LOGIN
Davina's POV:
The flaky layers of the croissant shattered with a satisfying crispness as I bit into it, the buttery richness melting on my tongue. This tiny corner table at "Le Petit Bonjour" had become my sanctuary, a place where the lingering anxieties of job applications and the general uncertainty of post-graduation life could be momentarily forgotten in the simple pleasure of a perfect pastry and a strong latte.
My phone, nestled beside my half-eaten breakfast, vibrated insistently against the wooden tabletop. I frowned, glancing at the unfamiliar number displayed on the screen. Usually, my calls were from recruitment agencies I barely remembered applying to or my mom checking in. Hesitantly, I swiped to answer.
“Hello?”
The voice that answered was flat, devoid of any warmth or inflection. “Davina Wilson?”
A knot tightened in my stomach. It wasn’t a voice I recognized. “Speaking.”
“Your father, Mr. Malcolm Wilson, is in the hospital. He suffered a heart attack.”
The buttery sweetness of the croissant turned to ash in my mouth. Malcolm. The name felt foreign, a relic from a life I thought I’d left behind. My father. A man whose presence had evaporated from my world years ago, a clean break after the messy, acrimonious divorce. He hadn’t called, hadn’t written, hadn’t so much as sent a postcard in what felt like an eternity. A heart attack? The image of a man I barely remembered clutching his chest felt surreal, almost comical in its absurdity.
“My… my father?” I stammered, the cafe’s comforting hum suddenly a distant, muffled sound. My fingers tightened around my coffee cup, the ceramic digging into my skin. “But… I haven’t heard from him in years.” The words felt inadequate, a pathetic understatement of the chasm that had grown between us.
The voice on the other end remained impassive. “He asked for you.”
That single sentence hit me with the force of a physical blow. He asked for me? After all this time? After the silence, the deliberate cutting off of ties? A bitter laugh almost escaped my lips. It had to be a mistake. Some cruel, twisted prank.
“There must be some mistake,” I said, my voice trembling slightly. “My father… he wouldn’t…” The words trailed off, the reality of the situation, however improbable, starting to sink in. A cold dread began to bloom in my chest.
The line went silent for a beat, amplifying the frantic thumping of my own heart. Then, the voice simply stated, “City General. Room 312.” And then, just as abruptly as it had begun, the call ended, leaving a hollow echo in my ear and a gaping void in the normalcy of my morning.
My croissant lay forgotten on the plate, its golden-brown layers now a stark reminder of the peace that had just been shattered. Malcolm. In the hospital. Asking for me. It made no sense. It was wrong. Yet, a strange, unsettling pull, a morbid curiosity mixed with a flicker of something I couldn’t quite name, began to tug at me. What was going on? And why, after all this time, did my estranged father suddenly want to see me?
The questions swirled in my mind, as bitter and unsettling. The cafe, once my sanctuary, now felt like a cage, and the sunshine streaming through the window seemed to cast long, ominous shadows.
My breath hitched in my throat, a strangled sound escaping my lips. "Room 312," the disembodied voice had said. City General. My mind raced, trying to reconcile the cold, distant father I remembered with the image of him lying in a hospital bed, asking for me. It felt like a scene ripped from a bad dream.
Pushing back my chair with a harsh scrape against the tiled floor, I practically ran out of the cafe. The L.A heat hit me like a physical weight as I hurried down the street, my mind a whirlwind of disbelief and a growing sense of urgency. City General wasn't far, a stark, modern building a few blocks away.
Bursting through the automatic doors of the hospital, the sterile scent of antiseptic and the hushed murmur of voices assaulted my senses. I spotted a nurse at the reception desk, her expression calm and professional.
"Excuse me!" I blurted out, my voice tight with a mixture of anxiety and a strange, unwelcome surge of emotion. "My father... Malcolm Wilson? He's in room 312. I need to see him."
The nurse's fingers tapped efficiently on her keyboard, her gaze fixed on the screen. After a moment, she looked up, her brow slightly furrowed. "Wilson... Malcolm Wilson... yes, he's a patient here."
Relief, sharp and unexpected, pierced through my anxiety. "I came here as soon as I received your call, about his heart attack. Can you tell me how he is? And... can you take me to his room, please?" My voice trembled slightly, the years of estrangement creating a strange barrier even now, in this moment of potential crisis.
The nurse's gaze softened slightly. "He's stable and he is currently resting. However," she paused, her eyes meeting mine with a hint of confusion, "He did not suffer a heart attact and.. we didn't call you."
Who is the mysterious caller? Why was Davina summoned suddenly to her father's bedside?
Davina's POV:The sunlight that streamed through the vast bedroom windows was soft, warm, and utterly peaceful—a stark contrast to the turbulent storm of the night before. I woke up slowly, every muscle in my body pleasantly aching, feeling utterly exhausted and yet more alive than I had in months.Ezra's arm was draped heavily over my waist, pulling me tight against his side. The scent of him—musk, sweat, and expensive cologne—was intoxicating. He was already awake, his breath warm against my hair. We moved together, not separating, but finding a new rhythm, a slow, languid dance of bodies that was both gentle and intensely possessive. It wasn't the frantic need of the previous night, but a deeper, more intimate claiming. His movements were deliberate, his eyes fixed on mine, conveying a tenderness that was usually veiled by his cold exterior.Afterward, I settled against his chest, listening to the powerful, steady rhythm of his heart. His fingers played idly with a strand of my hai
Davina's POV:The lingering heat from our intense exchange in the living room had not dissipated. It was a tangible thing, a promise and a threat hanging between us. Ezra’s gaze was dark and intense. When Ezra’s low, commanding voice broke that silence—"My office. Now."—I knew the conversation wasn't over. I follow him into the deeper recesses of the penthouse, I obeyed without question. He led me directly to his office, a deliberate choice of location—a place of power and final decisions.He closed the heavy mahogany doors, sealing us in. The room was dark save for the lights of the city reflected in the large window, illuminating his intent. He walked around his desk, leaning against the rich wood with a posture that was both relaxed and utterly dominant.I walked directly toward him, stopping when I felt the powerful orbit of his presence, meeting his gaze without flinching.He didn't waste time. "I told you, I ended the engagement with Tatiana Sokolov." He said the full name, the
Davina's POV:The confrontation at my home had ripped the delicate tapestry of our lives apart, but for the first time in months, something honest was woven back in. After I left Dexter broken on the floor, the police were called—not by us, but by a horrified neighbor. The ensuing hours were a blur of hushed statements, Lexi's tearful relief, and my mother’s stunned silence.The truth—about Dexter's affairs, his violence toward Lexi, and his vile attempts to assault me—had been laid bare. It was a lot for my mum to absorb, but seeing the bruises on her pregnant daughter’s face and witnessing her son-in-law's brutality broke through the stone wall of her judgment. By the time the police left, Dexter was gone. Kicked out by Lydia herself, who refused to let him back in the door.Lexi, with a quiet strength that made me incredibly proud, declared she was filing for divorce. The child she carried would not be raised under a cloud of fear and deception. The terror had given way to resolve,
Davina's POV:The world tilted. Not from the coffee or the stale air, but from the raw, sickening rage that surged through me. Bruises. On Lexi. My sister, sweet, gentle Lexi, pregnant, and Dexter, that pathetic, hateful worm, had laid hands on her. The casual, almost dismissive way she'd tried to hide them, the fear in her eyes when I'd caught her, twisted the knot of fury in my gut into something hard and unyielding. My own pain, my own fear of Ezra, faded into insignificance. This was real. This was immediate. And it demanded action.I pushed back from the table so abruptly my chair scraped loudly across the floor, drawing startled glances. Lexi looked up, startled, her eyes wide with apprehension. But I wasn't looking at her. My gaze, sharp and cutting, bypassed the bustling café patrons and landed on Ezra's men, casually positioned by the entrance, their eyes lazily scanning the room. They weren't just guards; they were extensions of his control, silent enforcers of my gilded cage
Davina's POV: The thought of stepping outside, of breathing air not filtered through Ezra's penthouse or the one from the club, was a tantalizing, terrifying prospect. After hanging up with Lexi, a surge of defiant energy mixed with crippling dread. How would I even leave? Ezra had made it clear I was a prisoner, I could only go to the club with him and be back to his penthouse. My mind raced, contemplating defiance, but the sheer scale of his control. There was only one way. I found Ezra in his private gym, a sleek, modern space humming with the low thrum of high-tech machinery. He was on the bench press, his powerful chest heaving, veins prominent in his forearms as he pushed an impossible amount of weight. Sweat sheened on his skin, glistening over taut muscles that flexed and rippled with each controlled movement. His black tank top clung to his torso, defining every sculpted line, his dark hair damp and falling across his forehead. My mouth went dry. A primal, unwanted heat
Davina's POVThe air in the penthouse felt heavy, suffocating. Every breath was a reminder that I was still here, trapped, under his roof. My body still thrummed with the phantom tremor of that night in the basement. His face, purple and lifeless, was seared into my mind, and Ezra's eyes, those cold, dead eyes of a killer, haunted my waking hours and invaded my nightmares. He was a monster. A true monster, not just in reputation, but in brutal, bloody reality.I moved through the luxurious rooms like a phantom, trying to make myself invisible. My entire being was dedicated to one, singular purpose: repaying the debt. Nothing more. It was my only escape route, the only path out of this gilded cage. I measured my life in numbers now – how much more, how many more hours, how much closer to freedom.He was always there, a silent, imposing presence. I felt his eyes on me, even when he pretended not to watch. I kept my gaze fixed on anything but him. When he entered a room, I found an excus