LOGINBy the time evening settled over the city, Ava was gone.
There had been no dramatic confrontation, no raised voices echoing through the hospital halls, and no last-minute attempt to fix what had already been broken. Everything had happened quietly, almost too quietly for something so life-changing. The discharge process was completed with minimal conversation, and within a few hours, Ava had gathered the few things she came with and prepared to leave. The nurse helped her adjust the babies carefully, offering brief instructions and polite concern, but even she seemed to sense that this was not a situation where advice would make a difference. Ava listened, nodded when necessary, and thanked her softly, her mind already set on what she needed to do next. When the moment finally came, she didn’t look back. Balancing one baby in each arm, she stepped out of the hospital room and into the hallway, her pace slow but steady. Each step reminded her of the physical strain her body had just endured, but she welcomed the pain. It grounded her, gave her something tangible to focus on instead of the storm of emotions threatening to rise inside her. The hallway was quiet, lit by soft fluorescent lights that cast long shadows across the polished floor. Nurses moved in the distance, their voices low and professional, completely unaware that for Ava, this was more than just a walk out of a hospital—it was the end of one life and the uncertain beginning of another. Behind her, somewhere down the corridor, Lucas remained. He hadn’t followed. That alone told her everything she needed to know. Ava adjusted her hold on the babies, pulling them slightly closer to her chest as if to reassure herself that they were real, that they were hers, and that they were the only certainty she had left. “I’ve got you,” she whispered under her breath, her voice barely audible. One of the twins stirred, letting out a soft sound, and Ava instinctively rocked gently as she walked, her movements natural despite her exhaustion. The simple act of holding them brought a strange kind of calm to her heart, even as everything else felt uncertain. When she reached the hospital entrance, she paused for just a second. The large glass doors stood before her, reflecting a faint image of who she was in that moment—a tired woman, pale and worn, holding onto two fragile lives with everything she had. For a brief second, doubt flickered at the edge of her thoughts. The world outside those doors was unpredictable, unforgiving, and she had no clear plan waiting for her. But then she remembered the look in Lucas’s eyes. The hesitation. The doubt. And just like that, the uncertainty disappeared. Because whatever waited for her outside could not be worse than what she had just left behind. Taking a slow breath, Ava stepped forward. The doors slid open, and a rush of cool evening air greeted her, brushing against her skin like a quiet welcome. The sky had already begun to darken, the fading light casting a soft glow over the streets beyond. Cars moved steadily along the road, their headlights cutting through the dusk, while distant voices and city sounds blended into a familiar, restless rhythm. Life was moving on. And now, so was she. Ava stepped outside fully, the weight of her decision settling more firmly with each passing second. She shifted the small bag on her shoulder, adjusting it for comfort, though there was very little inside—just a few personal items, nothing that could truly prepare her for what came next. She had no home waiting. No family to run to. No safety net. Only her children. And somehow, that had to be enough. “You’re going to be okay,” she murmured softly, though she wasn’t sure if she was speaking to them or to herself. Her voice carried a quiet determination now, something steadier than before. “We’re going to be okay.” One of the babies let out a faint cry, and Ava immediately paused, shifting slightly as she tried to soothe them. Her movements were instinctive, her body responding without hesitation despite her fatigue. “I know,” she whispered gently, lowering her head as if the child could understand her. “It’s a lot… but I promise you, I won’t let anything happen to you.” Her grip tightened just slightly, not out of fear, but out of resolve. Because she meant every word. A car passed by, its headlights briefly illuminating her face, and in that moment, something in her expression became clearer—not just pain, not just exhaustion, but strength. Quiet, unshakable strength that hadn’t been there before. Ava straightened slowly, lifting her gaze to the road ahead. It stretched out before her, uncertain and unfamiliar, filled with challenges she couldn’t yet see. There would be nights without sleep, days filled with struggle, and moments when she would question whether she had made the right choice. But there would also be something else. Freedom. For the first time in a long time, no one was standing over her, judging her, questioning her worth, or making her feel like she didn’t belong. There was no one to doubt her, no one to reduce her to something less than she was. It was just her now. Her and her children. And that thought, as terrifying as it was, also felt strangely empowering. “I’ll figure it out,” she said quietly, more firmly this time. She didn’t know how yet. Didn’t know where she would go or what she would do first. But she knew one thing with absolute certainty. She would never go back. With that, Ava took her first step away from the hospital, her pace slow but unwavering. The city lights flickered on one by one as night settled in, casting a soft glow along the streets as if guiding her forward. Behind her, a chapter of her life had closed. Ahead of her, a new one had just begun. And this time, she would write it on her own terms.For one suspended second nobody moved.Rain crashed violently through the shattered glass wall while smoke alarms screamed across the burning mansion. Adrian stood frozen near the edge of the broken windows staring down toward the black cliffs below where Damien Vale had disappeared into darkness and crashing waves.Then the estate exploded again.The floor beneath them shook violently as fire tore through the lower levels. Glass shattered across the hallway while armed teams shouted evacuation orders through thickening smoke.“MOVE!”Lucas grabbed Adrian’s arm hard enough to pull him backward seconds before part of the ceiling collapsed where he had been standing.“Forget him!” Lucas shouted over the alarms. “The entire place is coming down!”Adrian looked ready to jump after Damien anyway.Lucas saw it instantly.And for the first time in years, genuine anger exploded through him.“Don’t you dare.”Adrian turned sharply.Lucas shoved him hard against the wall. “Ava didn’t walk away
The private estate overlooking the northern coastline sat hidden behind steel gates, armed patrols, and enough security technology to resemble a military compound more than a home. Waves crashed violently against the cliffs below while storm clouds rolled heavily across the darkening evening sky. Somewhere inside the massive property, Damien Vale waited calmly for the world around him to collapse.And for the first time in years, Adrian and Lucas were walking toward the same enemy instead of each other.Neither man spoke as the black SUV climbed the winding road toward the estate. Tension filled the vehicle so heavily that it almost became physical. Lucas sat rigidly beside the window, still pale from the harbor shooting while a bandage remained visible beneath the collar of his dark coat. Across from him Adrian reviewed security layouts with terrifying focus, his expression unreadable beneath cold restraint.The war between them had exhausted both men.Now only the unfinished truth r
The hospital smelled like antiseptic, exhaustion, and fear.Ava sat motionless beside Lucas’s ICU room while dawn slowly bled through the glass walls overlooking the city. Eliana slept curled against her side beneath a blanket while Liam rested nearby across two chairs pushed together. Neither child wanted to leave her after the harbor attack. Neither stopped shaking completely even hours later.And honestly, neither had she.Beyond the ICU doors doctors still moved around Lucas after emergency surgery while security teams crowded the private hospital floor under Adrian’s orders. Reporters had already surrounded the building downstairs after news leaked about the harbor shooting. Every financial network, every media outlet, every social platform had exploded overnight.CARTER HEIR SHOT DURING HARBOR INCIDENT.CHILD KIDNAPPING LINKED TO CORPORATE WAR.LAURENT GLOBAL UNDER CRIMINAL REVIEW.The world was finally seeing the truth.Not the billionaires.Not the power.The destruction.Ava
The penthouse remained trapped in suffocating silence long after Damien disconnected the call. Ava could still hear Eliana crying through the speaker while panic clawed violently through her chest. Beside the windows, Adrian stood motionless, one hand braced against the table, as the revelation about his father echoed like a bomb through the room.Forty million dollars.Transferred willingly.Nothing made sense anymore.“Ava.”She looked up sharply as Lucas’s voice suddenly came through another phone line. Elise had reconnected with him during the call without anyone noticing.“I heard everything.”Adrian’s expression darkened instantly. “Get off my line.”“No,” Lucas snapped sharply. “Not until you start thinking clearly.”Ava stepped forward immediately. “Lucas, where is she?”Silence answered briefly before he spoke again.“I think I know where Damien is taking her.”Every eye in the room locked onto the phone.“How?” Adrian asked coldly.“Because Damien used the same location year
Ava ran before anyone could stop her.“Eliana!”The sound tore violently from her throat as she rushed out of Adrian’s office with Adrian directly behind her while security teams flooded the hallways in chaos. Liam’s terrified crying echoed from downstairs alongside guards shouting orders into communication devices. Every instinct inside Ava screamed the same horrifying truth.Her daughter was gone.No, no, noHer breathing fractured as she reached the lounge level. Liam stood near the staircase, shaking uncontrollably, while Elise crouched beside him, trying to calm him down.Ava dropped instantly to her knees.“Where’s your sister?”Liam burst into tears.“She was here, she was right here”Panic detonated through Ava’s chest so violently she thought she might collapse.“WHAT HAPPENED?” Adrian’s voice thundered across the penthouse.One of the guards answered immediately. “The cameras cut again for thirty seconds.”Thirty seconds.That was all it took.Ava grabbed Liam’s face gently
The silence inside Adrian’s office became unbearable after the video ended. Ava could still hear the distorted voice inside her head while the image of the black serpent crest burned violently into her memory. Beside her, Adrian remained motionless staring at the frozen screen with an expression so cold it no longer looked human. Elise stood near the desk gripping her tablet tightly enough for her knuckles to pale.Finally, Ava spoke.“Tell me everything.”Adrian did not answer immediately. He walked toward the windows slowly, one hand sliding into his pocket while the city glowed beneath him like a battlefield waiting to ignite again. For the first time since Ava met him, he looked genuinely shaken.Not angry.Not calculating.Shaken.“Elise,” he said quietly. “Lock the office.”The biometric doors sealed instantly behind them.Ava’s pulse quickened.Adrian turned back toward her carefully. “My uncle’s name is Damien Vale. Officially he disappeared twelve years ago after my father’s
A week had passed since the tense phone call with Mrs. Carter, but Ava could still feel the ripple of unease settling over her apartment. The twins laughed and played in the living room, oblivious to the tension simmering just beyond the walls. But Ava knew it was only a matter of time before the s
The morning sun filtered through the curtains, casting a warm glow across the apartment. The twins were already awake, their laughter echoing down the hallway as they tumbled toward the living room. Ava sat at the kitchen counter, sipping her coffee, watching them with quiet attention.Lucas moved
The weekend arrived with a quiet tension that Ava hadn’t anticipated. She sat in her living room, the twins sprawled on the soft rug in front of her, each playing with small toys. The sunlight streamed through the tall windows, casting a warm glow across the room, but Ava hardly noticed. Her mind w
The office smelled of polished wood and freshly brewed coffee, a faint hum of activity in the background. Ava sat at the head of the conference table, reviewing her presentation slides one last time. Every detail mattered, fonts, colors, phrasing, timing. The pitch she was about to give could secur







