The Cole estate transformed overnight. By the time the first guests arrived, the mansion looked less like a home and more like a cathedral carved from light. Chandeliers dripped crystal fire, violins bled through hidden speakers, and the scent of roses hung so thick it clung to Amara’s skin.
She hovered near the edge of the ballroom, a clipboard clutched too tightly in her hand. Her rented gown - a deep emerald chosen by Vanessa’s assistant - fit her like a costume. Beautiful, yes, but not hers. She smoothed the fabric nervously, scanning the sea of black ties and glittering gowns. Clara would have laughed herself breathless if she could see her now. “My best friend, hobnobbing with billionaires. Don’t trip, Amara.” Across the room, Damian was already surrounded. He wore the suit like armor, midnight black with a tie sharp enough to draw blood. The powerful flocked to him, their laughter polished, their words empty. But his eyes… they were somewhere else, scanning, searching. Vanessa glided past Amara without sparing her a glance. Every move of hers was calculated elegance - the tilt of her wrist around a champagne flute, the way her smile lingered just long enough to sting. She was queen of the room, and she knew it. Amara tried to focus on her task: checking names, smoothing logistics, making sure the orchestra stayed on tempo. But the undercurrent was impossible to ignore. Every glance, every whispered aside seemed to anticipate the storm that hadn’t yet broken. Half an hour in, it happened. The doors opened, and silence spilled like ink across the room. Conversations faltered, laughter choked. She entered with the kind of grace money couldn’t buy - poised, deliberate, devastating. A woman in her mid-thirties, draped in scarlet silk, dark hair falling in waves, eyes lined with defiance. She moved as though she belonged here, though the rigid smiles said otherwise. Amara didn’t know her, but Damian did. His expression tightened, the faintest crack in his polished mask. His glass stilled halfway to his lips. Vanessa, on the other hand, smiled. Not warmly. Not kindly. A smile like gasoline meeting flame. “Caroline,” she purred, crossing the room to greet her. Amara’s heart skipped. Caroline. The name from the file. The name Damian had tried to erase. The two women exchanged cheek kisses sharp enough to cut. “You weren’t on the list,” Vanessa said sweetly. “Funny,” Caroline replied, voice cool as glass. “I was certain Damian wouldn’t mind.” All eyes slid to him. For the first time since Amara had met him, Damian Cole hesitated. The night unraveled after that. Caroline didn’t hide in corners; she thrived in the spotlight. She spoke with senators, charmed investors, laughed with board members who didn’t dare reject her attention. And all the while, she watched Damian. Every word, every smile, was a weapon aimed at him. Amara busied herself with the orchestra, the caterers, anything to distract from the tension. But she couldn’t stop watching either. She saw the way Damian avoided Caroline, the way Vanessa seemed almost giddy at his discomfort. She saw how whispers spread like spilled wine, staining the atmosphere. Finally, curiosity won. She caught Vanessa near the champagne table. “Who is she?” Amara asked before she could think better of it. Vanessa’s eyes sparkled with cruel delight. “You don’t know?” Amara shook her head. “She’s the ghost,” Vanessa whispered. “The one he tried to bury. Damian’s fiancée.” Amara froze. The world tilted. “Fiancée?” “Mm.” Vanessa sipped her drink. “Well. Former, technically. But ghosts don’t stay buried, darling. Not in this family.” The revelation burned in Amara’s chest. Damian Cole, untouchable, unshakable, had once promised his future to Caroline - and for some reason, it had shattered. And now she was here, in his house, under Vanessa’s protection. She tried to steady her breath, but the room felt hotter, tighter. She spotted Damian near the balcony and slipped outside, desperate for air. The night wrapped around her like velvet. The city glittered below, far away from the suffocating ballroom. She leaned against the railing, heart thundering. “Overwhelming, isn’t it?” She was startled. Caroline stood beside her, a faint smile on her lips. “Sorry, I didn’t mean—” Amara began. Caroline waved a hand. “Relax. You’re not like them.” Her gaze was piercing, almost knowing. “You don’t wear their mask. That makes you dangerous.” Amara swallowed. “Dangerous?” “To him.” Caroline’s eyes flicked toward the glass doors, where Damian lingered in the shadows, watching. “He’s drawn to honesty. To things he can’t control. That’s why you’re here, isn’t it?” Amara’s breath caught. “I… I’m just his assistant.” Caroline laughed softly. “No one is just anything to Damian Cole. He doesn’t allow it.” Before Amara could respond, Damian was there, stepping onto the balcony like a storm breaking through. “Caroline,” he said, his voice a warning. She smiled. “Still protective. How sweet.” “Leave her out of this.” His jaw tightened. “Then maybe you should tell her the truth,” Caroline whispered, eyes gleaming. The air between them crackled, heavy with history Amara couldn’t touch. And for the first time, she realized the danger wasn’t just whispers or politics. It was personal. Deeply, dangerously personal.The pen clattered against the table when she finally dropped it.Amara stared at her signature - black ink curling at the bottom of the page, sealing something she couldn’t yet name. Her hand trembled, her chest felt hollow, and a strange numbness spread through her. It was done.She didn’t know whether to laugh or scream.The air seemed to shift, as though the house itself had been waiting for her choice. Somewhere upstairs, she heard footsteps - slow, steady, deliberate. She didn’t need to see him to know who it was.Damian always moved like someone who already owned the ground he walked on.The door opened without a knock.He took in the scene - the contract on the table, the pen beside it, her shaking hands. His expression didn’t change, but something in his shoulders eased, barely perceptible.“So,” he said quietly. “You signed.”She looked up, the words sharp on her tongue. “Congratulations. You win.”He didn’t flinch. “It’s not a game, Amara.”“Could’ve fooled me.”Damian stepp
Amara didn’t touch the contract for hours.It sat there on the table like something alive, watching her every move, whispering in the back of her mind each time she tried to walk away. She’d made coffee she didn’t drink, paced the length of the living room, even opened the window just to remind herself the world outside still existed.Nothing helped.The house was too quiet, the kind of silence that hummed under your skin. She caught herself listening for footsteps - for him - but Damian hadn’t appeared since he’d left her standing there.Part of her wanted him to come back.Part of her prayed he wouldn’t.By noon, she found herself in the garden. The sky was pale, the air heavy with the scent of wet grass. She sat on the edge of the stone fountain, staring at her reflection rippling in the water.She thought about Vanessa - about the bruises, the terror in her eyes. About the message that said he’s lying.And then she thought about Damian’s voice the night before. Low. Controlled. Un
The morning light did nothing to soften the night before.Amara sat at the edge of her bed, fingers clenched around the phone she hadn’t been able to stop staring at. The image of Vanessa - bruised, terrified, and the shadow behind her that looked too much like Damian - had looped through her mind until sleep became impossible.She hadn’t told him. Couldn’t.Every time she thought of confronting him, her chest tightened with something between fear and confusion.A knock sounded at her door.“Miss Amara,” the maid’s voice came softly. “Mr. Cole wants to see you. In the study.”Her stomach twisted.Of course he did.She washed her face, put on the calmest version of herself she could find, and walked down the long corridor that seemed quieter than usual. The house felt different these days - polished on the surface, hollow underneath.Damian was already standing when she entered. His tie was sharp, his sleeves rolled, and the faint scent of his cologne hit her like muscle memory. He did
The silence in the house had become unbearable.Even the air felt heavy - like it was holding its breath.Every sound, from the distant ticking of the clock to the faint hum of the refrigerator, seemed louder in the emptiness. Amara sat curled up on the sofa in the living room, wrapped in one of Damian’s sweatshirts that still smelled faintly of him - expensive cologne, smoke, and something darker.It had been three days since he’d spoken more than two sentences to her. Three long, restless nights of walking past his study and hearing muffled voices - low, angry, never clear. Once, she thought she heard a crash. When she knocked, he didn’t answer.Now, she wasn’t sure if she was living with the same man she’d met weeks ago or a stranger wearing his face.Her fingers trembled as she scrolled through her phone. Vanessa’s name glowed on the screen like a wound she couldn’t stop touching. Their last text replayed in her mind again and again:“You think you know him, Amara. You don’t.”The
Amara couldn’t stop shaking.Even after Damian’s words - you’re not safe anymore - had settled into the silence, her body betrayed her. Her palms were slick, her breath shallow, her heart caught between denial and panic.Safe. She’d told herself she was safe here. That whatever Damian was, whatever shadows lingered around him, they couldn’t touch her as long as she kept her head down. But now… now there were photographs. Proof. Someone had been close enough to see her, to follow her.And Damian hadn’t looked surprised.He watched her carefully, his expression unreadable again, but she thought she’d caught it - that fleeting flash of fear in his eyes. It chilled her more than Vanessa’s words ever could. If Damian Cole was afraid, then what chance did she have?“You’re shaking,” he said at last, his voice quieter than she expected.Amara swallowed hard. “You think telling me I’m not safe will stop it?”“No,” Damian admitted, his jaw tight. “But lying to you won’t either.”Her chest cons
The night stretched long and airless. Amara lay on her narrow bed, staring at the ceiling as Vanessa’s words looped like poison in her blood. Ask yourself what happens to people Damian can’t control.Sleep never came. When dawn finally slipped through the curtains, it felt less like relief and more like judgment. Her body ached from exhaustion, but her mind wouldn’t quiet.By the time she left her room, the house was stirring. Staff moved briskly through the halls, avoiding her gaze, as if the whispers from the gala still clung to her skin. In their eyes, she was no longer invisible. She was marked.In the kitchen, she busied herself with tasks no one asked her to do - arranging fruit, checking lists - anything to keep from thinking. But every sound seemed louder, every glance sharper.“Miss Brown.”The voice snapped through the air. Amara turned, pulse leaping. Damian stood in the doorway, sleeves rolled up, tie gone, as if sleep had been as elusive for him as it was for her. His pre