The scent of freshly brewed coffee lingered in the air that morning, mingling with the soft sizzle of bacon in the pan. Sunlight poured through the wide kitchen windows, painting the marble counters in gold. Even in all its sleek modern coldness, the Ravencroft estate almost felt warm in those rare, quiet moments.
I moved through the kitchen like I always did—calm, practiced, careful. I poured Victor’s coffee into his favorite matte-black mug, the one with his initials in gold. His tie was already draped over the arm of the leather couch, his suit laid out beside it, and the silver cufflinks he liked for important meetings—polished the night before—sat ready in their velvet box.
It had all become a ritual.
I wasn’t born into this world of generational wealth and whispered rules, but I had tried—desperately—to become part of it. To smooth the edges of who I was and mold myself into someone worthy. Someone they'd accept. I’d told myself that maybe, just maybe, if I was perfect enough, they’d forget I was born on the wrong side of the Verene name. That they’d forget I wasn’t really one of them.
But the walls of this mansion never stopped whispering. And the Ravencroft name never really wrapped itself around me. Not completely.
The clock on the wall blinked 7:00 AM.
Victor would be coming down any second now—briefcase in hand, phone glued to his ear, giving orders to his assistant before his foot even touched the bottom stair. I heard him just as I plated the bacon and placed it on the table.
“Victor, have some breakfast before you leave,” I said gently, placing his coffee down beside the plate. “I also packed your lunch… and your tie’s by the couch.”
No reply. Not even a glance.
His phone was pressed to his ear. His eyes glazed over me like I wasn’t even there. He just sat down, took a sip of the coffee, and nodded to himself at something he heard through the line.
I didn’t expect a thank you anymore.
I used to try—ask about his meetings, tell him to have a good day, try to give him a peck of kiss—but eventually, all I got back were grunts or cold silence. One day, he just changed but even so, I never stopped trying. I just adapted to his new attitude.
The coffee was always just how he liked it—dark, hot, two sugars. Even if he never said a word, I still made it because that’s what wives do. Because even when love goes quiet, effort doesn’t. I know he’s just stress out of work.
I had just turned back toward the stove when the front door slammed open. The sound ripped through the house like a gunshot, and before I could even process it, pain exploded across my cheek—a slap so hard it turned my vision white.
I stumbled, dizzy, the metallic taste of blood bursting in my mouth. My hand flew to my cheek instinctively.
“M-Mother?” I choked, blinking back the shock as Celeste Ravencroft, Victor’s mother stormed into the kitchen like a storm barely restrained by skin.
Victor ended his call without even reacting—just calmly set his phone down, completely unfazed. As if I hadn’t just been assaulted in front of him while my heart slammed against my ribs, breath coming short.
Mother’s eyes burned into me, filled with disgust and anger. Her hand was still raised, manicured fingers trembling with fury.
“You, shameless girl,” she spat. “How dare you show your face here after what you’ve done!”
My fingers curled around the edge of the counter. “What… what are you talking about, Mother?”
“Don’t call me that!” she snapped. “You think that name gives you a place here? You think a bastard like you could claw her way into this family and pretend she belongs? Into my son’s life?”
Her words cut sharper than any blade. Every syllable struck a place inside me that I’d kept stitched shut for years.
“I tolerated you for Victor’s sake,” she went on, her voice turning cold. “But now? You’ve humiliated us beyond repair.”
I turned to Victor—my husband. My supposed partner. My last hope but he didn’t even meet my eyes. He just sat there, staring past me like I wasn’t worth the breath.
“Please,” I whispered, “What happened? I don’t understand—”
Mother stepped closer, her lip curled. And then she said the words that broke me:
“Tell me, Alisa—did you hide your sister’s pregnancy just to cling to your place in this house? Naomi is pregnant. And she told me you knew. That you threatened her to keep it quiet.”
The world stopped.
My grip loosened. My lips parted as I turned to Victor again, desperate for him to say it wasn’t true but he looked away.
“Victor’s child,” mother said, with a cruel smirk. “Naomi will give us the heir this family needs. Not you. Not ever you.”
My knees buckled. I could barely breathe.
“Victor… w-what?” My voice cracked. “Were you just talking to Naomi on the phone? What? H-how?”
He stood, adjusted his cufflinks, and spoke with terrifying calm.
“I told you—I want a child. I’ve waited three years, Alisa but still nothing.”
I stared at him in disbelief. “So, you turned to my sister? You told that you’d wait, we talked about this, right?”
Mother scoffed. “You failed as a wife and yet you dare question him?”
My chest felt tight, like my lungs were collapsing. “Is it true?” I asked, voice barely a whisper. “Is Naomi really pregnant… and you're the father?”
The front door creaked open again and there she was.
Naomi Verene. My half-sister. The golden child. Dressed in ivory, glowing, radiant, one hand resting on her stomach like some gentle Madonna.
And then mother rushed to her side. “You shouldn’t have come, my dear. What if you tire yourself?”
Naomi offered her a sweet smile but her eyes—her eyes were locked on mine.
And in them, I saw it. Not guilt. Not regret but a smile as if mocking me.
Triumph.
The coffee still bubbled on the counter. The bacon cold and my husband’s tie lay untouched on the couch. The lunch I packed. The day I built.
None of it mattered now.
I stood there, frozen in a home that had never really been mine.
And just like that—
the morning shattered.
After a month of grueling, painfully drawn-out proceedings, each court appearance feeling like an open wound being salted, the divorce was finally, officially finalized. Papers were signed, hands were shaken and in the eyes of the public, it was over. While Naomi and Celeste toasted their so-called victory over champagne in some high-rise penthouse, basking in the smug satisfaction of what they believed to be a well-played game, Alisa felt no such triumph even though it was what she wants. She slipped away quietly with her presence barely noticed as though she were nothing more than a shadow exiting the room, as though she was never there to begin with. “Finally,” Naomi purred, her lips curling in satisfaction. “she’s out of the picture for good now.”Celeste smirked over her glass while the city lights reflected in her sharp eyes. “Out of the picture but not out of the game yet,” she replied smoothly.“If Victor moves quickly, the baby will be a Ravencroft before the press can crea
Alisa woke up to soft morning light filtering through the curtains the next day, casting a warm glow across the unfamiliar room while her mind felt foggy, lingering with the remnants of sleep. The first thing she noticed was the faint scent of Leo’s cologne, mixed with something more subtle like the musky smell of his sheets. It felt too intimate and too foreign for her.Her heart sank but this wasn’t from shock or anger but it was more complicated. The realization came to her slowly like a tidal wave creeping up the shore. She couldn’t recall how she ended up there the night before but a distant ache in her thigh suggested she had been searching for something maybe comfort or escape, and she knew that something did happen. Just look at her naked body as well as Leo’s.Her head throbbed lightly as she moved to sit up, then a wave of dizziness washed over her. Leo’s arm was draped lazily over her waist with his breath steady and calm, reminding her of the complicated mess she found he
After leaving the dinner early, Leo gripped the steering wheel more tightly than needed. The city lights created broken patterns on the windshield as they raced through the night. His jaw tensed and his eyes remained fixed ahead but his mind was still caught up in the chaos they had just escaped. In the passenger seat, Alisa sat silently. She had her arms crossed over her chest, and her gaze out the window was calm, composed, and unreadable.Leo scoffed. “Twisted bitch.”Alisa glanced at him. “Excuse me?”“Not you,” he muttered. “Your sister, crying like a starlet on cue.”Alisa gave a soft, bitter laugh. “She’s always been dramatic but she gets what she wants.”A pause. “Even if she has to rip it out of someone else’s hands.”Leo’s fingers tapped the steering wheel. “Victor plays along like he’s some poor, heartbroken husband. Bastard acts like he’s been wounded by love, not by his own damn ego.”“Well, don’t you think they deserve each other?” Alisa said flatly, voice devoid of heat
Leo already had heard rumors, mostly from his private sources about Naomi’s growing hostility for Alisa. She had become bolder in making passive-aggressive remarks among her friends and subtly damaging Alisa’s reputation. The jealousy was clear that it tainted her words and soured her smile. But tonight?Tonight, she wore honey and silk. Every movement seemed rehearsed like a performance. The dinner was hosted by Celeste in one of Ravencroft Group’s exclusive hotel suites where marble floors, gold accents and long-stemmed wine glasses filled the sight enough to look elegant. The event was labeled a "family celebration," a toast for Victor and Naomi's engagement and their expected child but really, it was a carefully planned scheme. And Celeste, ever the calculating matriarch made a bold choice. She shamelessly invited Alisa, not out of warmth, guilt or kindness but mockery. She invited her like a lion invites a lamb into its den. And to savor her discomfort over all that she had l
When Alisa and Leo arrived back in Seoul, the car ride from the airport felt suffocating with unspoken words. The low hum of the engine was the only sound filling the dark, leather-scented interior. Leo’s eyes flicked toward her every so often, quick glances that lingered just long enough to be felt but not long enough to hint a conversation. He said nothing and neither did she yet the silence between them wasn’t angry, it was heavy as if each of them was weighing the price of what had just happened and what was yet to come.Beyond the car windows, the city was waking up under a pale, washed out dawn. The Seoul skyline loomed ahead with its towers piercing the early morning mist and neon lights still flickering like tired sentinels not being able to sleep.With arms crossed loosely over her chest, Alisa leaned back against the cold leather seat. The fatigue from days of emotional chaos was tugging at her, but her mind was too restless to surrender to it. Her gaze drifted to the passin
The morning sunlight spilled through the sheer curtains, casting golden stripes across the floor. Alisa stirred with her limbs heavy with exhaustion and her eyes still swollen from yesterday’s heartbreak. Her blouse was wrinkled, the zipper halfway down her back and one strap slipped off her shoulder sometime during the night while her pajama bottoms lay crumpled on the floor, forgotten. The scent of last night’s perfume still clung faintly to her skin, mingled with the ghost of Leo’s cologne—fading, but still there.But the bed beside her was empty.She sat up slowly with her heart thudding in the stillness as her eyes swept the room. The empty soju bottles were gone so was the clutter she remembered leaving in her drunken haze before she’d cried herself to sleep.He had cleaned up. And left. The air was still warm from his presence but he was nowhere to be found. No note and no goodbye, just absence.And then she saw it.On the sleek mahogany table near the armchair sat the contract