LOGINChapter 2
LINA I couldn't sleep. The bed felt enormous without Damien, though I should have been used to it by now. How many nights had I spent alone in these expensive sheets, staring at the ceiling, wondering where he really was? Who he was really with? And what he was doing? It was routine at this point and I was clearly a masochist. My phone buzzed on the nightstand, and I reached for it, grateful for any distraction from my spiraling thoughts. It was Lily, my best friend. The preview of her message made my stomach drop. Lina, I'm so sorry, but I thought you should know...* My hands shook as I opened the full message. Attached was a photo—Damien in an elegant ballroom, but this wasn't any charity gala. The banner in the background read "Welcome Home, Adora." His first love. The woman he'd dated before his grandmother had arranged our marriage. The woman I could never compete with. In the photo, Damien stood at the center of a small crowd, holding a champagne glass, beaming with happiness, and beside him standing in a radiant red dress was Adora herself, who was holding onto his arm, all possessive. Lily's message continued: I'm at the Grandview Hotel for a work event. This party is happening in the ballroom next door. I'm so sorry, sweetie.. My vision blurred with tears, making the words on the phone unreadable as I closed my eyes and wiped the tears. Of course he'd lied to me. The charity gala had been a convenient excuse, and I'd been too scared to challenge him, to demand he tell me the truth. I was scared of him confirming the fact that I would always be lesser than her in his eyes. That I could never compete with his first love. I typed back with trembling fingers: Thank you for telling me. I'm okay. I cried myself to sleep that night, my hand cradling my stomach, whispering apologies to the tiny life growing in me. "I'm sorry," I murmured into the darkness. "I'm sorry your father doesn't want us. I'm sorry I'm not enough." Sunlight streaming through the curtains woke me up hours later as my eyes felt swollen and my head was pounding from crying. Damien's side of the bed remained untouched—he hadn't come home at all. I dragged myself out of bed and into the shower, letting the hot water wash away the dried tears. But it couldn't wash away the ache in my chest or the growing certainty that I couldn't continue living like this. Not anymore. Not with a baby to think about. I was making coffee in the kitchen, switching to decaf, making sure that nothing would harm the baby in me, when I heard the sound of a car arriving on the driveway, but the car sound wasn't Damien's black sedan. This car belonged to his grandmum. My heart skipped a bit, I wasn't prepared to face her, after a vulnerable night. I also wasn't ready to answer her questions despite how good intentioned her words were. I quickly checked my reflection in the hallway mirror, trying to smooth down my hair and pinch some color into my pale cheeks. The doorbell rang, and I opened it to find Damien's grandmother standing there, dressed in her favourite summer dress, and a hat. Despite everything, I couldn't help but smile at the sight of her. She'd been the closest thing to a mother I'd had since my parents died. "Lina, darling," she said warmly, pulling me into an embrace. "I hope I'm not intruding." "Never," I said, stepping back to let her in. "Please, come in. Can I get you some tea?" "That would be lovely." I led her to the sitting room, grateful for the excuse to do something with my hands, and ,ore importantly, it was a reason to avoid her knowing eyes. When I returned with the tea, she was studying the family photos on the mantel, her expression thoughtful. "You look tired, dear," she observed as I poured her tea. "Is everything alright?" "Just didn't sleep well," I said, as I added. "You know how it is." She accepted the cup but didn't drink, her eyes studying my face as she continued. "Where's Damien this morning?" "He had an early meeting," I lied smoothly. I was getting too good at lying. ' 'Hmm." The sound was noncommittal, but I had the uncomfortable feeling she knew more than she was saying. She sipped her tea in silence for a moment before speaking again. "You know, Lina, I've been thinking a lot about Damien lately. About his childhood." I settled into the chair across from her, curious to see where this conversation was headed. "He was such a sweet boy," she continued, a soft smile playing on her lips as she continued speaking. "After his parents divorced, he came to live with me. He was only eight years old, confused and hurt. His father was too busy building his empire, and his mother..." she trailed off, her smile fading. "Well, she had her own life to live, I suppose." "I tried to give him stability, love. But I think those early years left neglected by his parents left some scars that never went away. He learned to protect himself, to keep people at arm's length and to protect his heart first." She looked at me directly then, her gaze piercing. "It's not an excuse for how he treats you, Lina. But perhaps an explanation." My throat tightened. Did she know? Could she see how unhappy I was? "He's lucky to have you," she continued. "Your parents raised a remarkable young woman. Kind, patient, loyal. Everything Derek needs, whether he realizes it or not." The mention of my parents nearly broke me. I felt tears threatening to spill again and I blinked rapidly, trying to hold them back. "Speaking of which," she said, her tone shifting to something lighter, "I was wondering about grandchildren. You've been married two years now. An old woman has the right to hope, doesn't she?" The question hit me like a punch to the gut. My hand moved involuntarily to my stomach, and I saw her eyes follow the gesture. I quickly clasped my hands in my lap. "We're... we're not planning for children at the moment," I said carefully, each word painful. "Damien is very focused on his work, and I... I want to make sure the timing is right." His grandmother's expression changed to something that looked like disappointment, though she tried to hide it from me as she nodded her head. "Of course, dear. These things shouldn't be rushed. Though I confess, I'd love to see a little one running around this big house before I'm too old to enjoy it." The guilt was overwhelming. Here was this woman who'd saved me, who'd given me a home when I had nothing, who'd arranged my marriage to her grandson out of love and a desire to honor my parents' sacrifice. And I was lying to her, keeping her great-grandchild a secret because her grandson didn't want it. She stayed for another half hour, chatting about her garden club and asking about my charity work. When she finally prepared to leave, she took both my hands in hers at the door. "Lina," she said seriously, her grip firm despite her age. "I made a promise to your parents. The night of the accident, in the hospital, your mother made me swear that I would take care of you no matter what and I told her I will. That you would always have a family, always have a home here with me. If you're ever troubled, if you ever need anything—anything at all—you must tell me. Promise me that." I nodded, not trusting my voice to not break down if I attempted to speak. She pulled me into another embrace, and I let myself be held, wishing that I could tell her everything. About the pregnancy, about his indifference, about amily. But I couldn't. I wouldn't burden her with this. "I promise," I whispered against her shoulder. After she left, I stood in the empty foyer, my hand pressed against my stomach. The only people I wished I could tell about this baby, were the ones I could never reach again. My parents. I grabbed my car keys. I needed to visit them, to talk to them, even if they couldn't answer. I needed to feel close to them, to remember who I was before I became Damien's unwanted wife. I needed to go to their graves.Kayden POVChapter 76The doctor immediately demanded that will sanitized the room. The guards came in and took away the used plates she had breakfast with, the sheets were changed. He ordered everyone out and I moved outside. Selina needed her privacy after all.I leaned on the wall, watching the doctor through the slightly ajar door. He examined her head for signs of concussion. He proceeded to get readings of her vitals. I stared at my wristwatch with a scowl on my face. I was using losing the one commodity I couldn’t afford: time. I hated waiting. It had nothing to do with patience. Waiting meant being uncertain and months of planning had eliminated any uncertainty that was possible. Now, I stood here having to wait for a doctor to determine if my carefully laid out plans would be thrashed because of one guard’s incompetence.She looked pale except the places where her skin were bruised. Her complete attention was on her baby. At least, we agreed on something: the baby’s health
Chapter 75Selina POV My heart pounded as the air ran through my face. So close! My chest burned and my muscles were beginning to ache but I ignored the pain as my breathing came in hard spurts. The exit was so close I could almost taste the alluring scent of freedom. I was going to make it. Come just a few more steps. You can do this! My body was protesting violently. The edge of my vision began to blur. Not now. I thought about my baby; the determination and adrenaline that surged through my body sharpen my vision. I pushed myself forward, this was my only chance.My balance was suddenly upended as a muscular hand with a vice-like grip grabbed my arm. No! I tried to pull my arm out of the grip but it was no use. I gathered all my strength and without thinking, slammed into him. He cursed under his breath as my unexpected move sent him crashing to the floor. I picked up myself, a line of pain shot through my arm and took a few steps. I stretched my hands to touch the gate when
CHAPTER 74SELINA POV — The OpeningI had stopped counting the days and started to measure time by the change in the guards rotation and the time my food was brought to me.Routine kept the panic contained and I was able to able to function.As long as I'm alive, I told myself, there's still a chance.I had also been watching covertly. I'd learned early that obvious observation got me more scrutiny, placed the guards on alert which gave me with less room to work. So I watched in sideways and stolen glances rather than long stares or looks.I knew which guards were disciplined and which weren't. The younger one with the mohawk hair checked his phone every time he thought no one was looking. The muscular guard stepped out for cigarettes at the same interval like clockwork. One of them talked too much to the others, filling silence out of nervous habit, which meant his attention split constantly between conversation and duty.And then there was Sefu.He wouldn’t hold my gaze. Discomfort
CHAPTER 73DAMIEN POV I had spent the better part of a day suspecting the wrong man and it was almost impossible to say that out loud.The operations room had thinned out around us. I had the immigration records open on the screen beside me and a travel history that placed him on another continent for every single date that mattered.He hadn't done any of it. I closed the file and looked at him. "I was wrong about you."I didn't dress it up further than that. Cain didn't strike me as a man who needed cushioning. "The evidence pointed at you. I followed it. I was wrong, and I don't have time to be precious about admitting that."He held my gaze for a moment. "If our positions were reversed," he said, "I'd have done the same thing."Cain was a man who understood more than most, the cutthroat nature of our world. "I need your help," I said."You have investigators," he answered."Investigators are useful for tracing money and reading documents. They don’t understand or the world he ope
CHAPTER 72DEREK POVMy office had stopped looking like an office somewhere around midnight. Now it looked where someone was having a breakdown. Documents covered every flat surface and three laptops open to different windows of the same investigation.Nobody had said much in the last hour. There wasn't energy left for conversation. We'd given up chasing symptoms my lawsuit, Caleb's fraud, the tabloid stories and started digging for whatever sat underneath all of it. So far, every thread circled back to one name. Wren Castillo. So we went began the hunt.Dean had dragged in a whiteboard from somewhere and was building a single timeline. I was halfway through a registry search when Caleb went quiet in a way that made me look up."I never signed this," he said.I crossed the room and read over his shoulder. His name was on a company document I'd never heard him mention. It got worse, he was also listed as director, not investor. He checked the incorporation date twice, like exhaustion
CHAPTER 71KAYDEN POV I closed the door quietly behind me. There was a frown on my face. Why didn’t see the logic in what I was proposing? I thought she was smarter than this! I clenched my fist and slowly released them.I walked the corridor mulling why the planned failed. It wasn’t supposed to, after all, I had built the entire framework around her surveillance reports. How loyal she was, how lonely and sometimes unnecessarily kind she was to strangers. The strategy should have worked. It hadn't.Cain had no idea how stubborn she was or could be. I had never met her before the night my men brought her in. That was the truth nobody in this building understood, not even Wren.I didn't know Selina Whitmore, I only knew a file that contained photographs taken across eight months, several surveillance transcripts, financial records connecting her to the Foundation. A psychological profile assembled from pieces of conversations picked up during survelliance.She meant nothing to asides
Chapter 5LINAI stared at the words written on his tombstone.*Daniel Cruz Torres. He loved without reservation.*"Hi, Dad," I said, and my voice came out small and very timid The way it used to when I was a teenager sitting in exactly this spot, after the accident, after the Whitmore had taken me
Chapter 4LINA The silence that followed my words was absolute.Even the wind seemed to hold its breath. Damien stood completely still, the color still absent from his face, his jaw slack in a way I had never seen before. He looked, for the first time since I had known him, like a man who had been
Chapter 3LINAThe cemetery was quiet and empty in the late morning. I had brought fresh lilies-it used to be my mum's favourites, and held them to my chest as I walked the familiar path leading to their graves.I'd been here countless times over the years, but today felt different. Today I was goi
Chapter 1LINAThe pregnancy test slipped from my trembling fingers and fell, making a noise as it clattered against the bathroom counter. I couldn't believe what I was seeing as I slowly rubbed my eyes thinking I was getting too tired. But the visual refused to change. Two pink lines stared back







