The next morning, Ava stood in front of the mirror, holding a coffee she forgot she made. Her mind wasn’t on the reflection staring back at her. It was still on Dominic.
She hadn’t intended to let him spend time with Liam. Not yet. But seeing them together at the ice cream shop had pulled something loose inside her. A thread of hope she wasn’t ready to feel. He was charming. Gentle. Even awkward, in a way that surprised her. Dominic had always been confident, composed, commanding. But around Liam, he was unsure. Hesitant. Human. And it scared her. Because it made him seem real again. Not just the man who left… but the man who could still mean something. That afternoon, Ava got a call from the school. Her heart stuttered. She answered immediately. “Miss Jensen?” the administrator said. “Liam’s fine. But there was a situation during pick-up. A man came to collect him. Liam said he knew him, but you’re not listed as having any approved guardians.” Ava’s blood ran cold. “What did he look like?” “Tall, dark hair, tailored coat, very polite. Said his name was Dominic Grayson.” She clenched her jaw. “Don’t let anyone near my son unless I give you permission. Ever.” “Of course. We followed protocol. Liam stayed with us until you arrived.” She thanked them, barely. She found Dominic waiting outside the school gates. “How dare you,” she hissed, pulling him away from other parents' eyes. “You went behind my back?” “I wasn’t trying to take him,” Dominic said calmly. “He told me he forgot his math homework. I offered to walk him home.” “He’s six,” Ava snapped. “You can’t just show up and play dad like it’s a game.” “I’m not playing, Ava.” She crossed her arms tightly, fighting back the surge of panic. “You’re not on any emergency contact list. You’re not even supposed to know which school he attends!” Dominic sighed. “I did some digging. And I didn’t want to pressure you. I just… I wanted more time with him.” She stared at him for a long moment. “You can’t keep making decisions without me.” “I know,” he said, softer. “I’m trying to figure out how to do this right.” Ava exhaled slowly. “You want to see him? Fine. Then prove to me you’re serious.” He raised an eyebrow. “How?” “Pick him up tomorrow—with my permission. Bring him to the bookstore after school. Spend time with him while I’m working. I’ll be close. We’ll see how you do.” Dominic blinked, surprised. “Really?” “This isn’t a game, Dominic. He’s not a business deal you win. He’s a person. A little boy with feelings and needs and routines. You screw this up, and I’m done. Understand?” He nodded. “Understood.” She turned to leave, then glanced back. “You don’t get points for showing up. You get points for staying.” The next day, Ava watched from the window of the bookstore as Dominic walked up the sidewalk, holding Liam’s hand and a juice box. Liam was grinning. That alone made her stomach twist. She hadn’t seen him that happy after school in a while. They sat at the kids' reading nook. Dominic helped him pick out a book, knelt beside him, and—though clumsily—read aloud. His voice stumbled on the silly character names, but Liam didn’t care. He laughed, leaned into Dominic’s shoulder, and offered to read the next page himself. Ava pretended to shelve books while keeping an eye on them. It was surreal. And unfair. Dominic had missed birthdays, tantrums, nightmares, doctor’s visits. He didn’t earn that smile. But Liam didn’t know any of that. To him, Dominic was just a nice man who listened and laughed and made him feel important. That evening, after the store closed, Ava found them sitting on the floor with three open books and a half-eaten muffin between them. “Looks like you two had fun,” she said. Liam nodded. “He voices the characters like a cartoon!” Dominic smiled shyly. “It’s a talent I didn’t know I had.” Ava looked at her son. “Why don’t you go wash your hands and get your coat?” When Liam was out of earshot, Ava turned to Dominic. “You did better than I expected.” “Was that a compliment?” “A cautious observation,” she replied. He stood, brushing muffin crumbs from his shirt. “Thank you for trusting me with him.” “I didn’t,” she said honestly. “I trusted Liam to tell me if anything felt wrong. But… he likes you.” Dominic’s face softened. “I like him too. A lot.” She nodded, the silence between them charged. “I need to know something,” he said suddenly. “Did you ever plan to tell me?” Ava flinched. “I wanted to. So many times. But when I found out I was pregnant, you were gone. You were making headlines, surrounded by scandals, lawsuits. I convinced myself you didn’t want more weight.” “I would’ve dropped everything.” “Would you?” she whispered. “Or would you have done what you always do—throw money at the problem and move on?” Dominic stepped closer. “I deserved that. Maybe more. But I’m not the same man you knew five years ago.” “I’m not the same woman,” she replied. He looked at her then, really looked—like he was trying to find the old Ava beneath the armor she now wore. Maybe she was still in there. Maybe not. That night, as she tucked Liam into bed, he looked up at her with wide eyes. “Mommy, is Dominic my daddy?” The question hit her like a freight train. She blinked. “Why would you ask that?” “Because he talks like me. And his eyes look like mine. And he listens like Grandpa used to.” Ava sat on the edge of the bed, brushing back his curls. “Do you want him to be?” Liam shrugged. “I don’t know. But I like him.” She kissed his forehead. “Get some sleep, baby.” But she didn’t sleep that night. Because she knew the day was coming when she’d have to tell Liam the truth. And when she did… everything would change.The fire crackled quietly in the hearth of the safehouse, casting flickers of orange across the wooden walls. Dominic had secured every door, reset the perimeter code, and activated a low-frequency jammer. They were safe—for now.Ava stood near the mantle, holding the old photograph Dominic had retrieved from Ezra’s digital trace. It was recovered after they hacked into a temporary backup server Ezra had unknowingly pinged when accessing the brownstone's network.The image was sharp.Dominic. Ava. And… her.Ava's eyes locked on the face she hadn’t seen in nearly five years.A woman with auburn hair, a sharp jawline, and cool gray eyes.Her name was Isla Raye.Ava swallowed hard, her chest tightening. “It can’t be her.”Dominic glanced up from the table where he and Lila were analyzing new intel. “You recognize her?”“I knew her,” Ava said, sitting slowly. “We were roommates. Back in LA. Before I met you.”Dominic's brows pulled together. “Roommates?”“She was more than that,” Ava said
It started with a flicker.One moment, the hallway lights in the Brooklyn brownstone were glowing steadily. The next, they dimmed—then surged—before cutting out completely.Ava froze at the top of the stairs, Liam’s tiny hand wrapped tightly around hers. “Mommy?” he whispered.Dominic looked up from his phone on the living room couch, already alert. “Stay there.”The emergency backup kicked in seconds later—low, battery-powered lamps along the baseboards glowed with a soft, pulsing blue.But it wasn’t enough to hide the sinking feeling in Ava’s gut.Something was wrong.Dominic stepped quickly toward the control panel by the front door and keyed in his override code. It beeped. Nothing changed.“System override failed,” the robotic voice chirped.“Someone’s inside the network,” Dominic muttered. “They’ve taken control.”Ava’s mouth went dry. “Ezra?”“It’s the only explanation.”He turned to her, eyes fierce. “Take Liam to the panic room. Don’t wait for me.”“No. We’re not splitting up
Ava stared at the burner phone in her hand, scrolling through old messages that had once made her skin crawl. Years ago, she hadn’t had the courage—or the resources—to dig into them. But now she had Dominic. She had backup. And she had something to fight for.Dominic sat beside her at the dining table, laptop open, his fingers flying across the keyboard as he cross-referenced phone numbers, email domains, and digital breadcrumbs. Lila had sent in a list of known associates from Dominic’s past, Maddox’s underworld contacts, and even a few rogue employees with a grudge.Ava’s phone buzzed suddenly in her palm.She looked down.Unknown Number.A new message appeared.“You’re still so easy to find, Ava.”Her stomach turned to ice.Dominic grabbed the phone, scanning it. “Same encryption signature as the last threat. It’s him—or someone working with him.”“How did they get my number again? This isn’t even my current phone,” she whispered.“They were tracking it before. Lying dormant in the
Ava sat alone in the upstairs bedroom of the Brooklyn brownstone, the city’s muffled hum far in the distance. The walls were quiet, too quiet. Liam was napping, and Dominic was downstairs in another hush-hush phone call with Lila.She pressed a hand to her belly, still flat, still waiting for that first flutter, the first proof that life was really forming inside her.But right now, all she could feel was the weight in her chest.Someone was watching them.Dominic had confirmed it. The photos. The messages. The fact they’d moved in the middle of the night like fugitives. Everything had come rushing back—memories she’d locked away deep inside.She closed her eyes.Flashbacks of her past clawed their way to the surface.A dark room. Harsh words. The fear of being alone and pregnant the first time. When she was still just nineteen, scared and unsure of everything except that she would keep the baby, even if the father wouldn’t stay.Even now, years later, there were moments she still fel
The photo wouldn’t leave Dominic’s mind.Even as the laughter of Ava and Liam echoed through the apartment, even as the nursery walls were painted soft cream and lined with plush toys, the grainy image haunted him.Someone had been close.Close enough to capture them mid-laugh, hand in hand, right outside their home.And they weren’t just watching—they wanted him to know it.“I need answers,” Dominic muttered as he paced his office, fingers curling around the armrest of his leather chair. “Whoever this is… they’re playing a game.”Lila stood across from him, arms folded, sharp as ever in her black turtleneck and slacks. “I've enhanced the building security. Cameras, motion sensors, plainclothes guards in the lobby. No one’s getting in or out without us knowing.”“It’s not enough,” Dominic said. “If they were bold enough to photograph us that close, they’ve already breached our space.”Lila hesitated. “I ran the photo through forensic analysis. It came from an older model camera. No me
Three months had passed since their rooftop wedding, but Ava still found herself waking up each morning and smiling at the sight of Dominic sleeping beside her.He looked so different now—still powerful, still the CEO, still the man who could command a room with a single glance. But there was a softness in him these days, one she knew was reserved only for her and Liam.And now… maybe someone else, too.She pressed a hand to her lower abdomen, a secret smile playing on her lips. The test she’d taken that morning sat tucked in her nightstand drawer. Positive. She hadn’t even told Dominic yet.She wanted to be sure.She wanted to tell him in the perfect way.Downstairs, Liam was busy lining up toy trucks across the kitchen floor while Dominic flipped pancakes in an apron that said “#1 Dad (and Pancake King).”“You’re burning them,” Ava teased as she stepped in.Dominic turned around, spatula in hand. “That’s impossible. I have a system. A rhythm. A—”Smoke rose from the skillet.Ava rai