LOGINPOV: Evelyn
Whose handwriting was this?
As I opened to check, the sound of flip-flops distracted me.
Rebecca came back down the stairs, her face twisted into a smug grin as she saw me standing there with the crumpled papers in my hand, and she didn't even wait for me to speak before she started laughing at my expression.
"I told you he didn't want you, Evelyn, I told you that you were just a charity case my father brought home because he felt guilty about your parents dying in that accident, so now you can finally pack your cheap bags and get out of our house," she said, crossing her arms and leaning against the banister while she watched me.
I didn't cry like she wanted me to, and instead I just smoothed out the divorce papers on the small marble table in the foyer, my movements slow and deliberate while I looked at Arthur, who had paused halfway up the stairs to look back at us.
"Is this really what you want, Arthur, because I need to hear you say it one more time without your sister hovering over us like a vulture," I said, my voice sounding much calmer than I felt inside, which seemed to surprise both of them.
"Leave her alone, Rebecca, just go back to your room and let us finish this like adults without you making a scene in the middle of the night," Arthur muttered, looking tired as he walked back down a few steps to face me properly.
"I just want to make sure she knows she’s not getting a dime of our family’s legacy, Arthur, because she’s been living off us for three years and it's time she earned her own keep for once," Rebecca snapped, but she finally stepped back into the shadows of the upstairs landing.
Arthur sighed and looked at me, his eyes searching mine for the breakdown I think he expected, but I just stood there waiting for him to speak, and eventually he rubbed the bridge of his nose and said, "I'll handle my father, Evelyn, I'll tell him that it was my decision and that you did nothing wrong, so you don't have to worry about the fallout with the rest of the family."
"And what about the compensation, Arthur, because your papers say you're giving me a house and a monthly allowance, but I don't think that covers the three years I spent trying to make this marriage work while you were dreaming about someone else," I said, feeling a sudden spark of cold anger replacing the sadness.
"I told you the settlement was generous, but if there's something specific you want, just name it and I'll have the lawyers update the document right now so we can get this over with," he replied, sounding relieved that I wasn't begging him to stay.
I thought about all the nights I spent waiting for him, and all the times I sat through dinners where he barely looked at me because I was just a placeholder for Samantha, and I realized that I didn't want his pity or his house, so I looked him straight in the eye and said, "I want three billion dollars, Arthur, and I want it transferred to my account as soon as the divorce is finalized."
The silence that followed was so thick I could hear the clock ticking again, and Arthur’s face went from relief to pure shock, his mouth hanging open slightly before he let out a harsh, dry laugh that didn't reach his eyes.
"Three billion? You've got to be kidding me, Evelyn, I knew you liked the lifestyle but I didn't think you were this greedy, or maybe you really were just a gold digger this entire time like Rebecca always said," he spat, his voice dripping with sudden contempt.
"You said I could name my price, Arthur, and that is the price for three years of my life that I can never get back, so either you pay it or we can spend the next year fighting this in court and making sure your precious Samantha has to wait even longer to marry you," I said, picking up the pen that was tucked into the envelope.
He looked like he wanted to scream at me, his face turning a dark shade of red, but then he looked at the papers and back at me, and I could see him calculating how much his freedom was worth compared to the money I was asking for.
"Fine, if that's what it takes to get you out of my life forever, then I'll pay it, just sign the damn papers and leave before I change my mind about being civil with you," he growled, turning his back on me as if the very sight of me disgusted him now.
I leaned over the table and scrawled my name on the bottom of each page without hesitating, the ink drying quickly on the white paper, and once I was done, I set the pen down and walked past him toward the stairs without saying another word.
I could hear him shouting for Rebecca to come down and see what I had done, calling me names that should have hurt more, but I just kept walking until I reached the safety of my bedroom and locked the door behind me.
The room was dark except for the moonlight streaming through the curtains, and as I walked toward the bed, my foot brushed against a small shopping bag I had hidden under the nightstand earlier that day.
I reached down and pulled out the colorful pamphlet I had bought at the clinic, the one that talked about family planning and the best ways to start a family, because I had actually thought that having a child would fix the distance between us and make him finally love me for real.
I had planned to give it to him on my birthday next week as a surprise, thinking that a baby would be the anchor our marriage needed, but now the smiling faces on the cover just looked like a cruel joke that I had played on myself.
I sat on the edge of the mattress and tore the paper into tiny pieces, watching the scraps fall onto the carpet like snow, and I stayed there in the dark while the realization sank in that I had been fighting for a ghost for three years.
I reached into my bedside drawer to find a suitcase, but my hand brushed against a small, velvet box that Arthur had given me for our first anniversary, and when I opened it, I saw the necklace inside that I used to think was a symbol of his affection, but now I saw it for what it truly was.
Underneath the velvet lining of the box, there was a small slip of paper with a phone number I didn't recognize, written in a feminine script that definitely didn't belong to anyone in this house.
Now a letter then this, where are they all coming from?
I dropped them together and lay on my bed to sleep.
I will look at them tomorrow. I thought i as drifted off to sleep.
POV: EvelynThe strange thing about happiness was that it never arrived the way I imagined it would.When I was younger, I thought it would be loud.Some dramatic moment where everything suddenly became perfect.Instead it arrived quietly.On a Thursday.While I stood barefoot in the kitchen making pancakes because Toby had declared cereal "an insult to recovery.""You burned one."I looked over my shoulder."I did not."Leone walked over, stole the pancake straight from the pan and took a bite.He chewed thoughtfully."It's... enthusiastically cooked.""You mean burned.""I was trying to protect your feelings.""My feelings were doing fine until you showed up.""They're still doing fine."He kissed my forehead before taking another bite of the ruined pancake."I'll eat this one.""You don't have to.""I know."He smiled."I want to."That was Leone.He had a way of making tiny things feel important.Toby wandered into the kitchen still wearing yesterday's oversized shirt."Morning."
POV: EvelynI thought I was prepared.After everything we'd survived, I honestly believed there wasn't much left that could make me nervous.I'd faced courtrooms.Lawyers.Reporters.DNA tests.Hospitals at three in the morning.Phone calls that changed entire lives.One little follow-up appointment shouldn't have been enough to make my stomach twist itself into knots.Apparently my body disagreed."You've checked the appointment time six times."Leone's voice carried across the kitchen as he poured coffee into a travel mug."I've checked it twice."He looked at me over the rim of his cup."Evelyn.""Fine. Maybe six."He smiled without saying I told you so. One of the things I loved most about him was that he rarely needed to win little arguments. He just let me arrive at the truth on my own.Toby wandered into the kitchen a second later, backpack slung over one shoulder even though we weren't going anywhere near school."Why does everybody look like they're about to write an exam?"I
POV: RebeccaThe porch light had dimmed to a soft amber glow by the time we finally stood up. Nina’s hand stayed laced with mine as we stepped inside, the screen door clicking shut behind us like a quiet promise. The house was silent except for the low hum of the refrigerator and the distant murmur of neighborhood life. No emergencies. No ringing phones. Just us.I followed her down the hallway, my thumb brushing over her knuckles. In our bedroom, Nina turned on the small lamp on the dresser. Warm light spilled across the bed, catching on the soft linen sheets we’d bought together last month. She looked at me over her shoulder, that knowing little smile playing at the corners of her mouth.“Come here,” she said softly.I crossed the room without hesitation. When I reached her, she cupped my face with both hands and kissed me again—deeper this time, slower, like she had all the time in the world. Her lips were warm, tasting faintly of the iced tea we’d shared on the porch. I melted in
POV: RebeccaThe strange thing about surviving a disaster was realizing you suddenly had free time.For months every morning had started with another crisis.Another phone call.Another emergency meeting.Another witness.Another document.Another reason to believe the world was about to collapse all over again.Now...My biggest problem was deciding what to do on a Saturday.It felt suspicious.Nina looked up from the kitchen counter where she was making coffee."You've been staring at that calendar for five minutes."I looked down.I had."I think something's wrong."She frowned immediately."What?""We don't have anything scheduled."She blinked."That's the problem?""I feel like I'm forgetting something."Nina walked over, took the calendar from my hands and looked at it herself."No meetings.""No investigations.""No interviews.""No lawyers."She smiled before handing it back."Rebecca.""What?""I think that's called having a life."I stared at her."I remember hearing about
POV: ArthurThe last thing I sold was the watch.Not because it was the most expensive thing I owned.Because it was the last thing that still belonged to the man I'd spent twenty-five years pretending to be.The jeweler turned it over carefully beneath the bright lights, checked the serial number, inspected the movement, then looked back at me."I can transfer the payment today."I nodded."That's fine."He quoted the number.Six months ago I would've considered it insignificant.Now it would pay my legal bills for another few weeks.Funny how quickly money changed value when it stopped arriving faster than you could spend it.I signed the paperwork, accepted the receipt and walked back onto the street with a wrist that suddenly felt lighter.Not empty.Just...Different.My phone buzzed.Toby: Fishing Saturday?I smiled before answering.Absolutely.The reply came almost instantly.Don't let Leone cheat again.I laughed out loud.People walking past looked at me strangely.I didn't
POV: ArthurThe first person to call me after Samantha's evidence became public wasn't a friend.It wasn't family.It wasn't even someone checking whether I was alright.It was Richard Collins.Board member.Twenty-three years.The same man who had voted to remove me from my own company.I stared at his name lighting up my phone before answering."What?"No greeting.He didn't deserve one."Arthur."His voice sounded different.Smaller."I think we should talk."I leaned back in the chair on my porch and looked out toward the lake behind the house I'd rented after losing everything. The fishing rod Toby had insisted I buy leaned against the railing beside me.Three months ago Richard wouldn't have called.Three months ago he would've asked an assistant.Funny how quickly power changed people."I don't.""Arthur, listen—""No.""You don't even know why I'm calling.""I know exactly why."Silence.Then a sigh."The board is falling apart."I almost laughed."That sounds familiar.""Peop
POV: EvelynI find out through a headline.Not a call. Not a board email. Not even a warning.Just my name, Arthur’s company name, and the Aureline logo sitting side by side like somebody stitched them together for a story I never agreed to.COLLABORATION CONFIRMED: LAURENT FOUNDATION AND VALE GROU
POV: EvelynI don’t sleep again after that. I sit on the couch with the laptop still open on my lap while the house stays quiet around me in that way that feels too loud when your brain won’t shut up. Toby fell back asleep at some point, curled up again like nothing in the world is wrong, and Lilit
POV: EvelynI leave the gala early. I don’t storm out or make a scene. I just disappear the second I can breathe again because if one more person stops me to talk about “how inspiring” my speech was, I might actually lose my mind.Toby fell asleep in the car on the way home. He’s still half asleep
POV: NinaRebecca’s finger slides under my chin, turning my face toward hers. I’ve seen that look before.“I want to help my princess feel better,” she murmurs, her voice low and velvet-smooth, wrapping around the words like a promise.Something inside me cracks open at the endearment. “Princess.”







