LOGINThe words felt like stones in my mouth. I didn’t mean them, not really, but I wanted them to hurt. I wanted to leave a mark deep enough that he’d finally understand he couldn't talk to me like that. I wanted to train him, to show him that his insecurity didn't give him a license to be cruel. I wanted him to spend the flight to France haunted by the silence I’d left behind, hoping that by the time he landed, he’d be ready to apologize.
"Thank God you're on time," Sarah said, her voice echoing through the drafty heights of the Bradbury Building. She literally raised her hands in a silent prayer toward the rafters. "I thought I was going to get roasted if you didn't show in the next hour. The director has been pacing like a caged tiger." She paused, her head tilting as she caught my expression under the harsh work lights. "And why is your face so down?"
"I just... erm... nothing..." I muttered, focusing on my shoes.
Right as the words left my lips, my phone buzzed in my palm. It was a call from my father. I stared at the caller ID—Dad. He was probably calling to check in on the premiere, to remind me that I was a St. Claire and that the world was mine for the taking. I couldn't do it. I couldn't put on the mask of the doting, successful daughter while my chest felt like it had been hollowed out with a serrated knife.
I reached for the power button and held it until the screen went dark. Total silence.
"Come on, I need to be on stage, right?" I asked, looking at Sarah. I needed the work. I needed the lines to replace my own thoughts.
"You have to get into the costumier’s room immediately," she said, checking her own buzzing watch. "I need to step out and organize for tomorrow night’s press list. It’s a mess, Val. Everyone wants a piece of you for the opening." She reached out, squeezing my shoulder. "Tell me all about why you're looking like a ghost when I get back. And please... cheer up when you go on stage. The director is looking for a reason to snap, and you’re the lead."
I watched her jog away, her heels clicking rapidly against the marble floor. I sighed, a long, shaky sound that seemed to disappear into the vastness of the atrium.
I made my way to the costumier’s room, a small, cramped space tucked behind the heavy velvet curtains of the stage. The air in here was different—it smelled of lavender sachets, old cedar, and the metallic tang of steam irons.
Elena, the head costumier, was waiting for me. She was a woman of few words and sharp needles, a veteran of a hundred Broadway shows who saw actors as nothing more than clothes hangers with egos.
"You’re late for the fitting," she said, not looking up from a seam she was pinning. "Strip. We need to see how the silk sits with the new lighting gels."
I did as I was told, stepping out of my street clothes and into the world of the play. The costume for the second act was a masterpiece of liquid silk, a shade of blue so deep it looked like the ocean at midnight. As Elena cinched the corset, the fabric pulled tight against my ribs, making it hard to draw a full breath.
"You're tense," Elena noted, her cold fingers brushing against my spine. "Hold your breath. I need to take the waist in another half-inch. You’ve lost weight since the last fitting."
"Stress," I whispered, staring at my reflection in the vanity mirror. I looked like a haunted ghost. I kept seeing Jaxson’s face when I told him I hoped he came back dead. It was a jagged, ugly memory that refused to be pushed aside.
Maybe I overdid it. I wanted to call him. Wish a safe journey to France, I unlocked my phone to call him but he already taken off and his phone was off. I sighed angrily, turning my phone off again.
"Well, leave the stress in the dressing room," Elena snapped, smoothing the silk over my hips. "The dress won't hang right if you're hunched over like a mourner. Shoulders back, Valerie. You're a queen tonight."
I nodded, trying to force my posture into something resembling confidence. For the next hour, I was poked, pinned, and draped. Elena moved around me like a silent shadow, adjusting the hem, checking the way the light caught the hand-sewn crystals on the bodice.
Finally, the stage manager’s voice crackled over the intercom. "Technical rehearsal in five. All cast to the wings."
I stepped out of the costume room and into the darkness behind the stage. The theater was alive with a different kind of energy tonight. It wasn't the glamour of a premiere; it was the raw, mechanical heart of the show. Lighting technicians were perched in the rafters, shouting to the board operator about "hot spots" and "shadows." Stagehands were hauling heavy set pieces into place, the faux-marble pillars of my character’s mansion, the wrought-iron gates that represented her prison.
I took my place in the wings, my heart hammering. I tried to go over my lines, but Jaxson’s accusations kept interjecting. You’d rather have a thousand strangers clap for you than stay in one bed with me.
"Places!" the director shouted from the center of the dark house.
I stepped onto the stage, into the blinding white circle of the spotlight. For the next two hours, I worked. I hit my marks. I delivered my monologues about a woman losing her sanity in a gilded cage. It was easy to play, too easy. Every time I reached for an emotion, the anger and guilt from the morning were right there, ready to be channeled.
"Stop! Stop there!" the director’s voice boomed from the darkness. "The lighting is too warm. It’s supposed to be a cold morning, not a sunset! Reset to the top of Act Three!"
I stood center stage, the silk of my dress shimmering under the work lights, waiting for the reset. I looked out into the audience, seeing only the silhouettes of the crew.
That was when the first phone went off.
It wasn't a ringtone. It was the low, persistent vibration of a dozen phones at once. In the front row, I saw the assistant director pull his phone from his pocket. The blue light hit his face, and I watched his expression shift from irritation to absolute, bloodless shock.
Then, the murmuring started. It began in the back of the house and traveled forward like a physical wave. The stagehands in the wings were no longer looking at their cues. They were huddled together, staring at a single tablet.
"What's going on?" I asked, my voice amplified by the stage mic, echoing strangely through the theater. "Are we resetting or not?"
No one answered me. The silence that followed was heavy, oily, and terrifying.
Sarah appeared in the wings. She didn't stay hidden. She walked right out onto the stage, her face a mask of such profound horror that I felt my stomach drop into my shoes. She was holding her phone, her knuckles white.
"Valerie," she whispered. "Oh, God, Val."
"Sarah? What is it? Is it the director? Did he cancel the show?" I asked ready to throw a fit at him, blame him for being the reason why I had a fight with Jax.
She reached me and grabbed my hands. Her fingers were ice cold. "Your phone... you turned it off. I’ve been trying to call you for twenty minutes."
"What happened?" I shrieked, my voice cracking. "Is it Jax? Did his flight land?"
Sarah couldn't speak. She just pointed to the large projection screen behind me. Usually, it displayed a backdrop of a rainy London street. Now, it was a jagged, flickering feed of a news broadcast.
I turned around.
The image was of a burning wreckage in the Tejon Pass. The smoke was thick, black, and choked with the debris of a private jet. The red banner at the bottom of the screen read: GULFSTREAM CRASH: NO SURVIVORS. LOS ANGELES STARS TEAM CONFIRMED ON BOARD.
Oh no! That's Jaxson's private jet.
"No," I breathed. My knees began to shake so violently I could hear the silk of my dress rustling.
The words cut through the air like a razor blade.The penthouse, the glaring studio lights, the faint scent of my lukewarm coffee, everything vanished. My arms dropped limply to my sides. "What did you just say?""What do you mean he woke up..." I whispered.I shook my head, stepping back from Alex as if the physical distance could protect me from the absurdity of what he was saying. "Three months ago? And I didn't know...""Valerie, listen to me..." Alex started, his hands raised in a placating gesture, but the sound of his voice seemed to fade into a dull, distant hum.I stood entirely still beneath the hot studio lights, the heavy silence of the penthouse pressing down on my chest.For a whole year, I had prayed fervently that he woke someday, I had lurked around his room when I'm done with all my show biz, I'd walk back there to see how he was faring. Then, I smiled.Without another word, I stepped backward, returning to the marked tape on the floor. I smoothed down the fabric
"And cut!!!" The director’s voice blared through the heavy megaphone, instantly shattering the suffocating silence of the soundstage.The bright, blinding studio lights dimmed slightly, and the heavy emotional fog that had settled over the crew dissipated into a flurry of sudden movement. Production assistants scrambled with clipboards, makeup artists rushed forward with powder puffs, and the cameras stopped their silent, rolling feast on my grief."Brilliant, Valerie! Absolutely brilliant!" the director praised, beaming as he walked toward the set. "The raw emotion, the devastation...it’s going to be the most powerful scene of the entire project. Take fifteen, everyone!"I forced a tight smile, nodding as the wardrobe assistant gently draped a warm silk robe over my shoulders. I stepped off the elevated stage, my heels clicking softly against the concrete floor of the studio.My life, my acting career, everything was finally kicking off again. In the wake of the trial and the tota
"Watch out for me, you would see what I'm going to do and how you're going to end and I really don't want to understand why you hate me so much. Or why you're making all this sound cartoonish but I will bury you for everything you did." I stormed out. Driven raving mad, the sound of Sterling’s mocking laughter echoed in my ears like a recurring nightmare as I flew down the steps of the federal detention center. Every word he spoke had been a calculated needle thrust directly into my rawest wounds.*“Have you forgotten your earnest plea to end his life?”*The accusation burned. It was true. I had wanted Cillian dead. I had prayed for his destruction. And now that the universe had granted my twisted wish through the barrel of Sterling’s stolen gun, I was suffocating under the weight of my own hypocrisy.I didn't let Daniel drive me. I didn't call Alex. I grabbed the keys to one of Cillian’s cars from my bag, slammed my foot onto the accelerator, and tore through the LA traffic tow
Days poured by in a blurred, exhausting cycle of sterile hospital corridors and suffocating federal courtrooms.The trial didn't stop just because Cillian was drifting in a comatose void, the wheels of justice kept turning, grinding down the remnants of the Vane-Montgomery empire.But the narrative was no longer what the prosecutors had planned. Because I stepped onto the stand.I became the state's star witness, shedding my skin as the grieving, passive victim and weaponizing my voice for the one man who couldn't speak for himself.Every single time I took the witness stand, looking past the row of high-priced lawyers directly at a visibly shaking Sterling Thorne, I laid out the unvarnished truth. Cillian didn't do anything. It was Sterling who did everything. Cillian was never the mastermind, he was a hostage to his own protective instincts. Sterling had systematically manipulated Cillian for over two years, using me as a helpless bait to force Cillian into executing his corrupt
## **BREAKING NEWS**### **BLOODBATH IN NEW YORK FEDERAL COURT: MULTIPLE SHOTS FIRED INSIDE PRELIMINARY HEARING**> **MANHATTAN, NY** — Moments after the adjournment of the high-profile Vane-Montgomery corporate conspiracy trial, defendant **Sterling Thorne** violently disarmed a federal law enforcement officer, firing multiple close-range rounds at co-defendant **Cillian Vane-Montgomery**.> Eyewitnesses inside the courtroom describe a scene of absolute chaos as Thorne opened fire, screaming profanities about a "ruined empire" and "selling souls for a woman." Vane-Montgomery has reportedly sustained critical, life-threatening gunshot wounds to the chest. Emergency medical services are currently on the scene attempting stabilization, while Thorne has been heavily subdued by federal marshals. Valerie St. Claire, the prominent actress caught at the center of this blood feud, was present in the front-row gallery when the violence erupted. Live updates to follow. > The internet explod
Then the court proceedings started, and true to his stubborn nature, Cillian insisted he didn’t want a lawyer.Sterling’s defense team, a small army of over twelve high-priced attorneys did their absolute best, aggressively countering every single accusation thrown their way. They shuffled briefs, raised endless objections, and tried to spin the narrative that Sterling was just an innocent businessman caught in Cillian’s web.But the prosecutor’s points were airtight. The evidence was simply too overwhelming to shut things out, coupled with the fact that so many powerful, high-profile names had been completely exposed in the SD card I had released to the media. The government knew they couldn't protect everyone. To save the system from a total collapse, the authorities had to wrap this up tightly, focusing on burying only Sterling and Cillian, since that’s what the raging public cared about more than anything else.As the hours dragged on under the harsh courtroom lights, I could s







