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Aurelia’s POV
Friday will mark seven years of my marriage to Grant Ashford. Seven years of holding a home together with my bare hands. Seven years of reminding myself that love was supposed to feel worth it. I wanted that day to be beautiful, perfect for him and for Oliver, our five-year-old son. I folded the last shirt, smoothing out the faintest crease before hanging it neatly in the closet. My feet ached, but there was no pause, no room for rest. I moved straight to the kitchen, tying my apron tighter. Grant doesn't like frozen meals or anything that hints of convenience. Everything had to be fresh, steaming from the pot, plated with care. My eyes flicked nervously to the clock on the wall as I chopped, stirred, wiped and repeated. Then came the sound of tires crunching against the driveway. I wiped my hands on a towel and hurried to the sitting room. The door swung open and Grant stepped inside with Oliver at his side. My smile lifted automatically, my arms half-open for an embrace I already knew wouldn’t come. He brushed past me. His polished shoes thudded against the floor as he kicked them off carelessly, sending one skidding beneath the couch. Without a word of greeting, he dropped his briefcase onto the couch with a dull thud. “Is dinner ready?” His voice was clipped, already impatient as he tugged his tie loose. “It’ll be ready in a bit,” I promised. “I wonder what you do all day. Hurry.” He said and stalked toward the stairs. I swallowed the sting and turned to Oliver, my little boy. “How was school, love?” I asked with a warm smile. But Oliver mimicked his father instead. His small bag hit the floor with a dull thump. He kicked his shoes off without care and padded away in silence. The smile on my lips faltered. For a moment, I just stood there, staring at the chaos they left in their wake. Then, as always, I bent down, gathered the mess, and returned everything to its proper place. My body moved out of habit. This was my life, seven years of being a perfect housewife in a mansion that gleamed like glass yet felt like a prison. No staff, no help. Grant had insisted no outsiders be allowed in his home. So I scrubbed, I dusted, I polished, I cooked. Every single day. And still, nothing was ever enough. On Friday, Oliver had a short day at school. I asked Grant to bring him home afterward for the lunch I’d been planning in honor of our anniversary. Grant only nodded, distracted as always, before leaving with Oliver for school and then heading to the office. I poured my entire morning into preparing the meal. The kitchen filled with the buttery scent as I worked. I roasted a golden-brown turkey. I whipped the mashed potatoes until they were cloudlike. A bowl of creamy Dungeness crab chowder simmered on the stove. I tossed a fresh sourdough salad with avocados, cherry tomatoes, and a drizzle of balsamic. For a side, I baked artichoke hearts with breadcrumbs and parmesan with soup, and I prepared a plate of delicate garlic noodles. It was a spread meant for celebration, meant to remind my husband of home, family, and love. I had bought balloons the previous day at the supermarket, white and gold, and I tied them above the dining table. Fresh flowers from the florist in town stood in a vase at the center carefully arranged. By the time I finished, the kitchen was a mess, but I made sure to scrub it clean. Everything gleamed. Everything was perfect. At exactly three o’clock, the front door opened. But when Grant and Oliver walked in, they weren’t alone, they came with Selene. “Hello,” she purred. Her lipstick was red, her eyes perfectly lined. She wore a short, scarlet dress that clung to her like a second skin, her cleavage nearly spilling free. I froze, a plate still in my hand. My eyes darted to Grant, desperate for explanation. He gave me an irritated look, as though I were the intruder here. “Oliver invited her over for the lunch you kept emphasizing,” he said flatly, tossing his shoes aside. “Yes, I want her here,” Oliver chimed in quickly, without even looking at me, before disappearing upstairs. The sting in my chest was sharp, but I swallowed it down. As always, I bent to pick up Grant’s discarded shoes and briefcase, taking them where they belonged. After a while we finally sat at the dining table. Grant sat opposite Selene, while I was across Oliver. I quickly served everyone. I sat back just when Grant’s lips curved at Selene in a flirtatious smile. Selene tilted her head like a cat who’d caught the mouse. My son clung to her arm, asking her to feed him. “This food is cold,” Grant said after one bite, his tone heavy with disdain. “I thought you’d be home earlier,” I said softly, because they're supposed to be home before two o’clock. “So I should leave work and rush home because you’re cooking?” He asked, irritated. I pressed my lips together, lowering my gaze to my plate. My heart pounded so loud I barely heard the clink of his fork. He twirled a forkful of noodles, tasted it, and grimaced. “Too much garlic,” he announced. His critique continued, dish after dish, nothing was right, nothing was enough. He condemned my efforts with every bite, while Selene’s smirk lingered at the corner of her lips. I bought him a new tie, navy silk with a subtle pattern, chosen after weeks of saving from the household budget. I slid the box toward him, hoping to cut short his criticisms. He opened it, glanced at it, and scoffed. “It’s my anniversary gift,” I said quietly. “What kind of local tie is this?” he asked. He had brought me nothing. He never did. “Just be useful and warm the soup,” Grant ordered. Tossing the tie aside as if it were trash I took the soup back into the kitchen, and stood there for a moment, staring at the steam curling up from the pot. When it was warm enough, I carried it back out, only to find Grant’s gaze fixed on Selene’s cleavage. The three of them were laughing together. In that moment, I didn’t feel like a wife or a mother. I felt like a servant, an outsider in my own home, watching another woman take my place. Grant’s voice cut through the air. “My wife isn’t like you, Selene. You’ve got a sharp mind for business. She’s just a housewife, cooking is supposed to be her job. And yet, she can’t even get that right.” Selene smiled, trailing her fingers along her chest. “Well, you know me,” she purred. “I’m a baddie.” Grant chuckled. “At least tell me you’re enjoying the meal?” She gave a light shrug. “I can’t complain.” I swallowed hard, forcing myself to steady my breath before walking over to serve the soup. “My teacher said Sunday is visiting day at school,” Oliver piped up suddenly. Then, as if the words were harmless, he added, “But Mom isn’t as pretty as Selene.” I froze. And then, as if twisting the knife deeper, he said, “My classmates will laugh at me if they know my mom is just a housewife. Selene, will you be my mom instead?” The word mom hit me like a slap. My hand trembled, and the bowl slipped from my grip. The soup spilled, splashing onto Selene’s bare thighs. She gasped sharply, but thank heavens, it hadn’t been boiling. Grant rushed to her side, snatching a napkin and pressing it to her skin. “Are you okay?” he asked, his voice tight with concern. Then he turned to me, fury blazing in his eyes. “Why are you so dumb? Can’t you get a single thing right?” “I… I didn’t mean to,” I stammered, my voice barely a whisper. Oliver moved closer, his small hands tugging at Grant’s sleeve. “Daddy, Mommy hurt Aunty Selene! Don’t let her spoil her pretty body!” Grant’s glare deepened. “Apologize to her. Now.” “What?” I breathed, stunned. “If you won’t, then get out!” he shouted, his voice echoing through the dining room. I stumbled backward, my heart pounding, as I watched my husband and son drawn to Selene like moths to a flame, while I stood there, unwanted in my own home. I quietly returned to the kitchen. I pulled off my apron and pressed it against my mouth to muffle the sound of my sobs. When I gave birth to Oliver, I nearly died from the complications. I quit my job to care for him because Grant said that’s what a good mother does. I have lived with the scars of that birth, with the endless doctor visits, the failed treatments, the ache of a womb that could not give Grant the daughter he demanded. I risked my life bringing Oliver into this world, and now he called another woman Mom. His voice echoed in my skull like a blade, cutting me from the inside out. I wasn't even bored by anything else, just my son calling another woman “mom.” I couldn’t take it anymore. Wiping my face with the back of my hand, I slipped out the back door, away from the laughter at the table, and stepped into the cool air of the evening alone.Aurelia’s POVFor a week, I worked like a horse. Nights blurred into mornings, and mornings back into nights, my hands never still, my mind constantly moving. Whenever I worked overnight at the factory, part of me was always glued to the CCTV footage at home, making sure nothing happened to Oliver or Sylvette. My heart wouldn’t let me fully focus on the production line without that tether.Eventually, I delegated the monitoring to Tessa. Even so, I kept checking in, obsessive in my way, because nothing mattered more than the safety of my children.The plan had been to dismiss Sophie after her first week, but she proved herself. She was gentle, patient, and attentive. Oliver adored her. Even Sylvette seemed calmer in her care.I paused, considering the practicality. “Stay another week,” I told her. She’d go home in the mornings when I was gone, returning in the evenings. The arrangement was unusual, but it worked.By the second week, our production had exploded. The storerooms were bu
Aurelia’s POVMonday arrived in a swirl of boxes, luggage, and bittersweet farewells. We packed our things.Mrs. Vivienne stood by the doorway, Sylvette cradled in her arms. Her eyes shimmered with unshed tears as she held the baby, refusing to let go. I couldn’t help but chuckle softly to myself, some bonds are too deep to break, even for a short goodbye.Cassia pulled me into a hug. “I’m going to miss you,” she whispered, her voice trembling just slightly.“I’ll miss you too,” I said, gripping her hands gently. “Please… take care of yourself. Get enough rest, don’t overwork yourself.”She smiled, the kind of small, weary smile that carries both affection and worry. “I will. And you too… I know work will be hectic, but try, okay?”When we finally parted, everyone waved, her father, mother-in-law, her husband, the staff. Each goodbye carried warmth and familiarity I hadn’t realized I’d grown so attached to.On the private jet, I settled beside Oliver, who immediately bounced into a co
Julien’s POVAfter the movie premiere, the noise of cameras and commentary faded quickly, but the silence that followed was louder than any headline. Liora and I didn’t speak for a week.The second week crept in like an uninvited shadow, and I finally forced myself to dial her number.“Hey,” I said.“Hey.” Her voice was steady, but there was a thin edge to it, disappointment she was trying to hide.“Ugh… well, this is awkward,” I muttered, rubbing the bridge of my nose.“Apologizing is awkward?” she asked, a little amused, a little irritated.“No… not really.” I exhaled. “I’m sorry. I acted childish that night.”She didn’t argue. Didn’t make it harder. “It’s okay,” she said. “Just make it up.”“Of course. So what do you want?”“Let’s go on an adventure.”I snorted internally. “Great. Fix the time and day.”The next morning was Monday. The world expected me in the boardroom, but I didn’t show up. Instead, I showed up for her.She wanted an adventure, so an adventure she got.We went s
Aurelia’s POVTwo weeks slipped by like pages torn from a fast-moving calendar.Cassia was doing well, glowing even, as if motherhood had wrapped her in a warm halo. And the twins? They were tiny emperors. Everyone in the mansion was eager to hold them, rock them, breathe in that sweet, new-life scent.One might think Mrs. Vivienne would forget all about Sylvette now that she had grandchildren to fuss over.But no. She doted on Sylvette with the same fierce devotion, carrying her around like a precious heirloom. Sylvette, of course, basked in all the attention, smiling like she knew exactly how adored she was.One evening, after Cassia’s bath, I helped her settle into bed and handed her a steaming bowl of soup. The smell of ginger and herbs drifted through the room, warm and comforting.“Now that you’re in Los Angeles,” Cassia said, her tone light but her eyes sharpened with curiosity, “don’t you feel the little urge to… you know… see Julien?”A quiet sigh escaped me.It was ridiculou
Julien’s POVEven after Liora wrapped up her movie shoot, she still didn’t return to Los Angeles. We spoke often, but every call carried a faint distance, as if she were speaking from behind a curtain of worry. Her mother had been ill, then underwent surgery, and Liora stayed back to help her recover.When she finally returned, I didn’t expect the little spark that ignited in my chest. A quiet thrill, unsettling in its honesty. I’d gotten used to her absence… or so I thought.One evening she invited me for a walk. Her estate was unusually calm, dipped in that twilight hush where shadows stretch like lazy cats. The air smelled faintly of jasmine, the kind that always blooms after a hot day.She greeted me with a smile and a paper bag dangling from her hand.“I brought ice cream,” she announced, handing me one.We found a wide tree, its branches curling above us like a cathedral roof. We sat, unwrapping the ice creams. Mine dripped faster than I ate it. Maybe because the scene felt too
Aurelia’s POVLos Angeles greeted me like an old diary you swear you’ve forgotten, only to open it and feel every memory breathe again. As soon as we stepped off the jet, a sleek black town car awaited us, polished enough to reflect the sky and my nerves.The drive through the familiar streets made my chest tighten. Every corner felt like a whisper of the life I left behind.When we arrived at Cassia’s in-laws’ mansion, the enormous doors hadn’t even finished parting before Mrs. Vivienne swept out like a woman escaping a castle to retrieve her treasures.I braced for a hug. Instead, she sprinted right past me and scooped Sylvette into her arms with the enthusiasm of someone claiming a lottery prize.Cassia burst into laughter behind her, one hand on her pregnant belly. “You’ll get used to it,” she teased.I couldn’t help it. We both folded into each other, hugging tightly. She looked even heavier than she appeared in our video calls, glowing in a way only a woman carrying her own lit







