LOGINInés stared at her phone. The messages glowed on the screen like threats.
[My office. 3 PM. Don't be late.]
Her hands were shaking. She'd been pacing her room for two hours and it was already 2:45 PM.
*Why does he want to see me? Does he know?*
She'd dealt with dangerous men before. Back in their old life, her father repaired motorcycles for gang members. Rough men with scars and guns and prison tattoos. Men who looked at her like she was meat.
She'd survived all of that.
But Miguel was different.
Miguel scared her in a way those men never did.
Those men wanted to hurt her. Miguel? She didn't know what he wanted. And that was worse. Going near a man like him will only burn you, she told herself. Focus on the mission. Pay off the debt. Keep your head down.
Men like Miguel were her mother's specialty anyway. Carmen knew how to handle rich, powerful men. How to smile and lie and get what she wanted. Inés had watched her do it her whole life. Even when her father was alive, Carmen had other men. Richer men. Men who gave her money and jewelry and promises.
Inés looked around her room. Everything was in place. Her stripper costume was tucked in a box under her bed. The rest of her things, makeup, heels stayed at the club. She never brought them home.
She'd also told the cleaning staff not to enter her room. She cleaned it herself. No one could find anything suspicious if no one was allowed in.
Her phone buzzed. 2:55 PM.
Shit.
She grabbed another hoodie and pulled it on over her t-shirt. She looked at herself in the mirror. Blonde hair in a ponytail. No makeup. Baggy clothes that hid her body.
This was the Inés that Miguel knew. The boring stepsister he ignored. She took a deep breath and left her room.
Miguel's office was in the east wing of the mansion. The part of the house Inés usually avoided. The door was heavy wood with gold handles. She raised her fist to knock, but before she could, his voice came from inside.
"Come in."
How did he know she was there? She pushed the door open.
Miguel sat behind a massive desk, his laptop open in front of him. He didn't look up when she entered.
"Close the door," he said.
Inés did. The click of the lock felt too loud.
"Sit."
She sat in one of the chairs across from his desk. The leather was cold through her jeans.
Miguel finally looked up. His eyes were cold. Professional. Like she was a business problem he needed to solve.
"Do you know why I called you here?" he asked.
"No."
"No?" He leaned back in his chair. "You have no idea?"
Her heart was pounding so hard she was sure he could hear it. "You said we needed to talk."
"We do." He closed his laptop slowly. "I've been noticing some things, Inés."
He knows. Oh God, he knows.
"What things?" Her voice came out steady.
"You're never home at night." His eyes locked on hers. "Where do you go?"
"I study at my friend's house. My mother knows."
"Your mother." Miguel's laugh was cold. "Yes, I'm sure she does. You two seem very good at covering for each other."
What did that mean?
"I study late," Inés repeated. "Sometimes I fall asleep there. It's easier than coming home."
"What's your friend's name?"
"Jessica."
"Jessica what?"
"Martinez." The lie came easily. She'd practiced it.
Miguel pulled out his phone and typed something. Inés's stomach dropped. Was he looking her up? Could he check?
"Interesting," Miguel said after a moment. He put his phone down. "And why do you study so late? What classes are so important you can't come home?"
"Business management. Economics. Statistics."
"Mmm." He stood up and walked around the desk. He leaned against it, crossing his arms. He was too close now. "Do you know what I hate, Inés?"
"No."
"Liars." His voice was quiet but sharp. "People who keep secrets. People who pretend to be one thing when they're really something else."
Her throat went dry.
"My father worked his whole life to build his reputation," Miguel continued. "His company. His name. And now he's sick, probably dying. And in his last months, he married your mother."
He said the words like they tasted bad. "A woman who came out of nowhere with a daughter who sneaks around at night."
"I'm not sneaking..."
"Don't lie to me. CCTV caught you sneaking in several times at odd hours." His voice was harder now. "If there's anything that will bring trouble to this family, you need to tell me now. I won't tolerate deceit. I won't let you or your mother ruin what my father built."
Inés stood up. Her chair scraped back. "You don't get to interrogate me. Whatever I do is my business."
"Is it?" Miguel pushed off the desk and walked toward her slowly. Like a predator. "You're living under this roof. Eating our food. Going to school on our money. That makes it my business."
"I didn't ask for any of that."
"Then leave."
He was right in front of her now. Too close. She could smell his cologne. The same one from last night. "But you won't, will you? Because you need this. You and your mother both need this."
Her hands clenched into fists. "What do you want from me?"
"I want the truth." He tilted his head. "Are you seeing boys? Is that where you go at night?"
"That's none of your business."
"Answer the question."
"And if I am?" She lifted her chin, trying to look braver than she felt. "What I do with boys is my choice."
Miguel's eyes darkened. Anger flickered across his face. Then he moved.
He bent down slowly, like he was picking something up off the floor. But there was nothing there. It was an excuse. An excuse to bring his face close to hers.
His mouth was inches from hers. She could feel his breath on her lips.
"What do you know about boys, Inés?" he whispered.
Three Weeks after the funeral. The reading of Carlos Mendoza’s will had been a cold, sterile affair conducted in a mahogany-row office that smelled of old paper and expensive hubris. The lawyer had droned on about diversified portfolios, offshore holdings, and the sprawling Alvarez estate—all of it left, in a final act of obsessive possession, to Inés. Carlos had tried to own her from beyond the grave, tethering her to his ghost with gold and titles. Inés had walked out of that office without signing a single acceptance form for herself. She didn’t want his mansion; she didn't want his blood-stained dividends. Instead, she moved with a quiet, lethal efficiency to dismantle his empire. Within fourteen days, the "Mendoza Legacy" was being liquidated. The funds didn't go to luxury cars or art collections. They flowed back into the cracked pavement of the slums where she had grown up. The money funded the Luz Marina Foundation, a sanctuary dedicated to taking young girls off the street
With a violent shove that sent one detective who had come into the bar, stumbling into the mahogany bar, Carlos bolted. He threw himself through the heavy glass doors, the momentum of his panic carrying him into the humid night air. "Carlos! Stop!" Miguel’s voice echoed off the buildings, raw and commanding, but it was useless. Carlos wasn't thinking about the law anymore. He wasn't thinking about blueprints or legacies. He was a man running from the shadow of a gold necklace and the ghost of a girl in Apartment 4B. He hit the sidewalk with a stumbling gait, his expensive leather soles skidding on the pavement. He looked left, then right, his eyes wide and bloodshot, reflecting the neon chaos of the street. He saw the alleyway across the boulevard—a dark throat that promised a temporary escape. Without looking at the flow of traffic, without calculating the velocity of the world around him, he made his final, fatal move.The sound was something no one in the crowd would ever forge
The bar was a sleek, dimly lit cavern of polished chrome and dark leather, tucked away in a corner of the city where the wealthy went to disappear in plain sight. Carlos Mendoza sat in a corner booth, the amber light of a desk lamp casting sharp, angular shadows across his face. He looked impeccable. He had changed into a charcoal-grey suit, his hair perfectly coiffed, his posture radiating the relaxed confidence of a man who had successfully navigated a minor inconvenience. When Inés arrived, she didn't hesitate. She walked through the crowd of socialites and businessmen, her eyes locked on the man who had turned her life into a structural nightmare. She sat opposite him, her back straight, her hands folded on the table. "You look well, Inés," Carlos said, his voice a smooth, cultured baritone. He took a slow sip of his wine, savoring the bouquet as if he didn't have a care in the world. "A bit pale, perhaps. The stress of the last few days is clearly taking its toll. It’s a
The hallway of the apartment building smelled of stale tobacco and the slow rot of neglected dreams. It was a stark contrast to the sterilized luxury of the Alvarez estate or the perfumed chaos of P-Valley. Here, the air was stagnant, trapped in a narrow corridor where the wallpaper peeled like sunburnt skin. Miguel led the way, his hand resting instinctively on Inés’s arm, a silent anchor in the rising tide of their dread. Behind them, Uncle Clifford moved with a rare, somber quietude, the sequins of her robe no longer shimmering with joy, but clinking together like tiny, metallic teeth. They stopped at door 4B. There was no sound from within. No television hum, no rhythmic beat of music—just a heavy, oppressive silence that seemed to leak out from under the doorframe. And then, there was the smell. It was faint at first, a sweet, cloying heaviness that caught in the back of the throat, the unmistakable scent of a life that had been extinguished and left to the shadows. "Stay bac
The neon light of P-Valley hit Inés’s face, turning her skin a pale, ghostly violet. They headed straight for the Throne... the elevated booth where Uncle Clifford usually presided over the chaos. Clifford was there, draped in a floor-length sequined robe that caught every stray beam of light, but her usual regal composure was frayed at the edges. She was nursing a drink, her eyes fixed on the entrance as if waiting for a ghost. When she saw Miguel and Inés, her expression shifted from concern to a well-practiced, weary nonchalance. "Well, if it isn't the royal family," Clifford said, her voice cutting through the bass like a jagged blade. "To what do I owe the pleasure? You here for a private show, or are you just looking for a place where the air-conditioning actually works?" Inés didn't stop until she was inches from the desk, leaning over it so Clifford couldn't look away. "Cut the act, Clifford. We aren't here for the show, and we aren't here for the drinks." Clifford arche
The neighborhood was quieter than usual, the type of silence that feels heavy with the humidity of a brewing storm. Carlos moved through the shadows of the alleyway with a practiced grace. He reached the door of Apartment 4B. This was his sanctuary—the one piece of the board he hadn't shared with the police, the lawyers, or the Alvarez family. He knocked the familiar rhythm: three slow beats, then two quick ones. There was a long pause. Then, the sound of the security chain sliding. The door opened a crack, and Luz peered out. When she saw him, her breath hitched, and she instinctively tried to close the door. "Carlos," she whispered, her voice trembling. "What are you doing here? The news... they said you were being questioned. They said you were... they said you were on the run." Carlos placed a palm against the door, preventing it from shutting. He gave her a smile that was too wide, too bright, and entirely hollow. "On the run? Don't believe everything the media tells yo
Two months.Carlos stared at the sleeping woman beside him, still unable to quite believe that this was real, that Inés was actually his wife now, that she wore his ring and shared his bed and had legally bound herself to him in ways that couldn't be easily undone.Two months of having her completel
"Say that again," Miguel said, his voice deceptively quiet. "I want to make sure I heard you correctly."Inés stood near the door, her arms wrapped around herself like she was physically holding herself together, while Miguel paced behind his desk with the kind of controlled fury that made the ai
**I'm sleeping with Miguel. I've been sleeping with Miguel. We've been having mad, hot, passionate sex in Spain, in every position imaginable. I'm in love with him. I think I've been in love with him for the past one year, maybe from the beginning, and I'm so sorry but I can't keep lying to you any
The kitchen had been transformed into what looked like a wedding planning war room.Martha sat at the island with a leather-bound notebook open in front of her, her reading glasses perched on her nose, a pen poised over the page as she dutifully recorded every detail that Carmen threw at her with t







