I woke up to the sound of Daphnie’s loud knock against the thin wooden door of our apartment.
“Liana! Wake up! It’s our birthday!” she shouted from the hallway.
I groaned, rolling over in bed. My blanket clung to me like it knew I wasn’t ready to face the day. Not because I didn’t love birthdays but because turning eighteen meant stepping closer to… life. The real kind. The one that wasn’t always tucked away behind the DeLewunco estate’s pristine gates.
I heard my mom humming in the kitchen probably making her special birthday pancakes even though she had to be at work by seven. She was the senior housekeeper for the DeLewunco family, had been for almost twenty years. And me? Well, I’d always just been her daughter. The girl who wasn’t allowed to clean, or really do much of anything except stay out of the way and go to school. Mrs. DeLewunco insisted I focus on my education, and they’d paid for it all uniforms, books, everything.
I wasn’t staff. But I wasn’t exactly family either.
Still, growing up in the staff quarters on their estate meant I’d spent almost every day with Daphnie. We were born on the same day, raised under the same roof just opposite ends of it. Her in the mansion, me behind it. And despite everything, she’d never made me feel less.
“I swear to God, if you’re still in bed, I’m breaking in!” Daphnie’s voice snapped me out of my thoughts.
“Coming!” I called back, scrambling to get up.
When I opened the door, she was already halfway inside. Blonde curls bouncing, her pajamas way too fancy for sleep. She grinned, holding two paper crowns.
“Your Majesty,” she said dramatically, placing one on my head. “Eighteen. Officially grown women. The world isn’t ready.”
“Speak for yourself. I haven’t even combed my hair.”
“Details.” She waved her hand. “You can fix it after breakfast. First pancakes. Then planning.”
I narrowed my eyes. “Planning what?”
She grinned. “Our confessions.”
My stomach did a flip. “Daph”
“No backing out, Liana. Tonight, after the party, you’re telling Reuben how you feel. And I’m telling Jayson. No excuses, no delays, no what-ifs.”
I felt my cheeks burn. “He’s barely looked at me, Daphnie. He probably still thinks I’m the weird kid who used to chase frogs in the garden.”
“First of all, that was adorable. Second, you’ve grown up. Trust me, he’s noticed.”
I doubted that. Reuben was the firstborn, already neck-deep in family business. He was rarely home, and when he was, he wasn’t exactly... approachable. Sharp jawline, darker eyes, always dressed like he’d walked out of some luxury ad. But to me, he was just Reuben the boy I’d quietly loved for years, even though he never had a reason to love me back.
Then there was Kendrick. The second son. If Reuben was ice, Kendrick was fire warm, golden, and impossible to ignore. He treated me and Daphnie like equals. Like we mattered. He laughed at our dumb jokes, sat with us during breakfast, and never made me feel like I didn’t belong.
He was around more too. Even this morning, when the party prep had the house in chaos, Kendrick still managed to pop his head into the staff wing with a muffin in hand and a crooked smile.
“Birthday girls,” he’d said, offering it to Daphnie. “You’ve got frosting on your nose.”
“It’s a glow-up,” she replied proudly, licking it off.
He chuckled, then turned to me. “You okay?”
I nodded, feeling that strange flutter I always got when he looked at me like that. Like he actually saw me.
“Don’t forget,” he added, “you’ve got two hours before the house turns into a circus.”
“I won’t,” I’d promised.
And now, a few hours later, the mansion was already buzzing. Staff moving like clockwork, silver platters gleaming, florists running in and out. The DeLewunco family didn’t do simple. Their kind of wealth wasn’t just money it was power. Influence. Legacy. The kind of wealth that made politicians whisper and CEOs beg for dinner invites.
And somehow, in this big, gilded world… they’d made space for me.
The party was in full swing by late afternoon. Daphnie looked like a dream in her sapphire gown.
Daphne was effortlessly beautiful, the kind of girl who didn’t need to try to shine she just did. Her long, golden hair shimmered like sunlight,Her hazel eyes sparkled with mischief and warmth, always full of energy and unspoken plans. She was bold, outspoken, and unafraid to chase what she wanted, especially when it came to love. Daphne had a natural confidence, the kind that drew people in without effort. She could light up any room with her laughter and charm, and even though we weren’t related by blood, she was more than just my best friend she was my family, my anchor, my sister in every way that mattered.
I wore something she’d picked out for me cream silk, subtle but beautiful. I felt like a guest, not a ghost in someone else’s house.
There were laughs, toasts, speeches. Kendrick danced with us, made us laugh so hard we cried. He even pulled my mom in for a dance, and she nearly fainted.
But Reuben never showed.
Daphnie tried to pretend it didn’t bother her, but I knew it did. He was her big brother too. And she wanted him there. For her, for me.
“You okay?” Kendrick asked as he handed me a glass of punch.
I smiled, a little too tightly. “Yeah. Just tired.”
He didn’t push. Just stood beside me, quiet for a moment. “He’ll come around, you know.”
I didn’t ask who. I didn’t need to.
“I’m not waiting for him,” I lied.
He gave me a small smile. “You don’t have to.”
The sun began to set, casting golden light across the backyard where strings of fairy lights blinked like stars. Music played low in the background, and the last of the guests lingered by the dessert table.
Daphnie pulled me aside, her eyes dancing. “Tonight. After everything winds down. You and me. Operation Confession.”
I laughed. “You’re serious?”
“As a heart attack. This is our year, Liana. Eighteen changes everything.”
I looked around at the life I’d always known, the people I’d always loved, and the boy I couldn’t stop thinking about… even when he wasn’t there.
Maybe she was right.
Maybe it really would.
The soft sound of birdsong outside my window was the first thing I heard that morning.Peaceful.It had been four days since the kidnapping… since the blood… since Ruben carried me into the emergency room screaming for help while I bled out in his arms.Four days since I thought I’d never open my eyes again.And yet, here I was. Propped up in bed, the white linens pulled to my waist, my body aching in a hundred small ways… but alive.Very much alive.The wound on my shoulder throbbed with every movement, but the pain was dulled by the cocktail of meds the family doctor had me on.He checked in every morning without fail, followed by two more nurses Ruben personally hired. I hadn’t even seen them before this, but now it felt like they lived in the house.Daph came next always a few minutes after my vitals were taken. She never showed up empty-handed. Today, she brought fruit, some random magazines, and the messiest, most beautiful pink-and-blue bouquet I’d ever seen.“Tell me you’re bo
I stayed in the hospital for two days.Two days of Ruben never leaving my side.He slept in a chair, refused every call, canceled every meeting. I watched him from under half-lidded eyes as he paced, argued with doctors, and turned into a completely different man when the nurses took too long to change my IV.I should have been annoyed.But I wasn’t.I felt… cherished.Still caged. Still wary.But cherished.“Ready?” he asked as he stood by the door of my hospital suite, his tailored suit exchanged for black joggers and a hoodie. It was the least “Delwunco” I’d ever seen him.He held the wheelchair gently, waiting for me to sit.“Are we going home?” I asked, ignoring the tug in my chest.“To the villa,” he corrected. “The main house is too loud right now. Media's still sniffing around.”I nodded.He leaned down and lifted me like I weighed nothing, ignoring the nurse holding the chair.I protested weakly. “I can walk”“You were shot.”“That was two days ago.”He gave me the look.“You
Ken reached us then, crouched beside us. His face was unreadable, but I saw the anger tightening his jaw. His hand touched my wrist gently, checking my pulse. “She’s still fighting.”“I know,” Ruben said, his voice thick. “She always fights.”I groaned as another wave of pain seared through me.“Lia, don’t close your eyes.”“I’m… so tired…”“No.” He pressed his forehead to mine. “Don’t. You said you were trying. Don’t you dare stop now.”His voice cracked.“You were never supposed to be touched,” he said, his voice low now, hoarse. “I was supposed to keep you safe. You hate this life. You hate me for it. But I swear to God, Lia, if you just live if you just open your eyes tomorrow I’ll make this right.”My hand weakly reached for his.He grabbed it, laced our fingers, kissed my knuckles like I was sacred."I wanted a simple life," I whispered.He closed his eyes. “I know.”"You promised me normal."“I broke that promise.”Silence stretched between us."But I'm not ready to leave you y
It was supposed to be a normal day.Ruben had promised. Just me, Daph, and the college we’d been dreaming about since we were fifteen.And he kept his word.At first, I felt free. Walking down the campus walkway, backpack in hand, head high. Just like any other student. For once, I wasn’t Mrs. Delwunco, I was just Lia. A freshman. A girl with dreams.But I should’ve known.Freedom in my world always came at a price.I never saw them coming.One second I was laughing with Daph about how dramatic our lecturer looked, the next tires screeched, masked men jumped out of a van, and before I could scream, everything went dark.I woke up gagged, my hands tied. Blood dripping from my temple. A stinging cut above my brow. My legs ached. My mind was hazy.They had taken me to a warehouse, cold, damp, and silent except for the crunch of boots and murmured threats in a language I didn’t understand. But I knew fear when I felt it.And I felt it in every inch of my body.“She’s worth more alive,” on
“Did he touch you?” he asked.I blinked.“What?”“Did he kiss you?” he repeated, more sharply this time. “Tell me the truth.”My hands balled into fists at my sides.“He didn’t. I didn’t let him.”He looked away for a second, as though restraining himself from saying something vile, then laughed once a dark, bitter sound.“Of course he tried,” Ruben muttered. “Because he always wanted what was mine. Ever since we were boys.”“He told me everything,” I said quietly.Ruben's eyes snapped back to me.“Everything, Ruben. About the business. The blood. The empire. You lied to me. You dragged me into this and never gave me a choice.”“I protected you,” he hissed, the calm cracking. “I gave you a life. I gave you everything.”“You forced me.”“You’re my wife.”“Not by choice!” I screamed. “You think wrapping me in designer silk and kissing me like you mean it makes this right? I was a girl who loved you, Ruben. Before all of this. And you used that against me.”The silence after that was dea
I didn’t mean to end up at Ken’s place. I swear, I didn’t.But after days of silence from Ruben, after the way he looked at me that night, with a strange mixture of guilt and warning, after overhearing names whispered behind closed doors and catching glimpses of men, too sharply dressed to be mere businessmen, I needed answers.Real ones.And Ken… Ken had always been the loophole. The unexpected truth in a world that always felt carefully constructed.His penthouse was quiet, too quiet. He opened the door before I knocked twice, almost as if he knew I’d come."You shouldn't be here," he said, voice low, but his eyes… his eyes were the same haunted pools I remembered. Except now, there was something broken behind them. Something dark. Something hurting."Then tell me why I am here," I said softly, stepping in.He didn’t try to stop me.The silence between us felt like static thick, electric, full of unsaid things. I turned to face him, arms folded over my chest to shield myself from th