Se connecterCora
The big entrance room felt like it was spinning. I stood completely frozen on the polished marble floor, staring at my parents, completely shocked. My ears were ringing, and for a second, I genuinely thought I had misheard him. Terminate the pregnancy. The words felt like a physical punch to my chest. Before I could even find my voice, my mother stepped forward, her heels clicking sharply against the stone. She didn't look angry; she just looked like she didn't care, which was so much worse. She smoothed down the front of her perfect designer dress, her voice dropping into that smooth, super calm tone she used for business problems. "Your father is right, Cora," she said, her eyes boring into mine without a shred of maternal warmth. "You need to think about this clearly. The family can't have this kind of public drama. You ran off to New York, got involved with a man who dumped you, and now you expect us to clean up a mess that involves a child born outside marriage because of a public divorce? It is out of the question. Think of the press. Think of our stock prices. We're offering you a fresh start, but you need to get rid of this problem first." A clean slate. She was talking about my baby like it was just a stain on a window to clean up. "Are you guys actually insane?" Annie's voice exploded through the quiet room. She rushed past Chloe, stepping right in front of me as if she could shield me from them. She was bright red with pure rage. "She is your daughter! She just got out of the hospital, her life is in pieces, and you're standing there talking about stock prices and public relations? Have you completely lost your minds? You're heartless!" "Annie, stop," Chloe muttered quickly, reaching out and grabbing Annie's arm to pull her back. Chloe’s face was pale, her jaw clenched tight as she looked at our father, trying to use the same business-like tone he always respected. "Dad, please. Let's just sit down and talk about this calmly. Cora has been humiliated enough. She's tired. We don't need to make huge decisions right here in the hallway." "There is nothing to discuss, Chloe," my father snapped, his voice sharp and loud, like a blade. He didn't even glance at Annie, acting like her anger didn't matter. "Your sister made her choices when she walked out of this house two years ago. If she wants the protection of the Woods name, she plays by my rules. I will not harbor a bastard child under my roof, and I won't let the papers ruin our family name. Either she handles this problem, or she can leave." Handles this problem. As they kept arguing, their voices started to fade into a dull buzz. I didn't look at Chloe, or Annie, or the cold, upper-class strangers I was supposed to call parents. Slowly, my hands drifted down to my stomach, my fingers pressing against the fabric of my shirt. There was nothing visible yet. It was just a tiny, microscopic cluster of cells inside me. But in that exact moment, I suddenly felt a crazy, fierce need to protect my baby. It was so intense it actually made my knees shake. Leon had lied to me. Candice had betrayed me. My parents wanted to erase my existence for the sake of their reputation. My whole world felt fake, mean, and ruined. But this baby? This tiny, unborn life inside me was the only pure, real thing I had left. It hadn't lied to me. It hadn't abandoned me. And there was absolutely no way in hell I was going to let them touch it. I took a deep breath, and the trembling in my hands completely stopped. The heartbreak that had been weighing me down for days suddenly vanished, replaced by a cold, hard decision. I didn't care about their money. I didn't care about their massive inheritance, or the overly fancy, controlling feel of this house, or the security their billions could buy. None of it mattered if the price tag was my child's life. I stepped out from behind Annie and looked my father straight in the eye. I didn't yell. I didn't cry. My voice was completely steady. "Keep your money," I said. My mother’s eyebrows shot up, and my father’s eyes narrowed. "You will never see me again," I told them, my gaze shifting between the two of them. "None of you." Without waiting for a response, I turned my back on them, turned my back on the Woods fortune, and walked straight toward the heavy oak front doors. "Cora! Wait!" Chloe called out, her voice panicked, but I didn't stop. I pushed the massive doors open, the cool outside air hitting my face like a twisted form of freedom. "Coco, wait up!" Annie shouted, her sneakers squeaking loudly on the marble as she ran out right behind me. We didn't look back. We walked all the way down the long, winding driveway, past the security gates, and never looked back. Three weeks later, the reality of what I’d done hit me hard. I stood over the tiny porcelain sink in the bathroom, clutching the edges so hard my knuckles turned white. Another horrible wave of morning sickness tore through me, leaving me dry-heaving and gasping for air. The bathroom smelled faintly of cheap bleach and old pipes. It was nothing like the marble entrance room of my parents' estate. We were living in a small, cramped apartment on the edge of the city. The rent was super cheap, the walls were paper-thin, and the radiator hissed like an angry snake every time it kicked on. Annie had insisted I stay with her, using the last of her savings to pay for the lease, but we were both barely scraping by. I spent my days trying to find remote freelance work under a fake name, but I was barely functioning. This was between the awful way the pregnancy was messing with my body and the constant fear of being found. I wiped my mouth with a damp towel, leaning heavily against the sink as I stared at my pale, exhausted reflection in the cracked mirror. Dark circles sat heavily under my eyes. I looked hollow. The front door clicked open, and the sound of Annie’s keys rattling made me sigh with relief. I walked out of the bathroom, wiping my hands on my sweatpants. "Hey," I called out weakly. "Did you find any of that ginger tea?" Annie was standing by the small kitchen counter, her back to me. She froze when she heard my voice, hurrying to shove a stack of local papers and gossip magazines under a pile of grocery bags. She was being really awkward about it. "Oh! Hey, Coco," Annie said, her voice a little too high, a little too cheerful. "Yeah, I got the tea. And some crackers. Why don't you go sit down and I'll bring it to you?" My eyes drifted straight to the corner of a newspaper sticking out from under the plastic bag. I saw the edge of a glossy photo. A familiar shock of dark hair. "Annie," I said, my voice dropping. "What is that?" "Nothing! Just, you know, coupon circulars and stuff," she lied, stepping in front of the counter to block my view. "Seriously, go lie down." I didn't listen. I walked over, gently but firmly pushing her aside, and snatched the paper from the counter. The headline stared right back at me, a cruel, mocking slap in the face. POWER COUPLE EXPANDS EMPIRE: LEON AND CANDICE ANNOUNCE NEW LUXURY LINE. There was a massive, full-page feature article. The photo showed the two of them standing at a high-end gala, champagne glasses in hand. Leon had his arm tight around Candice, pulling her in, smiling big and full of himself. Candice looked absolutely stunning, beaming up at him as if he were the center of her universe. They looked happier than ever. They looked completely unbothered by the wreckage they had left behind. While I was throwing up in a tiny, falling-apart apartment, wondering how we were going to afford groceries next week, they were expanding their luxury brand and celebrating their perfect life. A hot, bitter tear fell down my face, smudging the cheap ink on the paper. The pain was still there, a sharp ache in the center of my chest, but right behind it was a massive wave of disgust. "They don't care," I whispered, dropping the paper onto the counter. "They ruined everything, and they don't even care." Annie wrapped her arms around my shoulders, hugging me tightly from the side. "I'm so sorry, Coco. I tried to hide it. You shouldn't have to see that." "It's fine," I said, wiping the tear away quickly, my voice hardening. I turned to look at her, the realization finally settling in. "I can't stay here, Annie. Even on the outskirts of the city, it's too close. New York is their playground. Eventually, someone will spot me. Someone will figure it out. I need to leave the country entirely. I need to go somewhere they can never find me, build a completely new identity, and start over from scratch. Somewhere no one can ever hurt me or my baby again." "If that's what you want, we'll figure it out," Annie said softly, nodding. "We'll save up, and—" Before she could finish her sentence, a sudden, violent knock rattled the apartment door. BOOM. BOOM. BOOM. The sound was so loud, so aggressive, that the cheap wooden door actually shook in its frame. Both of our breaths hitched at the exact same time. We froze, completely paralyzed in the middle of the tiny kitchen, staring at the door in absolute terror. No one knew we were here. Nobody had this address. BOOM. BOOM. BOOM. The handle jiggled violently from the outside.Cora The fallout from the charity gala was absolutely delicious.The next morning, the New York business tabloids were completely covered in blurry, high-resolution pictures of Leon shoving his wealthy cousin into a tower of shattering champagne flutes, the headline openly mocking the crumbling discipline of Halefield Luxury.I sat comfortably behind the wide marble desk in my private penthouse office, the morning sun streaming through the glass panes and casting a bright glow over my tailored silk blouse.Leon was forced to crawl back to my territory for the scheduled review meeting, looking completely exhausted and entirely broken down as he stood near the leather armchairs.He had dark, heavy circles under his green eyes, his skin looking incredibly pale and his hair slightly messy, looking like a man who hadn't slept a single minute since the orchestra stopped playing.According to Chloe’s internal legal contacts, his father had given him a brutal, public scolding in the main lob
Leon I was forced to attend a charity gala organized by my father's primary investment firm, my mind completely checked out as I scanned the elite crowd filling the grand ballroom.The room was a dizzying blur of glittering crystal chandeliers, expensive silk tuxedos, and women dripping in millions of dollars worth of diamonds, but the luxury just made me feel entirely empty inside.I stood near the edge of the marble pillars, a glass of dark bourbon idling in my hand, my fingers gripping the crystal so tightly that my knuckles turned a sharp, pale shade of white.My stepbrother Marcus was standing right near the grand staircase, a loud, obnoxious laugh escaping his throat as he hovered around a group of our company's top potential investors.He was loudly bragging to them about how he was already planning the company's full restructuring, openly treating my position like a temporary seat he was destined to inherit."Leon managed to secure the signature, yes, but the internal margins
Cora The happy, buzzing energy of the morning transferred smoothly to a high-end, private fashion boutique in the heart of Soho, the wide glass windows letting the bright New York sun stream across the plush velvet carpets.Annie and I were lounging comfortably on an oversized cream sofa, sipping premium champagne from crystal flutes while we picked out elegant dresses for Chloe's upcoming destination wedding in Europe.The atmosphere inside the exclusive store was completely relaxed, the boutique owner personally bringing out the newest seasonal collections while practically bowing to me with every single breath she took.Ricky and Riley were completely in their element, running in playful circles around the heavy velvet changing room curtains, both of them wearing oversized designer sunglasses they had snatched off a low display table."Maman, look at me! I am a movie star!" Ricky laughed hysterically, his dark curls bouncing wildly as he struck a dramatic pose on a small gilded st
Leon I spent the rest of the afternoon staring completely blankly at the dark wood wall of my executive office, the silence in the room feeling heavy and suffocating.My skin was still tingling from the freezing fury Cora had radiated inside that elevator, the raw intensity of her hazel eyes burned so deeply into my mind that I could still feel the phantom heat of her breath hitting my face.She had stood inches away from me, completely unbothered by my rage, looking down on me as if I were nothing more than an inconvenient speck of dust on her expensive designer shoes.My phone buzzed aggressively on the glass desk for the fourth time in the last hour, the bright screen lighting up with Candice’s name.I let out a ragged, exhausted sigh and dragged the phone to my ear, not even bothering to give a proper greeting. "What is it, Candice?""Leon, finally! You are literally ruining my entire evening right now," Candice’s high-pitched voice immediately whined through the speaker, her ton
Cora The office air was thick enough to choke on, smelling faintly of the expensive white floral arrangements Leon had wasted his quarterly budget on just to impress me.I didn't even blink as I glided right past him at the entrance doors, my heels clicking with a steady, lethal rhythm against his polished marble floorboards.I left him standing out there on his own ridiculous red carpet like a complete fool, his arms half-extended and his jaw slightly open in front of his whispering staff.The low, frantic murmurs of his employees echoed softly against the high ceilings of the atrium, but I kept my eyes locked straight ahead, completely ignoring the drama.I strutted straight into the grand executive boardroom on the top floor, my movements completely natural and full of an independent power.Chloe walked right by my side as my legal shadow, her sharp heels matching my pace while she carried the heavy leather folders containing our official counter-metrics.I didn't wait for a host
Leon The grand headquarters of Halefield Luxury looked immaculate under the bright morning sun, the soaring glass atrium reflecting the clean New York sky like a massive mirror. The entire main lobby had been completely transformed over the last twelve hours. The air smelled rich and expensive from the hundreds of premium white floral arrangements my team had positioned along the marble pillars, masking the usual sterile scent of polished stone and air conditioning.A pristine red carpet was rolled out across the entire length of the polished floor, stretching all the way from the security desks straight out to the public pavement. Every single department head, executive assistant, and junior designer stood in a straight, rigid line along the edges of the carpet, their faces tight with a mixture of how tired they were and discipline. They had been drilled on the protocol since six in the morning.I stood near the heavy glass entrance doors, adjusting the cuffs of my custom suit jacke
Leon The morning sun cut through the floor-to-ceiling glass windows of the main Manhattan boardroom, casting a bright, unforgiving glare across the polished mahogany table. The air in the room was thick with a heavy, expectant silence.Marcus sat directly to my right, a smug, arrogant smirk settle
CoraThe sounds of their loud laughter and heavy running steps slowly faded as they moved deeper into the massive estate, leaving the main living room in a deep, heavy quiet.I stood completely alone in the center of the vast space, the afternoon sun casting long, warm shadows across the polished f
Cora The light, buzzing energy from the terminal stayed with us all the way down the wide concrete walkways of the airport terminal. Chloe led our group toward the private exit, walking with a confident, effortless stride that seemed to make the crowded hallway naturally part for us."I swear, Cor
Cora The early morning sun was just starting to peek through the heavy blinds of the hospital room, casting long, sharp shadows across the floorboards.I was resting against a pile of stiff pillows, but my mind wasn't anywhere near peaceful.A sudden, sharp spike of anxiety was clawing at the insi







