MasukClaire's POV
By noon, I had accomplished almost nothing. On paper, my morning had been productive. I had answered emails, approved schedules, finalized travel arrangements for three executives, and reorganized next week's board meeting agenda.
In reality, I couldn't have told anyone what half of those emails contained because my attention kept drifting. Unfortunately, I knew exactly where it was drifting.
Every time the elevator doors opened, my eyes lifted automatically and every time someone walked past my office, I looked up and every time I heard laughter from the executive corridor, I found myself wondering if Tiffany was the reason for it.
The realization irritated me because I had never been insecure before at least not professionally.
For years, Laurent Group had been my territory. I knew every department, every executive, every client, and every crisis before it became a crisis.
I belonged here, yet somehow Tiffany had managed to make me feel like a guest in my own world before lunchtime. The worst part was that she hadn't actually done anything not really.
She hadn't flirted with Damien, she hadn't behaved inappropriately and she hadn't even been rude she had simply arrived and somehow that had been enough.
I pushed the thought aside and returned my attention to the financial reports spread across my desk. The quarterly projections were due before the end of the week, and Damien would want the finalized figures before tomorrow's meeting.
Normally I enjoyed this kind of work. Numbers made sense and people rarely did.
A soft knock interrupted my concentration. "Come in."
Emma stepped inside carrying a folder she took one look at my face and sighed dramatically. "Oh no."
I narrowed my eyes. "What now?"
"You have that look."
"What look?"
"The one that says you're pretending everything is fine while secretly imagining how difficult prison would be."
I couldn't help laughing. "That's oddly specific."
"I know you."
Emma dropped the folder onto my desk before lowering herself into the chair opposite me and for a moment, she studied me carefully and the humor faded from her expression. "You okay?"
The question was simple but the answer wasn't. "I don't know." It felt strange admitting that out loud.
Emma leaned forward. "You know none of this is normal, right?"
I laughed softly. "That statement covers a concerning amount of ground."
"I'm serious, Claire."
"So am I."
Emma shook her head. "The woman leaves him at the altar, disappears for four years and suddenly comes back, gets hired by the company, and somehow ends up with an office on the executive floor within twenty-four hours."
When she put it like that, it sounded even worse. "You're not helping."
"I'm not trying to help."
"Clearly."
"I'm trying to make sure you're not gaslighting yourself."
That earned another reluctant smile but before I could reply, my phone buzzed.
A meeting reminder.
I looked at the screen.
Conference Room Seven. Five minutes.
Wonderful, exactly what I needed more work.
Emma stood. "I should get back."
I nodded and paused. "Emma?"
She turned. "Yeah?"
"If I commit murder, you'll help me hide the body?"
She considered it. "For you? Probably."
"That's friendship."
"It's either friendship or poor judgment. Honestly, the line gets blurry."
I laughed as she left and for the first time all morning, my shoulders felt slightly lighter but unfortunately, the feeling didn't last.
Conference Room Seven was empty when I arrived.
A floor-to-ceiling wall of glass overlooked the Manhattan skyline, flooding the room with afternoon sunlight. The long conference table gleamed beneath recessed lighting, and a stack of presentation folders waited near the projector.
I moved toward the table and began organizing the materials. The meeting wouldn't begin for another fifteen minutes. There is still plenty of time or so I thought.
The door opened behind me and without looking up, I assumed it was one of the executives arriving early.
"You're ahead of schedule for once."
The silence that followed immediately told me I'd made a mistake. I looked up. Tiffany stood in the doorway and for a second, neither of us spoke but then she smiled and the expression was warm enough to appear genuine.
"I hope I'm not interrupting."
The strange thing was that she sounded sincere not fake and not forced but sincere and that somehow made her more unsettling.
"No," I said. "Not at all."
She stepped into the room and quietly closed the door behind her and for reasons I couldn't explain, that small action made me instantly aware that we were alone. Truly alone with no witnesses just the two of us.
"I've been hoping we'd have a chance to talk properly," Tiffany said.
I set down the folder in my hands. "We already met this morning."
Her smile widened slightly. "That wasn't really a conversation."
I couldn't argue with that. The encounter in the executive corridor had lasted less than two minutes but this felt different, intentional.
Tiffany approached the table slowly. "I know this situation must be strange for you."
There was something about the statement that immediately put me on edge not because it was rude but because it was accurate.
"I imagine it's strange for everyone."
"Maybe."
Her gaze drifted briefly toward the city outside the windows. "When I left New York, I never expected to come back."
The comment caught me off guard not because of what she said but because of how she said it. There was sadness there or at least the appearance of sadness.
For a moment, I found myself wondering how much of Tiffany Morgan was real and how much was performance.
"I heard you've been living overseas."
"I have."
"That's a long time."
"It felt longer."
A brief silence settled between us and oddly enough, it wasn't uncomfortable and that should have worried me but instead, I found myself studying her trying to understand why Damien had once loved her and trying to understand why her return had shaken him so deeply.
Tiffany laughed softly. "What?"
I realized I'd been staring.
"Nothing."
"That wasn't nothing."
I sighed. "You really want an honest answer?"
"I prefer them."
The statement nearly made me smile. "You're not what I expected."
For a second, Tiffany looked genuinely surprised. "Is that good or bad?"
"I'm still deciding."
She laughed the sound was light and effortless the kind of laugh people immediately liked.
Dangerous.
Everything about her was dangerous not because she was openly hostile because she wasn't and because she knew exactly how to make people comfortable.
"I should probably confess something," Tiffany said.
"What?"
"I was curious about you."
The admission caught me off guard. "Me?"
"Of course you." Her tone suggested the answer should have been obvious. "When someone disappears for four years and comes back to find her former fiancé married, curiosity is inevitable."
The word former should have reassured me but it didn't instead, I found myself asking a question I probably shouldn't have. "Then what did you expect?"
Tiffany considered that carefully. "I don't know." For the first time, her smile softened. "I suppose I expected someone very different."
My stomach tightened. "Different how?"
She studied me for several seconds long enough to make me uncomfortable and then she smiled again. "I expected someone less impressive."
I blinked because that wasn't the answer I anticipated. "Thank you."
"It's a compliment."
"I noticed."
"I wasn't sure."
Despite myself, I laughed and immediately regretted it because for one dangerous second, I understood why people liked Tiffany. She made things easy, comfortable and effortless but then she tilted her head slightly.
The movement was subtle almost thoughtful and suddenly something changed not the smile and not her tone but something beneath it something colder. "I've heard so much about you." The words sounded innocent enough, yet every instinct I possessed immediately went on alert.
"Really?"
"Oh yes." She folded her arms loosely the smile never left her face. "I've heard so much about the woman who replaced me."
The room seemed to go completely still and for the first time since Tiffany Morgan had returned to New York, the war truly began.
Damien's POVMorning arrived without anyone noticing.The darkness that had hidden the wreckage gave way to pale grey skies, revealing the full devastation left behind. What had once been a Ferris wheel now lay scattered across the waterfront and submerged beneath the Hudson. Twisted steel protruded from the river at impossible angles while cranes, rescue boats and Coast Guard vessels surrounded the collapse like silent sentries.The search hadn't stopped.It had simply grown larger.Police boats patrolled farther downriver while Coast Guard cutters swept across the Hudson toward New York Harbor. Rescue helicopters circled overhead, their blades chopping through the morning air as cameras from news helicopters hovered at a distance, broadcasting the tragedy to millions of people who had gone to sleep believing the Laurent Foundation Gala had been a success.Now every television station carried the same headline.Ferris Wheel Collapse at Charity Gala.Multiple Fatalities Confirmed.One
Damien's POVThe first rescue boat reached the wreckage within minutes.Its powerful spotlight swept across the collapsed Ferris wheel, illuminating twisted steel jutting from the Hudson like the broken bones of some enormous beast. Firefighters climbed carefully over the mangled framework while rescue divers stood at the edge of the boat, fastening oxygen tanks onto their backs before disappearing beneath the black water one after another.The moment the first diver surfaced, every person waiting behind the police barricades held their breath. He shook his head and nobody spoke as he disappeared beneath the water again.The waterfront no longer resembled the place where hundreds of people had laughed and celebrated only an hour earlier. Music had been replaced by sirens. Champagne glasses had been replaced by shattered concrete covered in broken steel and glass. The warm lights from the gala had given way to floodlights so bright they turned the night into an eerie imitation of dayl
Damien's POV"No!"The word ripped itself from my throat just as another deafening crack split the night.Time seemed to slow.One of the Ferris wheel's massive support columns folded inward with a scream of twisting steel, and for one impossible heartbeat the entire structure hung suspended, balanced between standing and falling. Every person on the waterfront stopped moving. Hundreds of eyes lifted toward the towering wheel as though willing it to remain upright.Then gravity won the Ferris wheel lurched forward and people screamed.The enormous structure groaned under its own weight as gondolas swung wildly through the air, smashing into one another with explosions of shattered glass. Steel twisted like paper, bolts fired from the framework and ricocheted across the pier, and the sound of tearing metal swallowed every other noise around us."Claire!"I tore free from the operator and ran. Someone shouted behind me and another person grabbed for my arm but I threw them off without e
Claire’s POVI should have walked away.The thought crossed my mind more than once as Damien and I made our way toward the Ferris wheel with the last group of guests.The waterfront looked beautiful at night. Strings of warm lights reflected across the river while soft music drifted from the ballroom behind us. Couples strolled hand in hand, children laughed as they ran between their parents, and the giant Ferris wheel turned slowly against the Manhattan skyline.For a few moments, it almost felt peaceful.Damien glanced sideways at me. "You still have time to change your mind."I looked up at the enormous wheel towering above us and sighed."I've been trying to change my mind since we left the ballroom."A quiet chuckle escaped him. "I knew you'd say that.""I wasn't joking.""I know." His smile lingered. "You'll survive."I looked at him. "If I don't, I'm haunting you."He laughed properly this time, the sound warm and effortless. "I suppose I'd deserve it.""You definitely would."
Claire's POVBy the time the charity auction came to an end, the atmosphere around the waterfront had changed completely.The formal speeches were over, the final donation figures had been announced, and the guests had begun drifting away from the ballroom onto the promenade overlooking the river. Soft music floated through the evening air while waiters moved between small groups carrying trays of champagne and desserts. Laughter replaced business conversations, and for the first time all night, people were simply enjoying themselves.I stood near the registration desk, quietly checking one last list on my tablet before handing it back to one of the coordinators."Everything's finished," I said with a smile. "You can finally relax."The young woman laughed in relief. "I wasn't sure we'd survive tonight.""You survived.""Barely." She shook her head before lowering her voice. "Thank you for everything, Claire."Before I could answer, another member of staff hurried towards me."Claire,
Claire's POVThe auction display turned out to be far less dramatic than everyone had feared.One of the framed photographs had been placed on the wrong easel, causing the item numbers to no longer match the catalogue. It took less than five minutes to correct, yet by the time we finished, three more members of staff were already waiting for me with new questions.I couldn't help smiling.Some things never changed."Claire?"I turned to find Daniel, the hotel's banquet manager, weaving his way through the growing crowd backstage."I've got a small problem.""Only one?" I teased.He laughed. "So far.""What happened?""The pianist arrived almost forty minutes early.""Is he in the green room?"Daniel nodded. "He is now.""Good." I looked at my watch. "Have someone take him some coffee while he waits. He always asks for it before he performs."Daniel blinked. "I forgot about that.""I didn't."A grateful smile spread across his face. "I honestly don't know what we're going to do without
Claire's POVI barely slept again but the difference was that this time I wasn't staring at an empty side of the bed. Damien had eventually come upstairs sometime after midnight. I knew because I heard him moving quietly through the bedroom while he assumed I was asleep.Neither of us had spoken an
Claire's POVDamien stood in the foyer for a moment as though he wasn't entirely certain he wanted to be there and the sight alone told me more than I wanted to know.His suit jacket was gone. His white shirt was creased in places that suggested he had been wearing it far longer than intended. Dark
Claire's POVDamien wasn't home, of course he wasn't.I stepped inside anyway, but the apartment felt different. Larger somehow. Colder. The silence seemed to stretch endlessly through the empty rooms, and for the first time since discovering I was pregnant, fear settled heavily in my chest. It wasn
Claire's POVThe moment I saw the name on Damien's phone screen, something inside me went completely still.Tiffany Morgan.For a second, I wondered if I had imagined it. The restaurant seemed to fade around me, the soft glow of candlelight and the murmur of nearby conversations becoming distant an







