LOGINTatiana did not feel like a wife.
Not even close. She felt like someone who had just stepped into a room she could no longer exit the same way she entered. The contract still sat heavy in her mind, even though it had already been signed and taken away. Ink on paper had never felt so permanent, so suffocating, so… final. Lucien Leng stood by the window again, as if he preferred distance over closeness even after getting what he wanted. The city behind him glowed like a living thing—endless, indifferent, unreachable. Tatiana stood near the center of the room, her arms folded tightly around herself. Kathy and Sean were gone again. Taken to another part of the building. Safe, Lucien had said. Protected. But the word protected no longer felt comforting coming from him. It felt like ownership. Tatiana swallowed. “This doesn’t feel like protection,” she said quietly. Lucien didn’t turn. “It is.” “That’s not an answer,” she pressed. A pause. Then he finally spoke. “Feelings are not always accurate indicators of reality.” Tatiana let out a dry laugh. “You sound like a machine.” Lucien turned slightly at that. “For someone like you,” he said calmly, “machines are safer than men.” That sentence lingered. Tatiana’s jaw tightened. “I don’t know what that means.” Lucien studied her for a moment, then looked away again. “It means you’ve survived long enough to understand the difference.” The room fell into silence again. But it wasn’t the same silence from her apartment. This one had weight behind it. Structure. Control. Tatiana walked slowly toward the desk where the contract had been. Empty now. Gone. Like it had never existed. “What happens now?” she asked. Lucien didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he pressed a button on his desk. A soft light flickered across the wall. A screen appeared. Tatiana frowned. On it—security footage. Her apartment building. Her old street. The café. Every place she moved through like a ghost was now mapped, recorded, monitored. Her breath tightened. “You’ve been watching me longer than today,” she said slowly. Lucien didn’t deny it. Tatiana turned sharply. “For how long?” “Long enough,” he said. “That’s not an answer either.” Lucien finally met her gaze. “And yet it is the only one you need.” Tatiana stepped closer to the desk. Her voice lowered. “You said you owe me.” Lucien’s expression shifted—barely. A flicker. Not emotion. Something more contained than that. “I did.” “What do you owe me?” she asked. Silence stretched. For the first time, Lucien didn’t respond immediately. That alone made Tatiana more alert. She watched him carefully. Something about this question mattered more than the others. Finally, he spoke. “It’s not relevant.” Tatiana shook her head. “No,” she said firmly. “If my entire life is now tied to yours, it becomes relevant.” Lucien’s jaw tightened slightly. “That part of your life is not something you want to revisit.” Tatiana stepped forward. “You don’t get to decide what I want anymore.” A beat. Then Lucien said quietly— “I already did.” The words hit differently this time. Not as control. But as certainty. Before Tatiana could respond, the door opened behind them. A presence entered the room like it belonged there more than she did. Tatiana turned sharply. Oscar. Lucien’s stepbrother. He looked entirely out of place and completely comfortable at the same time. Dark suit slightly unbuttoned, relaxed posture, faint smile like he was walking into a conversation already in progress. “Well,” Oscar said lightly. “This is faster than I expected.” Tatiana stiffened instantly. Lucien didn’t turn around fully. “You weren’t invited,” he said coldly. Oscar shrugged. “I never am.” His eyes shifted to Tatiana. And stayed there. Longer than comfortable. Tatiana felt it immediately. Not admiration. Not curiosity. Recognition. Like he already knew her role in something she hadn’t agreed to be part of. “So this is her,” Oscar said softly. Tatiana’s voice sharpened. “What do you want?” Oscar smiled slightly. “That depends on what he told you.” Lucien’s tone dropped. “Leave.” Oscar ignored him. Instead, he stepped closer to Tatiana. Not invading her space fully. Just enough to be unsettling. “You should be careful,” he said quietly. Tatiana frowned. “Careful of what?” Oscar glanced briefly at Lucien. Then back at her. “Contracts like this always come with missing pages.” Silence. Tatiana’s stomach tightened slightly. Lucien finally turned fully now. His expression colder than before. “That’s enough.” Oscar raised his hands slightly in mock surrender. “Relax,” he said. “I’m just saying she deserves to know what she signed.” Tatiana turned sharply. “What does that mean?” Lucien stepped between them subtly. “You don’t need to listen to him.” Oscar chuckled under his breath. “That’s exactly what I mean.” Tatiana’s pulse quickened. She looked between them. There was history here. Not casual. Not light. Something buried. Something unstable. Oscar’s gaze returned to her again. “And for the record,” he said softly, “your stepmother is going to notice you’re gone.” Tatiana stiffened. Lucien’s expression didn’t change. But his hand curled slightly at his side. Oscar noticed. Smiled wider. “Oh,” he added casually. “She already is.” Tatiana felt cold creep up her spine. “What do you mean?” Oscar tilted his head. “She’s been asking questions. About the children. About you.” Tatiana’s voice lowered. “You’re watching her?” Oscar shrugged. “Everyone is watching everyone. That’s how your new world works now.” Tatiana turned sharply to Lucien. “You said I was safe here.” Lucien’s gaze held hers. “You are.” Oscar laughed softly. “That’s optimistic.” Lucien’s voice dropped. “Get out.” Oscar stepped back slightly, but his eyes stayed on Tatiana. “Careful,” he said again. “Not all protection is what it seems.” Then he left. The door closed behind him with a soft click. Silence returned. But it was heavier now. Tatiana turned fully to Lucien. “Why is he here?” Lucien didn’t answer immediately. That was new. Tatiana noticed it. Finally, he said— “He likes to interfere where he shouldn’t.” “That’s not an answer,” she repeated. Lucien walked back toward the window. “It’s the only explanation you need.” Tatiana’s frustration rose. “You keep saying that.” Lucien didn’t respond. Tatiana stepped forward. “I signed a contract,” she said firmly. “I deserve full transparency.” Lucien’s voice lowered slightly. “You signed because you wanted safety for your siblings.” “That doesn’t mean I lose the right to understand what I’m involved in.” A pause. Then Lucien turned slightly. “Understanding comes with consequences.” Tatiana narrowed her eyes. “Everything you say sounds like a warning.” “It is.” Silence stretched between them again. Then Tatiana spoke more quietly. “Do you know my mother?” The question changed the air instantly. Lucien didn’t move. Didn’t speak. But something in his posture shifted. Subtle. Contained. Dangerous. Tatiana noticed immediately. “You do,” she said slowly. Lucien’s voice came out lower. “This conversation is over.” Tatiana stepped closer. “No, it’s not.” Lucien finally looked at her fully. And for the first time— Something unreadable flickered in his eyes. Not control. Not confidence. Something heavier. Tatiana felt it in her chest. Like pressure before a storm. “You shouldn’t ask about that,” he said quietly. Tatiana’s voice softened slightly. “Why?” A long silence. Then Lucien said— “Because some truths don’t protect people.” Tatiana held his gaze. “And some lies destroy them anyway.” For a brief second— Neither of them spoke. Then Lucien turned away again. “Your siblings are safe,” he said instead. Tatiana frowned. “That wasn’t what I asked.” “It’s what matters.” Tatiana exhaled sharply. She looked around the massive office. The glass. The silence. The control. And suddenly realized something uncomfortable. She didn’t know if she had been saved. Or positioned. Her voice lowered. “This isn’t just a marriage contract, is it?” Lucien didn’t answer. And that silence— Was the answer. Tatiana’s chest tightened. Because somewhere deep inside her— She understood. This contract was not the beginning. It was a continuation of something already in motion. And she had just stepped into the middle of it. Lucien finally spoke again, voice calm but firm. “You should rest.” Tatiana shook her head slightly. “I don’t feel safe.” A pause. Then Lucien said something quieter. “You are safer than you’ve ever been.” Tatiana looked at him. And didn’t believe him. Not fully. Not yet. Outside the glass walls, the city continued to move like nothing had changed. But inside that office— Everything already had. And somewhere far away, a phone rang. And a woman answered. Miranda Hayes. She had noticed.Tatiana did not feel like a wife. Not even close. She felt like someone who had just stepped into a room she could no longer exit the same way she entered. The contract still sat heavy in her mind, even though it had already been signed and taken away. Ink on paper had never felt so permanent, so suffocating, so… final. Lucien Leng stood by the window again, as if he preferred distance over closeness even after getting what he wanted. The city behind him glowed like a living thing—endless, indifferent, unreachable. Tatiana stood near the center of the room, her arms folded tightly around herself. Kathy and Sean were gone again. Taken to another part of the building. Safe, Lucien had said. Protected. But the word protected no longer felt comforting coming from him. It felt like ownership. Tatiana swallowed. “This doesn’t feel like protection,” she said quietly. Lucien didn’t turn. “It is.” “That’s not an answer,” she pressed. A pause. Then he finally
The silence in Lucien Leng’s office was not empty. It was controlled. Even the air felt structured, like everything inside the room had been arranged to obey him. Tatiana stood near the center, her pulse still unstable from the elevator ride. The city stretched behind him through floor-to-ceiling glass—endless lights, endless distance—but none of it felt as overwhelming as the man standing in front of her. Lucien had turned fully now. He studied her the way one might study something that had already been accounted for in a calculation. Not curiosity. Certainty. “You’re late,” he repeated calmly. Tatiana blinked once. “…I don’t even know who you are,” she said slowly. “So I don’t understand how I could be late to anything involving you.” Lucien didn’t respond immediately. Instead, he walked toward his desk with steady steps, picked up a thin file, and placed it in front of her. Not gently. Not aggressively. Just… deliberately. Like it had already been de
Tatiana didn’t sleep that night. She sat in the same chair beside the bed, her body angled toward the two sleeping children like a shield that refused to lower itself even for a second. Kathy slept curled into herself, still gripping the edge of Tatiana’s shirt as if afraid letting go would erase everything that had just happened. Sean lay on his side, but even in sleep his jaw remained tight, as though his body refused to believe it was safe enough to relax. Tatiana watched them both until the room blurred. Every small sound made her flinch. A pipe creaking. A car passing outside. The distant hum of the city refusing to pause for her life. Her mind kept replaying Kathy’s voice. If I cry again… she’ll sell me properly this time. Tatiana pressed her palm over her mouth. No. That wasn’t happening again. Not after everything. When morning came, it didn’t feel like relief. It felt like exposure. Like the world had more time to find them now. Tatiana moved
Tatiana Rivera had long since stopped believing silence was harmless. Silence was never empty for her. It was heavy—almost physical—pressing against her chest the moment she stepped into her apartment. It clung to her skin after long shifts at the café, followed her home through dim streets, and waited patiently behind every locked door like something alive. Most people thought silence meant peace. Tatiana knew better. Peace didn’t feel like this. She closed the door behind her, the small bell above it ringing softly. The sound faded too quickly, swallowed by the cramped apartment above Mrs. Delgado’s bakery. Familiar. Predictable. Lonely. Tatiana sighed and leaned her back against the door, letting the weight of the day finally drop from her shoulders. Her apron was still tied around her waist, faint coffee stains marking hours she could never get back. Her feet ached. Her arms burned. Her head throbbed faintly from exhaustion. Another day survived. That was w







