LOGINI stared at Curtis like I was looking at a stranger.
The man standing before me was not the same man who once held my hands and promised to protect me from the world. His face was calm, almost indifferent, as he bent slightly toward me. “Tessa, you crashed into the coffee table yourself and had a miscarriage,” he said, his voice steady, like he was explaining something simple to a child. “What right do you have to blame Lauren?” For a moment, I forgot how to breathe. I searched his eyes, hoping to find even a small trace of doubt. A flicker of uncertainty. Anything that showed he was confused and not fully convinced. There was nothing. Only coldness. “She pushed me towards the coffee table,” I said again, trying to keep my voice steady even though my chest was shaking. My throat still felt dry from crying. “Curtis, she pushed me.” I looked up at him desperately. “Why won’t you believe me? Why did you believe her?” My gaze shifted to Lauren. She stood slightly behind him, looking composed, hands folded gently before her. But when our eyes met, she released a tiny smirk. Wicked. Brief. But I saw it clearly. I turned back to Curtis. “I understand now,” I said slowly. The pain inside me was turning into something else. Something darker. “You guys are trying to put the blame on me so that you can marry her, right?” Curtis chuckled. The sound hurt more than a slap. “Tessa,” he said, shaking his head lightly. “You’ve learned how to play the victim, huh? It was you who cheated on me. You don’t have the right to misunderstand us.” His words felt like hot oil poured over my wounds. “Why won’t you believe me?” I snapped. My voice rose despite the weakness in my body. “If you had trusted me,” I continued, my hands trembling against the hospital sheets, “our child wouldn’t have died.” Silence filled the room for a second. I turned my head slowly and met Lauren’s eyes again. She wasn’t even pretending anymore. Her lips curved slightly, satisfaction dancing in her eyes. “Enough!” Curtis thundered. The force of his voice echoed against the hospital walls. But this time, I didn’t flinch. “No!” I snapped back. My eyes widened at him, burning with anger and grief. “No! I won’t keep quiet!” Something inside me had broken completely. The pain of losing my child. The betrayal. The humiliation. It all exploded at once. “I’ll let you pieces of shit pay with your lives!” I shouted. My hand moved instinctively to the small flower vase placed on the bedside table. I grabbed it and lifted it up, intending to smash it toward them. But Curtis was faster. He caught my wrist mid-air. His grip was tight. The vase slipped from my fingers and fell to the floor with a loud crash, shattering into pieces. Before I could pull away, his other hand grabbed my neck. He pushed me back onto the bed roughly. My body slammed against the mattress. “You’re the one who should pay with your life!” he said fiercely, his face inches from mine. His fingers pressed against my throat, not enough to choke me completely, but enough to make his threat clear. “Curtis…” I called, my eyes filled with fury and hatred I didn’t recognize in myself. “I would never forgive you in my life!” He chuckled again. As if my words meant nothing. He slowly released me and straightened up, adjusting the sleeves of his suit like he had just finished a minor inconvenience. “Stay here and repent for your deeds,” he said coldly. Repent? For what exactly? For trusting him? For loving him? He turned slightly. “Lauren, let’s go.” Lauren stepped closer to him, her heels making soft sounds against the floor. Together, they began walking toward the door. Just before stepping out, Lauren paused. She turned back. Our eyes met. She raised her hand slowly and waved at me. Her smile was wicked. Victorious. The door closed behind them. Silence filled the room. I lay back slowly on the bed. My body felt drained. Empty. Weak. Hot tears rolled down the sides of my face into my hair. I closed my eyes tightly, but that didn’t stop the tears. My hands clenched the bedsheet until my knuckles turned white. The image of my child flashed in my mind. The tiny kicks. The promises I made. All gone. And the man who should have been my shield stood against me. THIRD PERSON POV: Just outside the room, their voices carried faintly through the closed door. “Curtis, don’t divorce Tessa,” Lauren said softly. Her tone had changed once again. It was gentle. Caring. Innocent—like she was the one trying to protect the marriage. “Humph. Divorce?” Curtis replied with a short, dry chuckle. “Don’t even think about it until Tessa gets what she deserves.” He turned and walked away, his polished shoes echoing against the hospital floor as his footsteps gradually faded down the hallway. Lauren remained standing there. She held her small handbag in front of her with both hands, her posture calm and composed. For a few seconds, she did not move. Then slowly, a smile crept onto her face. Not the soft, harmless smile she wore in front of Curtis. This one was different. Cold. Satisfied. Real. “If Mom and Dad –“ she started to say but trailed off, her teeth gritted. “Well, whatever they are now. If they think they can replace me with some kinda girl they believe is their true daughter, they must be joking. I don’t give a damn whoever she is.” She opened her handbag and brought out her phone. Without hesitation, she dialed a number. The call connected almost immediately. “Prepare a paternity test,” she said calmly. She ended the call without waiting for a response. After slipping the phone back into her bag, she lifted her head and turned slowly toward the hospital room door. Her eyes fixed on it. “Tessa, you must divorce Curtis!”A suffocating silence hung over the boardroom.The polished conference table that had witnessed countless triumphant decisions now seemed to have become a battlefield where every person seated around it was waiting for the next devastating blow. Laptops remained open, financial reports were scattered across the glossy surface, and several untouched cups of coffee had long gone cold.Every pair of eyes remained fixed on the large screen displaying Ecofel's market performance.The numbers refused to cooperate.The company's stock had already suffered an aggressive wave of buying over the past several trading sessions, yet the acquisition had not slowed. Whoever was behind it wasn't making random purchases. saying this was an unexpected twist could rather be understatement. Every move had been calculated frighteningly, targeting available shares from multiple directions until the ownership percentage kept climbing beyond what anyone had predicted.One of the board members broke the s
Jason stepped out of his car and adjusted the cuff of his suit before making his way toward the towering commercial building where he had an important business meeting. The glass structure reflected the bustling city around it, with luxury vehicles pulling in and out of the entrance as executives hurried through the revolving doors.His assistant followed a few steps behind, carrying a leather folder containing the day's meeting agenda.Jason had almost reached the entrance when movement several meters away caught his attention.Three people were walking out of the building through another exit.One of them was Lauren.She wore a fitted cream-colored business suit, her posture poised and her expression composed as she exchanged a few final words with the two men accompanying her. Both men were dressed in black suits with matching ties, their polished appearance immediately revealing they were high-ranking corporate executives.Jason slowed his pace.His eyes narrowed slightly.Somet
Lauren sat comfortably at the head of a polished conference table inside a private room. The curtains remained tightly drawn, shutting out every view from outside. Only three people occupied the room.Lauren and two men.Their expressions carried the confidence of people who had invested too much to tolerate failure. One of the men leaned back in his chair with a satisfied smile. "I have to admit, you've exceeded our expectations." The man said, nodding.Lauren calmly folded her hands together. "I simply did what I was asked to do." She replied with quiet confidence.The second man chuckled softly. "No. You did far more than that." He said as he reached for one of the reports lying on the table. He tapped the document lightly with his finger. "Ecofel's public image has become increasingly unstable. Their investors have started asking questions. Their competitors have become bolder. Even the media is beginning to follow every little controversy surrounding them."Lauren's lips curve
Curtis slowly opened the door, tiptoeing inside and finding his way upstairs through the darkened room. It was about 10:46 p.m. by the time he arrived home, and he was wishing he didn't meet Tessa awake because he knew it was going to be a heavy fight.Before he could reach the staircase, the light quickly turned on."Where are you coming from?"Curtis instantly shivered as he turned sharply toward the voice. He almost lost his footing before quickly steadying himself. His heart skipped violently against his chest. There on the couch was Tessa.She wasn't sitting lazily as though she had been watching television. She sat upright, both hands resting on her knees, her posture stiff from hours of waiting. Her eyes were swollen with exhaustion, yet they remained painfully alert. It was obvious she had been sitting there for a very long time, refusing to leave the living room until he returned.Curtis swallowed quietly.Every excuse he had rehearsed during the drive home suddenly disa
"I... I guess this is where we say goodnight." Curtis said as he reached Lauren's apartment gate."What?" Lauren snapped, turning to his side. "Nah. You wouldn't do that. Remember you promised to have dinner with me the other day.""I know." He said. "I remember, but it's kinda late now for that. Maybe some other time."His hands tightened on the wheel."I refuse." She persisted, her voice sounding like she was going to cry. "Come on, Curtis. At least do this for old times sake. It's just dinner."Curtis stared at her for a moment. The request sounded harmless enough. A simple dinner. Nothing more. Yet he could not explain why a strange feeling continued to linger in the back of his mind. Ever since Lauren returned to the business world, she had appeared different. He had dismissed Tessa's concerns repeatedly, convincing himself that Lauren was simply rebuilding her life after prison.Now, sitting outside her apartment, he wondered if things were truly that simple.He rubbed a hand
One evening, Curtis sat comfortably beside Tessa on the couch while a television program played quietly before them. It had been days neither of them was discussing Ecofel's problems, Crown Aurora's sudden rise, or the growing tension surrounding Lauren's increasingly aggressive competition. The atmosphere inside the living room felt peaceful, something both of them desperately needed after weeks of stress.Tessa rested comfortably against him while scrolling through messages on her phone from several department heads who were still trying to recover from the recent project disaster. Though she was physically present, part of her mind remained occupied with business concerns. Ecofel was gradually stabilizing, but the wounds caused by the leaked information had not completely healed.Curtis, meanwhile, appeared distracted.He had barely paid attention to the television since they sat down.His thoughts had wandered several times throughout the evening.That alone was unusual.Norma
"Ms. Dean," Mr. Luther continued, his tone no longer carrying the earlier admiration but instead laced with clear displeasure, "I think the company has no need for someone like that."The words fell heavily into the room, and for a brief moment, no one moved. The air itself seemed to hold still, w
Sandra leaned closer to Tessa, her shoulder almost brushing against hers as she tilted her head slightly to conceal her words. “Isn’t this the design draft that you gave to me?” she whispered, her voice tight with unease. “Why is it now Lauren’s?”Tessa's eyes stayed on the screen, steady and focu
CURTIS’ POV“Look at what that bitch did!” Rosa barked, slapping the sheet of paper against the glass center table so hard that the sound echoed across the sitting room.I had been seating right beside her, buried in deep, sad thoughts. But the sharp crack of paper against glass pulled me back. I
I remember the ceiling lights flashing above me.White. Bright. Blinding.Everything smelled of antiseptic and fear. My body felt heavy, like I was sinking into something deep and dark. Voices floated around me, urgent and overlapping, but they sounded far away, as though I was hearing them from u







