LOGINAfter I proposed to Kathy Johnson, my girlfriend of seven years, we went to City Hall to get our marriage license. Instead, she had her bodyguards throw me onto the street. Then, she walked through the doors, hand in hand with her childhood friend, Nate. She didn’t even blink when he saw me sitting there on the ground, shaking with disbelief. "Nate's son needs a legal guardian to secure his inheritance from the Johnson Group. The fastest way is for me to marry Nate and adopt the boy." "As soon as the paperwork is finalized, we'll get a divorce. You'll still be the one I really marry." Everyone assumed that I, the man who had been devoted to her for so long, would foolishly wait. After all, I had already waited for seven long years. But that night, I accepted the arranged business marriage my family had prepared for me and took a flight to Center City on the East Coast. I vanished from Kathy's world completely, and no one saw it coming. Five years later, I returned to Westlake City to visit my family. My wife, Rhea Weyland, was the sole heir to the Weyland family, a powerhouse that practically controlled the entire West Coast economy. She was tied up in a sudden international merger meeting. She had specially arranged for someone to pick me up from the airport. But I never dreamed that the "someone" she sent would be Kathy. The moment she saw me, her gaze immediately fell on the glittering watch on my wrist. "I can't believe that after all these years, you've stooped so low you're wearing a cheap knockoff." "Are you done with your little pity party? It's time to come crawling back. Nate's son is starting at an elite private school, and you're just in time to be his full-time driver and bodyguard." I gently stroked the watch on my wrist. What she didn't know was that this was one of the more modest gifts Rhea had given me.
View MoreCHAPTER ONE
Mara's Pov
"You have to sign the birthday card, Lily. We don't just draw a cat on it and call it done."
"But the cat is the present."
"The cat is a drawing of a cat."
"A good drawing."
I looked down at my three-year-old, who was holding a crayon with the seriousness of a surgeon and absolutely zero intention of writing her name. The birthday card for her daycare teacher was now mostly an orange cat. There was barely a corner left for anything else.
"Fine," I said. "Help me write your name right here. This tiny space."
"L," she said, pressing the crayon down so hard it almost tore through. "I. L. Y."
Close enough.
I sealed the envelope before she could add another cat, packed her lunch, wrestled her into her jacket, and had us out the door by seven forty-three. Seven minutes behind my personal target. Not bad for a Tuesday.
This was my life and I had made peace with it.
That's not me being dramatic. I mean it genuinely. I was thirty-two years old, a junior partner at Hargrove and Sloane, the legal guardian of a three-year-old who drew cats on everything, and I had not been on a date since the Obama administration. But I had a routine that worked. I had a daughter, not biologically, not legally in the strictest sense, but mine in every way that mattered — and I had a job I was good at, and I had an apartment with enough counter space to actually cook, which I had learned to value more than I ever expected.
I had built something steady out of something that should have broken me.
Most days, I didn't let myself think too hard about how it started. The pregnancy, the phone call, the hospital. The way Elias Voss had stood in the hallway of the maternity ward looking like a man who had already left his body and was only staying out of obligation. The conversation we had in that hallway, which lasted maybe twelve minutes and rearranged the entire rest of my life.
He'd said, I can't do this. Not cruelly. Just honestly, in the way that people are honest when they're too exhausted to be anything else.
And I'd said, Then I will.
We didn't do paperwork. We didn't call lawyers, which is funny given that I am one. We just made an agreement the way people make agreements when they are too deep in grief to think about consequences. He would go. I would stay. Lily would be mine.
For three years, he kept his word. And so did I.
****************
I was reviewing a deposition summary when my phone rang at six-seventeen that evening. Unknown number, but local. I let it go to voicemail, finished the paragraph I was on, and listened to the message.
Nothing. Just someone who'd hung up.
I forgot about it immediately.
Lily and I had dinner. She ate approximately four bites of pasta and then announced she was full, which I knew meant she would appear at my bedside at ten p.m. requesting crackers. We read two books. I gave her a bath during which she flooded the bathroom mat, which is a nightly occurrence and I have simply accepted it as a feature of existence. I tucked her in. She asked me to sing the song.
I sang the song. It's not a real song. It's something I made up in the hospital the night she was born, when I didn't know what else to do and she wouldn't stop crying. It doesn't have a proper melody or real lyrics. But she loves it the way children love things that belong only to them, and I have never told anyone it exists.
I turned off her light, poured myself a glass of wine, and sat on the couch with the deposition summary still open on my laptop.
The knock came at seven fifty-two.
I wasn't expecting anyone. My neighbor Rosa sometimes came by to return things she'd borrowed, but she texted first. My mother called, never visited. My closest friends had all learned to schedule themselves in advance because I was the kind of person whose schedule required advance scheduling.
I looked through the peephole.
The man on the other side of my door was someone I had not seen in three years. He was taller than I remembered, or maybe I had just spent three years not thinking about his height. He was wearing a jacket that had seen better days and he was standing with the posture of someone who had rehearsed this moment and then abandoned the rehearsal entirely.
Elias Voss.
I stood at the door for a full ten seconds without moving.
He knocked again, softer this time, like he was already apologizing.
I thought about not answering. I thought about calling my lawyer, thought about the fact that I was a lawyer. I thought about Lily asleep in the next room with a crayon still faintly visible on her left hand despite the bath.
Then I opened the door.
He looked at me, and whatever he had planned to say first, he didn't say it. He just looked at me the way people look when they have been carrying something alone for a very long time and have finally, reluctantly, arrived at the place they should have come to sooner.
"I wouldn't be here," he said, "if I had any other option."
I kept my hand on the door. "That's not a great opening, Elias."
"I know." He exhaled. "My mother is dying. She has six months, maybe less. And the only thing she has asked me for—" He stopped. Swallowed. "She wants to meet Lily."
I looked at him for a long moment.
"You should have called first."
"I called," he said. "You didn't pick up."
Kathy's once-pretty face was now haggard and drawn.I stared at her warily. "How did you find this place? What do you want?"To have evaded the worldwide net Rhea had cast and bypassed the tight security of this top private hospital to get to my room, she had to be desperate.The image of Nate lunging at us with a fork flashed through my mind. I instantly went on guard, my muscles tensing.Kathy seemed to sense my defensiveness and took an eager step forward. "Simon, don't be afraid. I would never hurt you. I just…"I took a step back and cut her off sharply. "Get to the point.""Simon, the truth is... you're the one I've always loved. These past five years, thinking of you with another woman... it felt like my heart was being torn out!""I know you have feelings for me too. Come with me! Let's leave this place, leave the West Coast, and go somewhere no one knows us and start over, okay?"Though Kathy looked disheveled, like a fugitive who'd been hiding in the sewers for two weeks, I c
I knew Rhea's methods all too well. Nate had crossed a line she would never forgive, and he would spend the rest of his life in prison.To outsiders, Rhea was a cold-blooded queen who would do anything to achieve her goals, but I knew better than anyone that everything she did was for me.She would never allow anyone to harm me or William. I had been seriously injured this time, and I could only imagine how much she was blaming herself.Aaron might have described them as demons from hell, but I wasn't scared. I felt safe.Kathy and her cronies had brought their downfall upon themselves.I had given them a chance to walk away with dignity, but they insisted on taking the path to ruin.However, after hearing Aaron's description, a faint worry still lingered in my heart.William was only five years old. I was a little afraid that growing up under Rhea's extreme, elite-focused education might have a negative impact on his mental health.I was about to discuss child-rearing with Aaron when
Kathy never dreamed that I would humiliate her so thoroughly in front of everyone.She looked at our happy family, her eyes burning with a jealousy so intense it was maddening.Just as she lost her senses and was about to charge towards me, little William, like a brave little knight, spread his arms to block my path and glared at her fiercely. "Get away! Don't you dare look at my daddy with your dirty eyes!""Who do you think you are, telling my daddy to be your bodyguard? My daddy is the king at home. Even my mommy has to listen to him!""I know who you are. You're the woman who broke his heart. And you have a son that isn't his. My daddy only has me and my unborn brother or sister. Your child has no right to be a part of his family.""Someone like you isn't even worthy of carrying my mommy's briefcase. You're not as pretty as her, not as rich as her, and you're definitely not as good to my daddy as she is."Little William shot Kathy a look of utter disgust, scanning her from head to
Meeting their gazes, my heart immediately softened. "Alright, stop scaring the doctor. He hasn't even finished bandaging the wound."The doctor visibly relaxed upon hearing my intervention.After carefully performing a series of checks and confirming that the wound was not serious and there was no risk of infection, he reported respectfully, "Ms. Weyland, the gentleman has only sustained a superficial injury. There is no damage to the bone. Everything is fine.""I will apply the best ointment to his hand. There will be absolutely no scarring."Rhea's tense nerves finally eased a bit, and she nodded slightly. But I could feel her struggling to control her rage.As the oppressive atmosphere in the room grew heavier, the architect of it all, Kathy, swallowed hard.She could never have imagined that the man she once treated with contempt had transformed into someone she could never hope to reach in her lifetime.Watching the natural intimacy between Rhea and me, a wave of intense unwilling
"That watch… doesn't it look a bit like the 'Heart of Eternity' that President Weyland bought for a fortune at auction?""This is supposed to be her husband's first public appearance. How dare this guy parade around with a fake? Is he trying to sabotage the event?""Kathy, is this guy with you?" a n
Ignoring a furious Kathy, I turned and started to leave.I had only taken a few steps when she rushed up and grabbed my arm, her voice low. "Simon, you won't even take my money? What's that supposed to mean? Are you trying to burn this bridge for good?"I looked at her. "Since we broke up a long tim
I took a deep breath, pushing the irrelevant thoughts from my mind. Arguing with these fools was a waste of breath.I lifted my head, looked Kathy straight in the eye, and said calmly, "Well, you're here to pick me up, right? Let's go."The air grew tense, and the hall fell silent. The group exchang
After I proposed to Kathy Johnson, my girlfriend of seven years, we went to City Hall to get our marriage license.Instead, she had her bodyguards throw me onto the street.Then, she walked through the doors, hand in hand with her childhood friend, Nate.She didn’t even blink when he saw me sitting












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