The silence in the room was deafening, each breath I took felt like a betrayal. The weight of Dominic’s words—those accusations—hung over me like a heavy shroud. I wanted to scream, to yell, to accuse him of lying, but I couldn’t. Every part of me, every ounce of my being, was frozen in disbelief.
It was supposed to be a moment of reckoning, a moment where I confronted him about everything he had done to me, to my family. I had the proof, the damning evidence, that he was the one responsible for tearing my father apart. I was supposed to expose him, watch him crumble under the weight of his own deceit. But as his eyes locked with mine, something in his gaze faltered. It was an odd moment of vulnerability, one I hadn’t expected.
“Why, Elena?” Dominic’s voice was low, edged with something darker, more dangerous than I had ever heard before. “Why do you care so much about your father’s reputation? About your family’s name? Your father is a monster. He is the reason my mother is dead.”
His words were like poison, each syllable sinking into my skin. The bile in my throat rose, and I wanted to retort, to defend my family, but the truth gnawed at me, a constant whisper that I couldn’t ignore.
“My father didn’t kill your mother,” I spat, my voice trembling with a mix of anger and disbelief. “You’re just trying to justify your actions. You’ve orchestrated everything, Dominic. The scandal, the marriage… it’s all been about revenge, hasn’t it?”
He took a step toward me, his face hardening, his jaw clenched. “Revenge?” He shook his head, a bitter laugh escaping his lips. “No, Elena. It’s not revenge. It’s about justice. Your father ruined my family, and I will never forgive him for that. Never.”
The words cut through me like a blade, each one slicing deeper into my soul. I wanted to walk away, to leave him and never look back. But I couldn’t. Not now. Not when the truth was right there in front of me, threatening to tear apart everything I thought I knew.
“Why didn’t you tell me the truth earlier?” I whispered, the words escaping in a breathless rush. “Why didn’t you warn me? I thought I was the one who was supposed to uncover the secrets. But you knew, didn’t you? You knew everything.”
Dominic’s eyes darkened, and for a moment, I saw a flicker of something—something that could almost be regret. But it vanished just as quickly as it appeared. He closed the distance between us, standing so close that I could feel the heat of his body. “I didn’t want you to know,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper. “I didn’t want you to hate me. I thought if you knew the truth, you’d never forgive me.”
My heart hammered in my chest, a tidal wave of conflicting emotions threatening to pull me under. His words were like a sickening confession, but they also made sense in a twisted way. For all the lies and manipulation, there was a part of me that could understand his pain. Could he be telling the truth?
“I don’t know what to believe anymore,” I muttered, stepping back, needing space between us. My mind raced, unable to process the enormity of the situation. “Everything’s been a lie, Dominic. Everything.”
He reached for my wrist, his grip firm but gentle. “Not everything,” he said softly. “Some things… some things are real. The way I feel about you, for instance.”
I froze, his words sinking into me like a slow poison. “You don’t get to say that,” I hissed, jerking my arm out of his grasp. “You don’t get to make this about us when you’ve torn apart everything I’ve ever known.”
Dominic’s expression hardened again, his eyes narrowing. “And yet, here we are. Tied together, whether you like it or not. You think I want this? You think I wanted any of this to happen?” He ran a hand through his hair, his frustration palpable. “But we’re stuck with each other now, Elena. This marriage, this mess… it’s the only way out for both of us.”
The weight of his words settled over me like a suffocating fog. A marriage of convenience, born out of manipulation and lies. I couldn’t deny it, though—there was something between us. Something I couldn’t ignore.
I opened my mouth to respond, but before I could speak, the sound of footsteps echoed from the hallway. The door to the office slammed open, and a familiar voice broke the tension.
“Dominic,” Liam Caldwell’s voice was sharp, full of warning. “What the hell is going on in here?”
I turned, startled, to find Liam standing in the doorway, his eyes flicking between Dominic and me. There was no mistaking the tension in the air, and I could feel the unease settle in my stomach. Had he overheard us?
Dominic’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t take his eyes off me. “Nothing for you to concern yourself with, Liam.”
Liam’s gaze remained unwavering. “I’m making it my concern,” he said, his voice low but insistent. He stepped further into the room, his presence imposing. “You’ve been playing games with Elena, Dominic. I’m done letting you manipulate her.”
My heart skipped a beat. What was Liam talking about? Why was he so sure about Dominic’s intentions? I didn’t know whether to feel relief or dread. Could it be possible that Liam was on my side? Was there a shred of goodness in this family, or had they all been tainted by the same darkness?
“You don’t understand, Liam,” Dominic growled, stepping toward his twin. “This is bigger than you think.”
“I don’t care how big it is,” Liam shot back, his voice rising. “Elena doesn’t deserve this. She doesn’t deserve to be your pawn in whatever twisted game you’re playing.”
I glanced between them, trying to make sense of the situation. Dominic’s face was hard as stone, but there was something behind his eyes that told me this confrontation wasn’t over. It was only just beginning.
“I’m not anyone’s pawn,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper. “Not Dominic’s. Not yours.”
Dominic’s eyes softened, just for a moment, before he hardened his gaze again. “Then you’re free to leave, Elena. But don’t come back crying when you realize you have nowhere else to go.”
Liam stepped forward, a protective stance that put him between us. “Enough, Dominic,” he said, his voice fierce. “You’ve done enough damage.”
I stood there, torn between the two men—the ones who were tied to my fate in ways I couldn’t even begin to unravel. But in that moment, as the tension hung thick in the air, I realized something that I hadn’t fully admitted to myself: I was trapped. And the only way out was to confront everything.
Everything that had happened. Everything that was yet to come.
And when the truth finally surfaced, I knew that no one would come out of this unscathed.
I turned, feeling the weight of the decisions ahead of me settle in my chest. I was done playing by their rules. It was time for me to take control.
But as I made my way to the door, I heard Dominic’s voice behind me, soft but piercing. “You’ll regret this, Elena.”
The words stopped me dead in my tracks.
And with that, I knew the game was far from over.
The smoke curled in the air, dancing like a wicked omen.I stared at the man I had called “father” for twenty-eight years—Senator Richard Sinclair—now standing in the doorway of Charles Barron’s study, a smoking pistol in his gloved hand and blood on his conscience. The man I had defended through scandals. The man I had nearly destroyed myself trying to protect.He looked at me like a stranger.“Why?” I croaked, barely able to speak over the thundering pulse in my ears. “Why did you kill him?”Richard stepped forward calmly, as if he hadn’t just shot the only man who could’ve unraveled the twisted threads of my existence.“He was a liability,” he said simply. “And liabilities must be removed.”Dominic moved protectively in front of me, but my father didn’t even glance at him.“This doesn’t make sense,” I said, voice breaking. “You knew Victor was my real father. You knew—and you still arranged the marriage. You let me fall into this nightmare.”Richard’s eyes darkened. “You were never
The silence in the room was suffocating.I stared down at the DNA report, my hands trembling as the implications unraveled inside my mind like a bomb detonating in slow motion. The file said it plainly: a female child was born from Victor Caldwell and Olivia Sinclair. Identity redacted.Dominic stood frozen beside me, the file still open in his hands, but his entire body had gone rigid.I backed away, pulse racing.“This—this has to be a mistake,” I whispered, my voice cracking. “It’s probably someone else. I mean… it could’ve been another child. Someone who died. Maybe it’s not—”“Elena,” Dominic said, his voice tight, low, like it was strangling him. “You were born the year after my father vanished from public life. Right after Olivia disappeared.”“No.” I shook my head, stepping further away, the cold wall biting my back. “Don’t. Don’t say what I think you’re about to say.”He slammed the file shut. “We don’t know anything for sure. Not yet.”“But if it’s true,” I choked, “if I’m h
The moment the screen flashed SECURITY BREACH, my heart stuttered.“Dominic…” My voice trembled, barely above a whisper.He was already on his feet, pulling a drawer open to retrieve a concealed weapon, his movements quick, practiced. Liam stood by the window, peeking through the blinds as the wind howled outside, bringing with it the crackling of leaves—too calculated to be natural.“They’re here,” Liam confirmed grimly. “Two vehicles. No plates.”“Stay inside. Both of you,” Dominic growled, his eyes narrowing as he checked the chamber of his gun. “If they get past me, you run. Do you hear me, Elena?”“No.” I stood too, fury surging through my veins. “I’m not leaving you. Not again.”He turned sharply, grabbing my wrist. “This isn’t a debate—”“It never was!” I snapped. “I’ve been used, lied to, manipulated. If someone wants me dead, they’ll have to go through me this time. I’m done being collateral damage.”Liam raised a brow. “She’s got your fire,” he muttered to Dominic.“Worse,”
The vehicle sped through the night like a bullet slicing through the darkness. Rain pounded against the windshield, with the wipers working relentlessly back and forth, yet the constant swish did little to ease the anxiety building in my chest.I couldn’t tear my eyes away from the message on my phone:"You’re next. Just like your mother."Who on earth sent it? How did they know we were so close to the truth?Liam shot me a glance from the driver’s seat, his jaw clenched. He hadn’t said much since we departed from Dominic’s penthouse, but the tension radiating from him in waves spoke volumes. "We’re almost there," he said, his voice sharp. "It’s a Caldwell property. Off-grid, untraceable."I nodded, holding my phone tightly in my lap. My mind was racing—Dominic. The video. My mother. My father’s betrayal. The reality that someone had actually placed a target on my back.“I shouldn’t have left him,” I whispered.Liam’s grip on the steering wheel tightened. “He told you to leave. You kn
The old security tape played on the massive screen in Dominic’s study, casting flickering shadows on the walls. The room was dead silent except for the soft whir of the projector and the pounding of my heart. Dominic stood behind me, arms crossed tightly over his chest, his gaze glued to the screen. I sat at the edge of the leather couch, fingers clenched together, trying not to blink.The footage was grainy, the timestamp barely legible—August 17th, 1999—the year before everything in my world fell apart.My mother appeared first. Olivia Sinclair. Younger, but unmistakably her. Dressed in a soft blue coat, her dark hair pulled back in an elegant twist. She looked nervous. Anxious. She kept glancing over her shoulder as if expecting to be followed.Then he appeared.Victor Caldwell.Tall, commanding, and heartbreakingly handsome, even in the pixelated footage. He walked toward her, and the second their hands touched, the air in the room changed.My breath hitched.There was no denying
The rain was a relentless drumbeat on the glass walls of Dominic’s penthouse. Thunder cracked in the distance, nature’s fury echoing the storm inside me. I stared at my reflection in the mirror, the woman looking back at me barely recognizable. I wasn’t the same Elena Sinclair who walked into Caldwell Enterprises to take down a dynasty. No. That woman had believed in lines—clear ones, bold ones. Right and wrong. Truth and lies. Love and hate.But now?Now, everything was a blur. A twisted mosaic of betrayal, secrets, and stolen moments.Behind me, the door creaked open, soft footfalls padding into the room. I didn’t need to turn to know it was him.“Elena,” Dominic’s voice was low, hesitant, but still laced with that commanding undertone that always made my chest tighten.I met his eyes in the mirror. He looked exhausted, like he hadn’t slept in days. His shirt was unbuttoned at the top, his tie gone, his hair mussed from raking his fingers through it one too many times. But what stru