HOPE'S POV
I didn't know when I became nocturnal but I could swear by anything that I was seeing through the night clearly. Maybe it was the adrenaline rush that was giving me supervision as I ran through the forest.
Tud! tud! tud!... I kept hearing the sound of my bare feet as they jammed on the ground heavily and the scrunching sounds of dry leaves as I dashed in between trees in search of an exit.I couldn't remember the direction of the gate but I couldn't care less about that. I managed to sneak out of the huge room I was locked in and that was all that mattered. Direction wasn’t much of a concern to me as long as I didn’t run back in circles to my starting point.
I pray he doesn't find me, I whispered to myself without slowing my speed. This was my third attempt to escape and I was hoping to be successful. I never asked for any of these. Things I never wished for threatened to steal my breath and suffocate me while all the stuff I wished for eluded me.What do you normally do when the opposite of what you asked for kept coming to you? Well, the solution could be to pray for what you don’t want and let the opposite happen.
I pray his men found me. They should catch me and take me back to the forsaken haunted mansion. They should catch me… I kept repeating in my head like a mantra while wishing for the opposite at the back of my mind.
“Take the right, you…go in the other direction..” I heard someone giving instructions to the other people from a far distance. “Make sure you find her quickly, I’m sure she’s still somewhere in this place,”
I stopped running and started looking frantically for a place to hide. Running wasn’t an option any longer because even if I still had the strength to continue, the scrunching noise of dried leaves would give away my location.
As I continued looking around, I spotted a huge tree trunk that was half fallen. It was big enough to conceal my small frail body while I waited for them to pass.
I quickly made my way to the tree and laid on the ground with my eyes closed and my arms wrapped around my chest. That was it, whether I managed to run away or not depended on the tree.
What was that sound? I quickly turned towards the direction of the sound from but before I could discern whether it was an animal or not, something heavy landed on my head. The only thing I saw were stars exploding before my mind went blank. And there, my third escape became a total sham instead of a charm.
It was his entire fault though, that short chubby old hag and that illegal auction. I wanted to be out, yes. But was I hoping to be locked in a room with cockroaches and spiders? definitely not!
HOPE Assistant? I blinked a few times, unsure if I had misheard him. My heart thudded as if it wanted to burst out and scream: You’re not a maid anymore! But I didn’t let it show. I nodded, calmly, carefully, like someone used to getting promotions in mafia mansions. “Understood.” Truth was, I didn’t understand anything. Not why he trusted me, not why I felt seen in that moment, and definitely not why a small part of me felt… proud. Ace slid the file toward me with a lazy flick of his fingers. “Talk to Clara. She’ll walk you through the remaining details.” Of course. Clara. The name alone gave me a mini tension headache. I'd heard about her from the kitchen staff—how close she used to be to Ace, how she knew every part of the business, how she always wore stilettos like she was stomping on someone’s ego. She was now the HR manager, but before that, s
Tall, lean, and wearing a smile that was either amused or curious—maybe both. His jacket was half-zipped and his hand was tucked casually into his pocket.“Looking for Ace?” he asked.I stared at him. This had to be Bob—the half-brother. The one Ace tolerated but didn’t trust to accomplish anything. The one who lingered in the shadows, watching everything.“And you are?” I asked.He stepped closer. “The brother he doesn’t talk about.”Bingo.“Well, brother or not, I need to see him,” I replied, folding my arms.“He’s out. Cosa Nostra business,” he said, then paused, tilting his head like he was studying me. “You’re not like the other girls.”I blinked. “Excuse me?”“Most of them just cry or complain. But you—there’s fire behind those eyes,” he said with a grin. “It’s interesting.”I didn’t know whether to punch him or thank him. So I said nothing.He chuckled and leaned against the wal
ACEThere was absolutely nothing wrong with her going to the garden. It was just that I couldn’t have anyone tainting the memories of my mother. That garden was the only piece of her we could still see, touch, and feel.I stared at my office door, waiting for the person who had knocked to come in.It was Clara—my assistant at the Mason Enterprise. So far, she’d lasted longer than the others I had already fired.“Sir,” she greeted, walking straight to my desk. "I found it," she said, her voice smooth and sultry. "The shortlist of companies responsible for stirring up those protesters. I’m ninety percent sure it’s Cranes Electronics. They’ve got motive, access, and just the right amount of subtlety to pull it off without leaving too many breadcrumbs."I flipped through the documents, skimming the summary she’d neatly highlighted.“You’ve done well,” I said.“Of course I have,” she replied with a smile that was more suggestive than professional. “You bring out the best in me, Ace.”Her
ACE She stood there gawking at me. I’d left her speechless—that much I was sure of. I kept walking deeper into the garden, lost in memories… of my mother. It was her garden. She loved it like a child—probably because it was the only thing she had control over, especially when it came to my old man. Everything about her life revolved around him. My mother loved him too much, and that was the beginning of her downfall. She couldn’t leave him, no matter what. Not that he would have let her. She knew too much about the family. But Mason… my father… he loved her too, in his own twisted way. Her absence destroyed him from the inside out. I envied their love. But it was dangerous—for both of them. A love like theirs is the kind I would always long for… but never pray to have. A slight bump on my back snapped me out of it. “Sorry, Ace,” she said, placing a small hand on her forehead. “It belonged to my mother. I haven’t been in here since she left.” I watched her glan
HOPE I was wandering around the top floor, which once belonged solely to Ace before I became a co-owner, without a care in the world—confident I wouldn’t get caught. One of the kind maids had told me earlier that I was free to explore the place.As I poked my head into a series of empty rooms filled with nothing but dust, I suddenly stopped in front of the door to Ace’s room.Standing there, it hit me: after our encounter in his room the other week, seeing him again had become like trying to win the lottery. My heart sank as I realized it had been weeks since I last saw him.It wasn’t that I missed him. Not at all.It was that my stay in the mansion was dragging on, and I was starting to warm up to the place.No, you’re not, I scolded myself.I saw him that night. It had been a few weeks, but the image of the blood; barely visible between the collar of his shirt was still fresh in my memory. It hadn’t been much, but I could swear it wasn’t animal blood.The more time I spent in the ma
HOPEI stood there, glaring at him with pure contempt. I wished I could report him and the master for their crimes. I wasn’t an object. None of us in the master’s house were objects to be exchanged between rich criminals.I used to dream of working at the Mason enterprise. But just a few days ago, I discovered that the image he projected to the world was nothing more than a shadow of his true self. He was a criminal. And anyone associated with the master was just as guilty.“I can see the anger burning in your eyes,” he said, studying me. “How did it feel running for hours thinking you could escape from me?”He was provoking me on purpose. I could feel it.I squeezed my fists tightly around the fabric of my dress to stop myself from hitting him.“You should be the one telling me how fun it was,” I snapped. “How did it feel watching me run, knowing I had no chance? You’re a sick bastard, and no matter how much you try to hide it, it’s only a matter of time before the world sees you for