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“Revan… I’m here.”
Aruna’s soft voice was almost drowned out by the sound of rain that had just stopped. Her hand clutched a plastic bag filled with medicine, her fingers pale from the cold. In the other hand, she held a small box containing the birthday cake she had spent all night making—simple, but filled with love for Revan, the man she loved more than anything. She stood for a long time in front of Revan’s iron gate. The house that once echoed with laughter and sweet promises now looked dazzling, crowded, and foreign. “He said he was sick…” Aruna murmured softly. “Then why… do I hear music?” Gentle piano notes and the laughter of people drifted from inside. With hesitant steps, she opened the gate and walked toward the terrace. Chandeliers glittered above her; guests in elegant clothes held glasses of champagne. And there, in the center of the room—under the brightest light— Revan was kneeling, holding a ring. “Celine…” Revan’s voice was clear, steady, full of certainty. “Will you marry me?” Laughter, cheers, and applause erupted all at once. Meanwhile, Aruna’s world stopped spinning. The cake box in her hands trembled. The plastic bag slipped from her fingers unnoticed. Her eyes stared blankly. Her breath hitched. No… this isn’t real. Revan wouldn’t… “Revan…” she whispered, barely audible. Revan, who had just slipped the ring onto Celine’s finger, turned. The smile that had filled his face seconds ago froze in place. “Aruna?” The crowd began to notice the soaked girl standing at the doorway—her clothes dull, her shoes dirty, her face tired but her eyes still carrying the remnants of love. Aruna stepped forward, trying to smile. “I heard you were sick… I bought you some medicine, Revan.” Her hands trembled as she lifted the plastic bag. “And this… your birthday cake. I made it all night… I wanted—” “Aruna, stop!” Revan’s tone cracked like a whip. Every eye turned to her; whispers rippled through the crowd, and Celine’s mocking smile only deepened. “I just wanted—” “I said stop!” Revan snapped. He strode toward her, snatched the plastic bag from her hands, and tossed it into the trash can near the sofa. The bag hit the floor with a dull thud, pills scattering across the marble. “Revan!” Aruna gasped, her voice trembling. “Why did you—” “You think I’d take cheap medicine from a street pharmacy?” Revan said coldly. “Please, Aruna. Look around you. Look where I am now.” He glanced at her from head to toe, his eyes filled with disdain. “Look at yourself… coming to a party like this in shabby clothes and dirty shoes.” Aruna swallowed hard, lowering her head. Her hand, still holding the cake box, trembled even more. “But… I just wanted to celebrate your birthday. I thought—you’d be happy.” Revan looked at the box and let out a soft laugh. “Happy? With a cheap little cake like that?” Before Aruna could speak, he grabbed the box and hurled it to the floor. The small handmade cake splattered across the white marble, cream smeared everywhere. Soft laughter rippled through the guests. Celine rested her head on Revan’s shoulder, her voice dripping with mockery. “Honey, who is she?” Revan smirked coldly. “She’s the past. Someone who doesn’t know her place.” Then he met Aruna’s eyes directly. “Look closely, Aruna. This is Celine. My fiancée. The woman who will be my wife.” Aruna’s world collapsed again. Her heart pounded painfully; her vision blurred with tears. “Revan…” her voice cracked, barely a whisper. “You promised me. You said we’d get married once you got better. You said I was the only one you—” “Enough!” Revan cut her off sharply. “That was before. I don’t need a poor, pathetic woman like you. I’m tired of your little sacrifices you always flaunt as if they meant something.” Those words hit harder than any slap. Aruna clutched her chest, bowing her head in silence. Her tears fell, landing among the crumbs of the ruined cake. Celine stepped forward, her eyes gleaming with victory. “You should know your place, Aruna. Not all love is worth fighting for.” Laughter filled the room again. Aruna looked around—at every face that once smiled kindly at her, now mocking. With trembling hands, she knelt down and picked up the broken pieces of cake. “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I didn’t mean to ruin your party.” Then she slowly stood up, tears streaming down her cheeks. “But I want you to know, Revan… I truly loved you. From the beginning… until this very moment.” Revan turned his face away. “Enough. Leave before I lose my temper.” Aruna took a deep breath. A faint smile curved her lips—a smile filled with pain, yet laced with quiet strength. “Alright,” she said softly. “You won’t see me again. But I promise you, Revan… someday, you’ll regret throwing me away.” She turned around and walked out of the grand house. The laughter behind her grew distant, fading into the rain. The night sky wept with her, each drop hiding the tears she could no longer hold back. Under the dark, endless sky, Aruna whispered to herself— > “The love I gave you with all my heart… you repaid with humiliation. But Revan, one day… you’ll realize that the love you cast aside today will be the one thing you’ll spend your life searching for.”It came in fragments—documents pulled from shadows, whispered confirmations, patterns that only made sense once fear stopped clouding logic. By the time Nadine sat across the long glass table in the secured meeting room, the conclusion was impossible to ignore.This was no longer the work of a single enemy.It was a war.Rafael stood at the screen, sleeves rolled up, dark circles under his eyes betraying nights without sleep. Behind him, a web of names, corporations, and offshore accounts glowed like a digital spider’s nest.“They’re not acting independently,” Rafael said, voice low but steady. “They never were.”Davin leaned back in his chair, arms crossed. “Say it plainly.”Rafael exhaled. “Several of our competitors have merged their operations into one syndicate. Shared resources. Shared intelligence. Shared objectives.”Nadine felt her chest tighten. “You’re saying this is coordinated.”“Yes,” Rafael replied. “And deliberate.”Selena, seated near the end of the table, tapped her
The rain began before dawn.Not the gentle kind that soothed the soul, but heavy, relentless drops that struck the city like accusations. Nadine stood by the window of her apartment, arms wrapped tightly around herself, watching the streets below dissolve into blurred reflections of neon lights and uncertainty.She hadn’t slept.Every time she closed her eyes, she heard Rafael’s voice from the recording again.She doesn’t need to know.She pressed her fingers against her temples, shaking her head.“It’s fake,” she whispered to herself. “It has to be fake.”Yet doubt clung to her like a second skin.Her phone buzzed.A new message.From an unknown number.> You’re closer to the truth than you realize.Trust the evidence, not the man.Her breath hitched.“Enough,” she muttered, blocking the number with shaking hands.But fear didn’t disappear just because she commanded it to.---RafaelAcross the city, Rafael sat alone in his office, the lights off, rain streaking down the tall windows
The night felt unusually quiet.Too quiet.The city lights outside Nadine’s office window flickered like dying embers, stretched across the glass tower as if holding their breath. Everyone else had gone home hours ago, but Nadine remained at her desk, drowning in reports she could hardly focus on.Her mind kept replaying the scene from earlier—Rafael losing control, shouting, shaking, spiraling.It wasn’t anger that haunted her.It was the fear she saw underneath.She rubbed her temples, trying to steady her thoughts, when suddenly—A new email notification appeared.Sender: AnonymousSubject: THE MAN YOU TRUSTHer stomach tightened.She clicked it.A wall of text unfolded, cold and venomous.> You think you know Rafael.But he’s hiding something far worse than you imagine.Ask him where he goes at night.Ask him why he’s been in contact with your enemy.If you don’t… you’ll regret it.Attached was a file.A single audio clip.Nadine hesitated, pulse quickening. Her instincts screame
The conference room was far too bright—white lights glaring down like interrogators, bouncing off the polished table and the anxious faces surrounding it. The entire senior team sat stiffly, their laptops open, screens glowing with numbers that spelled disaster.Nadine sat at the head of the table, fingers clasped tightly together, trying her best to stay composed.But Rafael…Rafael looked like a storm.His jaw was tense, his eyes ringed with exhaustion, and the vein in his neck pulsed like a ticking bomb. It had been days since he’d slept properly. Weeks since he’d felt in control. Months since fear had stopped clawing at him.And now, with the latest sabotage results flashing across the screen, something inside him snapped.“Explain this,” Rafael said, his voice low but trembling with barely contained rage.The financial director cleared his throat. “We, uh… discovered discrepancies in the transaction logs. Someone accessed the system with high-level clearance—”“Who?” Rafael deman
The air in Davin’s apartment felt heavy—too quiet, too tense, too full of things unsaid. Rain tapped on the window like impatient fingers, urging him to make a decision he didn’t want to make.The file on his desk glowed faintly under the dim lamp. Inside it was the truth.A truth Nadine should never see.Davin rubbed his forehead and whispered, “If she sees this… it will destroy her.”A knock interrupted him—three soft, uncertain taps.“Davin?” Selena’s voice drifted in. “You’ve been in there for hours. Did you find something?”He inhaled deeply, then slid the file into a drawer.“No,” he lied smoothly. “Nothing new.”Selena stepped inside, watching him with searching eyes. “You’re lying.”Davin stiffened. “I’m protecting her.”Her expression softened, but the concern in her eyes sharpened.“Protecting her with silence is dangerous, Davin. If you’ve found something bad—”“Bad?” He laughed bitterly. “Selena, this isn’t just bad. This will shatter everything Nadine has rebuilt.”Selena
Rain slithered down the windows of the small conference suite Nadine had rented for emergency meetings. Water streaks blurred the city skyline into a smear of trembling lights—as if even the world outside mirrored the chaos inside her heart.Her company was under attack.Her reputation was collapsing by the hour.And every call her legal team made returned with the same answer:“We need more time.”Time she didn’t have.She rubbed her temples, exhaustion settling into her bones. Rafael had insisted on staying with her, but she had convinced him to handle the legal team instead. She needed time to think. Time to breathe. Time to—A soft knock on the conference door interrupted her thoughts.“Come in,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper.The door opened, revealing a tall man in a charcoal suit. His hair slicked back, his expression unreadable. Behind him stood two silent bodyguards who remained outside as he stepped in.“Nadine Aurelia,” he greeted smoothly, bowing his head slig







