LOGINShe knew that face. She had seen it in photographs dozens of times, at family dinners she had not been invited to, in the social column of the city's business papers, in the background of her sister's phone screen when her sister had still been speaking to her. She knew the hard, clean lines of that jaw, the sharp authority of those dark eyes, the kind of face that rooms reorganized themselves around.
Caleb Wren.
Her sister's fiancé.
He looked nothing like the composed, controlled man she had seen in those photographs. His shirt was partially undone. His hair was dishevelled. And his eyes — his eyes were red. Not from crying. From drinking. From hours of it, she could tell from the way he carried his own weight, the slight unsteadiness in his stillness, the bottle sitting open on the table beside him.
He looked at her.
And the grief on his face curdled into something else.
"Caleb—" she started.
He crossed the room in four strides.
She didn't have time to step back. His hand closed in her hair and the force of it knocked the air from her lungs as he pulled, sharp and without mercy, driving her downward until her knees hit the floor hard. The pain was immediate and bright. She grabbed instinctively at his wrist, gasping.
"You." His voice was gravel and ruin. Low and shaking with something that was not entirely rage and not entirely grief but some terrible combination of both. He looked down at her with those red-rimmed eyes and she saw years of something dark living behind them. "You have the nerve to stand in my house and beg."
"Caleb, please — you're hurting me—"
"Hurting you." He laughed, and it was the worst sound she had ever heard a person make. "Tell me about being hurt, Nora. Tell me what it looks like."
She was trembling. Her knees burned against the hard floor. She had her hands wrapped around his wrist but she was not strong enough — not nearly strong enough, and so she simply held on, as though that might anchor her to something solid.
"This is a mistake," she whispered. Tears were coming now and she couldn't stop them. "Whatever you think I did — it's a mistake—"
"You put her in that chair." His grip tightened. "You did that."
"I didn't—"
The word came out broken, cracking down the middle, and she hated herself for it. She had said those words so many times in the past weeks that they had begun to feel worn through — threadbare, unconvincing even to her own ears though she knew with every part of herself that they were true.
Her sister, Lena. Beautiful, careless, brilliant Lena, who had always moved through the world as though it had been built expressly for her. Who had been drunk the night of the accident — Nora knew it, had known it, had called her and begged her not to get in the car — and who had wrapped her vehicle around a barrier on the motorway overpass at sixty miles an hour.
The accident had left her paralysed from the waist down.
And Lena, who had never in her life accepted a consequence as her own, had looked at the ruins of everything — her mobility, her wedding, her carefully constructed future — and had decided that Nora was the cause of it. She had said so to anyone who would listen. She had said it to their mother. She had said it to her friends. She had said it to Caleb.
And then she had disappeared.
Gone. Without a word to Nora. Without allowing her so much as a moment to defend herself, leaving only the wreckage of her accusations and a fiancé mad with grief and alcohol standing over Nora in a cold room with his hand in her hair.
"I called her that night," Nora said. Her voice was very quiet now. She was past screaming. "I told her not to drive. I begged her, Caleb. She didn't listen to me — she never listened to me — and I have spent every single day since then living with what happened and being blamed for something I—"
"Enough."
His voice was absolute. A door slamming shut.
He released her hair and Nora caught herself on her hands, pressing her palms flat against the floor. She stayed there for a moment, breathing. Her scalp ached. Her knees throbbed. Around her the room was very still, just the fire being the only thing moving, casting long amber shadows across the walls.
Caleb stepped back. He reached for the bottle on the table without looking at it and drank without a glass. This was so unlike him and Nora trembled like leaves on a windy day.
He looked at her on the floor.
Something shifted in his expression like a decision being made behind those ruined eyes. Final and immovable.
"You're not going home," he said.
Nora looked up at him. "What?"
"Lena is gone." He said it flatly, as though reporting the weather. "The wedding is in four days. Everything is arranged. The families are expecting it. The contracts are signed." He set the bottle down. "You look exactly like her. Anyone who doesn't know you well enough would never know the difference."
The room seemed to tilt.
"You're going to take her place," Caleb said. "You're going to stand where she was supposed to stand, and you're going to carry the weight of what you took from me." His gaze moved over her with the cold appraisal of a man who had decided that a problem had a solution and was simply identifying the pieces. "Consider it what you owe."
"You're out of your mind," Nora breathed.
"Probably." He didn't flinch. "It doesn't change anything."
Nora pushed herself to her feet. Her legs were unsteady but she stood, and she lifted her chin, looking at the man she had once — a very long time ago considered one of the only people in the world who truly knew her.
She had been thirteen when she pulled him from the lake. A summer afternoon, a dare gone wrong, and Caleb Wren sinking beneath dark water while everyone else stood frozen on the bank. She had not thought about it. She had simply gone in.
He had looked at her afterward with something in his eyes that she had spent years trying to describe to herself. Seen, she had always settled on. He had looked at her like he truly saw her.
Her sister had told the story differently. Had placed herself on the bank. Had turned a moment of pure instinct into a romantic gesture, retelling it so many times and so convincingly that even Caleb had come to remember it that way — remembered it with Lena's name attached to it, with Lena's face in the water.
And Nora, who had never known how to fight for the things that were hers, had let it go.
She was looking at what that silence had cost her.
"I didn't cause the accident," she said, one final time. Not begging. Just true. "I didn't. And somewhere underneath all of that grief and that whiskey, I think you know it."
Caleb Wren said nothing.
He turned back to the window, and the firelight made a shadow of him. Nora stood in the center of his cold, beautiful room and understood, with a clarity that was almost calm, that no one was coming for her.
She was completely alone.
And in four days, if she could not find a way out of this, she was going to be his bride.
The first bouquet arrived on Tuesday morning.Claire carried it into Nora's office with an amused smile and set it carefully on the corner of her desk. White lilies and blue hydrangeas filled the room with a fresh scent, and tucked between the stems was a small envelope with Liam's name written across the front."I've already read the card," Claire admitted. "Not on purpose. It wasn't sealed."Nora looked up from her laptop."What does it say?"Claire cleared her throat dramatically."Saw this dinosaur puzzle and thought Liam might enjoy it. No pressure. Just wanted him to have it. — Caleb."She placed the envelope beside the flowers."That's... actually quite sweet."Nora stared at the handwriting for a long moment before reaching for the intercom."Claire.""Yes?""Could you arrange for it to be sent back?"Claire blinked."The flowers too?""Everything."Claire hesitated. "They're for Liam.""I know.""And you're sure?"Nora nodded once. “Unopened."Claire looked as though she wante
Monday morning arrived with a stack of emails waiting in Nora's inbox.Most of them were routine updates from department heads, but one stood out immediately. The subject line read Grant Implementation Meeting, and beneath it was a detailed agenda outlining the first phase of the funding process.She opened the attachment and skimmed through it.The grant committee had assigned a liaison to work directly with NovaCrest throughout the implementation period. The name at the bottom of the document made her pause.Fred Lawson.A knock sounded on her office door before she could think about it any further.Claire stepped in carrying a folder and two coffees. "Your nine o'clock just arrived. I wasn't sure if you wanted tea or coffee this morning, so I guessed.""You guessed correctly."Claire smiled as she placed the cup on Nora's desk."Mr. Lawson is waiting in Conference Room Two. I told him you'd be there in a minute."Nora nodded."Thank you."She picked up the folder, took one sip of c
Something was wrong.He just didn't know what.The meeting broke up a few minutes later.Conversations replaced presentations as people drifted into smaller groups, exchanging business cards and discussing future partnerships. Mr. Hales was pulled aside almost immediately by one of the investors, while members of Nora's team gathered around her to offer quiet congratulations on securing the grant."You've earned this," Claire said, handing her a folder she'd forgotten on the conference table. "I don't think I've ever seen you smile that much in one meeting."Nora managed a small laugh. "Trust me, it was mostly for their benefit."Claire smiled, assuming it was a joke."Enjoy the rest of your day, Ms. Voss. I think you've earned that too.""I wish I could."She slipped the folder into her handbag and excused herself before anyone else could stop her. If she left now, she could still collect herself before the afternoon caught up with her."Nora."His voice followed her into the corrido
The knock on Nora's office door came just as she sent her last email."Come in," she called, closing the document on her screen.Claire stepped inside with her tablet tucked against her chest. "The investors are here, and Mr. Hales asked me to remind you the board meeting starts in fifteen minutes. The grant committee arrived a few minutes ago."Nora glanced at the clock in the corner of her monitor and let out a quiet breath. She had promised herself she wouldn't let Lena's visit affect the rest of her day, yet the hours had disappeared while she buried herself in reports and budgets. It had worked for a while, but only because numbers demanded her attention in ways memories never stopped asking for."I'll be there in a few minutes."Claire lingered by the door instead of leaving straight away. "Are you sure you're alright? You seem... different a d tensed"Nora offered the same smile she'd been giving everyone since morning. "I'm fine. Just trying to get through a busy day."Claire
Nora came to her feet so quickly the chair rolled backward and struck the cabinet behind her."Get out."Lena didn't move."I said get out."Instead, Lena smiled.It was the same smile Nora remembered from years ago. The one that usually came a few seconds before something cruel left her mouth."So touchy." Lena tilted her head. "I only asked a question.""You followed me. You had someone take photographs of my son.""Oh, so he is your son."The words landed between them.Nora's jaw tightened.Lena folded her arms across her chest and let her eyes wander around the office as though she had all the time in the world."You've been away for six years." She looked back at Nora. "Tell me something... were you sleeping around while you were gone?"Nora's hand slammed against the desk."Enough."Lena didn't even flinch."I'm just trying to work out the timeline." Her lips curved. "Imagine my surprise when I discover my sister has a little boy living with her."She shrugged."I didn't think m
Nora buried herself in work.It was the only thing that still made sense.By the time she reached the office on Monday morning, she had convinced herself that Lena's voicemail could wait. She had ignored three more missed calls over the weekend, deleted two unread text messages without opening them, and spent Sunday pretending everything was normal for Liam's sake.Normal was easier to manage than fear.She dropped her handbag beside her desk and immediately reached for the stack of client files waiting for her attention. Numbers. Contracts. Deadlines.She had almost finished sorting the first pile when raised voices drifted in from outside her office."Nora is in a meeting.""I don't care.""I'm sorry, but you can't just walk in—"The door flew open before her secretary could finish."Nora, I'm so sorry," her secretary said, breathing hard as she hurried after the woman who had pushed straight past her. "I tried to stop her.""It's fine, Claire."Claire looked unconvinced.The woman
"Why are you asking about Nora?"Lena's arms folded slowly across her chest, the fabric of her robe pulling tight at the sleeves. She was not asking lightly. The way she said the name — clipped, like biting off the end of a thread — told him she had caught something in the question and was not goin
The drive from the airport felt longer than it was.She had texted Ashley from the gate: Landing now. Coming straight to you. And Ashley, who knew her well enough to read what that meant, had responded with nothing but her address, which Nora already knew by heart.Ashley opened the door before she
"Liam. Liam." Nora dropped her voice into the register that meant business and watched her four-year-old turn from the far end of the lawn with the particular expression of a child who had heard perfectly well the first time. "Come here. Now."He came at a run, which he did everything at, arms pump
"Mom." Nora's voice cracked down the middle. "Caleb divorced me. He handed me papers last night and told me I had a week to leave." She pressed her fingers against her eyes, then dropped her hand. "Did you hear what I said? He divorced me."Her mother sat across from her in the same armchair she ha







