LOGINThe morning light over the golf course was too clean.
Too calm. It didn’t match the tension tightening under Estella’s skin. She stood on the grass, adjusting her grip on the club—precise, controlled, exactly how she had been taught. From a distance, she looked flawless. Up close— She was holding herself together. This wasn’t a meeting. This was positioning. And she was being placed exactly where Aizen wanted her. “Too rigid.” His voice came from behind her. Close. Too close. Estella didn’t turn. “I’m fine.” Aizen stepped in anyway. Right behind her. No hesitation. No permission. His hand reached forward, covering hers on the grip of the club. Warm. Steady. Deliberate. “You’re forcing it,” he said quietly, his voice lowering near her ear. “Relax.” Her breath caught—just slightly. Not enough to notice. Enough to feel. This is instruction. Just instruction. Nothing more. Except it wasn’t. Because he didn’t step back. Because his hand didn’t move. Because his presence wasn’t neutral. “Why are you tense?” Aizen murmured. A pause. Then, softer— “After everything we’ve already done.” Estella’s spine stiffened. “That doesn’t make this appropriate.” A faint shift behind her. Not retreat. Not quite. “Appropriate?” he repeated, almost amused. His thumb moved—barely—against her hand. A small motion. Too small. Too intentional. “You said that night meant nothing,” he continued. “But your body reacts like it remembers.” That hit. Not loud. Not obvious. But direct. Estella inhaled slowly, forcing her heartbeat down. “Do you always rely on this?” she replied, voice flat. “Or only when you don’t trust your own arguments?” Silence. A beat. Then— Aizen stepped back. Just enough. “Focus,” he said, tone resetting to cold. “Or you’ll miss.” Like nothing happened. Like he hadn’t just crossed a line— And pretended it didn’t exist. ** The meeting started shortly after. The investor was exactly what Estella expected. Polished. Measured. Dangerous in the way quiet men often were. They didn’t waste time. Numbers. Risk exposure. Future projections. Estella handled her part cleanly. Precise. Untouchable. Until— “Project Orion is ambitious,” the investor said casually. “Reminds me of an older case.” A pause. Then— “Duan Dyne.” The name dropped like it meant nothing. But it did. It meant everything. Estella’s fingers tightened slightly around the document she was holding. Not enough to show. Enough to feel. Her heartbeat stuttered once— Then stabilized. Control. Now. “An unfortunate situation,” the investor continued. “Brilliant concept. Poor execution. And a messy ending.” Messy. That’s how they called it. Her father’s death— Reduced to a word. Estella lifted her gaze. Steady. Calm. Detached. “Every project carries risk,” she said. “What matters is how that risk is managed.” Clean answer. Professional. Safe. The investor smiled faintly. “Interesting.” Not convinced. Testing. Always testing. Aizen stepped in. Not to protect. Never to protect. “Miss Duan will be leading Orion’s risk documentation moving forward,” he said. “She has experience handling recovery frameworks.” That wasn’t support. That was exposure. He just pushed her further into the fire— In front of someone watching closely. Estella didn’t look at him. Didn’t react. She just continued. Explaining. Breaking down risk structures. Answering every angle thrown at her— Without slipping. Without breaking. But only she knew— How close she came. The meeting ended successfully. On paper. The investor was satisfied. Aizen got what he wanted. And Estella— Got confirmation. When they were finally alone, she spoke. “You knew.” Aizen didn’t hesitate. “Yes.” One word. No apology. No hesitation. “And you still let him bring it up.” “You handled it.” Flat. Final. Like that settled everything. Estella let out a quiet breath. Almost a laugh. But colder. “Of course I did.” She turned slightly. Not facing him fully. Not giving him everything. “You always make sure I do.” A pause. Something shifted in the air. Small. But there. ** “Estella?” A different voice broke the tension. She turned. Recognition hit immediately. “Senior?” Relief—unexpected, real—slipped through before she could stop it. He smiled easily. Too easily. “How long has it been?” Their conversation flowed without effort. Light. Natural. Unfiltered. She laughed. Actually laughed. Not controlled. Not calculated. And from a distance— Aizen watched. Still. Silent. Unreadable. But his gaze stayed longer than necessary. He saw everything. How relaxed she was. How her shoulders dropped. How easily she let someone else stand close. Too close. The man touched her arm lightly as he laughed. Casual. Familiar. And something in Aizen tightened. Sharp. Unwelcome. He didn’t like it. ** The drive back was quiet. Too quiet. Estella stared out the window, watching the city shift into evening. Aizen kept his eyes on the road. But his thoughts weren’t there. The car stopped in front of her apartment. Neither moved immediately. The silence stretched. Thin. Tense. “Was today part of your plan?” Estella asked finally. Still not looking at him. Aizen didn’t answer right away. “Part of it.” Honest. But incomplete. Which made it worse. Estella nodded slowly. As if she expected nothing else. She reached for the door— Then stopped. “If you’re going to use me,” she said quietly, “don’t pretend you’re not.” That landed. Clean. Precise. She stepped out. Didn’t look back. ** That night, Estella didn’t sleep. Her laptop sat open on the table. Orion files glowing in the dark. She hesitated. Just for a second. Then clicked. Deeper access. Restricted layers. Archived records. Lines of data moved across the screen. Names. Codes. Classifications. Until— One entry stopped everything. 𝗗𝘂𝗮𝗻 𝗗𝘆𝗻𝗲 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝘁𝘂𝘀: 𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗥𝗶𝘀𝗸 𝗙𝗮𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿 – 𝗙𝗹𝗮𝗴𝗴𝗲𝗱 Estella froze. Her eyes locked on the line. Once. Twice. Again. No change. No error. Her father. Not a victim. Not collateral. A risk. Her hand trembled—just slightly—over the trackpad. She scrolled. More data loaded. Redacted sections. Hidden notes. And one partial line— 𝗖𝗮𝘂𝘀𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝗙𝗮𝗶𝗹𝘂𝗿𝗲: 𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗸 𝗦𝘂𝘀𝗽𝗲𝗰𝘁𝗲𝗱— The screen flickered. Access denied. Locked. Cut off. Too fast. Too intentional. Estella leaned back slowly. Her breathing quiet. Too quiet. This wasn’t just about Orion. This wasn’t just about sabotage. This was— Personal. Her phone vibrated. A message. Unknown number. No name. No ID. Just one line: "𝗜𝗳 𝘆𝗼𝘂 𝗸𝗲𝗲𝗽 𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗴, 𝘆𝗼𝘂'𝗹𝗹 𝗳𝗶𝗻𝗱 𝗼𝘂𝘁 𝘄𝗵𝘆 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗳𝗮𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗿 𝗵𝗮𝗱 𝘁𝗼 𝗱𝗶𝗲." Silence filled the room. Heavy. Unforgiving. Estella stared at the screen. Her reflection stared back. Calm. But no longer untouched. For the first time— The line wasn’t blurred anymore. It was gone. And she had already crossed it.The room was unusually quiet.Soft morning sunlight slipped through the sheer curtains, painting long golden stripes across the hardwood floor. Outside, the city was already waking up. Cars hummed faintly in the distance, and the warm breeze of early summer nudged the curtains every now and then.For the first time in what felt like forever...Aizen Deveraux was still asleep.No ringing phone.No emergency meeting.No pressure from Orion.No battle waiting for him the moment he opened his eyes.Just silence.Estella opened her eyes slowly.For several seconds, she didn't move.Her gaze settled on the man sleeping beside her.Without his tailored suit.Without the cold, unreadable expression he wore at Valcor.Without the invisible armor he carried every single day.He simply looked...Exhausted.There was a softness to his face she had never seen before. The tight line between his brows had finally disappeared, and his breathing had become slow and even.He looked younger.Almost peac
The apartment was unusually quiet. Only the faint ticking of the wall clock echoed through the living room. Estella zipped the last compartment of Aizen's suitcase before setting it upright beside the sofa. She checked the checklist on her tablet one more time. Business documents. Laptop. Presentation files. Medication. Passport. Everything was there. Satisfied, she closed the tablet and rubbed the back of her neck. The cut hidden beneath the scarf still stung from time to time. She glanced at the clock. 10:17 p.m. He was late. Again. She walked over to the kitchen and poured herself a glass of water. As she stood by the island counter, her phone suddenly vibrated across the table. Linda Calling. Ella answered immediately. "Linda?" Linda didn't waste time. "Ella... don't panic, okay?" Ella frowned. "I'll decide whether to panic after you tell me what's going on." Linda sighed softly. "...Check your messages." A second later, several notifications appeared. N
The old photograph frame crashed onto the polished wooden desk. Not because someone threw it. Because Benedict Deveraux's hand had struck the table harder than he intended. The servants outside his study instinctively lowered their heads. No one dared to knock. The old man rarely lost his composure. Today... He did. Several photographs lay scattered across the desk. One showed Aizen gently adjusting Estella's scarf. Another captured the way they looked at each other. The last one... Aizen's fingers resting against Estella's cheek. There was nothing inappropriate in the photos. Yet every picture carried something far more dangerous. Affection. Benedict slowly picked up the last photograph again. His jaw tightened. "You've become exactly like your father..." His voice was barely above a whisper. A knock came from outside. "Master." The butler opened the door carefully. "Young Master Aizen has arrived." Benedict didn't answer immediately. H
The summer sun poured through the floor-to-ceiling windows of Valcor Tower, turning the glass walls into mirrors of the bright blue sky outside. The city below carried on as if nothing had happened over the last few days.Inside Valcor...Everything had changed.The biggest headline of the morning was no longer the scandal surrounding Zero Degree Holdings.It was the engagement.Aizen Deveraux and Samantha Laurent.Photos from the luxurious engagement party flooded every business news outlet. The smiles. The champagne. The rings. The handshake between the Deveraux and Laurent families.To the public...It looked like strength.Like two powerful empires standing even closer together despite every rumor trying to tear them down.Inside Valcor, congratulatory voices echoed through the hallways."Congratulations, Miss Laurent.""You looked beautiful at the party.""We're looking forward to the wedding."Samantha accepted every compliment with graceful smiles."Thank you.""You're too kind
By the time Estella opened her eyes, sunlight had already spilled across the bedroom floor.The curtains were half open, letting warm summer light filter into the room. Outside, Vesper City had already settled into another busy morning. Cars drifted through the streets below, and somewhere nearby, a lawn sprinkler ticked rhythmically against the pavement.Her head throbbed.A dull ache pulsed behind her temples.She frowned before slowly sitting up."..."The room was unfamiliar for a second.Then everything from last night crashed back into her mind.The wine.The balcony.Lionel.Linda.Aizen.Her hand instinctively flew to her neck.A bandage.She touched it carefully before letting out a quiet sigh."So I really did that..."The bedroom door opened gently.Linda peeked inside first."There you are."She smiled, although her eyes still looked swollen from crying."You finally woke up."Estella offered an apologetic smile."What time is it?""Almost noon.""...No wonder my head feel
The apartment felt strangely quiet after Linda left.The soft click of the front door echoed through the living room before silence settled over everything again.Estella stayed on the balcony without moving.Summer nights in Vesper City were usually warm, but tonight a gentle breeze drifted between the high-rise buildings, carrying the distant sounds of traffic and faint music from somewhere across the city.She already knew where it came from.The engagement party.Aizen and Samantha.She didn't need to see it.She could almost picture it.Crystal chandeliers.Expensive champagne.Elegant smiles.Flashing cameras.A perfect future.A future that didn't have room for her.Her fingers tightened around the stem of the wine glass resting on the small table beside her.She slowly looked toward the apartment across from hers.Dark.No lights.Of course.He wasn't home.He was celebrating his engagement.A bitter smile tugged at the corner of her lips."...Congratulations, Mr. Deveraux."H
Aizen rarely waited for anyone.People waited for him.Not the other way around.Yet here he was, standing in front of Estella's apartment door at nearly nine o'clock at night.The corridor was quiet.Only the soft hum of the building's air conditioning echoed through the floor.His phone remained
The first week back at Valcor felt strangely normal.Almost too normal.The kind of normal that made Estella suspicious.The city outside still moved at its usual pace. Meetings still filled calendars. Deadlines still chased employees. Emails still arrived faster than anyone could answer them.But
The nightmare came back before dawn.This time it felt real.Too real.Estella stood alone in a dark corridor.The walls stretched endlessly in both directions.Cold.Silent.Empty.Somewhere ahead, she saw her father.Duan Dyne.He stood with his back facing her."Dad."Her voice echoed.No respon
Valcor Tower felt colder than usual that morning.Not because of the air conditioning.Not because of the rain pressing against the glass walls outside.But because something inside Estella Duan had changed.She walked through the executive floor with steady heels, chin lifted, expression calm enou







