“We need to talk.”
He stood in front of me, voice disturbingly calm—like he was announcing the fridge had broken, not that I had thrown him onto a bed the night before.
Talk?
My brain instantly began filtering keywords. Talk about what? A debrief? A review? Or was he proposing some sort of… “long-term sexual partnership”?
Definitely not a proposal. That only happens in soap operas written by people with chronic romance brain.
Was he worried I’d cling to him?
After all—it was me who started this.
I was the one who dragged him out of the bar.
I was the one who opened the hotel door.
I was the one who pinned him down without a second thought.
“Look,” I said, adopting the most adult, accountable tone I could muster, “last night was a mistake. A reckless, impulsive, but… undeniably enjoyable mistake.”
I tried not to look at his shoulders. Not at his chest. Not at the water droplets sliding down his clavicle, tracing the path over sculpted muscle.
“I’m not going to ask you to take responsibility. I won’t call you crying about emotional trauma. I’m not that kind of girl.”
He didn’t say anything.
Seeing no reaction, I turned to the door—cue graceful exit, complete with closure monologue.
But just as my hand reached the doorknob, a warm, wet palm landed on the back of mine.
I froze. Slowly turned around.
He was looking at me with an expression I couldn’t place—somewhere between surprise and… seriousness.
“You don’t remember me?” he asked softly.
I blinked, thrown. I answered quickly, almost defensive: “Of course I do. You’re my new neighbor. Helped me find my keys the other night.”
Technically true. Totally accurate.
What I didn’t say—and never would—was that even without those trivial interactions, I remembered him.
That face was unforgettable.
Or, to be more precise, that face, standing in front of me in just a white towel, with water dripping down those abs… yeah. Not something easily erased from memory.
I swallowed hard.
The trick was: don’t look directly at him. Like an eclipse.
Too bad that strategy had completely failed.
Worse still, even though I was fully dressed and he was practically naked, somehow under his gaze, I felt like the one completely exposed.
I tried to speak—say something, anything to shift the attention.
But he didn’t ask again. He just stood there, watching me, as if waiting for the moment my real reaction would finally arrive.
The silence stretched.
Then he said, “It’s fine. Doesn’t matter.”
I blinked. What?
“Can I go now?” I asked, my voice dry. His hand still hadn’t moved.
He looked at me again, then—unhurriedly—said:
“Will you marry me?”
…
WTF?!
“You’re not serious.” I finally found my voice.
“I’m completely serious,” he replied, like he was announcing a quarterly investment plan. “I just returned to the country. My parents want me to get married as soon as possible. In their eyes, a married man means stability. And only a stable man can inherit the family business.”
I fell silent.
Two days ago, I swore I’d bring home someone better than Rhys.
Someone impressive enough to shut my parents up.
And now, the universe had delivered an answer—just with a thick layer of irony.
But I knew.
Marriage shouldn’t be like this.
I’d already lived through a love-less engagement once.
What it left behind was a house full of silence, intimacy that felt hollow, and a slow, brutal erosion of my self-respect.
I opened my mouth to say no.
But at that moment, my phone rang.
The sharp ringtone sliced through the quiet like a knife.
I glanced at the screen—and felt like a bomb had gone off in my chest.
Caroline Vance.
My mother.
Katherine was back.
She must’ve called to announce the beginning of something.
I looked at that face—familiar yet foreign—then back down at my phone.
And finally, I said the words:
“I can’t accept.”
I walked out of the hotel suite, the ringtone still shrieking behind me.
I answered not because I wanted to, but because I needed—desperately—to sever this umbilical cord that kept dragging me back into the past.
“Why didn’t you answer your phone? Were you trying to give me a stroke?”
My mother’s voice came rapid-fire, like a machine gun.
“I thought you were dead in a ditch or kidnapped by some maniac! Get home. Now. We need to talk.”
“I’m already on my way,” I said coldly, and hung up before she could launch into round two.
I gave the driver my parents’ address and collapsed into the backseat, like someone bracing for a colonoscopy without anesthesia.
Okay. Let’s get this over with.
My neighbor—aka my one-night stand—was probably insane.
But while I still had a drop of alcohol-induced courage left in my bloodstream—while the old Mira, desperate for love, hadn’t crawled back in and taken over—I had to move fast.
I had to throw this shattered mess back in their perfect little faces.
The Vance family estate sat in the kind of suburban enclave that didn’t welcome anyone who couldn’t afford a BMW. No subway stops. No bus routes. Just an elegantly phrased “keep out, poor people.”
At the wrought-iron gate, I inhaled deeply. I felt like a boxer walking into the ring. Shoulders squared. Chin lifted. Emotional armor locked and loaded.
The moment I stepped into the living room, I could smell the ambush.
My father—Franklin Vance—sat alone in his leather chair, wearing the same expression he probably used to fire underperforming hedge fund managers.
Beside him, my mother, Caroline, with her flawless hair and perfectly aligned pearl necklace, smiled the way a doctor does when saying, “The cancer’s spread.”
To their left, Rhys sat on the sofa, all solemn and brooding, as if waiting for a divorce lawyer to direct his next pose.
And on the right?
Katherine, obviously.
All we were missing was a gavel and a court reporter.
This was a trial.
I was the defendant.
And the verdict had already been written.
Mother struck first.
“What took you so long? I called you hours ago.”
She crossed her arms, her tone colder than the AC.
“Traffic,” I lied.
If I told them I’d just escaped from a man in a towel, they’d have me institutionalized.
“So? Why am I here?” My tone was sharp, iced over.
No one answered.
Not until Rhys stood, bandage still across his forehead.
The sight of him looking vaguely wounded brought me the tiniest flicker of grim satisfaction.
“You left this at my place,” he said slowly, holding something in his hand.
“Your bear alarm clock.”
I stared at it.
A cheap, scuffed electronic clock shaped like a cartoon bear, its plastic face scratched and faded from over a decade of use.
And now, this relic was their opening move?
Rage crawled up my throat, but I forced it down.
“Thanks,” I said flatly. “That’s… thoughtful.”
I snatched the ridiculous little clock and turned to leave.
Come on. No one calls a full-blown family meeting just to return a damn alarm clock. I knew better. This was about humiliation. About putting me in my place.
They were the real family.
I was always the outsider—invited in only when they needed a benchwarmer.
“Wait,” my mother said, her voice even colder than before.
I paused. Didn’t turn around.
She folded her arms again and smiled—that tight, poisonous kind of smile you only see when a doctor says “Stage four.”
“Now that Katherine’s back,” she said, “and since you and Rhys have broken up, we believe it’s time—he and Katherine should be engaged.”
I gave a short, humorless laugh. Turned around slowly, letting the sarcasm drip from my mouth.
“By all means. Plan whatever you want. Not like you’ve ever asked for my opinion before.”
“We used to ask,” she said, voice turning sharp, “back when you were still the sensible daughter. The one with potential.”
She stepped closer.
“You’re too emotional, Mira. Your insecurity made you paranoid—accusing Rhys, trying to control him. You didn’t trust him, and that’s what destroyed the relationship.”
Her words were blades.
Featherlight in tone.
Ruthless in effect.
“So this is on you.
And you’ll make that clear in the press.
Tell them you fell for someone else.
That’s why you ended the engagement.”
I froze.
Something tore inside my chest—like they’d ripped it open with their bare hands.
I looked at them, all of them—my parents, Rhys, Katherine.
So calm. So calculated.
Like a script they'd rehearsed for weeks.
What had I done to deserve this?
Where had I gone so wrong?
I was ready to explode. To storm out.
But that’s when my father finally stood.
Like a judge preparing to read the sentence.
“You don’t have to worry about finding someone new,” he said with absolute finality.
“We’ve already made arrangements—”
I thought the episode was over.I was wrong.‘Mirabelle, there’s… a big client down here!’ Priya called up to me from the first floor.I made my way down quickly, but when I saw Harper, the smile I’d been trying to keep on my face disappeared in an instant.I slowed my steps, forced myself to look at her without rolling my eyes. ‘What do you want?’‘Mirabelle, listen…’ Harper gave me this ridiculously familiar smile and stood up, as though we were best friends. ‘There’s been a misunderstanding. I came to explain everything to you.’‘Don’t try to be friendly with me. We’re not on first-name basis.’Harper’s eyes welled up a little, and her voice softened. ‘I didn’t know Cassian had a girlfriend when we were together. If I had known…’I wasn’t buying it for a second.‘If you’d known, you still would have been with him. You’re not in love with him. You’re in love with the resources he gave you. You don’t care about his relationship status or whether you were the other woman.’‘That’s not
Ashton glanced at Mirabelle, sensing the weight of her mood.He didn’t dare push her further.Instead, his thoughts swirled with curses aimed at Cassian Langford.Since Mirabelle’s birthday a few days ago, Ashton had been able to feel the shift in her behaviour.She’d been warmer, more open.He could almost swear there was a flicker of something deeper in her eyes when she looked at him.Not love, but definitely more than mere friendliness.But Cassian had ruined it all.The progress he’d made in drawing her closer had been demolished in one move by that idiot.Ashton knew, if it came down to a choice between him and Yvaine Carlisle, Mirabelle wouldn’t even hesitate.She’d choose Yvaine in a heartbeat.When he’d chased her out of the club earlier, his chest had tightened with panic.He’d been terrified that Mirabelle would start blaming him for Cassian’s behaviour.Thankfully, it hadn’t gone that far, but it didn’t feel great either.As he seethed silently, his phone buzzed.Mirabelle
Harper’s face immediately flushed red.‘Did I do something wrong? I don’t think we’ve met before, but if I’ve upset you in any way, I’m happy to apologise.’Cassian touched her shoulder.‘Don’t cry, let me figure out what’s going on,’ he said, then turned to me. ‘I’m honestly trying to introduce you to a client. What’s going on? Why are we getting into this before we even eat?’I’d aimed my snark at Harper to stand up for Yvaine, but Cassian? He was the one who really made me sick.I stared him down. ‘Drop the act. You think I don’t know what you two are up to?’Cassian, being an old friend of Ashton’s and a few years older than me, had always gotten my respect in the past.But not today.‘I’ve known Yvaine forever, you know we’re close. Yet here you are, bringing this woman here. What’s your play, Cassian? You trying to rub it in Yvaine’s face? Or maybe you want me to sit here with Harper and stir up some drama between me and Yvaine?’The room went deathly quiet.The look on Cassian’
‘I’m not lying.’ She shook her head so hard her earrings slapped her neck. ‘We dated for, what, three months? If I act like he was the love of my life, that’s just pathetic. I’m not that girl.’She sprang to her feet and scanned the room like she was ready to flip a table.‘I’m gonna build my brand and make a bloody fortune. Men are distractions. I’m over it. That breakdown was temporary, Mira, I swear, I’m fine now.’I exhaled through my nose. ‘He never deserved you.’My palms itched. ‘You shouldn’t’ve let him walk away like that. You should’ve called me. I would've made sure he couldn’t sit for a week. He doesn’t get to treat you like that.’Yvaine waved me off. ‘It’s done. I’m not wasting another second on him. If I throw a fit, it just proves I gave a damn. And I didn’t. Not really. Guys like him
‘Happy birthday,’ he said again.He placed it on the worktable.The cake inside was tiny.Four inches, maybe.Enough for two.The icing was smooth and white, with a single purple flower piped dead centre.No glitter, no sprinkles.Just that flower, neat, precise, a shade darker than amethyst.Primrose, my birth flower.I stared at it for a few seconds.‘Thanks,’ I said quietly, before my voice could crack.He lit a candle on top, just one, and grinned at me.‘Make a wish.’The flame flickered.I closed my eyes.Nothing came to mind straight away.My brain spun in ten directions before settling.I opened my eyes and blew out the candle.The smoke curled upward, sharp and faint.‘Happy birthday,’ Ashton said.I repeated it. ‘Happy birthday to me.’The heat in the room had settled into my chest.It wasn’t from the heater.‘Cake?’ he asked.Then he swiped a finger through the frosting and smeared it across my cheek.‘Birthday girl.’I blinked. Then grabbed a chunk off the side and smeared
‘No and no, though I wouldn’t mind giving my firstborn and last and my soul and all my tomorrows for a glimpse of the Pink Star.’I drooled at the thought of touching the 59.60-carat, vivid pink, flawless diamond.‘Any plans tonight? Why do I even ask?’ Yvaine waved off her own question. ‘Let me guess. Candlelit dinner by the bay, live string quartet in the background. I know, I know. I won’t be the third wheel.’I said nothing.Actually, no, I didn’t have any plans tonight.Ashton hadn’t said anything when I left the house this morning.And so far, half the day had passed without a message from him.Maybe he thought the share transfer agreement had said ‘happy birthday’ loud and clear.By evening, Priya and Daniel packed up and left.Yvaine got a call and dashed off in her ridiculous boots, leaving the studio dead quiet.I shut my laptop, stacked the loose sketch sheets, reached for the light switch—And stopped.Through the glass, someone appeared on the pavement outside.Alone. Ste