LOGINThree years into a contract marriage, Elena Voss had made peace with the truth: Adrian would never truly choose her. So when Vivian returned — beautiful, ambitious, and everything Elena feared — and Adrian carried that woman to the hospital while Elena quietly dressed her own burns alone, Elena made a decision. She would be the one to walk away first. She signed the divorce papers. Gave up nearly everything. Booked a flight to somewhere Adrian would never find her. She never made it to the airport. When Elena wakes up, she doesn't know her name, her past, or the man who has apparently been tearing apart an entire city looking for her. What she does know is the tiny heartbeat she's carrying, the worn tan line on her ring finger, and the damaged document in her bag that tells her she once fled an unhappy marriage to protect her child. Five years later, Elena renamed Aria is a celebrated musician on a national tour, a mother to a little boy who asks for a father with heartbreaking persistence, and almost a wife. Julian's ring is on her finger. The wedding date is set. Her life, rebuilt from nothing, is finally whole. Then the tour brings her to Adrian's city. He sees her across a crowded room and loses every rational thought he has. She looks at him the way you look at a stranger and it nearly breaks him. Because Adrian has spent five years believing she was dead. He has spent five years knowing, too late, that he loved her. And now she is here, wearing another man's engagement ring, raising a child who has his eyes, and she does not remember him at all. He acts like a man losing his mind. He probably is.
View MoreChapter 1
I never thought I'd forget the man I loved most. By the time he regretted divorcing me, he'd already lost me and our baby.
***
The sheets were still warm when Adrian pulled away from me.
I kept my eyes closed, pretending to fall asleep, listening to the sound of his breathing. We had just been so close. In those moments I let myself believe that tonight was a sign of something different. That the way he held me meant something even if he was never going to say it out loud.
I wanted to stay there forever, tucked against his chest, his heartbeat under my palm.
Then his phone buzzed breaking the tranquility of the room as I felt an impending sense of dread in my stomach.
He shifted immediately, his body turning towards the table without a second thought.
"I have to take this," he murmured.
He got off the bed, grabbed his phone and walked outside to the balcony sliding the door shut behind him.
I lay still and stared at the ceiling.
Stop reading into things, I told myself. You always do this.
But with every passing second, it got harder to hold onto the hope I had.
He came back twenty minutes later. I watched carefully as he moved quietly around the room, pulling on his jacket, checking his watch.
"Something came up," he said, without looking at me as he continued speaking. "At the company. I have to go."
"Now?" My voice came out smaller than I intended it to come out. If he noticed it, he certainly didn't show it.
"It can't wait."
He straightened his collar in the mirror, made sure he looked put together before turning to me.
"Go to sleep, Elena. Don't wait up!"
I said nothing. He left. The door clicked shut leaving me behind, alone on our big bed.
I know it was Vivian, again.
Three years.
That was how long we had been married. Three years of living a marriage that was build on a lie. It all started with an accidental one night stand and within the week, Adrian has lawyers who were drawing up contract papers for me to sign.
I should have walked away. I knew even then, some quiet part of me knew, that I was stepping into something that would ruin me for life because it wasn't possible to walk freely from men like this, but I was desperate and I had looked at Adrian and foolishly thought maybe we could make this work.
Maybe this becomes something real.
I was an orphan, moved from one foster home to the next, never staying in one place long enough to put down roots. I used to dream about having a family of my own. I used to dream of having a home where no one would ask me to leave. When Adrian offered me this marriage, I saw it as an escape and I took it thinking I was going to be happy.
So I stayed. I gave up my own work to become his personal secretary, in a bid to make myself useful to him so he could see my value from the onset.
I told myself it was practical. I was very good at lying to myself back then.
The truth was simpler and more embarrassing to admit: I loved him. I had fallen in love with my own husband, which I shouldn't have because it was a contract Marriage and the requirements for that was absolutely no love but there were moments when we would be alone and he would act differently- laugh at my jokes, helped me whenever I was feeling anxiety or how he always listened to what I had to babble despite his busy schedule.
But in the daytime, in the presence of others, I was nothing more like a prop that was used to enhance his life and display him as the kind of man who got both family and work lives balanced.
I was a presentable wife. A warm body for public appearances and private nights.
And yet I wanted more. I wanted all of it. I wanted a child with him, God that had been my biggest dream. I had brought it up to him once, choosing my words carefully, but Adrian had looked at me with those eyes of his and said calmly
There can be no children in this marriage, Elena.
Just like that. The case was closed. I hated myself for staying after that. I stayed anyway.
A few months ago, Vivian Laurent came back.
She had been abroad for years. She was a celebrated pianist that was famous worldwide and sought for, she had signed with Adrian's company soon after she returned and the rumors started within days.
Vivian is his first and true love.
He signed her to keep her close to himself. That's pure love right there.
Did you hear? Adrian is going to divorce the secretary wife. I think that's good. It was always going to happen.
I tried not to listen to what they were saying. I was well versed in pretending not to hear the bad things being said about me but Adrian had started keeping late nights, mystery calls that he never answered my questions about what they were.
- - -
The next morning I walked into the company and felt it immediately.
The looks were different. It seemed targeted at me, not the invincible look they often gave me in the past but the kind where all eyes were on me. A junior employee whispered something in her friend's ears and then they both glanced over to catch my gaze.
I kept walking.
Near the break room I heard two voices, low but not low enough.
"Vivian's back though, so it's only a matter of time....."
"He's not going to keep her around. I mean, she's just an orphan, right? No family, no connections...."
"Vivian's family has been in classical music for three generations and she is the best to be seen in her lineage. You really think he's going to choose between her and...."
I turned the corner and they went silent when their gases fell on mine.
I smiled, giving them one of the fake practised smiles that I had practiced all the time looking at my mirror.
"Good morning," I said.
They stammered back a greeting. I moved on.
My hands were shaking by the time I reached my desk.
Don't, I told myself. Don't let it in. It's all talk. There is nothing going on between them.
I sat down, pressed my palms flat on the desk, trying to put some pressure on it it keep me weighted.
My phone rang.
The ringtone was a piece of violin music that reminded me of the two years I spent learning violin in one of my foster homes. It was the longest I had ever stayed anywhere. Sometimes I wondered who I might have become if Adrian had seen potential in me the way he saw it in Vivian.
I stared at the screen until the ringing stopped.
'Stop', I thought. 'You have a report to deliver.'
I gathered my folders, smoothed my blazer, and made myself move.- - -
Adrian's office was located at the end of the executive floor. I knocked once. No answer
I pushed the door open.
The room smelled of her perfume before I saw her. My eyes widened when I looked at the scene in front of me.
Vivian was nestled against Adrian's side, her head tilted toward his shoulder, laughing softly at something he'd said. His hand rested near her waist.
He looked up. And our eyes met. For a single second no one moved.
Chapter 23Vivian had said as much. My mother had said something similar, in the way my mother said things, with less gentleness and more specific instruction about what I ought to do instead.I picked up my phone and put it down again.Julian had threatened to call the police and he had meant it and he had the standing to follow through. I had grabbed Elena's wrist at a public event and it was still circulating online and the narrative was not flattering. Another incident would move from gossip to something with legal weight.I needed to be rational.I was going to be rational.Being rational lasted until Saturday afternoon.I had gone to the park near my building because it was a thing my doctor had suggested in a way that implied I was not managing stress adequately, and I was trying to demonstrate to myself that I could follow reasonable advice.I had been walking for fifteen minutes when I heard him."If you go that way, the ducks get angry. I found that out already."I stopped.
Chapter 22ARIAThe Monday reception was where it happened.I had not wanted to attend and Julian had said it was professionally important and I had agreed and regretted agreeing for the full hour before we arrived. It was a smaller gathering, perhaps thirty people, the kind of event where distance was not available as a strategy.Adrian found me near the windows.He was different that evening. Something slightly less controlled about the edges of him. He had come from somewhere else before this, I thought, some other engagement, and whatever composure management he usually applied had worn thin.He did not start with pleasantries."I want to ask you something," he said."You can ask," I said. "I reserve the right not to answer."Something almost like humor moved across his face. Brief and then gone."Before Elena disappeared," he said, keeping his voice low, "she was injured. Her hand." He looked at my hands where they rested around my glass. "A burn. The back of her right hand. It w
Chapter 21ARIAVivian had been with the orchestra for nine days when I noticed the first shift.It was small enough that I might have dismissed it as coincidence if I had not spent five years learning to read a room full of musicians. Musicians were particular people. They felt things collectively before they said them individually, and the mood of a rehearsal room communicated more than any individual conversation could.The shift was in the way certain members moved through the space when Vivian was present.Not all of them. My principal violinist, my cellist section, my conductor, these were people who had been with me long enough that their loyalty was not a question I needed to ask. But the newer members, the ones who had joined in the past year, the ones who were still finding their place in the ensemble hierarchy, they had started doing something different.They deferred to Vivian.Not openly. Not in any way I could point to and name in a direct conversation. But in the small
Chapter 20ARIAThe Thursday rehearsal after Vivian's audition was the first time I played with her in work hours, carrying out a particular role together.She was, as established, exceptional at what she did, and she was also watching me.I noticed it in the first twenty minutes. Not the ordinary watching that musicians did, but there was something underneath it, like she was waiting for me to rip the mask off and do something unexpected.I let it sit. Some people were like that in new environments. Some players needed time to settle. By the end of the second hour I had revised that assessment.She was looking at my hands most specifically. When I played and when I kept my instruments, not paying attention to anything else.I did not say anything and focused on other things instead.After rehearsal I took Eli to a noodle place two streets from the hotel that he had identified on his second day in the city as the most important noodle place he had ever visited. He was working through












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