LOGINSarah's POV
Kael slid my black coffee across the table, his fingers brushing mine for a fraction longer than necessary. “You look like someone who hasn't slept for days,” he said. I wrapped my hands around the warm mug and managed a weak smile. “Is it that obvious?” The truth sat heavy without us. “I'm being treated as a slave in my own marriage,” I whispered. “I don't belong there. But I don't know what to do, neither do I have anywhere to go.” “I can't break the contract. At least not yet,” I added. Kael’s jaw tightened. He set his mug down. “Sarah… I honestly don't know what to say to calm you down right now. But I need you to know that you need to calm down first. You can't break now. Because if you do, no one will be there to save you. So calm down, and take it in while planning what to do in your mind.” I nodded, tears pricking at the corners of my eyes. I blinked them back fiercely. “It feels like I’m disappearing. Piece by piece. Everything I loved? Not appropriate for a Moretti wife. The way I act? Tacky. She's always making me feel less of myself. I'm tired!” He reached across the table and covered my hand with his. His palm was warm, callused from years of hands-on work restoring old frames and installing exhibits. The touch sent an unwelcome spark up my arm, equal parts comfort and danger. I didn’t pull away. “You’re allowed to grieve,” he said quietly. “You’re allowed to miss the life that made sense to you. Adrian and his mom knew who you were when he married you. He doesn’t get to rewrite you into someone else that's not you.” A small, bitter laugh escaped me. “He never accepts the fact that his mom might be wrong. Every time I try to talk to him about it, it's like hitting a wall.” Kael’s thumb traced a slow circle on the back of my hand before he caught himself and withdrew, though his gaze stayed locked on mine. “Remember when we first met. You never allowed the things your family does get to you. You had fire. Where's that Sarah now?” “She's tired and confused,” I muttered, staring into my coffee. “She’s helpless and doesn't know what to do. Sometimes I wonder, maybe I'm not supposed to be born.” “And what do you want?” Kael pressed, his knee brushing mine under the table. The contact lingered. “Because from where I’m sitting, you’re playing a role that’s slowly killing the woman you have always been.” “I don’t know anymore,” I whispered. “Part of me wants things to work out between me and Adrian so I'll just live in peace. But another part sees it as me putting myself as a second option.” Our eyes held. His hand found mine again, this time without pretense. The café noise faded into background static. My phone buzzed sharply on the table. Adrian’s name flashed on the screen. A text: Mother says the tailor arrives at 11:30 for gala fittings. Don’t be late. Do hurry back, Sarah. I pulled my hand back, cheeks flushing with a mix of shame and resentment. “I have to go,” I said, standing. “Something came up at home. Things will get worse if I'm late.” Kael stood too. “Text me when you get home,” he murmured. “Or if you need anything. Anytime, day or night. Just let me know.” I nodded against his chest, then stepped back. “Thank you. For listening.” The drive back to the mansion felt longer than the trip into the city. Every red light was a few more second of freedom. Seconds where no one reminded me that I was a mistake the family had to live with. But the gates opened anyway. The house was lit up, golden and unwelcoming. Eleanor waited on the steps. No coat. She wanted everyone to see her waiting for her daughter-in-law. “Sarah,” she said as I got out with a perfect smile. “There you are. We were beginning to think you’d forgotten the road to your house.” “I’m sorry,” I said, weakly. She turned and went inside and I followed. The tailor was already set up in the sitting room. Fabrics, pins, measuring tape. She measured me without meeting my eyes. Eleanor sat in the armchair, watching. “Stand straight, Sarah. Bend a little. Life you head up. A Moretti wife is always perfect without flaw.” “Adrian is working so hard to make this marriage work,” Eleanor added, voice soft enough for the tailor to hear. “The least you can do is not add to his burden by being weak. He has enough to manage with the company. He doesn’t need to worry about his wife embarrassing him in public.” I didn’t answer. What was there to say? Saying anything to her would obviously not change anything. When the tailor left, Eleanor walked me to the stairs. “Dinner at eight. We have to prepare for the upcoming gala. And Sarah? Don't ever leave this house to meet a friend or grab any coffee. This whole house is enough of whatever you want to do. You have a name to protect now. Try to act like it.” Upstairs, the room was empty. Adrian’s briefcase sat open. A note on my pillow. “Late meeting. Don’t wait up.” At 7:55pm I went downstairs. Eleanor was arranging flowers. Adrian arrived at 8:07. He kissed Eleanor first, then me. His lips barely touched my skin. Eleanor launched into plans. Gala seating. Charity board. She spoke to Adrian, about me, as if I wasn’t there. “And for the speech at the foundation event,” she said, “I told them Sarah isn’t comfortable with public speaking. She’ll sit in the front row and smile. That’s enough, isn’t it, dear?” ‘My father built that gallery from nothing,” I said quietly. Everyone turned. “I’ve spoken to donors, to critics, to crowds bigger than that foundation room. I’m comfortable with public speaking, Ma'am Eleanor.” The word Eleanor instead of Mother made her flinch slightly. Adrian looked at me. “Sarah!!!” He cautioned. Eleanor recovered fast. Her smile was thinner now. “Well…That’s admirable, dear. But the Moretti Foundation has a certain tone. A certain message. We can’t have personal stories mixed in. It would seem unprofessional. I’ll have my secretary prepare something for you. You can memorize it.” I nodded. “I’d like to see the draft. Thank you.” Adrian cleared his throat. “If you’re up for it, then do it. Just don’t make it weird. The board hates weird.” I nodded again. I'm not strong, neither am I up to their standard. But I'm never going to let them intimidate me.Sarah's POVI remained on the sofa long after the call had ended, my phone still clutched tightly in my hand. The screen had gone dark minutes ago, yet I couldn't bring myself to put it down. My thoughts were spinning too fast. The words from the man at the law firm replayed over and over in my head, each repetition sounding louder than the last."The fingerprint verification was accepted without issue."I closed my eyes.No matter how many times I tried to convince myself there had been a mistake, my mind always drifted back to that afternoon. Adrian had smiled so reassuringly as he asked for my fingerprint. Eleanor had stood nearby, encouraging me to relax when the machine failed the first time. They had both looked relieved when the second attempt worked.At the time, I hadn't questioned it.Now, I wished I had.A knock on the door startled me from my thoughts. "Mrs. Sarah?" one of the maids called gently."Yes?""Would you like some tea?"I forced a smile she couldn't see. "Yes, t
Sarah's POVThe house was unusually quiet that afternoon.Eleanor had left for a charity luncheon earlier that morning, and Adrian was at the office. For the first time in days, I had the entire mansion to myself. I sat in the sunroom with the leather journal that had arrived in the mysterious package resting on my lap. I had opened it countless times since receiving it, yet I hadn't written a single word.Every time I uncapped the fountain pen, my thoughts drifted elsewhere.To Anna.To the photographs.To the anonymous messages.To the conversation I had overheard outside Adrian's study."We switched the package."Those words refused to leave me.I sighed and closed the journal, leaning back in my chair. Maybe I was allowing suspicion to consume me. Maybe there truly was an explanation for everything. Adrian had never stopped treating me with kindness. If anything, he had become even more attentive since Anna reappeared.So why couldn't my heart settle?Before I could answer my own
Sarah's POVBy the following evening, I had almost convinced myself that I was letting my imagination run too far.Almost.The doubts were still there, quietly lingering beneath every reassuring smile Adrian gave me, but they no longer screamed as loudly as they had the day before. Perhaps I was exhausted. Perhaps I simply wanted everything to go back to the way it had been before Anna appeared and turned my peaceful life upside down.I was arranging fresh flowers in the living room when I heard the front door open.A familiar voice echoed through the hallway. "Sarah?""I'm here," I replied, setting the vase down.A smile found my lips almost automatically as Adrian walked toward me. His tie was loosened, and despite the obvious exhaustion on his face, he still managed to look at me as though I were the best part of his day."There you are," he said warmly."You came home early.""I promised I would."He leaned down and kissed my forehead before holding up a medium-sized brown package
Sarah's POVThe sound of the doorknob turning seemed unnaturally loud in the quiet study.For a heartbeat, I couldn't move. My pulse thundered in my ears as the door slowly swung open, and Adrian stepped inside. He was dressed exactly as he had been when he left that morning, except his suit jacket now rested over one arm, and a blue folder was tucked beneath the other. His eyes landed on me almost immediately.For a brief second, surprise flickered across his face before it disappeared behind the calm expression he wore so effortlessly. Neither of us spoke. The silence stretched between us, heavy and uncomfortable, while I desperately searched for something—anything—to say. I had imagined many different ways this day could end, but none of them involved being caught standing in the middle of his study with guilt written all over my face."Sarah?" he said at last, his voice gentle rather than accusing. "I wasn't expecting to find you here."I forced myself to breathe normally and trie
Sarah's POVThe thought refused to leave me.No matter how hard I tried to distract myself over the next two days, my mind always found its way back to the same questions. Adrian's explanation about the package had sounded reasonable. His apology seemed sincere. Even Eleanor had behaved as though she genuinely knew nothing about it.Yet every time I closed my eyes, I heard the security guard's words again."The boss made sure of that."Those six words echoed in my head with unsettling clarity.I hated what they were doing to me.I hated that I had begun questioning every smile, every explanation, every reassuring touch from the man I loved.But perhaps what frightened me most was the realization that I no longer trusted my own judgment.Had Adrian always been this careful, and I had simply never noticed?Or was something really changing around me?That morning, Adrian left earlier than usual. He kissed my forehead before leaving, reminding me—as always—not to go anywhere alone."I'll
Sarah's POVFor several seconds, neither Eleanor nor I said a word.The maid stood patiently near the doorway, waiting for one of us to respond, while my thoughts refused to settle. A package with no sender's name. Delivered to the house without notice. After the anonymous messages. After Anna's unexpected appearances. After everything that had happened over the last few days, there was no way I could convince myself it was an ordinary delivery."I'll go and see it," I finally said.Eleanor immediately stood. "I'll come with you."I looked at her for a brief moment before nodding. Somehow, I was grateful I wouldn't be walking there alone.The two of us made our way through the front garden toward the main gate. The afternoon sun hung high above us, but I barely noticed the warmth. Every step seemed heavier than the last.As soon as the guards noticed us approaching, they straightened respectfully."Good afternoon, ma'am.""Good afternoon," Eleanor replied.I looked beyond the gate ins
Sarah's POV By evening, the tension coiled tighter. Dinner was served in the smaller dining room off the main hall, broth, steamed vegetables, and a slice of dry bread that tasted of ash.Eleanor presided at the head of the long table. "You've been quiet today, Sarah. Too quiet. I hope you’re not
Sarah's POV Adrian entered the room carrying a tray of coffee, toast, and a small bowl of fruit. He set the tray on the low table before me, his gaze avoiding mine at first. "You barely ate last night. Please, Sarah. You need your strength.”I pushed myself upright, the robe slipping from one shou
Sarah's POVEleanor remained standing, pacing around the sitting room. "That project… You will not do it. Not under any circumstances. I won't have the Moretti name dragged into some flashy city venture with that... that outsider."Her shout echoed off the high ceiling. I looked up at her, my hand
Sarah's POVVoices. Raised, heated, echoing up from the floors below like thunder. Eleanor's sharp, commanding tone sliced the air, followed by Adrian's lower, strained responses. And then... another voice.Another familiar voice I can never forget Kael.My heart stuttered, a mix of hope and fear







