LOGIN
CHAPTER ONE
The Truth
Annie's POV
My phone buzzed that afternoon, and ice shot down my spine as I stared at the screen.
“Hey love, running late. Bringing someone home… my cousin from Cape Town.”
“Alright baby, safe trip.”
The words felt like ash in my mouth the moment I sent them. Cousin from Cape Town? He'd never mentioned a cousin. Not once in five years. Unease twisted in my stomach like barbed wire.
This was the man I'd built my world around. My constant. My anchor. Five years of shared dreams, quiet sacrifices, laughter that used to echo through these walls. He'd always whispered, “we will grow old together.”
I believed him.
As the CEO of Starlight Event Company, he was untouchable. He hosted and planned weddings for billionaires, presidential ceremonies, and galas dripping with wealth. I'd been there too—lending ideas, loving him fiercely—even while working at rival Pleasure Hills.
Tonight was supposed to be our healing. Our new start after months of distance, missed calls, video chats.
Candles flickered across the dining table, lavender and vanilla swirling with the scent of roasted chicken and fries—his favorites.
I wore my red gown he'd given me on Valentine's Day, hugging my body like silk meant only for him.
Everything was perfect.
Everything screamed love.
Until the doorbell rang.
I smiled as I walked to the door. But the smile froze halfway.
Diaman stood there —tall, sharp-suited, breath taking. But he wasn't alone. A woman clung to his arm like she owned it. Her perfume hit before her words —sweet, poisonous, expensive.
“Annie,” Diaman said smoothly. “This is my cousin, Katy. She's pregnant… she'll be staying with us for a while.”
Us.
The word slammed into me like cold steel. Katy's smile was soft, polite—but dripping with venom.
“I've heard so much about you. It's nice to finally meet the famous Annie.”
Famous? Her tone mocked me. I forced a brittle smile.
“Make yourself comfortable.”
“Guest room,” Diaman instructed, kissing my forehead, then my chin. For a second, I felt safe. Then he turned away.
“I prepared your favorite,” I whispered, gripping his hand. My voice is soft, a plea. “Won't you eat with me?”
“Annie, I'm exhausted. Dinner can wait. Show Katy to her room.”
And just like that, he walked away.
The candles flickered against the silence. The room felt too big for one heart.
Katy's eyes roamed lazily.
“Love the scent here,” she inhaled, savoring it. “Smells like… hope. Or desperation.”
I gripped a chair until my knuckles turned white.
“How long are you staying?”
“Oh… a few days. Maybe longer. Depends on how things go.” She said sweetly, patting her bump.
“Alright. Let me show you to your room.”
“Perfect,” she purred. Humming behind me, already at home.
Later, as night crept in, whispers slithered from her room—low, smug, cutting.
“Of course it worked. Men are easy when they're broken. He was practically begging for more that night….”
“His girlfriend didn't even know I was his secretary.”
Office. Begging. Secretary. The words sliced straight into me. She wanted me to hear.
Fury exploded as I stormed into the room, fire in my throat.
“Diaman! What the hell did you do?”
My voice trembled, hands clenched into fists. My heart pounded like a drum in the quiet room.
“What's with the shouting?” He asked.
“Don't!” My voice cracked. “You lied! Katy—your secretary! You told me she was your cousin!”
He ran a hand through his hair. “Annie please —”
“I heard everything. You begged her in your office while I waited like a fool at home!”
“It wasn't supposed to happen! I was drowning! The company was hanging by a thread—investors were—”
“So you unbuttoned your morals to breathe?” I shot back.
“She came with files! I… we were falling apart. You were pulling away. She was there when you weren't.”
“You stopped coming home! Stopped replying to my texts! Stopped calling! And now you blame me? You let a strange woman comfort you! Now she's pregnant, and you can't erase that.”
“Annie, she's not a stranger. Besides, she gave me what you never did.” He looked away.
I let out a shaky laugh, tears streaming down my cheeks.
“Because I never got pregnant. Is that it?”
“Legacy matters,” he shrugged.
“And loyalty doesn't? All I got were broken promises.”
“I gave you my best.”
“No.” I shook my head. “You gave me your ego, your stress, your guilt.”
He grabbed his phone from the bed. “Look Annie, I told you the truth. Deal with it or leave.”
I wiped my cheeks with the back of my hand.
“Alright. I'll deal with it.”
“Good.”
“By walking out of this joke. You can keep your lies. Your secretary.”
“That's the best thing to do if I were you. I was never going to marry you, Annie. You were just something I used to distract myself over the years. I can't marry a lowlife like you. Go find a man like your standard, because no man like me will ever want to spend his life with you. If they want to… it's just to get in between your legs and dump you.”
For a moment, I looked at him—the man I once loved—and saw nothing but a stranger. Another hot tear burned as I reached for the door and slammed it behind me.”
Katy appeared in the hallway, lips curling smugly.
“You're wasting your tears, Annie. He chose me.”
Jaw clenched, tears drying into fury.
“Then enjoy what's left of him.”
She laughed softly.
“I already am.”
The evening air hit me like a slap—sharp, biting —but nothing compared to Diaman's betrayal. Streetlights flickered along the quiet road as I walked aimlessly, the sound of my heels and box echoing through the silence.
My heart was breaking piece by piece. Every memory of his words, her voice, cut deeper. My mind spun, reality overlapping with nightmare. I wanted to wake up because the man I'd spent years with had just betrayed me.
Only one person could stop me from shattering completely: Matteo, my best friend.
My fingers trembled as I pulled out my phone, scrolling until his name appeared. I exhaled heavily, then tapped. Two rings. His warm teasing voice came through, just like always.
“Heey, baby girl… what'sup?”
My throat caught. Words barely escaped.
“Matty… can… can I come over?”
Instantly, his playfulness vanished.
“Of course, sweetie. You sound like a ghost. Are you okay? Where are you? Should I come get you?”
I swallowed, fighting back the sob.
“No… I'm already coming.”
“Okay. Doors open for you.”
As the call ended, I increased my pace, somehow making it to his house. His doors were open—tiny hope shimmering in the darkness.
And there he was, in ridiculous pineapple-print pajamas with a bonnet perched on his head. Normally I'd laugh. Tonight, I couldn't.
Seeing me, his eyes changed—the casual sparkle gone, replaced with worry.
“Jesus…. Annie.”
I crumpled into his arms. The sob I'd held ripped free. He squeezed me like he could wring out the pain from my bones.
When it died down, I leaned back to meet his worried gaze.
“Matty… can I have a bottle of vodka?”
His eyes widened.
“Vodka? Sweetie, you don't even drink coffee without complaining. Now you want vodka? What's wrong? You're scaring me.”
“Please Matty. I… I just want to stop feeling for now.”
“Fine. Vodka it is. But you promise to tell me what's destroying you.”
I promise.
He studied me, then nodded.
“Alright. Come inside.”
His apartment smelled like home. Throw pillows arranged neatly, tiny cactus on the windowsill standing guard. For a moment, his house felt like a sanctuary. I sank into the couch, twisting my hands in my lap.
He returned from the kitchen with bottles and glasses.
“Before you touch that,” he collapsed beside me. You promised to tell me what's eating you. So talk.”
I stared at the bottles, then him.
“Diaman came home with a lady tonight… his secretary. He lied, told me she was his cousin. She's pregnant…. With him.”
The words tumbled out, heavy with tears. “When I confronted him… he didn't deny it. He said he never meant to marry me… just used me all these years. Bringing her home was the only way he could tell me.”
“That bastard! After five years! He is an asshole! A spoiled brat that should be dealt with! My love… I'm so sorry.”
Then his tone softened, teasing.
“You want me to slash his tires? Break his kneecaps? Even bleach his boxer's?”
“You're ridiculous.”
“Ridiculously devoted to you. What do you need?”
I didn't answer. I slid to the floor, reaching for a bottle. He joined me silently, t
wisting the cap open. The first sip burned, but I kept drinking. One bottle, then two, then three. The room spun. His voice faded into distant hum. The last thing I felt was his hand tucking a blanket around me.
CHAPTER FIVE His Terms Annie's POV Sunlight spilled across the lounge, glinting off the polished marble floor like tiny stars. Guests murmured softly around me—quiet laughter, clinking glasses, the soft scrape of cutlery—but everything felt far away, muffled, like I was underwater.The faint scent of fresh citrus lingered in the air, mixed with polished wood and warm daylight. It should have been calming, but my stomach churned with nerves. My palms were cold, pressed flat against my thighs as I waited.Then he arrived.Grey walked in with the steady confidence of someone who never had to wonder if he belonged. His presence shifted the room. He sat across from me like he owned not just the chair, but the air between us. The calm, controlled aura around him made it feel like he had already rehearsed everything he was about to say—down to the exact moment he would inhale.“We need rules,” he said. His voice was steady, expression unreadable. “If this is going to work, it has to be fl
CHAPTER FOURThe DealAnnie's POV I stirred as the soft morning light streamed softly into my bedroom window. The sunlight brushed against the curtains in warm, lazy streaks, glowing across the bedroom walls like gold dust. The first thing I became aware of, was the soreness in my body, a deep pulsing reminder of last night. A reminder I couldn't escape even if I tried.The second?Grey wasn't here.I looked around my room as if expecting a note, a trace, anything… but there was nothing. My cheeks felt hot, and I could still feel the numb ache of my womanhood humming with traces of his touch, reminding me of how wild he was last night.Annie, you didn't come here for all this, I scolded myself. You came to heal.But it had happened, and there was no undoing it now.Besides… it's not like I'd ever see him again.A knock pulled me out of my thoughts.“Annie, it's me, Matteo.”I opened the door and let him in. He sat beside me crossing his arms in that dramatic, exaggerated way he alway
CHAPTER THREE Temptation Under The Moonlight Annie's POV Two days later–after the blur of airports and shuttles, and a mind too tired to think—the resort unfolded before me like a painting brought to life. It was around 9pm. The sky was dark yet glowing, lit up by shiny stars sprinkled across it and the moon so bright.The beach was wild tonight —loud music, shouting voices, laughter drifting everywhere. A full night party. Bonfires rose up like flames reaching the sky, surrounded by bodies dancing, taking pictures, drinking like they wanted the night to swallow them whole.The DJ blasted afrobeats and summer pop, the speakers shaking with bass so deep that I felt it vibrate in my chest.Matteo was already shaking his head to the beat, his curls bouncing like he had no care in the world. “You need this break, Annie,” he yelled over the music. “Just breathe and forget everything!” he tugged me into the crowd. We danced for a while, but soon enough he got carried away, and drifted in
CHAPTER TWO Wedding Planner Annie's POV I woke up with my head pounding like a drum. Every pulse felt sharper than the last. My eyes fluttered open, taking in the dim morning light. Matteo was gone—God knows where.As I swung my leg off the bed, a sudden jab of pain shot across my head. I froze, letting it pass before stepping forward.My phone lay on the mirror table. Matteo must have kept it there. I didn't remember. My fingers trembled as I picked it up, scrolling through notifications like a starving woman hunting for food. No calls. No texts. No excuses. Just emptiness. Just silence. My heart sank further.From now on, Annie… forget men. Focus on your work. I muttered to myself, dragging my aching body into the bathroom for a shower. Work still awaited. Life didn't pause.I rushed into the office, still adjusting my hair, my smile forced. I pretended last night hadn't shattered me.“Here comes my best girlfriend at Pleasure Hills, Annie! You're late today, why? And why are you
CHAPTER ONE The TruthAnnie's POV My phone buzzed that afternoon, and ice shot down my spine as I stared at the screen.“Hey love, running late. Bringing someone home… my cousin from Cape Town.”“Alright baby, safe trip.”The words felt like ash in my mouth the moment I sent them. Cousin from Cape Town? He'd never mentioned a cousin. Not once in five years. Unease twisted in my stomach like barbed wire.This was the man I'd built my world around. My constant. My anchor. Five years of shared dreams, quiet sacrifices, laughter that used to echo through these walls. He'd always whispered, “we will grow old together.”I believed him.As the CEO of Starlight Event Company, he was untouchable. He hosted and planned weddings for billionaires, presidential ceremonies, and galas dripping with wealth. I'd been there too—lending ideas, loving him fiercely—even while working at rival Pleasure Hills.Tonight was supposed to be our healing. Our new start after months of distance, missed calls, vi







