로그인Sophia's POV
I found out about Zane's discovery the wrong way. I was walking past Damien's office at eight in the morning looking for coffee and the door wasn't fully closed and I heard my mother's name. I stopped. I shouldn't have listened. I know that. But when you hear your dead mother's name spoken in a room you weren't invited into, your feet stop moving on their own. "The brake failure wasn't mechanical," Zane's voice. Flat and certain. "Someone cut the line. Clean cut, not wear. The original accident report buried it." "How deep," Damien said. "Deep enough that it took me six years of digging to find it." A pause. "The report was filed by a Vale affiliated investigator. The same firm Victoria uses for background checks." Silence. "She was nineteen," Damien said quietly. "Yes." "They killed her parents and then sent Marcus to find her." "Yes." I put my hand flat against the wall. The hallway was very quiet. The estate hummed around me the way expensive buildings do, climate controlled and indifferent, and I stood there with my palm against the wall and felt the floor shift under me in a way that had nothing to do with the building. My parents hadn't died in an accident. My parents had been killed. And the woman who ordered it had then spent three years having me in her house, calling me a gold digger, telling me I came from nothing. I pushed off the wall and walked into the office. Both of them looked up. Damien's face did something fast and complicated when he saw me. Zane's didn't change at all which somehow made it worse. "How much did you hear," Damien said. "Enough," I said. I walked to the chair across from the desk and sat down because my legs had made a decision about not holding me up much longer and I preferred to be sitting when that happened. Zane turned the screen toward me without being asked. The file was long. Detailed. Photographs of the accident report with sections highlighted, financial records showing payments from a Vale subsidiary to the investigative firm, a forensic analysis of the brake line that used words like deliberate and non-accidental and premeditated in clean clinical language that made it worse somehow. I read it all. Nobody talked while I read. Zane sat with his hands flat on the desk. Damien stood by the window doing the thing he did when he was processing, looking at the city like it owed him an answer. When I finished I put the file down and looked at the screen for a moment. "The trust," I said. "My parents' trust. Victoria found out about it." "Yes," Zane said. "We think approximately eight years ago. Through a Vale connected bank." "And instead of finding a way to access it directly she decided the cleanest option was.." I stopped. "To remove them and insert Marcus," Zane said quietly. "The trust language specifies the assets transfer through the bloodline's spouse. With your parents gone and you married to Marcus, the Vale family would have had access through him." "Except I didn't know about the trust," I said. "Which kept you manageable," Damien said from the window. He was still looking at the city. "As long as you didn't know you had anything, you wouldn't fight for it." I sat with the full shape of it. Eight years of planning. My entire marriage a transaction. My parents' death a business decision made by a woman who had then looked me in the eye for three years across her dining table and smiled. "Sophia," Damien said. I looked up. He had turned from the window and was looking at me with that expression I was still finding a name for. Not pity. Not calculation. Something in between that was entirely his own. "Say something," he said. "I'm thinking," I said. "You've been thinking very quietly for four minutes." "I think quietly," I said. "My mother was the same way." Something moved in his face when I said that. I looked at Zane. "Can this be used. Legally." "Elijah thinks yes," Zane said. "It opens criminal exposure for Victoria directly. Not just civil." He paused. "But using it means going public. The Vale legal team will come back hard and they'll use everything they have. The affair story. The contract. Everything." "And if we don't use it." "Marcus gets the trust. Victoria gets away with it. And we spend the next year fighting a civil case we might lose." I nodded slowly. "Use it," I said. Zane looked at Damien. Damien looked at me. "You're sure," he said. "She sat across from me for three years," I said. "She watched me set the table and cook dinner and try to be a good wife to her son and the whole time she knew what she did to my parents." I looked at Damien steadily. "Use it." Damien nodded at Zane. Zane picked up his phone and left the room without another word. That was Zane. Everything efficient. Nothing wasted. And then it was just us. Damien stayed by the window and I stayed in the chair and the office was quiet and outside the city was doing its thing, moving and loud and completely unaware. "I need to ask you something," I said. "Okay." "Last night. What you said to Marcus. She's mine." I looked at him. "Did you mean it or was it for the room." He was quiet for a moment. "Does it matter," he said. "Yes," I said. "It matters to me." He looked at me for a long time. The grey blue eyes doing that thing where they gave away more than he intended if you knew where to look. And I was starting to know where to look. "Both," he said finally. "It was for the room." A pause. "And I meant it." The office was very quiet. I should have said something sensible. Something about the contract or the sister arrangement or the forty eight hours Dominic kept referencing. Something that acknowledged all the reasons that answer was a problem. Instead I said "okay" and he said "okay" and we looked at each other across the room and neither of us moved and the silence between us was the kind that had stopped being uncomfortable somewhere in the last four days without either of us deciding that was allowed to happen. My phone buzzed. I looked at it. A news alert. The affair story had been picked up by two more outlets overnight. A gossip site had published a timeline, fabricated and completely convincing, of how long Damien and I had supposedly been seeing each other. I put the phone face down. "Dominic is going to want a meeting," I said. "Dominic is already waiting," Damien said. "He's been in the dining room for twenty minutes." "You knew." "He texted me when you were reading the file." I stood up. Straightened the sweater I was still wearing from this morning. Looked at Damien. "Are you going to tell him about the brake line," I said. "He already knows," Damien said. "Zane tells Dominic everything." "So this morning was…" "Zane wanted to tell you himself," Damien said. "Before Dominic turned it into strategy." I looked at the door. Then back at Damien. "That was kind," I said. "Of Zane." "Don't tell him that," Damien said. "He'll deny it." Something in my chest did a small, inconvenient thing. I walked to the door. Stopped. "Damien," I said. "Yes." "When this is over," I said. "When Marcus is done and Victoria is done and the trust is settled and the contract is safe and all of it is finished." I looked at him over my shoulder. "What happens to the sister arrangement." He held my gaze. "What do you want to happen to it," he said. I looked at him for a moment. Then I walked out without answering because some questions needed more than four days of knowing someone before they were ready to be answered out loud. But in the hallway, moving toward whatever Dominic had built overnight from the ruins of the gala, I thought about both and I meant it and the way he had said it like they weren't contradictions. And I thought that maybe the universe's sick sense of humor was not entirely without mercy. Sometimes it dropped you at a bus stop in the rain. And sometimes it put the right person in the kitchen when you got there.Damien's POVThe guardianship filing hit the press at four.I watched it happen in real time from my office screens. One outlet first, then three, then twelve, the story spreading the way bad stories always did, fast and confident and carrying just enough truth to make the lie around it stick.The headline most of them used was some version of the same thing.Black brother's reckless behavior raises family concern. New woman at center of BCT crisis.New woman. Like she had manufactured herself and inserted herself into my life for sport.I closed the screens and called Elijah."Counter is filed," he said before I could speak. "Judge Harmon is reviewing. We should have a response by morning.""What's our position.""That the filing is retaliatory, baseless, and transparently coordinated with a Vale family legal strategy designed to destabilise the Black estate." A pause. "It's a strong position. Diana has no recent contact history with you, no established relationship, and no legal sta
Sophia's POVBy noon I knew three things.The Vale family was broke in the specific way that only very rich people managed to be broke, everything tied up in appearances and debt and a Ponzi scheme held together by reputation and fear.Diana Black had been in contact with Victoria Vale for eight months, longer than any of us had been in this war.And Damien hadn't said a single unnecessary word since he came back to the table.That last one I kept noticing. Not because he was usually loud. He wasn't. But there was a difference between his regular quiet and this quiet and I could feel it across the table every time I looked up from the files.Zane left at ten to follow something he didn't explain.Dominic left at eleven on a call that made his jaw do the tight thing.Which left me and Damien and four hours worth of Vale financial records spread across the dining table and a pot of coffee that had gone cold somewhere around the third file."You should eat something," I said without look
Dominic's POVI had been awake since four in the morning.Not unusual for me. I functioned best in the hours before the city woke up, when everything was quiet and I could think without interruption. I had rebuilt the entire PR strategy by five, restructured the sister narrative by six, and had three calls with our legal team before seven.By the time Sophia and Damien walked into the dining room I had a plan.What I did not have was patience for the way my brother looked at her when she sat down.I filed it away. Later problem."The affair story has traction," I said. "Two more outlets picked it up overnight. By this evening it will be on every major platform." I looked at Sophia. "Marcus moved fast. Faster than I expected which means he had this prepared before the gala.""He baited Damien deliberately," Sophia said."Yes.""So he knew Damien would react.""He knew someone would react," I said. "He didn't necessarily know it would be Damien specifically. But he knew this house well
Sophia's POVI found out about Zane's discovery the wrong way.I was walking past Damien's office at eight in the morning looking for coffee and the door wasn't fully closed and I heard my mother's name.I stopped.I shouldn't have listened. I know that. But when you hear your dead mother's name spoken in a room you weren't invited into, your feet stop moving on their own."The brake failure wasn't mechanical," Zane's voice. Flat and certain. "Someone cut the line. Clean cut, not wear. The original accident report buried it.""How deep," Damien said."Deep enough that it took me six years of digging to find it." A pause. "The report was filed by a Vale affiliated investigator. The same firm Victoria uses for background checks."Silence."She was nineteen," Damien said quietly."Yes.""They killed her parents and then sent Marcus to find her.""Yes."I put my hand flat against the wall.The hallway was very quiet. The estate hummed around me the way expensive buildings do, climate cont
Damien's POVI didn't sleep.Not because of the scandal or the forty thousand notifications or Dominic pacing his office until two in the morning rebuilding a strategy I had destroyed in four seconds. Those things I could work with. Those had solutions.I didn't sleep because of Sophia's face in the kitchen when the knowing hit her.Not crying. Just that expression underneath crying that people make when something is too big and their face gives up. I had seen that expression once before. In a mirror. The day I was six years old and understood that the packed bags and the locked door meant nobody was coming back.I got up at five and went to my office and pulled everything on the Vale family finances.Elijah had sent the court filing at midnight. I read through it twice and then called him.He picked up immediately which meant he hadn't slept either."The trust," I said. "How long has it been active.""Twenty six years," Elijah said. "Set up by Sophia's parents before she was born. St
Sophia's POVHis mouth was warm.That was the first stupid thing my brain registered. Not the three hundred people watching. Not Marcus standing two feet away looking like someone had detonated a bomb in his chest. Not Dominic somewhere behind me radiating the specific fury of a man whose plan had just been set on fire.Just that Damien's mouth was warm.Then my brain caught up and I pulled back.Damien let me. But his hands stayed on my waist and his eyes stayed on Marcus and the look on his face was the kind that ended conversations permanently.The room was completely silent. I could hear cameras. I could hear whispering. I could feel the math being done in real time by three hundred people and I was going to have to live with whatever answer they reached."We're leaving," Dominic said. Not a suggestion.The limo ride back was its own kind of disaster.Dominic looked at Damien. Damien looked out the window."Care to explain," Dominic said."He had his hand on her.""So you kissed h
Sophia's POVHoly fuckity fuck. There was no way you could call the Black estate a house. It was a whole fortress made of glass and steel, the whole building reeled of intimidation.Dominic’s driver took my cracked suitcase like it was a lump of dirt and disappeared into the shadows of the foyer. D
Sophia's POVThe rain wasn't stopping. If anything, it got louder, mocking me with every heavy drop that hit the plastic roof of the bus stop.I stared at my phone's screen blankly. As though staring at it continuously was going to make a single dollar pop up.How was I supposed to even get a bus?
Sophia's POV"Get out."Two words. That was all it took for my entire life to faceplant into the dirt.I stood there, staring at the man I’d called my husband for three years, and for a second, I actually thought I’d misheard him.Because I was the one who just walked in on him. I was the one stand
Sophia's POVThe dress I was wearing cost more than the car I’d been forced to leave behind at the Vale estate.It was a deep, shimmering emerald silk that clung to every curve like a second skin. Dominic had picked it out himself, claiming it was the color of envy."Perfect for tonight," he’d said







