FAZER LOGINThe master bedroom smelled like him—that intoxicating blend of sandalwood and cold indifference. Lily stood in the doorway, her suitcase wheels catching on the threshold like a final protest.
Five years.
Five years of stolen moments in this gilded cage.
They had fucked against every surface—the mahogany desk, the shower glass, the very spot where her knees now threatened to buckle. But they had never made love. Not once.
Her packing took less than ten minutes.
How pathetic, that a marriage could be undone faster than the time it took David to choose a tie each morning. The suitcase—bought new for their honeymoon, still faintly dusty from disuse—gaped open like a wound.
She filled it only with what she had brought: a few books, the pearl earrings her mother left her, the silk nightgown he had once torn off her without looking at the color.
The study smelled of his Cuban cigars and betrayal.
There, in the top drawer where he kept his whiskey and condoms, lay the divorce papers. Prepared before they got married. A contingency plan for Marina's inevitable return.
Lily signed without trembling. The pen glided smoothly as the knife he had slid between her ribs for half a decade.
She had come to him willingly.
She left with equal resolve.
No tears. No dramatics. Just the quiet unraveling of a dream she should have abandoned the first time he had whispered another woman's name into her hair.
The front door clicked shut behind her.
Rain lashed the pavement as she hailed a cab. The droplets streaked the windows like the tears she refused to shed.
"Where to?" the driver asked.
The question froze her.
Leave. Just leave. That had been her only thought. But now, faced with the reality—she had nowhere to go.
No home. No family.
Her mother had died bringing her into this world. Her father's remarriage had brought only a stepmother whose mistreatment cut deeper than cruelty. Her childhood had been a nightmare.
The only peace she had ever known were those fleeting years with David—years she now realized were just another kind of solitude.
She had severed ties with her own family for him, unwilling to let their dysfunction touch his world.
And what had it earned her?
A divorce paper signed before marriage. A husband who used her merely as a sex toy.
"Where to?" The driver's voice sharpened as horns blared behind them.
Panic tightened her throat. Then, before she could think—
"Noa's apartment. 27 Willow Lane."
The name escaped like a confession. Noa, her best friend since high school. The woman who had gripped her shoulders the day she signed that contract marriage, eyes blazing: "You'll regret this, Lily. He'll destroy you."
And like a fool, she had laughed it off.
Now, with the divorce papers heavy in her bag and the taxi meter counting away her old life, Lily finally believed it.
The clock ticked 12:17 AM when Lily appeared at Noa's doorstep. Rainwater dripped from her hair onto the welcome mat—Noa's joke gift from last Christmas: "Go Away Unless You Have Wine."
Her knuckles hovered, trembling.
The door flew open before she could knock.
Noa stood there in rumpled pajamas, her sleep-mussed braids swinging as she jerked fully awake.
"Jesus Christ, Lily—" Her voice cracked when she saw Lily's shattered expression, the death-grip on her suitcase. "You look like you walked out of a fucking horror movie."
Lily's attempt at a smile twisted into something broken. "I didn't... know where else..." The words dissolved like sugar in whiskey.
Noa didn't ask. She just yanked her inside, kicking the door shut with her bare foot.
"You're fucking freezing." Her hands—always warm, always steady—rubbed Lily's icy arms. "Where's your coat? Scratch that—where's your common sense?"
The suitcase thudded to the floor. Lily stared at it, numb. Five years of marriage reduced to one wheeled carry-on.
Noa swore under her breath and manhandled her onto the couch. "Move and I'll duct tape you here." She vanished into the kitchen, banging cabinets with unnecessary violence.
Lily sat. The apartment smelled like Noa's vanilla candle wax and takeout—real life, not David's sterile mansion. Her fingers traced a coffee stain on the cushion. Proof that people actually lived here.
A chipped "World's Best Accountant" mug (a gag gift from Lily) appeared under her nose. Chamomile steam curled between them. Noa didn't do it gently, but her hands were careful as she wrapped Lily's around the heat.
"Drink. Then talk. Or don't. But hydrate, you tragic heroine."
The tea scalded Lily's tongue. Good. Pain meant she still felt.
Noa perched beside her, knee bouncing. Waiting.
"I signed them," Lily whispered to the tea leaves. "The divorce papers."
Noa went statue-still.
"Marina's back." The words came out strangled. The tea rippled—her hands were shaking now. "They're… together."
A tear plopped into the mug. Then another. Silent. Efficient. Like she had practiced this moment in the mirror for years.
Noa exploded off the couch. She didn't miss the bruise-like love bites peeking above Lily's collar. If David had chosen Marina, why leave marks like claim staked on condemned land?
"Fuck that emotionally stunted bastard—" She kicked the coffee table so hard a magazine slid off. "I'll burn Hardison Corp to the ground. I'll—"
"It doesn't matter." Lily's voice surprised them both—hollow as a picked-clean bone. "I know he never loved me. And I promised him. The contract..."
Noa whirled, eyes blazing. "That contract was emotional blackmail and you know it—" She bit off the rest, fists clenching. Because they had had this argument before. Many times.
The silence stretched. The radiator hissed. Somewhere downstairs, a dog barked.
Finally, Noa sat. Not touching, but close. "Okay," she said, exhaling hard. "Okay. Fuck him. His loss."
She gently hugged Lily, her tone firm, "I've got you. You're home now."
Tears burst out, and Lily curled into Noa's side, her tea cooling between them. Outside, the rain slowed to a drizzle. The world kept turning.
And for the first time in five years—so did Lily.
***
The next day, Lily went to work as usual. The elevator doors slid open with a soft ding, revealing Jenny's smug face.
"Oh, Lily," Jenny chirped, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "You're such an angel for covering my shift last night."
Her manicured fingers fluttered near her chest in mock gratitude.
"But then again," she added with a poisonous smile, "it's not like you have much of a personal life to interfere, do you?"
"Did you see the news? David's real love is back." She leaned in, her perfume cloying. "And everyone bets he'll propose to her soon."
Jenny's painted lips curled in triumph. "Face it—you'll never be the one to win David's heart."
Lily's grip tightened on her bag, but her voice remained ice-cold. "Funny, coming from someone who couldn't even handle a simple report without faking a migraine."
She stepped past Jenny without another glance, leaving the other woman gaping.
At her desk, Lily mechanically sorted through emails, her movements precise, practiced. The resignation letter in her bag weighed heavily against her hip—a burden, yet also a promise of freedom.
She couldn't stay. Not after last night. Not when every glance at David would remind her of Marina's triumphant return. Today would be the last time she made his coffee.
The ritual began without thought—measuring the exact 17 grams of Ethiopian beans, heating the water to 96°C, and timing the 30-second bloom. She had perfected this routine like she had perfected everything else about being Mrs. Hardison—the silent wife, the flawless secretary, the warm body in the dark.
The first time he had praised her coffee, she had clung to that scrap of approval like a lifeline. Maybe if I perfect this, she had thought, he'll see me. What a fool she had been.
Steeling herself, she pushed open his office door—only to freeze.
David wasn't at his desk.
Instead, Marina lounged in his leather chair like a queen on a throne, her manicured fingers tracing the edge of his polished mahogany desk. She looked up, a slow, feline smile spreading across her lips.
"Oh, Lily," she purred. "I've heard about you."
The music inside the bar thumped like a heartbeat, heavy and relentless, but Lily no longer felt the rhythm. The moment she caught David's cold gaze from across the dance floor, something inside her deflated.Her steps faltered, the song fading in her ears even though it was still playing loud and fast. There, standing just a few feet away near the entrance, was David. And beside him, arm-in-arm and looking as smug as ever, was Marina.The sight of them together hit her like a punch to the stomach.David's eyes found hers almost instantly. His expression didn't change—calm, cold, unreadable. Marina, on the other hand, spotted Lily and immediately tightened her grip on David's arm, as if marking her territory.Lily stepped back, bumping into another dancer.Lily's heart pounded in her chest. A thousand thoughts raced through her mind. Did he follow her? Was this a coincidence? Did Marina bring him here on purpose?David didn't approach.He simply stood there, watching her like a predat
Lily stepped into Noa's apartment, the soft click of the door closing behind her doing little to muffle the storm inside her chest. Her hands trembled as she removed her shoes, her mind replaying the scene at the hospital on a never-ending loop—the moment Marina's body jerked in reaction to the allergen, the panicked shout from David, the sheer terror of being accused, and worst of all, the cold fury in David's eyes as he pointed at her."You're home," Noa said, emerging from the kitchen, wiping her hands with a dishtowel. She frowned as she looked at Lily. "What happened? You look like you've seen a ghost.""I might as well have," Lily murmured, lowering herself onto the couch as if all the energy had been drained from her bones.Noa sat beside her, waiting quietly.Lily told Noa everything: the wild goose chase across the city to buy specific dishes, the discovery that David and Marina had already eaten, the theatrical performance Marina put on, and finally, the allergic reaction th
The city was sweltering under the streetlights when Lily stepped out of the hospital. David had been injured protecting her, and no matter how cruel his words were, she couldn't ignore the pain behind them.First, she went to the east side of town for some rare mushroom broth. Then, just as she paid, Marina called again."Oh, Lily, I forgot to mention David prefers steamed herbal soups now. There's a new place in the west. Can you grab those too?" Marina's voice was syrupy sweet over the phone, hiding the steel underneath.Lily hesitated, glancing at the heavy bags in her hand. "I already.....""Don't forget you are his secretary, this is your job," Marina interrupted coldly.Lily gritted her teeth. "Fine."By the time she returned to the hospital, her clothes clung to her like a second skin, her arms ached from the weight of the food, and sweat matted her hair to her forehead.But nothing could've prepared her for what she saw through the slightly ajar ward door.David, leaning comfo
Lily never expected David to risk his life for her.Now, seated in the hospital room, watching the doctor clean and dress the gash across his shoulder, her stomach twisted into a tight knot. Guilt, confusion, and something softer—something terrifyingly close to affection—churned together inside her chest.The antiseptic smell hung thick in the room. The monitor beeped steadily, and David sat still, only flinching slightly when the cotton swab touched raw skin. Lily stood a little away, her arms wrapped around her midsection, her teeth worrying her lower lip. She hadn't said much since they arrived. Neither had he.The doctor finished the dressing, then glanced toward Lily. "He'll be fine, but he needs rest and careful attention. You're his wife, aren't you?"Lily opened her mouth but didn't know what to say."She is," David said flatly before she could respond. "Make sure she knows how to take care of the wound."The doctor nodded and began explaining the medication schedule and dress
The message arrived mid-afternoon: brief, coldly formal, unmistakably David."Dinner. 7 PM. Delphina's. Dress accordingly."Lily hadn't expected the invitation.She stared at the text for a long moment, thumbs hovering.Delphina's?The same five-star restaurant he had once mentioned taking her to after the successful completion of Project A.He never did. Business had gotten in the way. Marina's return had taken priority. But now, here it was months later.Why now?She didn't answer the message. She just showed up at 7 sharp, dressed in a sleek black dress she'd bought two years ago on impulse, back when she still hoped he'd take her somewhere nice without a reason. She'd left the tag on until tonight.The waiters greeted her with reverent familiarity, guiding her through the quiet restaurant to a table near the tall windows. The place was empty. Every seat, every table, every candle belonged to them.A candlelit dinner, booked exclusively for two.David sat waiting, impeccably dresse
"David’s secretary," Marina drawled, rising from his chair with deliberate grace. Her eyes raked over Lily with slow, calculated disdain—from her sensible heels to her neatly pinned-up hair. "Hmm. I don’t see what all the fuss is about."Lily kept her expression neutral, though her fingers tightened around the coffee tray. "Can I help you with something, Ms. Laurent?"Marina smirked, circling her like a predator. "Oh, I’m just… assessing the competition." She paused, tapping a manicured nail against David’s desk. "Tell me, how does it feel? Playing house with someone else’s man for five years?"Lily didn’t flinch. "If you’re referring to my work, all records are up to date. Would you like me to pull the files?"Marina’s smile faltered. She hadn’t expected such precision—such competence. The realization sharpened her voice. "Cute. But we both know you were just a placeholder."She leaned in, her whisper venomous. "David told me everything. How lonely he was. How… convenient you were."







