LOGIN
The room smelled faintly of roses and fresh linen. Candles flickered along the marble walls, their golden light trembling against the white of her wedding gown. Outside, rain whispered against the window, soft but relentless, as if the sky itself mourned for her.
Lilian Brook sat motionless on the edge of the bed, her veil pooling around her feet like fallen snow. Her fingers trembled on her lap, the diamond ring glinting with cruel irony. The reflection in the mirror across the room showed a woman who looked nothing like a bride — just a stranger wearing someone else’s dream. She’d once imagined her wedding night would be filled with laughter, warmth, maybe even love. Instead, the silence was heavy, suffocating, and cold. Her heart gave a painful jolt when the door opened. Ethan knight stepped inside. His black suit was sharp as the edge of a blade; every line of his face carved with quiet authority. He was the man every woman in the city adored — powerful, poised, impossibly handsome. But standing there, beneath the dim light, he looked like everything Lilian feared: distant, untouchable, merciless. “Take your clothes off,” he said. The words cut through the silence like shards of glass. His tone was calm, almost bored, yet the chill behind it made her breath hitch. Lilian blinked, unsure if she’d heard him right. “Ethan…” she whispered, her voice trembling. “Can’t we just—” He didn’t let her finish. “Don’t make this harder than it already is.” His gaze slid over her like judgment. “You got what you wanted, Mrs. Brook. Now play your part.” Her stomach twisted. Play your part. As if that was all she was — a role in his carefully constructed life. She wanted to ask why. Why he hated her so much. Why he agreed to marry her if he couldn’t stand the sight of her. But the questions stuck in her throat. Ethan took a step closer, the air thickening between them. She could feel the warmth of his body, though it carried no comfort. His scent — dark cedar and smoke — filled her lungs, making it even harder to breathe. Her trembling hands reached for the buttons of her gown. Each click echoed in the silence, a cruel countdown to the moment she wished would never come. Her heart screamed for her to stop, to run, to fight — but pride was the only armor she had left. When his fingers brushed her skin, she shivered. It wasn’t desire that burned through her veins, but despair. His touch wasn’t tender; it was a reminder of everything she had lost the moment she said I do. The night stretched endlessly — a blur of coldness, tears, and silence. When it was over, she lay still beneath the sheets, staring blankly at the ceiling. Her body was there, but her soul felt miles away. Ethan stood near the window, buttoning his shirt with careful precision. Every movement was deliberate, detached — as though nothing had just happened between them. He didn’t look at her when he said, “Know your lane.” Three words. Cold. Final. No goodnight. No warmth. Just a command — one that sliced through her already bleeding heart. Lilian turned her face away, but tears still escaped, slipping silently down her cheeks. “Yes, Mr. Brook,” she whispered, her voice barely audible. He paused for a heartbeat — long enough for her to think, Maybe… maybe he’ll say something more. But he didn’t. The door clicked shut behind him, and the echo filled the emptiness he left behind. Lilian sat up slowly, clutching the pillow to her chest. Her tears soaked into the fabric as she pressed her face against it, muffling her sobs. It shouldn’t have been like this. She had loved him once — perhaps she still did, though that love now burned like a dying flame, struggling for air. Outside, lightning split the sky, casting brief flashes of light through the curtains. The rain grew heavier, hammering against the glass, as if echoing her pain. She rose from the bed and walked toward the mirror again. The woman who looked back at her wasn’t the hopeful girl who had walked down the aisle hours ago. Her eyes were red, her hair a tangled mess of silk and sorrow. “You did this to yourself,” she whispered bitterly. “You fell in love with a man made of ice.” But even as she said it, something flickered deep inside her — small, fragile, but alive. He thinks he can break me, she thought, clutching the edge of the dresser until her knuckles turned white. He thinks I’ll take whatever coldness he gives. A tear slid down her cheek, but her lips curved in quiet defiance. “One day, Ethan knight,” she murmured, voice trembling yet fierce. “I’ll melt your ice. And when that day comes, you’ll remember the night you turned your back on me.” The storm outside answered with a low rumble, as if sealing her promise. She turned off the flickering candles one by one, leaving only the faint light of the rain-soaked window. In that lonely room — surrounded by silk, roses, and the fading scent of her broken vows — Lilian Brook’s heart hardened and awakened. The night that should have marked her beginning had instead written her first scar. But it also sparked something else. A vow. A quiet fire waiting beneath the ice.⭐ SHATTERED TRUST Lilian didn’t wait.The moment the news finished loading on her phone, she grabbed her bag and rushed out of the apartment.Her heart pounded the entire ride to Ethan Brook Group.Every red light felt like an insult.Every wasted second felt like Aiden slipping farther away from her.When she arrived, she didn’t slow down.Her heels struck the marble floor sharply as she stormed through the lobby.Employees turned to look, whispering, but she didn’t care.She pushed open Ethan’s office door without knocking.Fortunately, he was there.Standing by the window, his back to her, phone in his hand, staring at the city as if nothing in the world was wrong.Lilian shut the door behind her.The sound echoed.She didn’t greet him.Her eyes burned with hurt and fury.“Tell me it’s a lie,” Lilian said coldly.Ethan turned slowly.“The engagement. Tell me it’s a lie.”He frowned.“What are you talking about?”“The news,” she snapped, walking closer.“Tell me it’s fake.”Ethan’s
SILENT TRAPS Lilian looked at the two men, her eyes filled with fear and exhaustion.“Can we really not do this now?” she asked weakly.Alexandra opened his mouth to answer, but Ethan had already reached for the car keys.“We’re taking my car,” Ethan said firmly.Alexandra studied him for a second, then nodded.“That’s fine.”Without another word, they walked out together and drove into the night.The moment they arrived at the location, hope didn’t disappear.It bled out slowly.The abandoned docks stretched endlessly before them, dark and lifeless under the pale moonlight.Rusty containers stood like graves.Broken crates rolled softly as the cold wind brushed past them.Too quiet.Dangerously quiet.Searchlights swept across the empty space.Left.Right.Again.Nothing.No child.No footprints.No sign of a struggle.Not even a distant cry carried by the wind.Only the sound of waves slamming gently against metal, as if the sea itself was whispering secrets.Lilian sat in the bac
ALLIES IN THE DARK The night grew heavier.Inside Ethan Brook’s mansion, tension hung in the air like smoke that refused to clear.Screens glowed. Phones rang. Men moved in and out, receiving orders.Lilian stood close to Ethan in the middle of the room, arms wrapped around herself, trembling.Her eyes were already filled with tears.“Please, Ethan… we must not lose Aiden,” she whispered.Ethan watched her quietly.For the first time in years, she didn’t look like the woman who hated him.She looked like a mother who was breaking.He stepped closer and gently touched her shoulder.“Lilian… we will find him.”She lifted her broken gaze to his.“We must,” she muttered. “He’s your son, Ethan. We have to.”“I know,” Ethan said calmly. “We will.”Her voice cracked.“If anything happens to my son, Ethan… I will never forgive myself… or you. Even in death.”Ethan met her eyes.“Then stay here. Let’s fix it together.”🕵️ The Search BeginsEthan turned to his men.“Track every camera from m
Night had swallowed the city.Inside Ethan Brook’s mansion, everything was quiet—until the gates burst open.“ETHAN!”Lilian stormed inside like a hurricane, her heels striking the marble floor as tears blurred her vision.“Bring out my baby!”The guards rushed forward.“Ma’am, you can’t—”“Move!” she screamed.At the sound of her voice, Ethan froze upstairs.He rushed down.The moment he appeared, Lilian broke free from the guards and ran to him.Before he could speak—She shoved him.“How dare you kidnap my child, Ethan!”Ethan staggered.“What?”“Don’t pretend!” Lilian cried. “Bring out my son! Bring out Aiden right now!”Her voice echoed through the hall.“AIDEN!”She looked around wildly, hoping her voice would reach him if he was hidden somewhere.Ethan stared at her, confused, shaken.“Lilian… what are you talking about?”She pointed at him, trembling.“That is my child alone! You have no right! If you touch him, I swear I’ll drag you to court and destroy you!”Tears streamed d
⭐ THE BOY WHO NEVER CAME HOMEMorning arrived quietly.Soft sunlight slipped through the curtains of Lilian’s apartment, painting the walls gold. Outside, the city was already awake—cars glided past, horns murmured, footsteps echoed from below.In the kitchen, Lilian moved carefully, packing two lunchboxes with practiced hands. She slipped fruits beside sandwiches, checking everything twice like a mother who never stopped worrying.At the mirror, Aria brushed her hair lazily, still half-asleep.At the dining table, Aiden sat too still.His laptop was open.But he wasn’t watching cartoons.He was searching.Maps.Routes.Building layouts.On the screen: Ethan Brook Group Headquarters.His small fingers typed fast, copying addresses, memorizing floors, studying entrances like a little detective on a secret mission.Lilian noticed.She paused, watching him for a second, then walked closer and gently closed the laptop.“Aiden,” she said softly, “what are you doing on the computer this ear
⭐ AFTER THE STORMThe car moved steadily through the quiet streets, streetlights flashing past the windows like fading thoughts, but Lilian felt completely lost inside it. Her hands rested in her lap, fingers curled tightly, as though holding herself together required effort.Alexandra glanced at her more than once. Each time, he saw the same thing—distance. Her silence wasn’t empty; it was heavy, the kind that came after too much had been said, and too much had been taken without permission.“Ethan…” he said at last, his voice careful, controlled. “Is he your husband?”Lilian turned to him slowly. Her eyes were tired, rimmed with pain, yet firm in a way that told him this was not a wound she would explain easily.“He’s my ex.”The word lingered between them.Alexandra paused, his grip tightening slightly on the steering wheel. “I’m sorry.”She nodded faintly, as if apologies had long lost their meaning. After a moment, she spoke again.“Please stop here.”He frowned, instinctively ch







