LOGIN"I don't want to go back to what we were," she said. "I'd burn it down before I let that happen." Her chin lifted slightly. "So whatever this is," she said, "it has to be something we've never been." "From the ground up." The air between us had changed. Nothing had moved to change it. My finge
Edward's POV A flight of stairs. Elena's door was ajar when I reached the landing. I pushed it open and stepped inside. She was at the window. Coat still on. I shrugged mine off and set it on the chair by the door. The click of the latch made her shoulders tighten once before they released. "Y
Thursday. The registry doors opened before I fully reached them, air still adjusting around the gap, carrying paper dust and ink heat and the low sound of decisions being processed without ceremony, none of it pausing for me. My name came almost immediately. Not because I was expected—because the
Alicia's POV Apartment light warmed the room before I crossed the threshold. Elena stood at the counter, spoon tracing slow circles through a pot resting on low heat. Steam rose in thin strands, breaking apart under the ceiling light before it could gather into anything defined. My shoes paused b
Edward's POV I didn’t remember walking into the estate. I remembered the gate. Then nothing clean after that—just fragments of motion stitched together without pause. Headlights fading into the drive. The slow roll of tires over stone. The way the house lights adjusted as if it had already antic
The car didn’t stop at the main entrance. It passed the glass frontage of the building, continued past the visible entry point, and turned into the service approach that only functioned as an entrance once the guard stepped aside. No signage. No announcement. Just controlled access. I didn’t que
Alicia's POV The coffee was at the temperature I liked it. That was the first thing I noticed when I sat down. Small. Specific. The kind of detail your body reaches for when it needs proof that the world is still ordinary. It was. The café was the one I came to when I needed ten minutes that bel
Alicia's POV The elevator doors opened. The executive floor was still. Not empty, just contained. I walked the corridor to my office, pushed the door open, and closed it behind me. Stood at the window. Let the silence do what silence does. My chest had been tight since the moment his voice cut
Alicia's POV Monday morning and the building felt the same. I didn't. The elevator climbed. I watched the numbers rise, phone already in my hand. Two emails from committee chairs. One from compliance. Nothing urgent. Everything moving. The doors opened. Claire glanced up. Coffee waiting on her
Edward's POV Lucy. The thread at that table told me everything I needed to know before I stood up. Rejected. Warned. And precise in the way only someone with history can be precise. The gala. The contract. The pregnancy. Pure knowledge. Hard fact. Unequivocal. The kind that comes from being close







