LOGINThe First Lie
Isla POV
My heart pounded so hard I could feel it in my throat as I followed Lila down the long hallway. The gold bracelet on my wrist felt like it weighed ten pounds with every step.
“Remember,” Lila whispered, glancing back at me. “He’s been asking for you every single day since he woke up. When you walk through that door you are the only thing keeping him together. Don’t give him a reason to doubt that.”
“I know,” I muttered. “I’ve got it.”
Lila stopped outside a heavy wooden door and gave me one last nod before stepping back. “Good luck.”
I wiped my sweaty palms on the soft cream dress, took a slow breath, and pushed the door open.
Elias Hargrove sat propped up in the hospital-style bed, morning light falling across his face. He looked pale and tired, with messy dark blond hair and warm blue eyes that lit up the second they landed on me. Monitors beeped softly beside him. A breakfast tray sat untouched on his lap.
“Celeste?” His voice came out rough, like he hadn’t used it much. “Is that really you?”
I forced a soft smile and stepped closer. “It’s me, Elias. I’m here.”
He reached for my hand right away. His grip felt weak but warm, like he was afraid I might disappear again.
“I thought I lost you. Where have you been?”
The question landed like a stone. I had rehearsed this moment a hundred times last night and still felt the ground shift beneath it.
I sat carefully on the edge of the bed. “I’m so sorry I was gone so long. I was scared after the accident. I didn’t know how bad it was for you and I hid. I shouldn’t have.”
He lifted my hand and pressed his lips to my knuckles. The kiss was soft and real. The softness of it caught me off guard. “You should have come anyway. Even if it was bad. But I’m just glad you’re safe now. That’s what matters.”
I swallowed hard. “How are you feeling today?”
“Honestly, better now you’re here.” He gave a small smile, but pain flickered behind it. “The doctors say my memory will come back in pieces. I hate being like this.”
His hand tightened suddenly around the bedsheet. “Everyone keeps looking at me like I’m fragile. I’m sick of it.”
“Elias, these things take time.” I held his hand. “Right now the only thing that matters is that you are getting better.”
“Five months away and everything changed,” he said quietly. He paused. “When I woke up the first name I called was yours. It was just there. I don’t even know why.”
He looked at me. “I don’t remember much about us. But I want to. What was it like?”
My mind raced through the folder I’d memorized all night. “You used to bring me flowers every Friday. Yellow roses because you said they reminded you of my smile. You would leave little notes with them.”
His eyes softened. “Yellow roses. That sounds like me. What else?”
“You always opened doors for me,” I continued. “Even when I told you I could do it myself. You said it wasn’t about that. It was about showing me I mattered.”
Elias squeezed my hand. “I wish I could remember everything. I will make it up to you.”
Guilt burned in my stomach like acid. He was looking at me with so much open trust, like I was the only steady thing left in his world. I wasn’t. I was a stranger wearing his fiancée’s face.
“I’m here now,” I said quietly. “We’ll figure out the rest together. One day at a time.”
“Stay a while longer?” He shifted slightly, wincing. “Everything feels better when you’re sitting right here.”
I stayed. We talked for what felt like hours. He asked small questions and I answered using everything from the file plus whatever felt natural. He never pushed. He never doubted. He just listened with those warm blue eyes and held my hand like it anchored him.
“You look a little different,” he said after a while, “I can’t quite place it. Probably my memory.” He chuckled softly. “The accident changed things for both of us, I guess.”
“Trauma does that,” I said. He smiled like those words meant everything.
A nurse eventually came in to check his vitals. I used the moment to stand.
“Will you come back later?” Elias asked, still holding my fingers a second longer. “I sleep better when I know you’re close.”
“Of course,” I said, squeezing back gently. “Rest now. I’ll be here.”
I slipped out of the room and closed the door behind me. Lila was waiting in the corridor, arms crossed.
“Well?” she asked quietly.
“He believed every word,” I told her. The words tasted bitter on my tongue.
Vivienne appeared at the end of the hall like she had been listening the whole time. She fell into step beside me.
“Naomi came through the surgery,” she said without greeting. “She is stable for now.”
I kept my face straight ahead. “Thank you.”
“Don’t mistake this for generosity. Just hold up your end of the deal and she will continue receiving everything she needs.”
“I understand,” I said.
She stopped and looked at me directly. “Good. No improvisation. No mistakes.”
Vivienne turned and walked away without waiting for more.
I made it back to the bedroom and shut the door. The second I was alone, I crossed to the window and pressed my forehead against the cool glass. My shoulders started shaking.
Naomi was alive. Actually alive because of this.
But I had just sat with a kind man and lied straight to his face while he looked at me like I was his salvation. The weight of it pressed down until I could barely breathe.
I wiped my eyes fast when a soft knock sounded.
“Mr. Elias is asking for you again,” Lila called gently. “He says he can’t rest without hearing your voice one more time.”
I closed my eyes for a second. Then straightened.
“Tell him I’m coming,” I answered.
I suddenly became too aware of the gold against my skin as I turned toward the door.
And somehow, walking away was already becoming harder.
The Man They Didn’t Warn Her AboutIsla POVI couldn’t sleep after hearing that name. Cassian. It kept circling in my head like a warning I couldn’t ignore. I lay in the silk sheets staring at the ceiling, replaying Elias closing his door and the way Vivienne’s voice had sharpened.Nobody had mentioned him in any file or briefing. That alone told me he mattered.Morning came too early. I went straight to Elias’s room and knocked softly before stepping inside. He was already awake, sitting up with a book in his lap that he clearly wasn’t reading.“You came early,” he said. His voice sounded distant.“Couldn’t sleep.” I sat on the edge of the bed and searched his face. “What happened last night? You seemed upset.”He shook his head. “Nothing you need to worry about.”“Elias, talk to me.” I reached for his hand. “You shut me out. If something’s wrong, I want to help.”He pulled his hand back gently and stood, moving to the window. “I just need to be alone today. It’s not you. I promise.”
Living Her LieIsla POVI stepped into Elias’s room the next morning carrying the fresh yellow roses he had sent with a handwritten note. He was already sitting up, looking stronger than yesterday, though the tiredness still showed around his eyes.“You didn’t have to bring them back,” he said with a small smile as I set the vase down. “I sent them for you.”“I know.” I sat on the edge of the bed and took his hand. “But I wanted to see your face when I thanked you. The note was sweet. You remembered the yellow ones.”His fingers tightened around mine. “Wanted to surprise you. How are you holding up with all this? I know I’m not exactly easy company right now.”“You’re doing better every day,” I told him. “The doctors are impressed.” He chuckled softly. “Getting better in a hospital bed isn’t exactly an achievement.” His smile faded slightly. “But yeah, I hate these gaps. The missing pieces. It feels like I’m reaching for something that keeps slipping away.”“It will come back,” I sai
The First LieIsla POVMy heart pounded so hard I could feel it in my throat as I followed Lila down the long hallway. The gold bracelet on my wrist felt like it weighed ten pounds with every step.“Remember,” Lila whispered, glancing back at me. “He’s been asking for you every single day since he woke up. When you walk through that door you are the only thing keeping him together. Don’t give him a reason to doubt that.”“I know,” I muttered. “I’ve got it.”Lila stopped outside a heavy wooden door and gave me one last nod before stepping back. “Good luck.”I wiped my sweaty palms on the soft cream dress, took a slow breath, and pushed the door open.Elias Hargrove sat propped up in the hospital-style bed, morning light falling across his face. He looked pale and tired, with messy dark blond hair and warm blue eyes that lit up the second they landed on me. Monitors beeped softly beside him. A breakfast tray sat untouched on his lap.“Celeste?” His voice came out rough, like he hadn’t u
Becoming CelesteIsla POVThe black SUV door shut with a heavy thud the moment I slid into the back seat. I didn’t look back at the hospital. How could I? Naomi was still in there fighting and I had just walked away with a stranger.“You really think this is going to work?” I asked, my voice rough from screaming earlier.Vivienne didn’t even glance up from her phone. “It will work because you will make it work.”The driver pulled away smoothly. City lights blurred past the tinted windows as I pressed my bandaged shoulder against the cool leather.“That’s it? I just leave her there?” “Her care has already been arranged,” Vivienne answered, still typing. “Private room. Best specialists. She will be moved within the hour.”“I want to see her. Just once before I disappear.”“No.” Her tone was sharp and final. “Isla Virelli died tonight. Celeste Voss does not visit patients in public hospitals.”I turned back to the window. “You’re asking me to abandon her.”“I’m giving you the only way t
The Night I said YesIsla POV I stepped out of that elevator like I owned the building, shoulders back, chin up. Tonight I was Lauren Cassidy. The black cocktail dress clung to my body. The fake diamond pendant rested cool against my collarbone. Five minutes. That was all I had before security rotated and this whole job went to hell.“Naomi, you still with me?” I whispered, fingers brushing the earpiece hidden behind my hair. “I’m here,” she answered, voice tight. “Mark’s on the fourteenth floor. We have only five minutes.” “Excuse me.” A security officer called.I turned and faced him. He studied my name tag and identity card for a moment then looked up. “Sorry Miss Lauren. We have been expecting you.”I gave a brief nod and kept walking .“Isla.” Naomi’s voice came back through the earpiece, restless now. “It feels too easy.” “Relax. It’s your mind playing tricks.” I turned the corner without breaking stride, heels clicking sharp against the marble. “I’m almost there.”Suite







