LOGINChapter three
Andrea's POV
I get home that night, and the first thing I hear is my mother crying.
It’s not the first time, and it probably won’t be the last, but it never gets easier standing outside the kitchen door listening so I linger for a moment before walking in. She wipes her face quickly and straightens up, pretending like I haven’t seen anything.
“Mom,” I say. It’s the best I can manage after everything tonight.
“I'm fine, Andrea.” She replies, not looking at me, shuffling the papers on the table.
I sit across from her and pull the stack toward me before she can stop me. I already know what they are without reading a word. The red stamps at the top say it all. Three new invoices, all marked OVERDUE. The total on the last one is so bad I have to turn it face down because I can’t let her see my reaction.
“When did these come?” I ask.
“Today,” she says quietly. “The hospital called too. They said if we don’t make at least a partial payment by the end of the month, they’ll have to pause Ethan’s treatment.”
I don’t say anything because there’s genuinely nothing to say. I definitely suck at consoling.
My father walks in from the sitting room, probably drawn by the voices. He glances at the papers, then looks away like he always does, and something sharp pierces my chest.
“Aren’t you going to say anything, Dad?” I ask, keeping my voice steady.
“There are men who have called this house three times this week,” I continue. “The loan isn’t reducing, and the hospital isn’t going away. So… what exactly is the plan?"
He’s quiet for a long moment before he finally says, “I’m working on something,” in the voice he always uses when he has absolutely nothing. I look away, because the anger in my chest is the kind I can’t afford to release right now.
“Okay, Dad,” I say, and leave the kitchen before I say something I can’t take back.
I peek through the slightly open door of Ethan’s room, just wanting to make sure he’s asleep. But he’s sitting up in bed, blanket tucked around him, little toy cars scattered across the floor. His head turns instantly when he hears me, and with a grin that makes my chest ache, he calls, “Sister! Where did you go all day? I missed you!”
I hesitate, caught off guard, then step in. “Hey, pumpkin.” I crouch beside the bed, smoothing his hair. “I missed you too.”
He hugs my arm tight. “Did you play with anyone? Did you have fun?”
I force a smile. “Yeah, a little. Just babysitting stuff,” I say carefully. That’s the cover story I give my family: random side gigs, harmless little jobs. Nobody knows I’m living a life that isn’t mine tonight.
“Andrea… when is it all going to end?” Ethan leans back, his small face serious. “It hurts.”
My throat tightens. He’s only four, and yet he already understands pain in a way that shouldn’t exist at his age. My hand hovers over his hair. “I promise, Ethan. I’ll figure out a way.” By ‘a way’, I meant accepting the devil's proposal. “I just… need a little more time.”
He nods solemnly and coughs softly. I remember the loan I still owe the woman who supplies me with these rich people’s outfits and jewelry. I argued with her tonight, I’d promised to balance everything but I came with excuses instead, and now her words still ring in my ears. “You can’t keep running from your debt, Andrea.”
I swallow the lump in my throat. Sacrifices come with being the best sister. I can’t just keep watching him suffer; he doesn’t deserve any of this.
Trying to lighten the moment, I crouch closer. “Hey, remember that Transformers set you’ve been asking for?” I grin. His eyes widen. “I’m going to get it for you really soon.”
“Really?” His face lights up like the sun has risen in his bedroom. “Thanks, Andrea! You’re the best sister in the whole wide world!”
I hug him tight, feeling his warmth and innocence, and for a moment, the weight of the night lifts slightly. But I can’t ignore it, everything I’m about to do, the decisions I’m considering tonight… it’s all for him. For Ethan.
I pull back and kiss the top of his head. “I love you, little man. Sleep tight, okay?”
****
Seven days later, a knock at the front door makes my stomach drop before I even reach it.
Two men, the same ones from last month, stand there in the doorway with their too-loud voices and their cold smiles, asking for my father in a way that echoes down the hallway. I am certain the neighbors can hear every word.
“He’s not available,” I say, pressing myself against the doorway so they can't see past me.
“Tell him the deadline moved,” the taller one says, smiling without warmth. “He has until Friday now, not next week. And we’re not as patient as before.”
When they leave, I lean against the door, heart racing.
“Who was that?” my mother asks, her footsteps closing in.
“Nobody,” I say, walking past her toward the bathroom. “Wrong door.”
She doesn’t push, and I’m grateful because I don’t have a version of the truth I can give her. She's had enough to worry about already.
I lock the bathroom door and sit on the edge of the tub. Tristan's card is in my hand as I think about the invoices on the kitchen table, Ethan’s medication, those two men, and my father’s empty assurances. What am I really waiting for?
I know what I am going to do.
I have known since Tristan Hale stood across from me and offered exactly what I needed with a catch… I’ve known. I tell myself it’s not sleeping around. Just one man. One decision.
Seven days, he said. But it takes until the seventh night before I act. I pull out my phone and dial the number on the card before I can rethink my decision.
“I’m ready, Mr. Hale,” I say as soon as he answers.
There's a short pause before his calm, unbothered voice comes back. “My driver will be outside your building tomorrow at nine. Pack what you need.”
He hangs up before I can respond as I sit there with the phone in my hand and the card on the tub. I made the right choice. I have to believe it.
At breakfast, I sit both my parents down. “I got a job offer,” I say and my mother looks up immediately with that careful, cautious hope in her face that breaks something in me a little. “Brand ambassador post with a private firm. It's a long distance, so I’ll be living away for a while. They agreed to cover my expenses.”
“How long is a while?” my mother asks.
“A year,” I say, “maybe more depending on how it goes, but the pay is enough to handle everything, the hospital bills, the loan, all of it.”
She studies me closely, looking for the part I’m not saying. I hold her gaze. She needs to see enough truth to let it go.
“Is it safe?” she asks quietly.
“Yes,” I answer, and for that part, I believe it. It's Tristan Hale after all.
My father looks at me, relief and shame crossing his face. “You don’t have to do this, Andrea,” he says, the most he’s said in weeks.
“I know,” I say, “I want to.”
My mother squeezes my hand once, tight, then lets go. That's her way of saying okay, I love you, and please come back safely, all at once.
I finish packing, glance at Ethan’s medication and hospital schedule, and think: this time next month, none of this will be a problem. That thought is all I need to keep moving.
Chapter Fifty-EightAndrea's POVAll I did was agree.Maybe I should have asked more questions.Maybe I should have asked why Tristan looked so tense after bringing it up. Maybe I should have asked why he spent the entire drive oddly quiet, his fingers tapping against the steering wheel every few minutes.Instead, I just said yes and now I was staring at a mansion that somehow made Tristan's house look modest.“Oh my God.” The words slipped out before I could stop them.The gates alone looked expensive enough to pay off a hundred people's monthly salary and I'm not exaggerating.Tristan glanced at me from the driver's seat.“That bad?”“Your family lives here?”His mouth twitched slightly. “Unfortunately.”The car continued down the long driveway.The mansion seemed to grow bigger the closer we got. Massive white columns framed the entrance. Perfect gardens stretched across the property. Fountains sparkled beneath the evening sun.Everything screamed money.Old money.My stomach tight
Chapter Fifty-SevenTristan’s POVNot once in my life has a woman ever slapped me across the face. Not once. And somehow the craziest part of this entire situation is that I’m not even angry about it.I probably should be.Three months ago, if anyone had asked me how I’d react to being hit, I would’ve said exactly what everybody expects from Tristan Hale.Cold rage, distance, punishment.But standing here now, looking at Andrea panicking in front of me with tears already gathering in her eyes…All I feel is guilt.Because I pushed her there.I know I did.The slap barely even registered compared to the look on her face afterward. Immediate regret, immediate fear and honestly? That part bothers me more than the slap itself.“Tristan…” Her voice shakes badly. “I'm so sorry.”I finally move but not toward her. Just one step away.Because right now my thoughts are too loud and I need one second to get them under control before I say something stupid.Andrea notices immediately and the fea
Chapter Fifty-SixAndrea’s POVIt’s been a week.An entire week.Seven full days since Tristan decided to disappear from my life while somehow still living in the same house as me.At first, I genuinely thought something was wrong.The second morning, I woke up confused when his side of the bed was empty again. The third morning, I started getting annoyed. By the fourth, I was checking news articles to make sure he hadn’t secretly died in some dramatic billionaire accident.But no, he was alive. Very alive apparently, just avoiding me like I personally ruined his life.Every text I sent never got a response. Every single one. And the worst part? He read them.I knew he did because those stupid little read receipts would appear under my messages like tiny acts of violence.Meanwhile the man continued haunting the house like some emotionally unavailable ghost. He’d leave before I woke up and somehow return after I’d fallen asleep.At least… that’s what I assumed.Until the couch inciden
Chapter Fifty-FiveTristan’s POVAvoiding Andrea feels cowardly. Unfortunately, it also feels like the smartest option right now. Because the second I see her face again, I already know I’m going to forget every logical thought currently holding my life together.So instead, I left before sunrise like a complete asshole.The truth is, I don’t actually have a better plan yet.And yeah, I know avoidance isn’t a strategy. It’s basically just procrastination dressed up in a suit pretending to be self-preservation.But avoidance buys time and time buys clarity. Right now, clarity is the one thing I need before I do something I can’t take back.At least that’s what I kept telling myself while being driven to work after barely sleeping the entire night.Daniel walks beside me through the executive floor, reading through my schedule from his tablet while trying very hard not to notice I haven’t paid attention to a single word he’s said in the last five minutes.“You have the investor conferen
Chapter Fifty-FourAndrea’s POVMy hand reaches across the bed before my eyes even open.It’s instinct at this point. Some call it muscle memory. But whatever… choosing the right words isn't the point right now. The point is that my body reaches for him before my brain is even awake enough to think about it. I reach for his warmth, for solid skin and sleepy breathing and the familiar weight of him beside me.Instead, my fingers touch cold sheets.My eyes open immediately.The room is quiet and grey with early morning light. I sit up slowly, hair everywhere, and look at the space beside me. The pillow is still there but the indent is gone, sheets pulled smooth like nobody slept there at all. Or like whoever did left a long time ago.I glance at the clock across the room.7:04 AM.For some reason, that makes it feel weirder.I just sit there for a second staring at the empty space beside me.Last night was really good. Close to perfect, even.Tristan had been… softer. Different in a wa
Chapter Fifty-ThreeTristan's POV“Hey, I've been waiting for you.” Andrea's voice interrupts my thoughts. “I already changed and everything, couldn't find you anywhere.”I turn around.She's standing at the entrance to the outdoor terrace, hair down, wearing nothing but a robe loosely tied at the waist, looking at me with that expression she gets when she's been looking forward to something and is mildly annoyed it hasn't started yet.I turn back toward the pool.I’m leaning against the railing, letting the last drag of smoke leave my lungs slowly. I love the silence here, even though it's expensive. No city noise. No neighbours. Just the sound of wind creating small waves across the water and Andrea's bare feet on the stone behind me.She walks over and stops beside me.“Are you okay?”I drop the cigarette, crushing it beneath my slippers. “Yeah,” I say after a second, forcing a small smile. “I was just thinking.”Andrea leans against the railing beside me, studying my face carefull
Chapter Thirty-EightAndrea’s POVHe's propped up against the headboard with a glass of water on the nightstand and the colour slowly returning to his face, which is a relief because twenty minutes ago he looked like a man who had seen the other side and wasn't impressed by it.I’m lying beside him
Chapter Thirty-SixAndrea’s POVI decided to cook something simple. The kind of meal my mom used to make when we had a little extra money at home. Not fancy restaurant food, just good, hearty breakfast. I made scrambled eggs with chopped onions and tomatoes, crispy bacon, golden pancakes with a bi
Chapter Thirty-FiveAndrea’s POV“So here’s the full list of what I need,” I say, handing the paper to Claire. “I checked the kitchen twice but some things are missing. Can you get them from the pantry for me?”Claire takes the list and scans it quickly with the expression of someone trying to stay
Chapter Thirty-FourAndrea’s POVI wake up to the soft sound of a door opening and closing.My eyes flutter open slowly. The bed feels warm and huge, the sheets still carrying Tristan’s scent. I turn my head and see him standing in front of the tall mirror, knotting a deep navy luxurious tie easily







