LOGIN{The Next Evening}
By the time I was done with work for the day, my whole body felt heavy. The subway ride had been nothing but a blur of voices and stops, but my mind had never stopped racing. Work, deadlines, numbers, clients—always pulling, always demanding. But tonight wasn’t for them. Tonight was for Liam. I held tighter to the little gift bag in my hand. The dragon figurine was inside, wrapped in simple paper. It wasn’t just a toy. It was proof. Proof that I remembered. Proof that he mattered more than anything else. I pushed the door open, already picturing his face when he saw it. But the sound that greeted me made me pause. Laughter. Liam’s laughter. A sound so rare these days that it nearly knocked the air out of my chest. I stepped inside quietly, and then I saw them. William stood at the counter, a bowl in his hand, stirring icing with Liam beside him. And next to them, Olivia, Liam’s nanny, was smiling warmly. The three of them together looked like something from another lifetime. My old life. My old family. For a moment, I couldn’t move. The bag in my hand suddenly felt foolish, like nothing compared to what I was seeing. My son glowing with happiness, William in my kitchen as if he belonged, and Olivia fitting into the picture like she’d been there all along. Liam turned first. “Mommy!” His face lit up as he ran to me. “You’re here!” He hugged me tight before pulling back. “I’m glad you’re back now. Daddy says you only care about work.” The words cut straight through me. I froze, staring down at him, the smile I tried to hold trembling at the edges. “Liam,” I said softly, brushing his hair back, “that’s not true.” “But Daddy said so.” His small voice carried no malice, only innocence. He believed what he heard. I lifted my eyes, meeting William’s. He leaned against the counter casually, arms crossed, a smugness in his tone when he finally spoke. “I was just being honest with him, Viv. You’re never around. Somebody had to explain why.” My chest burned. “You don’t get to walk in here after years of silence and pretend you’ve been the voice of reason. You don’t get to do that, William.” He shrugged, calm, as if my anger didn’t touch him. “I’m here now. That’s what matters, isn’t it?” Liam tugged my hand. “Mom, come see the cake! Daddy helped me. And Olivia too. Look!” I followed him to the counter, my throat tight. The cake was small, uneven, but his pride was enormous. “He’s been such a helper,” she said. “We thought it would be fun for him to do the frosting.” I forced myself to nod. “It looks… wonderful.” Liam’s excitement was unstoppable. “Mom, can Olivia be in the pictures too? We’re gonna take family photos! Daddy says she’s more like a mommy than you right now.” The words hit like a knife. My whole body went still. I looked at my son, so innocent, so unaware of what he’d just said. My heart twisted, aching, but I couldn’t let him see it. “Liam,” I whispered, my voice breaking though I tried to keep it steady, “I am your mommy. No one else.” He blinked, confused. “But Daddy said—” “Enough, Liam,” William cut in lightly, patting his shoulder. “Go get the camera.” Liam ran off happily, leaving silence in his place. I turned to William, my voice low and shaking. “How dare you put those words in his mouth? How dare you make him doubt me?” William smirked faintly. “I’m just telling him the truth. You’ve buried yourself in work for so long, Viv. He needs someone present. Someone he can see.” He glanced at Olivia, then back at me. “And maybe that isn’t you anymore.” The gift bag was still clutched in my hand, crumpled now from how tightly I held it. My dragon figurine felt small compared to the picture they had painted in my own kitchen. My son’s laughter filled the air again as he returned with the camera, pulling Olivia close, tugging William’s arm. And I stood there, frozen, watching the family photo form without me. My eyes burned, but I refused to cry where they could see me. I decided to step outside, giving them the excuse that I had forgotten something in my car. I wrapped my arms around myself, the chill biting my skin, but it was better than staying inside. I leaned against the wall of the building, the little bag with the dragon figurine still tight in my grip. The handles dug into my palm, but I held on like it was the only thing keeping me steady. I felt like a stranger in my own home. The door creaked open behind me. I didn’t have to turn to know it was him. “Viv,” William’s voice slid out smooth, like it always had—practiced and polished. “You don’t have to run off like that.” I didn’t look at him. “I needed air.” He stepped closer, his shoes scuffing the concrete. “It’s been a long time since we’ve been in the same room like that. Felt almost normal, didn’t it? The three of us together… Liam smiling, laughing. It was good. It could be good again.” I let out a short, bitter laugh. “Normal? You think that looked normal?” He reached for my hand, brushing it lightly with his fingers. “We were good once, Viv. We could be good again. Don’t shut me out.” I pulled my hand back like his touch burned me. My voice came out sharper than I meant, but I didn’t care. “Good? Do you really want to talk about good, William? Because when I think of good, I don’t see you.” He opened his mouth, but I didn’t give him the chance. “Where were you when the bills stacked up so high I thought I’d drown under them? Where were you when I had to sell my wedding ring to cover Liam’s treatments? Where were you on his last three birthdays? Because I didn’t see you. Not once.” His easy smile slipped, but I kept going. “You want to talk about family? Family doesn’t walk out the moment life gets hard. Family doesn’t vanish without a single phone call. Family doesn’t reappear years later, thinking one cake and a few smiles erase everything.” My throat tightened, but I forced the words out steady. “Your absence defines you more than your sudden desire to ‘be here’ now.” He looked at me, stunned, his charm cracking at the edges. He didn’t have an answer ready. I straightened, my grip on the bag tightening. “You don’t get to rewrite history, William. Not for me, and not for my son.” I turned away before he could recover, before he could find words to patch up the silence. I didn’t go back inside. My stroll led to the to Supermarket just around the block where I decided to get some groceries. When I walked to the register, ready to pay, my phone buzzed, the screen lit with Susan’s name. I answered, and her warm voice filled my ear. “Viv! Where are you?” I tried to laugh. “Supermarket. Last-minute birthday mission.” “Of course you are,” she teased. “Listen, I’m just around the corner at that little restaurant on Fifth. Come by for a drink.” “I don’t know,” I said, shifting the bag in my hand. “It’s getting late, and I—” “You’re going home to stare at the ceiling, aren’t you?” she cut in. “Don’t lie to me. One drink. I’ll have wine waiting.” I hesitated. My whole body begged for sleep. But the thought of going home to the silence made my chest ache. “Fine,” I said. “One drink.” “That’s my girl.” I joined Susan shortly. The restaurant was small and glowing with warm light. Susan waved me over, two glasses of wine already on the table. “You weren’t kidding,” I said, sitting down. She grinned. “I never kid about wine. Now, spill. Promotion, merger, billionaire boss—all of it.” I rolled my eyes, taking a sip. “It’s chaos. I barely know which way is up. But, hey, I’m Director Hartley now. That has a nice ring, doesn’t it?” Susan smirked. “Sure. But the real question is when was the last time you slept more than four hours?” I groaned. “Don’t start.” “I will start,” she said firmly. “Because I can see it all over you. You’re running on fumes, Viv.” I laughed weakly. “If I don’t laugh, I’ll cry. And if I cry, I’ll never stop.” Her eyes softened. For a little while, the heaviness eased. We talked, we laughed, we remembered old times before everything became this hard. For an hour, I let myself breathe. But then I glanced at my phone and felt guilt punch through me. “Shit. It’s late. I need to go. Liam.” Susan caught my hand. “Don’t drown in this alone, Viv.” I hugged her tight. “I’ll call you tomorrow.” The apartment was quiet when I returned. Too quiet. I set my keys down carefully, trying not to make a sound. Liam must already be asleep. But something felt wrong. I stepped into the living room and froze at the sight of familiar clothes scattered across the couch and floor. Then I heard it. I took the stairs two at a time, my pulse pounding. Dread clawed at me with every step. I threw the bedroom door open and there they were. William, half-naked, moving over Olivia in my bed. In my house. With our son asleep down the hall. For a moment, the world blurred red. My body shook, rage boiling up so fast I thought it would break me. The words tore out of me before I could stop them, sharp and final. “What the fuck, William?!”VIVIENNE~•~It had been two days since I fed Inez the lie, and nothing had happened yet.I kept thinking something would. I gave her exactly what Damon told me to give her. After that, nothing. Liam went to school and came back. Inez made his lunches. Everyone was polite. And the longer it stayed calm, the more worried I got, because I knew it wasn't really calm. We were just waiting.So when the doorbell rang a little after two, with Liam at school and no one home but the two of us, I already had a bad feeling.Inez went for the door first. She was closer, and getting the door was her job, but the second she reached for it I wanted her nowhere near it."I've got it," I said, too quick.She turned and looked at me."I've got it," I said again, slower this time. "Go finish the kitchen."She let go of the handle and went. I waited until she was gone, then I opened the door.A man was standing there. Regular guy, kind of tired-looking, holding a big envelope and a clipboard."Vivienne L
VIVIENNE~•~I woke up before the alarm and lay there a minute trying to remember which ceiling I was looking at.That's what the size of this place did to me now. We'd been gone long enough that the house had gone back to feeling like a stranger, all that room around the bed, the dark sitting in corners too far away to reach. At Elena's the kitchen and the living room were one room and I could hear Liam breathing from anywhere I stood. Here there was a whole hallway before I got anywhere, then the stairs, then more house under that, quiet and polished and waiting on me to remember how to live in it.We'd come back two days ago, once the custody fight was done. No hearing left to win, nobody left to run from on that front, so there was no reason to keep hiding at Elena's. Damon had the cars loaded and brought us home, back to the big house where all of it started. I'd spent the first night awake just getting used to it again.I came down to the smell of toast and the sound of my son a
DAMON~•~"Are you gonna leave too? Like Daddy did?"I had the answer. It was one word and I'd have given it to anybody else without a second of thought. *No.* I'd built my whole life on saying the hard thing first and watching people scramble after it.I couldn't get it out of my mouth.Because the word he wanted was *forever*, and three hours ago his mother stood in a marble hallway and told me she'd been lying to me for weeks, and I didn't know anymore if the thing I'd promised this kid was a thing two grown people could keep. I wasn't going to hand him a *forever* and then break it down the middle in front of him. He'd already had one man do that.So I got down on one knee by the bed, and I gave him what I had that was true."You see me here, buddy?"He nodded, his chin still going."I'm here right now. I checked your closet tonight, same as every night." I pulled the blanket back up over him. "You ever known me to skip one?""No." It came out wet. "But that's not forever."Six ye
VIVIENNE~•~"Mommy!"Liam came barreling down the hall the second I got the door open, and he hit my legs and grabbed on with both arms, and for a minute I just stood there holding onto my kid and trying to remember how to breathe."Did you win? Did you talk to the judge?" He tipped his head all the way back to look up at me. "Marco let me have two ice creams and said I couldn't come, but I drew you a picture. You wanna see it?"I got down on my knees right there on the floor and took his face in both hands."Listen to me, baby. You're staying right here. With me. Nobody is taking you anywhere, not ever, you hear me? It's done. It's over.""For real real?""For real real. I promise you."He threw both arms around my neck and squeezed so hard it hurt, and over the top of his head I saw Damon standing in the kitchen doorway, watching the two of us. The second my eyes hit his, he looked away."Liam, go wash up," Damon said. "Dinner's almost ready.""Mommy says nobody's taking me!" Liam
VIVIENNE~•~Elena sat back down beside me and folded her hands on the table like she hadn't just lit her whole life on fire in front of a judge, and I couldn't stop shaking.She'd done that for me. For Liam. She'd stood up in open court and put every bit of it on her own back so the word "tampering" would never touch Damon or me, and the worst part, the part I couldn't breathe around, was that I'd helped her hold those records. I'd kept the copy. I was every bit as in it as she was, and she'd just made sure the whole world would never know."Counsel, both of you sit." Okafor took her glasses off and rubbed the bridge of her nose. "I've heard enough for one morning."The whole room went still."Mr. Ackerman, your motion to strike is granted. The evaluation's gone. I can't trust a report that came out of an improper contact, and I won't pretend otherwise." She set the glasses back down. "But before your client gets comfortable, let me say what I watched happen on that stand."William s
ELENA~•~I'd spent my whole career learning not to react in a room like this, and I needed every bit of that training now, because Ackerman had just laid my sin out on the record and the only thing holding me up was the habit of a still face.Every head in the courtroom had turned to me. I could feel them. The judge, waiting. William, looking pleased with himself for the first time all morning. Ackerman, easing back into his chair.Damon wasn't looking at me, though. He'd turned in his seat, and he was looking at his wife.That was the thing that decided it. Not the motion, not the records, not fifteen years of work about to burn in front of a judge who'd always liked me. It was the question I could watch forming on Damon's face while he stared at Vivienne, and the fact that I knew exactly what it was.He was wondering if she'd known. And the second he decided she had, that was the end of them, the one real thing either of them had managed to make out of this whole ugly arrangement.







