LOGINMia's POV
Jeo was already there when I arrived at the quiet café downtown, and he stood when he saw me — dark hair stylishly messy, blue eyes as kind as I remembered — and pulled me into a gentle hug. I stiffened for half a second it had been long since anyone had held me like this.
"Mia Williams," he said. "Still as beautiful as ever."
"You look good too, Jeo."
"I ordered you hot chocolate instead of coffee," he said as we sat down. "You never could stomach coffee in the morning."
I stared at the cup. Steam rose from it in a thin ribbon, and my throat closed around nothing.
"Hey." Jeo's voice softened. "You okay?"
"It's the hot chocolate," I said, and laughed wetly. "It's very moving hot chocolate."
He had the good grace not to press. Instead he spread the sketches across the table — the Havers project, a luxury boutique hotel, modern but organic, flowing lines and natural light — and somewhere in the second minute of talking, I forgot to be sad. My hands started moving on their own. "You could integrate the existing architecture with bio-mimetic design elements," I heard myself say. "Keep the old brick facade as a contrast to curved glass — and the central atrium could carry a sculptural staircase, with water features that throw light patterns through the whole space as the sun moves—"
I stopped. Jeo was grinning at me.
"What?"
"There she is," he said quietly. "The girl who painted that mural in the university hall. I was starting to think K.T. Enterprises had filed her away somewhere."
It had, I thought. "Jeo, it's been years since I've drawn anything—"
"Mia."
That voice. My spine knew it before my mind did — three years of training, the body snapping to attention. Kyle stood at our table in a crisp black suit, rain glittering on his shoulders, his expression carved from stone. How he'd found me, I didn't ask. Kyle Branson found whatever he wanted found.
Jeo rose, extending his hand, easy and unbothered. "Kyle Branson? Jeo Parker. I went to college with Mia."
Kyle ignored the hand. His eyes never left me. "A word, Mia."
I had to breathe before I stood.
Outside, the awning dripped rain between us and the street. His hand closed on my elbow, burning through my sleeve.
"Who is he?"
"An old friend."
"Friends don't look at each other that way." His voice was low, dangerous. "You quit this morning. You slapped Taylor, you quit, you disappeared — and now I find you here, with him. What is this, Mia? What exactly do you think you're doing?"
"Having hot chocolate," I said. "And discussing a job."
"You have a job."
"I quit that job. You were there. You were holding her at the time — perhaps it slipped your attention."
His jaw tightened. "You signed a contract. No relationships with other men during our marriage—"
"A job, Kyle." Something hot finally tore loose in my chest, and my voice rose to meet it. "The contract says nothing about a job. Or does it? Should I check?" I pulled my arm free, and the rain-cold air rushed into the space between us. "You suspended me. I saved you the paperwork. What I do now is none of your business."
"You're my wife."
"Your wife?" I met his gaze. "You don't get to control every aspect of my life, Kyle. Not anymore."
"The contract—"
"The contract says I can't have relationships with other men. It doesn't say anything about taking a job." I straightened my spine. "Unless you're jealous?"
His laugh was harsh. "Jealous? Of him? Don't be ridiculous."
"Then there's no problem, is there?"
We stood there, staring at each other under the dripping awning. For a moment, I thought I saw something in his eyes.
"Fine," he said coldly. "Take the job. But remember your place, Mia."
I walked back inside on legs that held. Behind me, through the glass, I felt him standing in the rain a long moment before his car door slammed.
"The job," I said, sitting down. My hands were shaking now that it was over. I wrapped them around the cooling cup. "Tell me where to sign."
Jeo's whole face lit, "Monday. Come Monday."
It was dark when I got home. The porch light was off — I always left it on — and the wrongness of that small thing prickled at me even before I reached the stairs. The bedroom light was burning.
Taylor was lying on my bed.
In my pajamas. The ivory silk ones . She was scrolling her phone against my pillows, one leg crossed over the other, and when she saw me in the doorway she stretched, slow and luxurious, like a cat presenting its claws.
"Oh, Mia." A smile bloomed, unhurried. "I hope you don't mind. I just got back to the country and haven't found a place yet — hotels are so impersonal, you know? Kyle worried." She let the word sit there, glowing. "So he said I should stay here." She plucked at the silk collar with two lacquered fingers. "These are darling, by the way. A little loose on me."
Two more days.
"Where is Kyle?"
The smile has something anticipatory. She looked like a woman watching a fuse she herself had lit.
"The study, probably." She turned back to her phone. "He found some very interesting reading."
I should have heard the warning. I was too tired; the day had used everything. I walked down the dark hallway toward the line of lamplight under the study door, and I pushed it open.
Kyle sat behind his desk, perfectly still. The lamp cast shadows across his face, and in his hand, held so tightly the paper had begun to crease, was a hospital report.
My pregnancy report.
His eyes lifted to mine, and they were nearly black.
"When," he said, very quietly, "were you going to tell me?"
**Mia's POV**"Hey, woman!" Scarlett's voice cut through my thoughts. Her perfectly manicured fingers snapped in front of my face. "You've been staring at that coffee cup for ten minutes. Spill."I blinked, focusing on my best friend's concerned face across the café table. Scarlett looked exactly as she always did – fiery red hair styled in elegant waves, designer clothes, and an expression that said she'd brook no nonsense."I'm fine," I said automatically, the words feeling hollow even to my own ears."Right." Scarlett leaned back, crossing her arms. "And I'm the Queen of England. Come on, what's going on? You look like you've barely slept."I traced the rim of my untouched coffee cup, watching the liquid ripple. How could I explain the chaos of the past few days? Kyle's sudden attention, the expensive gifts, the way hope kept trying to bloom in my chest despite everything I knew about him?"A lot happened." I finally managed.Scarlett's perfectly shaped eyebrows rose. "As?""Kyle h
**Mia's POV**The deliveries started at dawn.First came the Italian silk bedsheets, their fabric so fine it felt like water running through my fingers. The deep purple shade reminded me of twilight skies, of quiet moments I used to spend sketching on the balcony. A small card accompanied them, printed in nice handwriting: "For better sleep."By ten, a collection of organic bath products had appeared – lavender-infused soaps from Provence, hand-blended essential oils, bath salts from the Dead Sea. Another card: "For relaxation."Noon brought aromatherapy candles, each one hand-poured in crystal vessels that probably cost more than most people's monthly rent. The scents were carefully chosen – chamomile, vanilla, sandalwood. A third card: "For peace of mind."I stood in the middle of my bedroom, surrounded by Kyle's latest attempts at... what? Apology? Compensation? Control wrapped in cashmere and silk?"Mrs. Branson?" Mrs. Chen appeared in the doorway, her arms full of yet another pac
**Mia's POV**The morning light filtered through the bay windows of my bedroom, casting rainbow prisms across the polished wood of my vanity. I stared at the small army of pill bottles that had appeared there sometime during the night, arranged in neat, clinical rows. Blues, whites, pale pinks, and soft yellows – a rainbow arsenal of chemical intervention.My fingers traced the edge of the nearest bottle. The label bore some long, unpronounceable name, followed by precise instructions in stark black text. Behind it stood at least a dozen more, each with its own schedule, its own promises of healing.This must have emptied an entire pharmacy. Mrs. Chen had arranged my morning pills in a small crystal dish – the kind usually reserved for expensive chocolates or delicate petit fours. A knock at the door startled me from my reverie. Three sharp raps – precise, measured. I glanced at the elegant Cartier clock on my nightstand. 9:47 AM. Too early for Kyle to be home. He should be at K.T.
**Kyle's POV**The memories come unbidden in the darkness of my bedroom, rising like ghosts from the depths of my mind. I close my eyes, and suddenly I'm seven years old again, standing in my father's study with its imposing mahogany walls and the perpetual scent of cigars that always made my throat tight."Remember, Kyle." Father's voice echoes across time, as cold and precise as the cut crystal tumbler in his hand. "In this world, your existence is meaningless unless you prove yourself worthy of the Branson name."I remember how tall his leather chair seemed, how the evening light through the window cast his shadow long across the Persian carpet. How I'd stand there, spine straight despite my trembling, as he assessed me with those steel-grey eyes I'd inherited. He'd tapped the report card with one manicured finger. "Second is not acceptable. Bransons don't come second.""I tried my best, Father." My voice had been small, though I'd struggled to keep it steady. A Branson never show
Mia’s POV"She's your what?" Daniel's voice cut through my thoughts, disbelief evident in every syllable."My wife." Kyle's voice was ice cold, the same tone he used when closing million-dollar deals. "She is my wife."My fingers tightened around the coffee cup. The irony made my chest ache.Daniel's eyes found mine, filled with concern. "If you're experiencing threats or violence," he said softly, leaning closer, "I can help you, beautiful lady.""Don't," Kyle's voice dropped dangerously low, "say that to my wife."I saw his jaw tighten, that subtle tell I'd learned to recognize over years of watching him from a distance. A bead of sweat rolled down his temple - something so uncharacteristic it made me blink. Kyle Branson didn't sweat. Kyle Branson was always perfect, always controlled.A bitter laugh threatened to escape my throat. Of course Daniel would think that. We didn't look like a couple. We looked exactly like what we were - a business arrangement gone wrong. A contract marr
**Mia's POV**The therapy room was nothing like I'd imagined. No leather couch, no walls lined with dusty psychology books. Instead, soft grey walls surrounded comfortable armchairs, and large windows let in natural light filtered through gauzy curtains. Dr. Sarah Matthews sat across from me, her presence calm and grounding."Are you comfortable, Mia?" she asked, adjusting the small device that would guide my eye movements. Her voice carried that perfect blend of professional and compassionate that probably took years to master.I nodded, though 'comfortable' wasn't quite the right word. The armchair embraced me like a cloud, but my nerves jangled with anticipation. Or was it fear?"Remember," she continued, "EMDR therapy helps process traumatic memories by engaging both sides of your brain. Just follow the light with your eyes, and let your thoughts flow naturally. There's no right or wrong way to experience this."The light began moving, a gentle rhythm like a metronome. Left to rig







