LOGINThe lobby of Thorn Tower was a cathedral of ambition.
Isabella stood frozen just inside the revolving doors, her breath catching at the sheer scale of the space. Marble floors stretched toward infinity, polished to such a high shine that they reflected the forty-story atrium like a mirror lake. A chandelier made of what looked like a thousand crystal daggers hung from the ceiling, catching light and throwing it across the walls in prismatic fragments. People moved with purpose suits and heels and the quiet hum of money doing what money does. She felt like a fraud just standing here. "Can I help you?" The voice came from a reception desk that looked like it cost more than her entire education. A woman with razor-sharp cheekbones and a smile that didn't reach her eyes regarded Isabella with polite disinterest. "Isabella Davenport. I have an interview with HR at nine." The woman tapped at her keyboard, her manicured nails clicking against the keys. "Davenport... Davenport... ah, yes. Personal secretary position. Take the elevator to the thirty-fifth floor. Someone will meet you there." "Thank you." Isabella walked toward the elevators, her heels clicking against the marble in a rhythm that sounded like fake it, fake it, fake it. She kept her chin up, her shoulders back, her eyes forward. She belonged here. She deserved to be here. She would not let the ghosts of the past four days destroy this chance. The elevator rose so smoothly she barely felt it move. Floor numbers blinked past 10, 15, 20, 25 each one taking her further from the woman who'd been betrayed and closer to someone new. Someone untouchable. The doors opened onto a different world. Where the lobby had been cold and monumental, the thirty-fifth floor was warm and deliberate. Rich wood paneling. Soft lighting. Art on the walls that probably cost more than most people's houses. A reception area with leather chairs arranged around a coffee table covered in magazines that Isabella had only ever seen in airports. "Ms. Davenport?" A woman appeared from nowhere fifties, silver hair pulled back in an elegant twist, wearing a suit that probably cost Isabella's monthly rent. Her smile was genuine, which somehow made her more intimidating. "I'm Helena Vance, Director of HR. We spoke on the phone. Please, follow me." Isabella followed, trying not to stare at the offices they passed. Glass walls revealed people working at desks that looked more like furniture than office equipment. Everyone was beautiful. Everyone looked like they belonged. Helena led her into a conference room with a view that made Isabella's stomach drop. The entire city spread out below them, tiny cars and tinier people going about their tiny lives while up here, decisions were made that affected all of them. "Please, sit." Helena gestured to a chair facing the window. "Can I get you coffee? Water?" "No, thank you. I'm fine." Helena sat across from her, folding her hands on the polished table. "Margaret Chen speaks very highly of you. She says you're the hardest worker she's ever employed." "Margaret is very kind." "She's also very honest. If she says you're good, you're good." Helena pulled a folder from her bag and opened it. "I've reviewed your resume. Five years with Chen Media, steadily increasing responsibilities, and excellent performance reviews. You were there when the company went under?" Isabella nodded. "Until the last day." "That's loyalty. That's also the kind of dedication we value here at Thorn Enterprises." Helena made a note. "The position you're applying for is personal secretary to our CEO. It's not an easy job. The hours are long, the demands are high, and the person you'll be working for is... particular." "I understand." "Do you?" Helena's eyes sharpened. "Damien Thorn is not like other CEOs. He doesn't suffer fools. He doesn't tolerate mistakes. He works at a pace that has broken stronger people than you. But if you can keep up, if you can anticipate his needs before he voices them, if you can become indispensable" She paused. "There's no ceiling on what that could mean for your career." Isabella met her gaze steadily. "I'm not afraid of hard work. I'm not afraid of high expectations. I've spent five years being invisible while making everyone around me successful. I'm ready to do that on a larger scale." Helena studied her for a long moment. Something shifted in her expression approval, maybe, or at least curiosity. "Margaret said you were composed. She wasn't wrong." Helena closed the folder. "There's one more step. Mr. Thorn likes to meet potential candidates for key positions personally. It's unusual for a secretary role, but then, he's an unusual man. He's free in ten minutes. If you're willing to wait?" Isabella's heart stuttered. The CEO. The infamous Damien Thorn. She'd be meeting him today, right now, without preparation or warning. "I'm willing." Helena smiled again, warmer this time. "Good. Make yourself comfortable. I'll come get you when he's ready." She left. Isabella sat alone in the glass conference room, looking out at the city that sprawled beneath her like a kingdom waiting to be claimed. Ten minutes. She had ten minutes to compose herself, to push down the memories of Jonathan and Priscilla, to become the woman who could walk into a billionaire's office and convince him she was worth his time. She could do this. She had to do this. Twenty minutes later, Helena returned. "He's ready. Follow me." They walked through a set of double doors and into a hallway that felt more like a museum than an office. Original art on the walls. A sculpture that looked like Rodin but probably wasn't. The kind of quiet that came from money so old it didn't need to announce itself. Helena stopped before a massive door, dark wood with a simple brass plate: D. Thorn, CEO. "Go on in. He's expecting you." Isabella's hand trembled slightly as she reached for the handle. She steadied it with sheer force of will, turned the knob, and stepped inside. The office was enormous, with wall-to-wall windows, a desk the size of a small car, and bookshelves filled with leather-bound volumes that looked like they'd never been read. But Isabella barely noticed any of it. Because standing at the window, his back to her, was a man she recognized. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dark hair pulled back at the nape of his neck. A physique that spoke of money and discipline and genetics too good to be fair. He turned. And Isabella's world tilted on its axis. Green eyes with silver rings around the irises. A chiseled jaw. Tanned skin that she remembered in intimate detail the way it looked in moonlight, the way it felt beneath her fingers, the way it had pressed against her own just a few weeks ago. The stranger from the club. The man she'd woken beside and fled from in the gray light of dawn. Damien Thorn. Their eyes met. Recognition flashed across his face as quickly as lightning, there and gone. For one suspended moment, the air between them crackled with the impossible coincidence of it all. Then his expression shuttered. "Ms. Davenport." His voice was deep, controlled, utterly devoid of emotion. "Please, sit." He gestured to a chair facing his desk. No acknowledgment. No flicker of the intimacy they'd shared. Nothing but the cold professionalism of a CEO meeting a job candidate. Isabella's legs carried her forward on autopilot. She sat. She folded her hands in her lap. She raised her chin and met his gaze with every ounce of composure she possessed. If he could pretend, so could she. "Thank you for seeing me, Mr. Thorn." He moved behind his desk, settling into his chair with the fluid grace of a predator. For a long moment, he simply looked at her with those green eyes assessing, calculating, searching for something she couldn't name. "Margaret Chen speaks highly of you." "She's been very kind." "Kindness has nothing to do with it. Margaret doesn't recommend people she doesn't believe in." He leaned back, steepling his fingers. "Tell me why you want this job." Isabella drew a breath. "I want to work somewhere where my efforts matter. I want to be indispensable to someone who appreciates dedication. I want" "I don't want the rehearsed answer." His voice cut through her words like a blade. "Tell me why you really want this job." The room fell silent. Isabella looked at this man who had been a stranger, then a lover, now an interviewer. She thought about the past four days the betrayal, the escape, the hotel room, the fever, the desperate need to become someone new. She decided on the truth. "Because I have nothing left." Something flickered in his eyes. "My company went bankrupt. My fiancé cheated on me with my best friend. I spent the weekend in a hotel room with a fever, trying to memorize everything about this company so I wouldn't fall apart during this interview." She held his gaze. "I want this job because it's the only thing I have left to fight for. And when I fight for something, I don't lose." The silence stretched between them. Damien Thorn regarded her with an expression she couldn't read. The green of his eyes seemed to shift in the light, the silver rings around them catching the sun streaming through the windows. Then, slowly, almost imperceptibly, the corner of his mouth twitched. "Good answer." He stood, moving to the window with his back to her. "You start Monday. Helena will handle the paperwork." He paused, his reflection ghosting in the glass. "And Ms. Davenport?" "Yes?" "Whatever happened before you walked through those doors leave it there. In this building, you're no one's victim. You're my secretary. And I expect nothing less than excellence." Isabella rose on trembling legs. "I understand, Mr. Thorn." She turned to leave, her hand reaching for the door handle. "One more thing." She looked back. Damien Thorn faced her now, his silhouette dark against the blazing city behind him. For just a moment a fraction of a second the mask slipped. "The club. That night." His voice dropped. "It didn't happen." Isabella's heart clenched. "No," she agreed quietly. "It didn't." She walked out. The door closed behind her with a soft click that sounded like the end of one story and the beginning of another she couldn't begin to imagine.The morning of her return, Isabella woke before dawn.She lay in the hotel bed, watching the first light creep across the ceiling, her heart heavy with the weight of her decision. Eleanor was asleep in the chair by the window, her silver hair loose, her face soft. She had stayed with Isabella through the weeks of silence, of healing, of trying to find herself again.Now it was time to go home.Isabella slipped out of bed, careful not to wake her mother. She dressed quickly, packed her small bag, and wrote a note.Mom,I'm going home. I need to face this. I need to stop running.Thank you for everything.I love you. IsabellaShe left the note on the pillow and walked out the door.The drive to Portland was long and quiet.Isabella sat in the driver's seat, the road stretching out before her, the ocean on one side, the mountains on the other. She thought about Sebastian, about the years they had shared, about the moments that had been real and the moments that had been lies.She though
The weight of the contract pressed down on Isabella like a physical force.She sat at the kitchen table, the document spread out before her, the words blurring together. If she leaves before two years, she owes him one million dollars in damages. The clause stared up at her, cold and unforgiving, a trap she had walked into with her eyes wide open.She had trusted him. She had believed in him. She had given him everything.And he had trapped her."Isabella." Sebastian's voice came from behind her. "Please. Let me explain.""There's nothing to explain." She didn't turn around. "You lied to me. You manipulated me. You made sure I couldn't leave.""I was trying to protect us.""By trapping me?""By giving us time." He moved closer, his voice cracking. "Time to work things out. Time to build something real.""And if we hadn't?""Then I would have let you go."She laughed in a hollow, broken sound. "You expect me to believe that?""I don't expect you to believe anything." He reached for her
The morning after Sebastian's confession, Isabella woke to an empty bed.She sat up, her heart racing, and found him standing by the window, his back to her, his shoulders tense. The sun was rising over the ocean, painting the room in shades of gold and pink."Sebastian?" Her voice was soft. "What are you doing?"He turned, his face pale, his eyes red. "I couldn't sleep.""Neither could I." She climbed out of bed, wrapping a robe around herself. "What are you thinking about?""The past." He moved closer. "About all the mistakes I've made.""We've all made mistakes.""Not like mine." His voice cracked. "I lied to you. Manipulated you. Used you to hurt my brother.""You also loved me.""That doesn't excuse what I did.""No." She took his hands. "But it explains it."The conversation that followed was long and painful.Sebastian talked about the years of resentment, the desperate need to be seen, the overwhelming anger that had consumed him. He talked about Genevieve, the woman he had lo
The evening had started like any other.Isabella sat on the porch, watching the sun set over the ocean, a glass of wine in her hand. Sebastian was beside her, his arm around her shoulders, his breathing steady. The children were inside with Eleanor, their laughter drifting through the open windows.It was peaceful. Almost too peaceful."Isabella." Sebastian's voice was soft. "I need to tell you something."She turned to look at him. "What is it?""I've been thinking about the past. About Genevieve. About Damien. About all of it."Her heart tightened. "What about it?"He was silent for a long moment. Then he said, "I've loved Genevieve for as long as I can remember. Since we were children. Since before any of this started."Isabella's blood ran cold. "What?""She was the first person who ever saw me. The first person who made me feel like I mattered." His voice cracked. "And then Damien took her from me.""Sebastian ""Let me finish." He took her hands. "I need you to understand."He t
The drive back to Portland was long and quiet.Isabella sat in the passenger seat, watching the coastline blur past, her hand in Sebastian's. The cottage had given her what she needed: space, silence, a chance to breathe. But now she was ready to go home.The sun was setting, painting the sky in shades of gold and amber. Sebastian glanced at her, his eyes soft. "Are you sure about this?""About coming home?""About us."She squeezed his hand. "I've never been more sure of anything."He smiled a real smile, the kind that reached his eyes. "Good. Because I'm not letting you go again."The house looked the same, the white clapboard, the wraparound porch, the garden she had planted with her own hands. But it felt different now. Lighter. Like the weight of the past had finally been lifted.Isabella stepped out of the car, her heart pounding. The front door burst open, and Lucas came running, his face bright with joy."Mommy! You're home!"She knelt, pulling him into her arms. "I'm home, ba
The cottage sat at the edge of the cliff, its windows dark, its garden overgrown.Isabella stood in the driveway, her bag slung over her shoulder, the wind whipping her hair. She had driven for hours, following the coastline until the road ran out, until there was nothing but ocean and sky and the distant cry of seabirds.She didn't know who owned the cottage. Didn't care. It was empty, and she needed somewhere to breathe.She broke the lock on the back door, a small thing, rusted with age, and stepped inside.The cottage was dusty, the furniture covered in white sheets, the air thick with the smell of salt and abandonment. She pulled the sheets off the couch, opened the windows, and let the ocean air fill the space.It wasn't much.But it was hers.The first few days were a blur of exhaustion.Isabella slept, ate when she remembered, walked along the shore when the weight of everything became too much. She didn't answer her phone. Didn't check her email. Didn't think about Sebastian
The next three weeks were a study in controlled chaos.Isabella learned to read Damien's moods the way she'd once learned to read spreadsheets by paying attention to the details. The tension in his shoulders meant he'd had a difficult call with his grandfather. The way he rubbed his temples meant G
The office was empty when they returned.Isabella stood at the window, watching the storm roll in across the Manhattan skyline. Thunder rumbled in the distance, low and warning, and lightning flickered behind the clouds like something waiting to be born. The city was bathed in the strange golden li
The days after Sebastian's death blurred together.Isabella moved through them like a ghost waking, eating, working, sleeping but none of it felt real. Damien was the same, his grief a mirror of her own, his silence heavier than any words. They held each other at night, two broken people trying to
The penthouse felt like a tomb.Isabella stood in the center of the living room, her arms wrapped around herself, watching Damien pace. He had been silent for five minutes five endless minutes since his confession that he knew enough to destroy them all. His hands were clenched at his sides, his ja







