MasukTricia thought grief would destroy her. When the news came that her fiancé, the decorated soldier, Colonel Raymond, had died during a dangerous mission, her world collapsed overnight. The man she loved was gone, and nothing felt the same anymore. But in the darkness of loss, one person stayed beside her. Raymond’s best friend. Mark Coleman. What began as comfort soon became something far more dangerous. Their shared grief turned into late-night conversations, stolen glances, and a passion neither of them expected. Within months, the bond between them became a secret neither dared to speak aloud. A forbidden love. A betrayal that could destroy everything. Then the impossible happened. Six months after being declared dead, Raymond returned alive. Now the man Tricia mourned stands before her again, while the man she secretly loves is his closest friend. Caught in a web of guilt, desire, and loyalty, Tricia struggles to hide the truth as tensions grow between the two men who trust each other most. But jealousy is a dangerous thing. Secrets begin to unravel. A revenge plot spirals out of control. A brutal attack leaves one man fighting for his life, another facing prison… and Tricia trapped in the middle of consequences she never imagined. Just when she thinks things cannot get worse, a shocking discovery changes everything: She is pregnant. And the father could be either man. As love, betrayal, revenge, and secrets collide, Tricia must face a painful truth. Some webs of passion are impossible to escape. And sometimes the heart’s most forbidden entanglements come with devastating consequences.
Lihat lebih banyakThe first time Tricia Watson saw him, he ruined her painting.
She had chosen the quiet edge of the military base, where the evening sky melted into gold and violet, because the light there was honest. Raw. Untouched.
Her brush moved gently across the canvas, capturing the glow of sunset over the distant parade grounds.
Click.
Click.
Click.
The sharp sound of a camera shutter pierced her concentration.
She turned sharply, and collided with a solid chest.
Her canvas tipped. Paint smudged.
“Oh my God!” she gasped.
A firm hand caught the easel before it crashed.
“I’m sorry.”
His voice was deep. Controlled. Almost amused.
She stepped back.
Tall. Broad shoulders. Sun-browned skin. Military haircut. A faint scar near his eyebrow.
And eyes that watched too steadily.
“You were standing right in the frame,” he added.
“My frame,” she snapped. “This is a painting spot, not a photoshoot arena.”
A small smile played on his lips.
“I could say the same about your easel.”
She crossed her arms. “You bumped into me.”
“You spun around,” he corrected calmly.
There was an awkward pause.
The wind carried the scent of dust and approaching nightfall.
He looked at her canvas.
“It’s good,” he said after a moment.
She glanced at him suspiciously. “Flattery won’t fix the smudge.”
“Maybe not,” he replied, reaching into his pocket. He handed her a folded handkerchief. “But it’s a start.”
She hesitated before taking it.
“Thank you,” she muttered.
He nodded once, then lifted his camera again, stepping aside this time to give her space.
And just like that… he kept photographing the sunset.
But she was suddenly aware of him.
Aware of the way he adjusted his lens.
Aware of the calm authority in the way he stood.Aware that her heartbeat was slightly off rhythm.
She focused back on her painting.
But five minutes later, she realised something strange.
He wasn’t taking pictures of the sunset anymore.
He was taking pictures of her.
She turned.
“Are you serious right now?”
He didn’t lower the camera.
“You’re blocking my sunset.”
“You changed angles.”
“You’re more interesting.”
Her breath caught.
The air between them shifted.
“Is that your professional opinion?” she asked.
He lowered the camera slowly.
“Yes.”
A beat.
“And it’s accurate.”
She opened her mouth to respond, but an orderly’s voice echoed faintly from a distance.
“Colonel Stone!”
Her expression changed.
Colonel?
The orderly jogged closer, saluting him sharply.
“Sir, they’re waiting for you at the briefing.”
He gave a brief nod.
Then he looked back at her.
“Seems I’ve kept you from your masterpiece.”
“You’ve done more than that,” she said quietly.
His gaze softened slightly.
“Raymond Stone.”
He extended his hand.
She hesitated only a second before shaking it.
“Tricia Watson.”
His grip was firm. Warm.
“Watson…” He tilted his head thoughtfully. “Any relation to General Watson?”
Her eyes widened slightly.
“That’s my father.”
Raymond’s expression flickered, surprise, then subtle respect.
“Well then,” he said, releasing her hand slowly. “I suppose I’ve just interrupted something very important.”
“You interrupted a painting,” she corrected.
“Good,” he said.
“Why good?”
“Because sunsets return.”
He stepped back.
“But moments don’t.”
And then he walked away.
Leaving her standing in the fading light.
Heart racing. Paint forgotten. Sunset unfinished.
She didn’t know it yet.
But that man had just stepped into her life.
And nothing, not love, not loyalty, not even death, would undo it
Tricia told herself she wouldn’t think about him again.
She failed before breakfast.
By mid-morning, she had replayed the sunset encounter at least five times, his voice, the steady confidence, the way he had said her name like he was testing how it felt.
Watson.
She blamed it on boredom.
Her father’s military base wasn’t exactly thrilling for a civilian photographer. Order. Discipline. Routine. Everything ran on schedule.
Except her thoughts.
That evening, her father insisted she attend a formal officers’ reception being held at the Grand Hall.
“You’ll meet important people,” General Watson said. “Connections matter.”
She rolled her eyes lightly. “I’m a photographer, Dad. Not a politician.”
“Still,” he said firmly. “Representation matters.”
So she dressed.
Not flashy. Not provocative. Just elegant.
A deep emerald dress that traced her curves without trying too hard.
When she walked into the hall, conversations lowered just slightly.
She was used to that.
But she wasn’t prepared for the sight across the room.
Raymond Stone.
In full military uniform.
Decorated. Commanding. Composed.
The scar near his eyebrow seemed sharper beneath the chandelier lights.
He was speaking to a group of officers, posture straight, hands behind his back, authority radiating from him without effort.
He turned.
And his eyes found hers. Not by accident. Not by coincidence.
Like he had been looking.
A pause.
Then recognition. Then something warmer.
He excused himself from the group.
She stood still, refusing to look away.
“Miss Watson,” he said as he approached.
“Colonel Stone,” she replied calmly.
He gave a faint smirk.
“You clean up well.”
She raised a brow. “Was I unclean before?”
“No,” he said smoothly. “Just… less formal.”
She shouldn’t have smiled.
But she did.
“You followed me?” she asked lightly.
“I live here,” he replied. “You’re the visitor.”
Touché.
Her father’s voice interrupted.
“Tricia!”
General Watson approached, handshake firm as he greeted Raymond.
“Stone. I didn’t know you’d met my daughter.”
“By accident, sir,” Raymond replied respectfully.
“Accidents can be useful,” her father said with a knowing look.
Tricia narrowed her eyes at that.
The General moved away when called.
Raymond leaned slightly closer.
“You look different tonight.”
“How so?”
“Less annoyed.”
“I’m not easily annoyed.” she said.
He tilted his head.
“So I imagined the hostility at sunset?”
“That wasn’t hostility,” she said.
“What was it?”
She hesitated.
Flustered? Curious? Intrigued?
“I don’t know you,” she replied carefully.
“You could.”
The air shifted again.
Music began playing across the hall, soft, orchestral, deliberate.
Raymond extended his hand.
“Dance with me.”
It wasn’t a request.
She hesitated only long enough to prove she wasn’t easy.
Then she placed her hand in his.
He guided her to the centre floor.
His palm rested at her waist.
Her hand settled on his shoulder.
Close. Too close.
“Are you always this confident?” she asked.
“Only when I’m certain.”
“And you’re certain about what?”
“That you were disappointed I left so quickly yesterday.”
Her breath stalled for half a second.
He noticed.
“That wasn't a disappointment,” she said softly.
“What was it?”
She looked up at him.
This close, she could see the faint tension behind his composed exterior.
This wasn’t a reckless man.
This was a controlled one.
Dangerous in a different way.
“Curiosity,” she admitted.
He didn’t smile.
But something in his eyes changed.
“Curiosity can be lethal,” he said quietly.
“Only if mishandled.”
His hand tightened slightly at her waist.
A subtle shift. A warning.
Or a promise.
The song ended too quickly.
They didn’t step apart immediately.
People were watching now.
Whispers forming.
Colonel Stone and the General’s daughter.
Raymond released her first.
“May I see you tomorrow?” he asked calmly.
She should say no.
She didn’t.
“Maybe.”
He nodded once, accepting the challenge.
“Tomorrow evening. Same place as the sunset.”
He began to walk away.
“Colonel,” she called softly.
He turned.
“You never apologised properly.”
“For what?”
“For ruining my painting.”
A faint smile.
“Tomorrow,” he said, “I’ll make it up to you.”
And he left her standing there.
Heart racing.
Watched.
Wanted.
Claimed, though not yet officially.
Across the hall, two men observed quietly.
One was smiling politely.
The other…
Was already paying attention
A year later. The lake looked exactly the same. Morning sunlight still danced across the water. The surrounding trees still swayed gently in the breeze.The cottage still stood proudly near the shoreline, wrapped in the quiet beauty that had first welcomed them when they needed somewhere to heal.Yet everything else had changed. Laughter echoed across the property. Tiny footsteps raced across the grass.A squeal of excitement shattered the peaceful silence before another followed immediately afterward.General Watson lowered his newspaper. Slowly. Suspiciously. The expression on his face suggested he already knew trouble was approaching.A second later Lily Stone burst around the corner of the cottage like a tiny hurricane. Her curls bounced wildly. Her shoes appeared untied. Her determination remained absolute.The little girl sprinted across the lawn with complete confidence despite possessing only a questionable understanding of danger. Or balance. Or patience."Grandpa!"General W
"I think your mother would have framed that one." The words lingered quietly in the room.Tricia looked back toward the photograph glowing on the laptop screen. The image filled the display. Sunlight. Lake water. Family. A moment frozen forever.For several seconds she simply stared at it. Then a small smile touched her lips."I think she would have too."Raymond settled into the chair beside her. The cottage had grown silent around them. The twins were asleep. General Watson had retired for the night.Outside, moonlight shimmered softly across the lake, transforming the water into silver and shadow.The peacefulness felt almost unreal. Not because it was unfamiliar anymore. Because it had become familiar.That realization still surprised her occasionally. After everything they had survived, peace had stopped feeling temporary. It had started feeling like home.Raymond reached forward and rotated the laptop slightly. The photograph remained visible between them.His eyes studied it th
The idea stayed with Tricia long after she closed the camera screen. Even after Raymond fell asleep beside her. Even after the cottage settled into complete silence.The image remained fixed inside her mind. A photograph from her mother's memory box. A family standing together beside a lake.Her mother smiling. General Watson looked younger and far less patient. A little girl standing between them with windblown hair and grass stains on her knees.The photograph wasn't perfect. Nobody had been looking directly at the camera. The horizon tilted slightly. Part of a tree branch blocked one corner.Yet somehow it felt perfect anyway. Because it captured something real. Something alive. Something worth remembering.Now, years later, Tricia found herself staring at a photograph she had taken only hours earlier. Different people. Different generations.The same feeling. The realization lingered with her as sleep finally claimed her.When morning arrived, the idea remained. Clearer now. Stron
"I knew it."Raymond looked up from the section of railing he had been repairing."Knew what?"General Watson folded his arms with the unmistakable confidence of a man presenting undeniable evidence."That one was born to be photographed."Lily immediately rewarded the statement by producing another delighted smile the moment she spotted the camera hanging around Tricia's neck.The older man pointed triumphantly."There."Raymond glanced toward Lily. Then toward the camera. Then back toward General Watson."Or maybe she's smiling because she likes seeing Tricia happy."General Watson opened his mouth. Paused. Then frowned."That was annoyingly reasonable."Tricia laughed. The sound drifted across the deck along with the gentle breeze coming off the lake.For a moment nobody moved. Nobody rushed. The afternoon unfolded around them with the kind of ease that had once felt impossible.Then Tricia raised the camera again. Instinctively. Naturally. Like a part of herself waking up after a
Lily’s cries echoed loudly through the baby monitor while Raymond crossed the living room with such immediate speed that Tricia genuinely suspected military instincts had permanently fused with fatherhood inside his brain.“Do you realise babies sometimes cry before an actual catastrophe occurs?”R
For several seconds neither of them moved. The room seemed to shrink around the envelope resting in Raymond's hand.Outside the window, sunlight still poured across the military grounds. Inside, the warmth vanished instantly.Tricia could not take her eyes off the handwriting. She knew every curve
The tribunal chamber emptied slowly afterward, though the heaviness lingering inside it seemed unwilling to leave with the people.Voices remained subdued. Footsteps softer than usual against polished floors.Even the officers escorting Sean Carter away moved with a strange restraint, as though eve
The shift began not with volume, but with recognition.“Your Honour.”The voice did not rise above the room, yet it carried through it with a steadiness that did not require repetition, drawing attention not by force, but by presence. Heads turned almost in unison, the movement subtle but collectiv
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
Ulasan-ulasan