LOGINAriana’s POV
I didn't mean for him to touch me.
I didn't even expect him to come that close.
But the moment Alex’s hands closed around my waist, air rushed out of my lungs. I stood there, shocked.
Three months.
Three whole months of trying to bury him, bury the resort, bury what happened….and in one second, all of it came clawing back.
The second our eyes met, everything inside me unraveled.
He dropped his hands as I burned him.
Maybe I had.
My skin was tingling where he had touched me. It felt like someone had hit the rewind on everything I had worked so hard to move past.
He cleared his throat, his face snapping into a cold, unreadable mask I had only seen in movies. “Follow me.”
I hesitated, but he didn't slow down. He didn't even look back.
Of course, he didn’t.
I tightened my grip on my bag and followed, my heart beating faster than it should.
He pushed open a conference room door and stepped aside stiffly. “Inside.”
I walked in, feeling like I stepped into an awkward interview. I clutched my bag tighter, my only shield. The door shut behind us with a click that made my stomach twist.
He looked…..different. Or maybe it was me who changed. But his eyes, God, his eyes–I looked to see if I could get back the man I had known at the resort.
“What happened out there….” I started, my voice softer than I intended. “She hit me, and I didn’t even…”
“You’re fine,” he cut in, cold and precise. “It’s settled.”
My mouth parted.
The way he dismissed it—the way he dismissed me, it stung more than the slap.
“This is a professional environment,” he continued, his voice clipped. “Whatever happened between us before…”
He stopped.
He couldn't even say the word.
I exhaled, “Alex…..are we really just going to….”
“Yes….”
He didn't even hesitate. “We are strangers here. Nothing more.”
I flinched before I could stop myself. Strangers? After everything?
He seemed satisfied with my reaction. I guess that’s what he wants.
“For the duration of your employment, you will address me as Mr Sterling.” He said, sharp and cold. “I expect professionalism. No familiarity. No reminder of….anything else.”
I forced my shoulders back, straightening even though my chest felt tight. “Understood.”
I sounded professional and a little bit cold. But I don't care. This was what he wanted.
He walked to the door, ready to send me back out like none of this had ever happened.
But when he opened the door….he stopped.
There was someone there, standing with a stern look.
And it was directed at me.
It was a woman. She was tall, looked elegant, had sharp cheekbones and even shaper eyes. Her blazer cost more than the rent I had shared with David.
The way she looked at me made my stomach drop.
Her eyes slid from Alex…to me…to my bag which I held tightly to my chest. I didn’t know her, but God, she looked like she knew Alex.
“Ariana,” Alex said stiffly, “you may go.”
I was dismissed. Just like that.
I nodded, even though it was like a knot had been tied around my throat. I walked past her, refusing to lower my gaze. If she expected me to look timid, I was sorry to disappoint her.
I was scared but my chin stayed up.
Her eyes sized me up, judging me and maybe wondering what I was doing in a place like this.
I didn't stop. I walked straight out.
The second I was in the hallway, I finally exhaled. It came out shaky, like I had been holding my breath since the moment I saw him.
Stupid…that's what I was.
I am stupid that a single accidental touch could unravel three months of trying to forget him.
I kept walking, ignoring the curious glances from the staff passing by.
The office was buzzing again, like nothing had happened. Phones rang, heels clicked, conversation was had and I felt completely out of place.
I made it to the lobby, the glass door reflecting a version of me I barely recognized.
My hair was slightly messy from the chaos outside, my face flushed and my thoughts were everywhere.
What the hell am I doing here?
I sucked in a deep breath and stepped outside, the cold air hitting me. I wrapped my arms around myself and headed for the little bench near the street.
The city moved on completely oblivious while I sat there, feeling like my entire world was tilting sideways.
This wasn’t the plan.
I joined the company because I needed a fresh start. Because I wanted to rebuild myself. Because I promised I would never let a man dictate the direction of my life again.
But the universe clearly had other plans.
I leaned back against the bench, staring up at the tall building towering above me.
I remembered the resort.
The way he looked at me like I was the only woman in the world.
The way he whispered my name while his dick stroked my inside, slowly.
The way he held me like he wasn’t ever letting go.
And now?
“Stangers” the word echoed in my ears. He said it so easily and firmly.
Like that night meant nothing. I knew I meant nothing, but was I the only one who felt the way I did?
Maybe that's what made my chest ache the most. It wasn't the awkwardness, it wasn't the slap from that woman, it wasn't even how cold he was towards me.
It was the realization that I was the only one who had struggled these past months.
He had moved on.
And I…..apparnetly hadn’t.
I rubbed my hands over my face.
“God, Ariana. What were you thinking?”
Maybe coming here was a mistake.
Maybe accepting this job without researching who owned the damn company was the stupidest thing I have done all year.
I should quit now, before things get worse–before I embarrass myself again or get caught between his coldness and my own unresolved feelings.
I hated that I even had any sort of feelings. I hated that three months later a single look was all it took to make me crack.
My phone buzzed, snapping me back to reality.
It was a text from mom.
I sighed. “What does she want?”
Mom: Don't forget to bring the rice when coming back.
I rolled my eyes at the text. As if my life wasn't already in shambles.
I didn’t reply. Instead, I shoved the phone back into my bag and exhaled. My chest heavy.
I looked back at the building again. “should I go back inside?”
What if I see him again?
Every instinct in me screamed ‘leave, run, quit.’
But quitting meant going back home and telling mum that she was right, it meant facing Maya and her mocking me, it meant seeing the disappointed look on dad’s face, the constant question from all of them.
No. I didn't want that.
I wanted to move forward. I needed to. But could I do that here? Under his roof? With him pretending I didn't exist beyond these walls.
My finger shook as I played with them nervously.
This was supposed to be my clean slate and new beginning.
But what new beginning starts with your past standing right there. I sighed and stood up, my legs were stiff.
Walking away felt too dramatic, going back inside felt too painful. So I walked a few steps down the sidewalk, just far enough that the doors were out of sight.
“Breathe, Ariana. Think.”
I forced myself to sit on a different bench, letting the city noise swallow me. I watched people passing by, all with purpose and direction, like they belong somewhere.
I wanted that feeling again.
Three months ago, I thought leaving David, blocking Jessica and all our mutual friends, starting fresh would fix me.
But now I wondered if I had simply jumped from one wrong place to another.
Welcome dear readers to Ariana's journey... please read and add to your library. It'll mean the world to me.
ARIANA’S POVThe party ends in soft echoes.By the time the last car disappears down the driveway and the final balloon gives up its will to float, the house exhales. Silence settles slowly, like a blanket being drawn over something warm and content.Joseph is already asleep against my shoulder, his tiny breaths even and heavy. Josephine is fighting it with stubborn dignity in Alex’s arms, her eyes blinking in dramatic protest.“She gets that from you,” I whisper.Alex looks down at our daughter. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”Josephine yawns mid-defiance.We move through the house in quiet coordination, a rhythm we learned somewhere between midnight feedings and shared exhaustion. The nursery light is dim, casting everything in gold. Alex lays Josephine down first, brushing his thumb gently over her cheek before stepping back like he’s afraid to disturb something sacred.I place Joseph in his crib and tuck the blanket carefully around him.For a moment, neither of us s
ARIANA’S POVONE YEAR LATER The house no longer smells like gunpowder. It smells like vanilla frosting, fresh roses, and baby powder.I stand at the top of the staircase, one hand gripping the banister while the other balances Joseph against my hip. His tiny fingers are tangled in my hair, his giggles warm against my neck. Across the hallway, Alex is trying and failing, to convince Josephine to keep her headband on.She keeps ripping it off with fierce determination that is unmistakably her father’s.“It’s a celebration,” Alex tells her seriously, crouched in front of her like she’s a board member he’s negotiating with. “Presentation matters.”Josephine blinks at him, then drops the headband on the floor and crawls toward the stairs with reckless enthusiasm.I laugh.It’s been a full year since that night. Since Jerry’s incident. Since the war ended in a single, deafening moment.And everything is different.“Careful,” I warn as Alex scoops Josephine up just before she reaches the e
ALEX’S POVThe house smelled like gunpowder long after the police left.Even after the windows were opened and the paramedics packed up and the guards were rotated out. Ethan assured me three separate times that Jerry was locked in a holding cell with no chance of walking out tonight.The scent clung to the walls or maybe it clung to me.I stood in the hallway outside our bedroom, staring at the door. My hand was still faintly shaking. I curled it into a fist until the tremor stopped.I had heard the shot before I saw her.That sound will never leave me.When I reached the office and saw Ariana stumble backward, hand flying to her stomach….For a split second, my world ended.I’ve faced hostile takeovers, corporate sabotage, men who thought they could outmaneuver me in boardrooms and back alleys. None of it prepared me for the sight of my wife almost being shot in my own house.I failed tonight.I pushed the door open quietly.She was sitting against the headboard, freshly changed, a
ARIANA’S POVThe gunshot split the air. For a fraction of a second, I felt nothing but pain.Just the violent echo ricocheting off the office walls and the deafening ring in my ears. Then something warm grazed my side.I stumbled backward, slamming into the edge of Alex’s desk. My hand flew instinctively to my abdomen. There was no blood.The bullet had missed or….. Jerry’s body jerked.His expression shifted from triumph to confusion.A second gunshot cracked through the room.Jerry staggered forward this time, the black bag slipping from his shoulder and crashing onto the floor. Papers spilled across the polished wood like white feathers.And then I saw him……Alex.He was standing in the doorway behind Jerry, arm extended, gun steady, eyes colder than I had ever seen them.“You really should have aimed better,” Alex said quietly.Jerry tried to turn fully, but another guard burst in from behind Alex, tackling him before he could recover. The gun flew from Jerry’s hand and skidded acr
ARIANA’S POVThree hours……It had been three hours since Alex left.I stood by the bedroom window, staring at the front gates even though I knew I wouldn’t see anything from this distance. The security lights glowed white against the darkness, illuminating the driveway like a stage.He should have called or even texted, even if it was just a two-word message. But my phone remained silent in my hand.I tried to steady my breathing. Alex was careful. He didn’t make impulsive mistakes.Still… Jerry was a different kind of enemy.I sat on the edge of the bed and pressed my palm gently over my stomach. “We’re fine,” I whispered. “Your father always comes back.”The words felt fragile.Downstairs, I could hear faint movement from the guards, like footsteps and murmured voices. The house was heavily secured now with more men, more cameras, more locked access points.It should have felt safe but it didn't.I checked the time again. It was three hours and twelve minutes.A small chill ran thr
ALEX’S POVThe police lights faded behind us as we drove away. I kept one hand on the steering wheel and the other resting over Ariana’s hand. I needed to feel her there, to know she is alive.She leaned her head back against the seat, eyes closed, but she wasn’t asleep. I could tell by the way her fingers tightened around mine every few seconds.“You’re quiet,” she said softly.“Ya, I’m just thinking.”“That’s what worries me.”I almost smiled, but it didn’t reach my eyes.Tonight could have ended differently. If we had been five minutes late… if Victoria had pressed that syringe…and Jerry had decided to stay and finish what he started.I pushed the thoughts away. “I’m not letting him disappear,” I said.“I know you won't,” she replied. I smiled, she knew me too well.When we got home, security had already doubled. There were more men at the gate and more cameras activated. I helped Ariana inside.The house felt different. She paused in the living room and looked around like she w







