:
One day, I would return every single favor that family ever gave me with interest.
But the thing about powerful men was that they rarely noticed the beginning of their downfall.
And Olivia?
She was going to become exactly that.
Not intentionally.
Not knowingly.
But eventually.
A soft vibration interrupted my thoughts.
My phone.
Again.
This time, my eyes narrowed slightly.
A new message finally appeared on the screen.
Unknown Number.
My thumb moved instinctively as I opened it.
And for the first time that night…
I smiled genuinely.
“Who exactly are you?”
Simple question.
But be cautious.
Careful.
Not emotional.
Interesting.
Very interesting.
I stared at the message for a few seconds before typing slowly.
“Someone offering you a way out.”
Three dots appeared instantly.
Disappeared.
Then it appeared again.
She was thinking carefully before replying.
Good..That meant she wasn’t reckless.
Her next message finally came through.
“People like you never help for free.”
The smile on my face deepened slightly.
Smart girl…Very smart girl.
I loosened my tie slowly while reading the message again.
Then I typed:
“And people like you don’t survive by trusting easily.”
This time, her reply took longer.
Long enough for me to imagine her sitting somewhere in that hospital room, exhausted and emotionally drained while trying to decide whether I was dangerous or useful.
Probably both.
Finally..
Another message appeared.
“What do you want from me?”
I leaned back slowly in my chair, my gaze drifting toward the storm outside the windows. That question carried more weight than she realized.
Because the truth?
What I wanted from Olivia Bennett had very little to do with marriage. And absolutely everything to do with revenge.
My fingers hovered briefly over the keyboard before I finally typed:
“I want to make you an offer.”
The message was delivered immediately.
Then came her reply.
Fast this time. Almost nervous.
“What kind of offer?”
I stared at the screen for a long moment. And somewhere deep inside me…Something dark settled quietly into place.
Because Olivia had just done the one thing I needed most.
She opened the door.
And now..I intended to walk straight through it.
OLIVIA’S POVEthan left at eight thirty.He did not say anything else significant on his way out. Just finished his tea and stood and said he had a meeting at nine and thanked me for the tea with the warmth of someone who was genuinely grateful rather than being polite and walked out through the back door the way he had come in.I stood in the kitchen after he left and listened to the house.Somewhere above me Jaden was in his study. The particular quality of the house when he was working. A specific kind of occupied silence that I had learned to read the way you learned to read weather.I looked at my tea.Cold now.I poured it out and made a fresh cup and went to the sitting room and sat in the chair by the window and thought about everything Ethan had said.Not arranged it. Not strategized around it. Just thought about it the way you thought about something that had given you a piece of understanding you had been missing and needed time to settle into its proper place.Jaden has ne
OLIVIA’S POVThree days of it.That was how long I had been carrying the distance without saying anything about it. Three days of breakfasts that were correct and dinners that were warm enough and conversations that covered the surface of things without going underneath them.Three days of the study door closed at midday.Three days of lying awake in the dark turning the same question over and not arriving at any answer that did not hurt in one direction or another.I had not chased it.I was not going to chase it.Not because I did not want to. Because I understood, at a level below strategy, that chasing Jaden Parker toward something he had decided to step back from would not produce the thing I wanted. It would produce a version of it. A managed, careful, controlled version that arrived because I had pushed rather than because he had chosen.I did not want the version that arrived because I pushed.So I carried the distance.And I got up on the fourth morning and went downstairs an
JADEN’S POVThe morning after the terrace I woke up before my alarm.That was not unusual. What was unusual was the specific quality of stillness I lay in before getting up. I stared at the ceiling of my room and thought about the night before with a clarity that did not fade the way most things faded with sleep between you and them.I had told her about the kitchen table.About my father’s apology.I had not told anyone that. Not Ethan, who had been beside me through most of the rebuilding. Not the therapist I had seen for exactly four sessions eight years ago before deciding the version of myself that did not examine things too closely was more functional. Not Marcus, who knew the broad shape of my history without knowing the specific weight of that one evening.I had told Olivia.On a terrace, in the dark, with her hand finding mine on the railing in a way that neither of us had announced or discussed.I got up.Showered.Dressed.And somewhere in the ordinary mechanics of getting
OLIVIA’S POV I woke up knowing.Not from an alarm. Not from a notification. Not from any external signal that the number had changed and was now significant in a way that required my attention.I just woke up and knew.One hundred days.I lay in the bed that had become my bed over fifteen months and looked at the ceiling that had become my ceiling and listened to the house that had become my house in all the ways that mattered except the legal one and I counted backward from the contract end date the way I had been counting without meaning to for weeks.One hundred days.I pressed my lips together.Looked at the ceiling.In the beginning I had counted down the way you counted down to the end of something difficult. The specific arithmetic of someone marking days in their head because the number decreasing felt like progress. Like movement toward something better. Like the accumulation of surviving.I had not noticed when the counting changed its quality.At some point the decreasing
JADEN’S POV We stayed on the terrace for a long time. I was not tracking it. That in itself was unusual. I tracked time the way I tracked most things. With the specific awareness of a person who understood that time was the one resource that did not replenish and who had built his entire professional life around the precise allocation of it. Tonight I was not tracking it. The city below us had moved through several stages of its nighttime self before either of us spoke again after what she had said. “You can put some of it down.” I had turned those words over quietly while we stood at the railing. Feeling the specific quality of them. The way they had arrived without performance or strategy. Without the careful framing of someone trying to manage me toward a particular emotional state. Just said. Simply. Like a fact being offered rather than a comfort being manufactured. She was good at that. I had noticed it early. The way she held space without filling it. The way she
OLIVIA’S POVThe terrace was cold.Not uncomfortably. The specific cool of an evening that had not yet committed to the full chill of later in the night. I stood at the railing and looked at the city below and let the air move around me and waited.I was not sure how long I waited.Long enough for the city to settle into its deeper evening. Long enough for the lights below to stop changing and simply be what they were.Then I heard the door behind me.Footsteps.He came to stand beside me at the railing.Not across the terrace. Not at the far end. Beside me. Close enough that his arm was near mine in the cold air.I did not say anything.He did not say anything.We stood at the railing and looked at the city together and the silence had the quality of something being held rather than something being avoided. The specific weight of two people standing inside a significant moment and giving it the space it deserved before anyone tried to put it into words.The city below us was beautifu
OLIVIA’S POV The house was too quiet in the mornings.Not the kind of unpleasant quiet. Just the kind that left too much space for thinking. Jaden was in his study by seven every day without fail. The staff moved through their routines like choreography. Everyone had somewhere to be and something
ADRIAN’S POV The bedroom was quiet in the way that rooms between two people who had run out of things to say to each other always were.Elena was on her side of the bed with her laptop open, the blue light catching the angles of her face. She had been working since we got back from dinner. Or she
OLIVIA’S POV The library had become my favorite room in the house.That surprised me. I had expected to feel like a guest in every room, moving carefully through spaces that did not belong to me. But there was something about a room full of books that felt neutral. Like books did not care who own
JADEN’S POV The city was getting dark outside and I was standing outside my window.I stood at the bar in my room and poured two fingers of vodka into a glass, watching the lights come on across the skyline one by one. From up here the city always looked manageable. Organized. Like every moving p







