LOGIN“Sign it.” The divorce papers slid across the table, along with the pieces of my heart. I married Shawn Black against my family’s wishes believing his love could survive anything. I was wrong. When his ex came back, I became invisible. And the man I gave everything to walked away without looking back. One druken night, lost and heartbroken, I met him Slade Knight, the reclusive billionaire everyone feared. Cold. Mysterious. Untouchable. He offered me a deal I couldn’t refuse. A marriage built on lies, meant to destroy the man who broke me. But fate had other plans. Because before I ever said “I do,” I was already carrying his child. Now, trapped between revenge and forbidden desire, I’m learning that the most dangerous thing about Slade Knight isn’t his power… It’s the way he makes me wish the lie was real
View MoreThe rain hadn’t stopped since morning. It drummed softly against the tall windows of our penthouse, a sound I used to find soothing before but now it only made the silence heavier.
Shawn had left early, as he always did. No goodbye kiss. No “see you tonight.” Just the faint scent of his cologne lingering in the hallway and the echo of the front door closing behind him. For three years, that silence had grown like a shadow between us. I used to believe that love could heal everything that what we had was strong enough to outlast the world’s disapproval. My family warned me that he was too cold, too calculating. But I saw what they didn’t. I saw the man who stayed up with me when I couldn’t sleep, who remembered every small thing that made me smile, who held my hand like it was something sacred. That man hasn’t been home for months. I stared at my reflection in the kitchen window,my loose hair, hollow eyes , robe still wrapped around me though it was almost noon. There was a time when I looked forward to his texts, his calls. Now, my phone stayed on the counter all day, silent and mocking me with its emptiness. When it finally vibrated, my heart betrayed me and leapt. Shawn: “Be home by 6. We need to talk.” No heart emoji. No hint of affection. Just six words that carried the weight of something final. By five-thirty, the rain had turned into a storm. The city outside looked like a watercolor painting blurred by tears. I sat on the couch, my hands trembling against the mug of untouched tea, waiting for a man I no longer recognized. When I heard the door open, I didn’t move. His footsteps were firm, deliberate. He didn’t even look at me when he walked in, just set his briefcase down and removed his coat as if this were another ordinary evening. “Shawn,” I said quietly. “You said we needed to talk.” He turned, and for a fleeting second, I saw the man I married, tall, confident, eyes dark with purpose. But the warmth was gone. “Yeah,” he said, pulling something from his briefcase. “We do.” He placed the envelope on the table between us. I didn’t need to open it to know. I could feel the ending before I saw it. “Divorce papers,” I whispered. He nodded. “It’s for the best, Ariana.” “For the best?” My voice cracked. “For who, Shawn? For you? Or for her?” That was when I the hesitation and flicker of guilt in his eyes. It was all the confirmation I needed. “She’s back,” I said softly. “Isn’t she?” He didn’t answer. He didn’t need to. The silence said everything. My breath hitched. “You told me you were over her. That she meant nothing.” He sighed, rubbing his temple. “People change, Ariana. Feelings change. I didn’t plan for this” “No,” I cut in, my voice trembling but sharp. “You didn’t plan it, you just let it happen. The woman who left you, the one who broke you but one smile from her and you’re ready to destroy everything we built.” His jaw tightened. “Don’t make this dramatic. You knew from the start what I’d been through.” “I also knew what love looked like,” I whispered. “And for a while, I thought you did too.” For a moment, he looked almost human again. His hand twitched, as if he wanted to reach for me but he didn’t. He just slid the papers across the table, his eyes cold and final. “Sign it.” Two words. That was all it took to shatter three years of devotion. After he left, the silence returned, heavier and colder. The apartment that once felt like home now felt like a museum. Every photo on the wall, every memory replaying in my mind, turned into proof of how blind I’d been. I sank onto the floor, pulling my knees to my chest, the sob I’d been holding breaking free. I didn’t know how long I stayed there maybe minutes, maybe hours until my phone buzzed again. Lila: Come to Eden Lounge tonight. You need a drink. Or ten. I hesitated. Going out was the last thing I wanted, but the thought of sitting here surrounded by ghosts was worse. Maybe a drink could numb the ache. Maybe pretending for a few hours would hurt less than reality. The club was alive with pulsing lights and laughter and the kind of chaos that made it easy to forget yourself. Lila hugged me tight, her red lipstick and sparkling dress a stark contrast to my pale, sleepless face. “You look like death, babe,” she said bluntly. “I feel worse,” I muttered, taking the glass she handed me. “To new beginnings,” she said, raising hers. “To endings,” I corrected softly, clinking mine against hers. One drink turned into three. Three became six. And somewhere between the music and the haze, I stopped feeling and stopped remembering. That’s when I saw him. Across the bar, in the dim light, a man stood watching me. Tall. Dark suit. Sharp eyes that didn’t belong in a place like this. There was something magnetic about him, not the kind of beauty that begged for attention, but the kind that commanded it. Our gazes locked. For a moment, everything around me blurred. I should have looked away, but I didn’t. Something about the way he looked at me like he could see straight through the wreckage inside me made it impossible. He walked toward me, slow and confident, the crowd parting unconsciously as he moved. “Rough night?” His voice was deep, smooth, dangerous. I managed a bitter laugh. “You could say that.” He studied me for a long moment. “Then maybe you should let someone else make it better.” Normally, I would’ve walked away. But that night, I was tired of hurting. Tired of being the woman who stayed and suffered. So I didn’t. I let him take my hand. I let him lead me away from the noise and the heartbreak. And I let one reckless decision change everything.Ariana’s POVBy Next Morning,the alarm chimed softly beside me, but my body was already half-awake, drifting out of sleep with the uneasy awareness that today wasn’t an ordinary workday.I need to visit the Hospital.The word echoed in my head as I lay still for a moment, staring at the pale ceiling, one hand instinctively finding my stomach beneath the sheets.For my Antenatal.For a second, fear fluttered in my chest as every visit carried a strange mixture of reassurance and vulnerability and a proof that something miraculous was happening inside me… and a reminder of how much could still go wrong.I sat up slowly and careful not to wake Slade. He slept on his side, one arm flung across the pillow like he owned the entire mattress in his dreams. For a man who ruled boardrooms and corporations, he looked absurdly human when he slept.I smiled softly.Then reality tugged me back.I slipped out of bed, showered quickly, and dressed in one of my new blazers, structured enough to make m
Ariana’s POVBy the time the car pulled into the mansion driveway, my body felt like it had been wrung out and hung to dry.The day clung to me starting from every awkward introduction, every sideways glance, every humiliating second of that apology replaying in my head like a scratched record. Still, beneath the exhaustion, something steadier lived in my chest.I survived.That thought followed me inside as I kicked off my heels and sighed as my toes curl gratefully against the cool marble floor. The house was quieter than usual.A staff member approached immediately. “Welcome back, ma’am. Should we have dinner prepared?”I hesitated.The image came to me suddenly of my mother back when life was simpler, standing in the kitchen humming softly, finding comfort in stirring a pot even when the world outside felt cruel.I sighed softly missing everyone, stupid me who married a man against their wish and now look where that landed me.“I’ll handle dinner tonight,” I said.The staff member
Shawn’s POVThe silence in the penthouse wasn’t peaceful.It was always accusatory.Isabella stood by the window, phone in her hand, jaw tight, eyes sharp with the kind of certainty that didn’t ask questions but only delivered verdicts.“You’re still watching her,” she said flatly.I frowned. “Watching who?”“Ariana,” she snapped, turning around. “Don’t insult my intelligence, Shawn. I saw it.”Saw what? I opened my mouth to deny it, then stopped when she shoved her phone toward me. My social media feed glared back with Ariana’s profile hovering at the top of recent searches.My chest tightened. “That doesn’t mean what you think it means.”“Oh?” Isabella laughed humorlessly. “Because it looks exactly like what I think it means.”“You’re overreacting ” I said with irritation creeping in. “Why would I be stalking a woman who cheated on me?”Her eyes flashed. “So you admit you were on her page.”“I wasn’t stalking,” I shot back. “Her name came up. People talk. It’s impossible not to hear
Emilia’s POV Saturday morning found me at the breakfast table with a cup of tea and a notepad, scribbling an embarrassingly chaotic list that read blazers, trousers, shoes that don’t scream “wedding guest,” only confidence. I was halfway through crossing out confidence as if it could be bought when Slade walked in.He glanced at the notepad. Then at me.You’re planning a takeover?”“I’m planning survival,” I replied. “Apparently, junior designers are expected to look like they know what they’re doing.”He took the seat across from me, calm as ever. “You’ll be fine.”“I have exactly three dresses that qualify as ‘professional,’” I said. “And two of them are aggressively optimistic.”His brow lifted. “Optimistic?”“ Yeah bright,floral and possibly delusional.”“Hmm get dressed.”I narrowed my eyes. “That sounded ominous.”“Shopping,” he said simply. “Corporate wear. Today.”I laughed. “You realize that sentence is terrifying.”“You’ll thank me later.”By noon, I was standing in a bou












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