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Chapter 22: The Presence in the Hallway

Author: Veeaura
last update publish date: 2026-05-21 21:01:20

The loud knock made Maya jump violently on the couch, her head snapping toward the entryway with wide, terrified eyes. Ava quickly held up a hand, telling her sister to stay quiet without saying a word. Her own heart was hammering frantically against her ribs, the noise loud in her ears.

"Ava? Are you there?" Noah’s voice was still coming through the phone, but it sounded strange. Closer. Like it was echoing from the other side of the wall.

"Hold on," she whispered, lowering the phone but n
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  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 52: A Closer Look

    The city glittered beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows, but Julian paid it little attention. His focus remained on the file spread across the desk. Three days of digging had produced nothing useful. No hidden accounts. No suspicious transactions. No wealthy benefactor quietly funding Ava Hayes’s business. Just numbers. Normal, boring numbers most people would never think twice about. Julian flipped through another page, irritation building with every line. People always left traces. Greed left traces. Secrets left traces. Fear left traces. Yet every road seemed to end in the same place—a small salon, a hardworking owner, and a family struggling to stay afloat. None of it made sense. His phone vibrated. Without looking, he answered. “Tell me you found something.” “Not exactly.” Julian closed his eyes. “Then why are you calling?” “There’s something you should see.” A notification appeared on his tablet. Julian opened the attachment and found a spreadsheet filled with rows

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 51: The Cost of Peace

    The kitchen remained quiet long after Marcus finished talking. Nobody seemed to know what to say. The first-aid kit sat open on the table. A stained cloth rested beside it. The kettle on the stove had long since stopped whistling. Marcus leaned back in his chair, exhausted. The fight had taken more out of him than he wanted to admit. Across from him, Leo stared at the table. His jaw was tight. His shoulders were rigid. The guilt was written all over his face. Marcus noticed it immediately. “Stop it.” Leo looked up. “Stop what?” Marcus pointed at him. “That look.” Leo laughed bitterly. “What look?” “The one where you’re blaming yourself.” Silence. Leo looked away. Marcus sighed. “You didn’t put me in that fight.” “They came because of me.” “No,” Marcus said firmly. “They came because they’re idiots looking for someone to bully.” Leo clenched his hands. “If I hadn’t gotten involved—” “Enough.” Marcus’s voice cracked through the room. Everyone went quiet. “I’

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    The morning sun poured through the kitchen window of the Hayes household, bathing the room in warm golden light. Ava sat at the breakfast table with a cup of tea between her hands while Elena moved around the kitchen, humming softly as she prepared breakfast. “You’re smiling again.” Ava looked up. “What?” Elena pointed a spatula at her. “That. You’ve been doing it all week.” “Doing what?” “Smiling at your phone like you’ve won the lottery.” Ava immediately reached for her cup. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.” Elena laughed. “You know, when you were twelve, you used to make that exact face whenever you were hiding something.” “I am not hiding anything.” “Mm-hmm.” Ava narrowed her eyes. “You don’t believe me.” “Not even a little.” Ava shook her head, fighting back a smile. “You’re impossible.” “That’s what happens when you spend twenty-six years raising someone.” Before Ava could answer, footsteps sounded from the hallway. Marcus walked into the kitchen,

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