LOGINAlice
Six days left of being Catherine Morgan, and I lay awake in the dark counting them anyway, one by one. I turned each day over in my head like if I thought about it long enough, time might slow down a little.
Vaylen didn’t come home that night. I moved through the penthouse the same way I’d moved through this marriage, ensuring the rooms stayed spotless while the hours passed without sound. Nothing changed, but somehow that had stopped feeling strange a long time ago.
The next morning, I counted again while standing by the bedroom window. Five days left.
The city stretched below me, loud and moving and alive in a way this place never was.
It was my birthday, a thought that came and went almost immediately with no excitement and no ache either, remaining just a fact.
By noon, I stood at the kitchen counter stirring powder into a glass of water, watching it disappear slowly beneath the spoon. Prenatal vitamins.
“Once a day,” the doctor had said two days ago, a responsibility sitting quietly inside my body where nobody else could see it.
I set the spoon aside and lifted the glass. Then the knock came from the door and I froze with the cup halfway to my mouth. For a second, the whole apartment seemed to go silent around me, or maybe it was just me standing there too still, waiting for my heartbeat to settle enough to think.
I lowered the cup carefully and walked toward the door, expecting absolutely nothing. At some point during the first year of this marriage, I’d stopped expecting things from Vaylen Morgan at all, a shift that happened quietly enough that I never noticed the exact moment.
Reno stood in the hallway holding two garment bags over one arm and a velvet box in the other hand.
“From Mr. Morgan.” He paused a little. Then, “Happy birthday, Mrs. Morgan.”
I just looked at him for a second, from the bags to the velvet box and back at him again, like maybe I’d misunderstood something. My hand tightened a little on the edge of the door as the thought that he remembered slipped in too fast before I could shut it down.
I reached for the things immediately, before my mind could turn it into more than it was.
“Thank you, Reno.”
“Of course.” He gave a small nod and stepped away.
I closed the door slowly, carrying everything to the couch so I could lay it out carefully.
The dress came first, a dusty rose soft fabric with clean lines, elegant without trying too hard and very deliberate, which was very Vaylen. I brushed my fingers over the material once before turning to the jewelry, which consisted of pearl drop earrings and a thin chain necklace. They were simple pieces, but expensive enough that you noticed anyway, exactly the kind of thing I would’ve picked for myself.
The shoes were in the second bag, right on the first try in my exact size, which stopped me more than it should have.
I sat on the edge of the couch staring at them for a moment. Five days before our marriage ended, and he still knew my shoe size. I didn’t really know what to do with that thought, so I let it sit there.
My phone started ringing from the kitchen counter, the sound following me the whole way across the apartment as I got up to answer it.
Vaylen.
I picked up.
“Has Reno brought everything?” His voice was low and distracted, like he was reading something while talking to me.
“Yes.”
I heard papers shift faintly on his end, proving he was still working.
“I’ll pick you up at seven.” A short pause. “Be ready.”
The call ended. I stared at the blank screen for a second longer before setting the phone back down. Then I picked up the glass from the counter and drank the vitamin mixture in a few quick swallows before I could think about it too much. When the glass was empty, I rinsed it out and went back to the dress.
---
The dress fit perfectly, not just good enough, but perfect. I stood in front of the mirror with one hand resting at my waist, feeling the fabric settle properly against my body.
Vaylen had never asked for my measurements, yet he still knew them anyway.
I lowered my hand, and my wedding ring caught the light. I stared at it for a second. I hadn’t taken it off and I wasn’t going to, not yet. Five more days and the ring wouldn’t mean anything to anyone except me, but tonight, it still did. So I left it where it belonged, determined to wear his name properly until the end.
---
At exactly seven, I heard the front door open, because Vaylen Morgan was never late.
I let out a slow breath and walked down the stairs, fingers brushing lightly against the railing as I went. He stood near the door in a dark suit, phone in one hand and the other in his pocket, looking up and stopping just for a second when he heard my heels.
Most people wouldn’t have noticed it, but I did. Three years with Vaylen had taught me how to spot the small cracks before they disappeared again. His eyes moved over the dress slowly then back to my face, as something shifted in his expression, gone almost immediately and hidden behind that usual control he wore like armor. His jaw tightened.
“Let’s go.”
---
The drive was quiet, and it wasn't a comfortable quiet either, but the kind where every small sound starts to feel louder because neither person is saying what they’re actually thinking. Streetlights passed over Vaylen’s face in steady flashes while his eyes stayed on the road and his hands never shifted on the wheel. I kept mine folded in my lap and looked out the window instead.
When we reached the hotel, he parked and turned off the engine, but neither of us moved. The silence stretched for a few seconds longer, turning heavy enough that I finally broke it first.
“Hold my hand when we walk in.”
His head turned slowly toward me.
“You said I could have one night.” I swallowed once. “This is part of it. After tonight, you won’t have to do it again.”
Something flickered across his face, quick and hard to read, before it disappeared.
He opened his door and got out, and a second later, mine opened too. I looked up at him as he stood there holding the door open without speaking.
I stepped out, smoothing the dress automatically, and he moved beside me before holding out his hand. I placed my hand in his, feeling his grip close around mine, firm and steady. Then his thumb brushed once across my knuckles as I kept my eyes forward, walking beside him into the hotel.
The restaurant was warm with soft gold lighting and low conversation, where glassware caught the light every time servers moved past. Everything smelled expensive, from the wine and butter to the polished wood.
We sat down and ate mostly in silence, but it wasn’t the same silence we’d lived with at home. That silence was empty from repetition, while this one felt careful, like both of us were too aware of each other.
“How’s the Singapore project?” I asked after a while, and his eyes lifted to mine immediately.
“Complicated,” he said, adding after a second, “Alliance issue.”
And somehow that turned into him talking about government approvals, delayed shipments, investors, numbers, timelines, and contracts layered over each other. His food barely got touched while he spoke, because Vaylen only forgot to eat when his mind was fully somewhere else.
I didn’t say much and mostly listened, but every now and then, between sentences, his eyes came back to me briefly, like he was checking if I was still paying attention.
Then the music changed.
My fingers tightened around the stem of my glass before I could stop myself. I knew that song, and the first note hit me harder than it should have as something in my chest tightened before I could stop it. The song pulled me backward for a second, back to a version of myself that existed before the penthouse, before the ring, and before I learned how quiet a person could become inside a marriage.
I looked down at my glass and took a slow breath, the kind you take when you absolutely cannot lose composure in public.
“What is it?” Vaylen’s voice was quieter now.
I looked up to find him already watching me. He’d been watching me all night, actually, enough that I still didn’t know what to do with it after three years of almost nothing.
The music drifted softly through the restaurant around us, uncaring, filling the silence between sentences. I held his gaze for a second before speaking.
“Dance with me, Vaylen.”
Happy reading, my loves! ❤️ Okay... I need answers! 😭 After everything you've seen so far, do you think Vaylen is starting to notice Alice... or is he just feeling guilty? And tell me honestly—would you dance with someone who already asked for a divorce? 👀 Drop your answers and your theories in the comments! I read every single one, and I LOVE seeing you all debate. 🤭 If you're enjoying the story, please don't forget to leave a Gem or Gift. Your support means more than you know and keeps this story growing. ❤️ Now... let's see what happens when Alice asks, "Dance with me, Vaylen."💃
VAYLEN Saturday arrived clear and warm, and by the time the city had fully shaken itself awake, I was already dressed and ready to leave, the ring box resting inside my jacket pocket. Jenny came downstairs in a white sundress, her hair loose, sunglasses pushed up on her head. She looked at me when she got in the car and immediately narrowed her eyes. "Why are you smiling?" "I'm not smiling." But the smile was not cooperating with me. "You are." She studied me for another second before turning toward the window. "Where are we going?" "The beach." She turned back. "Which one?" "You'll see." She looked at me again, longer this time, then settled into her seat. I pulled away from the curb. From the corner of my eye I saw her trying and failing to hide a smile. --- We reached Velmira Cove just before noon. It was quieter than the main stretch…a curved bay with pale sand and water that shifted between green and deep blue depending on where the light caught it. A few people move
VAYLENThe SUV rolled to a stop just outside the perimeter gates of our downtown project.Morning had barely broken. The eastern sky still carried traces of violet as the first wash of sunlight settled over steel, concrete, and glass.The construction site was already alive.Tower cranes stretched across the skyline like silent giants while concrete mixers rumbled near the loading bay. Workers in reflective vests moved between scaffolding and unfinished floors, their voices rising above the steady rhythm of machinery.I stepped out of the vehicle. Several of the foremen acknowledged me with brief nods before returning to work.Most of them had been here since five. Seeing me on-site before sunrise was no longer unusual. I preferred seeing a project wake up rather than hearing about it afterward."Morning, Mr. Morgan."I looked over as Chen, the site project manager, approached with a rolled set of drawings tucked beneath one arm and a paper cup of coffee in the other."Morning."I fel
ALICEBy the time the application portal closed twenty-four hours later, one hundred and thirty-six submissions had been received.Three days had passed since I'd begun reviewing them. Three days since CARINE had appeared on my screen.I looked up from the tablet in front of me as a knock sounded at the door. Teenah stepped inside, a folder tucked beneath one arm."Mrs. Laurent.” She stopped in front of my desk. "The selection committee will be assembling in ten minutes."For a moment, my gaze lingered on her before I nodded and set the tablet aside."Thank you."She returned the nod and turned toward the door. A second later, it closed softly behind her, leaving the study quiet once more.For the first time since the accident, I'd returned to Diamond Global headquarters that morning. The dull ache in my ankle was still there, but it no longer demanded my attention with every step. It was manageable now. Not enough to keep me away from work any longer.I gathered my tablet and made my
ALICEMy phone lit up on the coffee table.Teenah.The moment I answered, her voice exploded through the speaker."Alice Laurent... you're a very wicked woman."Her voice was light, completely without malice. I could hear the smile underneath it before she'd finished the sentence."What — what happened?""Oh, don't 'what' me." She laughed. "You've been hiding Julius Roland from me.”A smile tugged at my lips before I could stop it. Of course she would read meaning into it. I had seen this coming. The moment she left earlier with that look on her face, I knew exactly where her mind had gone.I shook my head lightly, still smiling as I tried to steer the conversation back to harmless ground."Teenah..." I laughed softly. "You're imagining things.""Hmm… tell me more ma'am…" There was far too much satisfaction in her voice."Alice, we've known each other for too long."I said nothing."I saw the way he looked at you." She paused deliberately. "And I definitely saw the way you looked at h
ALICE Diamond's gaze moved from Julius to me, waiting. "Uncle Julius has work tomorrow." The excitement on her face dimmed at once. "But—" "However," I cut in before she could finish. My eyes shifted to Julius. "If you're not in a hurry, you can stay for dinner." She went completely still. For a second, she simply stared at me then she swung toward Julius. "See?" Before he could answer, she had already taken hold of his hand. "You can stay." Julius drew a breath, but whatever response he intended to give was lost when she grabbed his other hand with her second hand and immediately started pulling. "Come. You have to help Lisa." "Diamond—" She didn't even slow down. "Guests don't sit alone." By then, she was already halfway to the kitchen. "That's rude." Her answer floated back over her shoulder. Julius allowed himself to be led away without the slightest resistance. As he passed, he glanced back at me. I looked away, pressing my lips together and o
VAYLEN We talked long into the night before I finally left.By the time I stepped out of the apartment building, evening had settled over the city. The streets were quieter now, the rush of the day giving way to something slower.I got into my car and started the engine. The drive home passed more quickly than it should have.More than once, I caught myself smiling at nothing before turning my attention back to the road.Whatever the evening had been, I wasn't ready to put a name to it yet.---The following morning, I arrived at the office earlier than usual.There was no urgency in my steps, no weight pressing at the edges of my thoughts as I crossed into the building and made my way to my office. Even the usual sound of phones ringing and assistants moving through the corridors felt distant.I settled into my chair and opened the first contract on my desk. The work had barely begun when my phone rang.Marcus.I answered without taking my eyes off the document in front of me."Mr.
ALICEI barely had time to react before she crouched slightly, her attention moving from my shoulder to my arm and finally to my face.Apparently satisfied with what she found, she gave a small nod. “You look much better.” The relief in her expression was impossible to miss. Just as quickly, it d
ALICE A little while later, we left the hospital and headed toward the parking lot, with Julius carrying my bag. I reached for it automatically.“I can carry that.”“I know.” The answer came without hesitation. “But you don’t have to.”My hand fell back to my side. For some reason, those words lin
ALICE "Can Uncle Roland always stay here with us?"The question caught me so completely off guard that I could only stare at her for a second.Diamond looked back at me with open curiosity, her small hands still wrapped around mine as though she had asked the most ordinary question in the world."
ALICE Not long afterward, the quiet inside the apartment was broken by the sound of the front door opening.My head lifted instinctively. Diamond stepped inside first. Julius followed a second later.The moment I saw her, something inside me clenched.Her eyes were red and swollen, the skin beneat







