Masuk"Aurora?” Noah’s voice cut through the chaos, confusion etched across his face. “What happened?” he asked, glancing past me.
Footsteps echoed behind. I tore myself out of his embrace and started walking away, my wedding dress swishing against my legs. “Wait, Aurora!” Dave’s voice called after me. I didn’t stop. I couldn’t stop. “Please!” A sudden noise made me spin around. Noah had Dave pinned against the wall, his expression dark with anger. Dave’s eyes locked on mine, pleading, but how could I stay? I kept walking, out into the reception. Heads turned. Whispers followed. My bare feet were cold on the marble floor, but I barely felt it. Almost at the door, someone grabbed my arm. My heart lurched and I almost screamed—until I looked up. Max. My brother. He was staring down at me, concern and anger battling in his eyes. “What are you doing here?” he demanded, frowning. “Where are you going?” His gaze flicked around the room. “Where’s Dave?” For the first time, I looked straight at him. All the pain crashed over me at once. I stepped forward and threw my arms around him, finally letting the tears spill I wake up in an unfamiliar room, my body heavy, my mind foggy. For a heartbeat I pray it was all a dream—that I’m married to Dave, that everything was just one terrible nightmare. But then my eyes land on the wedding dress draped across the couch, crumpled and silent like a ghost of yesterday. Sadness crashes over me, sharp and cold. I push myself up, looking around at the unfamiliar walls. Fragments of last night flicker through my head, broken and blurry. I don’t remember everything. I only know the ache in my chest is real. I step out of the room and find Max and Noah in quiet conversation. Max has his head in his hands, voice low but trembling. “What am I going to do now? How am I going to tell our parents I couldn’t protect her from this pain?” He glances at Noah, who is at the stove, moving with slow, precise motions. Noah doesn’t answer, just flips something in the pan. Max rubs his face again, his jaw tight. “I’m going to kill that boy. Who does he think he is?” Without a word, Noah turns, sliding a plate across the counter toward him: sunny-side-up eggs and seasoned avocado toast—my favourite. The smell hits me like a memory. I can’t remember the last time I had it, or any home-cooked meal; work had swallowed everything. Max looks at the plate, then at Noah. “I’m not hungry.” “Go check on your sister,” Noah says evenly, pouring a warm glass of milk. “She should be awake by now. Take this too—she should drink it first.” I step out of the bedroom completely and move toward them. Max is on his feet in an instant, rushing to hold me. I’m too weak to return the hug; my arms hang at my sides. When I lift my head, Noah’s eyes are on me—dark, intense. The last time I saw him was during my first holiday home from college; he’d been there with Max the night I announced my relationship with Dave. I haven’t seen him again until yesterday, smoking at my wedding. When did he start smoking? The thought pulls my brows into a frown. I realise we’ve been staring at each other far too long, and suddenly I’m hyperaware of the oversized shirt hanging on my body—his shirt, I guess. Heat creeps up my neck. I pull away from Max and look up at him. He must read the confusion in my eyes, because he says quietly, “You fainted at the reception yesterday. Noah carried you here.” I just nod, taking in the space. The house looks almost empty, like no one really lives here. One of his many places, probably. Max guides me to the chair he’d been sitting in and urges me to eat. He looks helpless, sad. The food smells amazing; my stomach clenches with hunger, but I can’t bring myself to lift a bite. Instead, I look up at Noah. He’s already watching me, reading every movement. I give the smallest nod to show my thanks. Then I push back from the table, my voice barely steady. “Okay. I’m going to head back to my place and go to the company.” Max stares at me like I’ve lost my mind, but before he can speak, Noah’s voice cuts through the room. “I’ll drive you.” We should go get ready,” Noah says quietly as he passes me and Max, disappearing into a room at the far end of the apartment. Max opens his mouth like he wants to speak, but I can’t bear to hear whatever he’s about to say. I just want to leave. I don’t even know where I want to go—I just know I can’t stay here. I slip past him into the room I woke up in. It’s spacious, airy. Oddly enough, everything here is to my exact taste—from the paint colour on the walls to the furniture straight out of my P*******t board. For a second, a strange warmth flickers in my chest… until I see my wedding dress on the couch. Yesterday was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. I was supposed to be married. I walk over and lift the dress carefully. Its pure white fabric is still flawless—no champagne stains, no happy tears. Just a hollow reminder of what should have been. I fold it with shaking hands and notice my phone lying beside it. I don’t want to check the headlines. Despite my best efforts for a small, private wedding, my failure will already be trending. Part of me still hopes there’s a reasonable explanation for what I heard yesterday—that I overreacted, that it’s all a sick joke. With a deep breath, I pick up my phone and open my messages. Seventy-three new messages from Mina. For days I’ve been texting her with no reply, and now she’s sent me seventy-three. Anger curls inside me but quickly fades into a sharp pain in my chest. 13 new messages from Dave. Aurora, please. Are you okay? It’s not what you think. We can explain. I never wanted to hurt you. Please answer your phone. Mina and I need to talk to you. Don’t shut me out. I’m sorry, Aurora. I love you. Please come back, let me explain. Tell me where you are. I’m worried. Please… My chest tightens. I type a single reply Meeting at my office. 1:00 p.m. I know I shouldn’t see him. But I need answers. Max enters quietly and sits beside me on the bed. “Aurora,” he says, like the word itself hurts him. His eyes search mine, desperate. I can’t speak; if I do, I’ll break again. “I’ll be here,” he says softly. “Whatever you decide to do, I’m here. Always.” A knock at the door makes me lift my head. Noah stands there now, fully dressed in a sharp suit that stretches across his broad shoulders. “Are you ready?” he asks. I nod once, give Max a final glance, and rise to my feet. Then I follow Noah out.Morning arrives quietly.Not with alarms or urgency, but with pale light slipping through the glass walls of the penthouse and the low hum of the city waking below. I lie still for a moment, staring at the ceiling, listening.No footsteps rushing. No voices. Just calm.It takes me a second to realize how strange that is.For years, mornings meant tension — emails already piling up, cases waiting, expectations pressing down before I’d even opened my eyes. But here, in Noah’s penthouse, the quiet feels intentional. Curated. Like he designed even the silence.I sit up slowly, pulling the sheet around me. I didn’t sleep in his bed. That boundary still exists — deliberate, respected. But the guest room no longer feels like a temporary shelter. It feels… lived in.My phone lights up on the nightstand.Noah: You awake?I smile before I can stop myself.Me: Unfortunately, yes.A moment passes.Noah: Coffee’s ready. No pressure.I swing my legs out of bed.He’s already dressed when I enter the
The kiss shouldn’t have followed me into the morning.But it does.It lingers in the quiet hum of the penthouse, in the way my pulse refuses to settle as I stand at the sink pretending I’m focused on rinsing my coffee mug. My reflection in the glass looks composed — hair neat, posture straight — but my eyes give me away. They’re too bright. Too awake.Last night changed something.Not loudly. Not recklessly.But permanently.Behind me, Noah moves through the space with the same measured calm he always carries, except now I notice the restraint beneath it — the way he keeps a careful distance, like he’s holding himself in check.“Your driver will be here in ten,” he says.I nod. “Thank you.”Silence stretches, but it’s not awkward. It’s loaded.“Noah,” I say, turning slightly. “About last night—”“We don’t need to define it,” he says immediately, meeting my eyes. “Not yet.”That surprises me. “You don’t want to?”“I want to do it right,” he replies. “Which means no pressure. No rushing
The boardroom smells like polished wood and quiet ambition.I take my seat at the head of the table, spine straight, expression calm, even as my pulse ticks louder with every second. Twelve faces look back at me — partners, senior counsel, men and women who watched me grow up running through these halls and now assess me like a variable they’re not sure they trust.“Let’s begin,” I say, clicking my tablet awake.The call starts predictably enough — quarterly numbers, client retention, litigation wins. I move through it with precision, answering questions before they’re fully formed, anticipating objections, shutting down doubt with facts. This is the part I’m good at. This is the armor.Then one of them clears his throat.“Aurora,” Mr. Langford says, folding his hands. “We’d be remiss not to address the… optics.”There it is.I don’t blink. “Be specific.”He hesitates, then continues. “Given the very public disruption of your wedding and the subsequent media attention, some of our cli
Sleep doesn’t come easily.I lie awake staring at the ceiling, the quiet of the guest room broken only by the distant hum of the city and the soft, unfamiliar rhythm of someone else’s home. Noah’s home. The thought alone sends a strange flutter through my chest — unsettling, warm, dangerous.I turn onto my side, clutching the edge of the duvet like it might anchor me.This is temporary, I remind myself. Everything is temporary.But my body doesn’t believe it. My heart doesn’t either.Sometime before dawn, my phone vibrates on the bedside table.I flinch, already half-awake, and grab it instinctively. Emails. Dozens of them. Red flags. Subject lines stacked with urgency.Partner concerns.Client escalation.Board review requested.Of course.The firm never sleeps. And neither, apparently, do the people waiting for me to fail.I sit up, hair falling into my face as I scroll. One message catches my eye — from one of the senior partners. The tone is polite, but the meaning is sharp.Given
The penthouse is too quiet.Not the comfortable kind of quiet — the kind that presses against your ears, makes you aware of every breath, every shift of weight, every unspoken thing hanging between two people who are pretending they don’t feel anything at all.I stand by the window, arms folded, watching the city lights blur together below. From this height, everything looks smaller. Manageable. As if problems shrink when you’re far enough away.Behind me, I hear Noah move.Not loud. He never is. Just the soft sound of a glass being set down, footsteps crossing marble. I don’t turn around, but my spine straightens anyway, like my body reacts before my mind does.“You didn’t eat,” he says.I shrug. “I wasn’t hungry.”“That’s a lie.”A sigh slips out of me. “You always this observant, or is that just with me?”There’s a pause. Long enough that I almost turn around.Then, quietly: “Just with you.”That does it.I turn, finally facing him. He’s leaning against the kitchen counter, sleeves
I don’t sleep.I lie still beneath the soft weight of Noah’s sheets, staring at the ceiling while the city breathes outside the windows. Every sound feels amplified — the faint hum of electricity, the distant siren, the muted rhythm of my own pulse._m._always_here.The username keeps replaying in my head, over and over, like a whisper that refuses to fade.Mina.It has to be her.She always liked to linger just on the edge of things — not bold enough to step fully into the spotlight, but too hungry to disappear. Even as kids, she had hovered near my life, smiling too brightly, listening too closely.I roll onto my side and unlock my phone again.The follow request is still there.Waiting.I don’t accept it.Instead, I take a screenshot and forward it to Noah with a single message:This just happened.The reply comes almost instantly.Don’t interact. I’m on it.I exhale slowly and set the phone aside.For the first time, I realize this isn’t just about fear or revenge or obsession. It







