INICIAR SESIÓNConfidential was what written on it.
I sat down on the ground, the material is cool. I dropped the envelope onto the glass coffee table.
Open it, a voice in my head whispered. It's right there. The Tokyo merger details. The family secrets. The leverage you need.
I reached for it, my fingernail sliding right up to the edge of the heavy, untouched wax seal. The red wax was smooth, perfect—a symbol of a world that valued appearances over everything.
But I stopped. My hand hovered, trembling just a fraction.
If I broke that seal, that would not be fine. Since this is confidential. Principles matter. The evidence would be undeniable.
No, I thought, slowly pulling my hand back. The envelope is bait. But I don't need to open it to discover the truth. I had something better—I had the internet and the skills to use it.
I stood up and walked back into the study. The three curved monitors of the command center were still glowing, waiting patiently for me like loyal servants. I dropped into the captain's chair, feeling the heavy leather embrace me.
I cracked my knuckles—a habit from my college days when I'd pull all-nighters researching for papers, and later, for the scripts that made the Vanes their millions.
"Okay, Mr. Cross," I murmured to the empty room. "Let's see who you really are. Not from people mouths. But through evidence."
I opened a new tab. My fingers flew across the mechanical keyboard.
Sebastian Cross.
Enter.
The screen flashed.
Standard Search: 0 Image Results.
I smirked. Of course.
To the public, he was a ghost. Just like me. Corporate logos appeared, stock prices fluctuated on graphs, and generic, sterile press releases filled the results. But there wasn't a single photograph of a human face. He had scrubbed the internet clean. Erased himself from the digital landscape.
Smart, I thought.
I wasn't just a writer. I was a tech too. And to write realistic thrillers that critics praised for their authenticity, I had learned how to unlock doors that didn't exist, to find information that wasn't meant to be found.
"This is a search not everyone can do," I whispered, my fingers already moving. "Time to hack the system."
I opened a command prompt, the black screen with green text appearing like an old friend. I bypassed the standard PR filters and tapped into the "Dark Media" archives—the database used by paparazzi and tabloids for killed stories. These were the photographs that never ran, the articles that got buried by expensive lawyers, the digital ghosts that refused to stay dead.
I typed his name again, adding parameters. I ran the script I'd written years ago for research purposes.
[Processing...]
[Bypassing the walls...]
[ACCESS GRANTED]
The screen flickered, then there came the results.
There was Sebastian. Not the man who made me an omelet this morning.
There was a photo of him in a tuxedo at a private Met Gala after-party, a model on each arm, looking bored out of his mind.
There was a grainy, long-lens shot of him shaking hands with the Prime Minister of Japan.
There was a high-resolution shot of him stepping out of a helicopter, wearing sunglasses and a suit that looked like it was cut from midnight itself.
He looked... cold. Ruthless. His eyes, the ones that had looked at me with amusement in the rain, were dead sharks in these photos.
I clicked on a leaked internal memo from Forbes that had never been published.
Headline: THE IRON HEIR: How Sebastian Doubled the Empire's Value in Two Years.
I read the texts.
"The CEO is known for his uncaring, cold, ruthless, efficient in his job, and a most soughted bachelor. Rumors of a rift with his grandmother, the matriarch Eleanor, have sparked concerns about the company's future..."
"Eleanor," I whispered, tapping the screen. "So that's Grandma."
I searched for her. Eleanor Cross.
An image popped up of an elderly woman who looked like she ate nails for breakfast. She had steel-gray hair, pearls the size of golf balls, and a glare that could freeze a volcano.
"Yikes," I muttered. "No wonder he's hiding in a garage."
I leaned back, spinning the chair slightly.
It all made sense now. The "friend's" apartment. The expensive car. The cooking skills. The reason he was standing in the rain looking miserable.
He wasn't broke. He was burnt out.
He was running away from the expectations, the board meetings, the "The Ruthless Heir" title. He wanted to have some peace.
And then he met me.
A girl with no name. No money. No expectations.
I was his vacation. I was his rebellion.
A slow, dangerous smile spread across my face.
"You poor, sweet billionaire," I said to the photo of him on the screen. "You think you're using me to escape? You think I'm your little charity case?"
I closed the browser tabs, one by one.
Click. Click. Click.
I erased the history. I wiped the digital footprints. I made sure the "Ghost" remained a ghost to everyone else.
I was Sienna. I had been raised in a shark tank just like him. My father was a monster; his grandmother was a tyrant. We were the same breed, Sebastian and I. Broken royalty hiding in the mud.
But there was one difference.
He was exhausted being the workaholic people call him.
I was hiding because I was preparing for war.
I needed money. I needed that advance from Dave. And to get it, I needed a story that would set the world on fire.
Well, I didn't need to invent one anymore. I was living it.
I placed my hands on the keyboard. The mechanical keys felt cool under my fingertips.
"Chapter One," I whispered.
The typing was a rhythmic, violent staccato. I wrote about the tuxedo. I wrote about the helicopter. I wrote about the secret hidden in the grease under a man's fingernails. I wrote about the girl in the rain who was really a wolf in silk.
I lost myself in the flow. The sun began to dip, casting long, orange shadows across the bridge outside. The penthouse was silent except for the clicking of the keys.
I was halfway through a scene about a corporate gala when the front door buzzed.
The lock hissed.
My heart did a somersault. I didn't minimize the window. I didn't hide the screen.
"Sienna?" his voice called out. He sounded tired, the weight of the day dragging on his words.
I didn't move. I didn't breathe. I just stared at the three monitors glowing with his own face, with his own lies.
"In here, Mr. Cross," I said, my voice steady.
Silence followed. Then, the heavy tread of his boots approaching the study.
He appeared in the doorway, still in his work shirt, a smudge of oil on his cheek. He looked at me, then his eyes shifted to the screens.
The air in the room turned to ice.
Okay there. Let me write my own story. I was named Sienna. Right Sienna Vane, when the last name had to be attached. And somehow I just ended with this attitude towards life. The way I talk about things, the way I speak, all of them and strictly speaking probably not really it happened somehow. But I just like the way I speak. It had been years already, since I started talking to myself and letting myself live as a character so I can have some energy to deal with situations like this. And now here we go. There before me sat three people. Right before is my uncle, my father's brother, Marcus Vane. And two women, one used to be my step-mother, to whom my father married right after my mother's demise. Now that I think about it, such a family it is, whatever I have, before my eyes. And then Uncle Marcus started talking, while throwing the files which Riya, framed beautifully just for me, just go get me out from here, from Vane Media. And Riya was used to be and I used to call her sist
But unfortunately for the Screen. It died down just as he saw the screen. Sebastian walked in.He looked wrecked, which I now realized was likely an intentional aesthetic choice. His hair was damp from the New York humidity, sticking to his forehead in messy, dark waves. There was a smudge of grease on his cheek—placed a little too perfectly near his jawline, I noted. A prop. A costume choice for the role of the working-class hero.He was carrying two plastic bags that smelled like a heavenly mix of peanut sauce and toasted garlic."I come bearing gifts," he announced, kicking the door shut behind him with a heavy thud of his heel. "Pad Thai and Spring Rolls. And I hope you like heat, because the guy at the truck said this will burn your soul."I spun the spaceship-style chair around, plastering on my best, brightest "disowned heiress" smile."My soul is already burnt," I said lightly, my voice airy and carefree. "But my stomach is empty. You’re a lifesaver, husband."He walked towar
Confidential was what written on it. I sat down on the ground, the material is cool. I dropped the envelope onto the glass coffee table.Open it, a voice in my head whispered. It's right there. The Tokyo merger details. The family secrets. The leverage you need.I reached for it, my fingernail sliding right up to the edge of the heavy, untouched wax seal. The red wax was smooth, perfect—a symbol of a world that valued appearances over everything.But I stopped. My hand hovered, trembling just a fraction.If I broke that seal, that would not be fine. Since this is confidential. Principles matter. The evidence would be undeniable. No, I thought, slowly pulling my hand back. The envelope is bait. But I don't need to open it to discover the truth. I had something better—I had the internet and the skills to use it.I stood up and walked back into the study. The three curved monitors of the command center were still glowing, waiting patiently for me like loyal servants. I dropped into the
"Stuff about problems need to go away now, I'll be writing and publishing under my own pen name from now on Dave. Be my Agent."Dave on the other side doesn't know how to bring justice to Sienna, so he could only walk to ease the tension and anger builded on his veins. "I'll arrange the advance for you, but you want to keep this a secret, what if your husband finds out?""I'll handle things here, don't worry about them." I said thinking about how he said he won't betray let's see what happens I thought. "I understand, give me the necessary details. But if Vanes find out this?""They never knew anything about me Dave. All they needed was profit, nothing else.""How about I too resign from here?" "Stay there enjoy the double salary they provide Dave. Be my support from there." "Hahaha. Sure that works well. You are terrifying, ghat's why i like your way of work."I looked from the camara attached to the door to see who came. Standing in the hall was a woman. Tall. Ash-blonde hair p
Instead, he just grabbed a pen from the desk."See you tonight," he said.He walked out.I exhaled a breath I didn't know I was holding. Focus, Sienna. Hot temporary husband later. Work now.I turned back to the screen.Then I saw it.The keys he’d left. Not house keys.A key card. Matte black.Embossed in silver letters:CROSS INDUSTRIESI frowned.His name is Cross. The company is Cross Industries.Coincidence? Cross is a common name. Maybe the garage is a subsidiary.But my Author Brain—the part of me that wrote plot twists for a living—whispered:Nothing is a coincidence.Crazies like you exist, a voice whispered in the back of my mind. Right. Crazies like me exist. If Sienna Vane could vanish into thin air, why couldn't a billionaire play mechanic?I picked up the card. It was heavy.Who are you really, Sebastian?I opened a new tab. My fingers shook slightly as I typed.Cross Industries.Enter.The screen flooded with results.CROSS INDUSTRIES: The Trillion Dollar Shadow.AEROSP
My eyes slowly opened, smell of food hit my nose. And it smells appetizing. I stretched. Hand brushed cold silk on the other side. Empty.Panic spiked. Dream? Am I back at the Vane estate? I thought.Then I saw the black dress shirt draped over the Eames chair. The rain-streaked view of the Brooklyn Bridge.Right. Married. Homeless. Penthouse.I rolled out, body aching from the stress hangover. I followed the smell.The living room was blinding. Sunlight smashed through the glass walls.Kitchen. Open concept. Sebastian was at the stove.Gray sweats. Black tee stretching across shoulders that were too wide for a mechanic. He held a spatula like a scalpel."You're up," he said. But he didn't turn around."You have eyes in the back of your head?" I asked, leaning on the marble island."Reflection in the window," he said, flipping eggs. "Coffee's in the pot. Mugs up top."I poured. Black.One sip. Holy hell, Sebastian actually cooked it well. "Oh, husband, this is crazily good," I said,







