{ Vanessa’s POV}
The silence that followed was deafening. Even the air seemed to hold its breath. Lady Sinclair’s hand trembled in the air before she lowered it slowly, her eyes narrowing at her son. “Unbelievable,” she muttered bitterly before sweeping out after Lisa, her gown whispering against the floor like a warning. The moment the door closed behind her, Vincent’s hand shot out and grabbed my wrist. His hold wasn’t painful, but it was firm, unyielding, urgent. “Come with me,” he commanded, his tone leaving no room for argument. He pulled me through the corridors, his stride long and sure. I stumbled to keep up, clutching my skirts, my pulse racing. My wrist tingled where his hand gripped me, and though his hold wasn’t cruel, it was charged with something I couldn’t name—anger, desperation, maybe even longing. To anyone watching, it might have looked like a knight whisking a maiden away. To me, it felt like being pulled into the heart of a storm. Servants glanced up as we passed, their whispers echoing behind us, but Vincent didn’t slow. His jaw was tight, his eyes stormy, his entire frame radiating heat and authority. We stopped in a quiet, shadowed corner of the mansion, hidden from curious eyes. Only then did he release me, though his presence still surrounded me like a cage. I leaned against the wall, trying to catch my breath, my chest heaving. Slowly, my eyes lifted to his. He pressed both palms against the wall on either side of my head, trapping me there. His scent—warm, masculine, intoxicating—wrapped around me. His gaze locked onto mine, dark and searching, as though he could peel away my soul with a look. My heart betrayed me. I wanted him to close the distance, to erase the years and the pain, to claim the kiss I had imagined a thousand times in the quiet of my nights. I could feel his breath, warm against my skin. But instead of a kiss, his words sliced through the moment like a blade. “Don’t mistake my protection for care. I’d do the same for any servant.” My chest constricted. “Know. Your. Place.” The words hit me harder than Lisa’s slap ever could have. My lips parted, but no sound came at first. When I finally found my voice, it was trembling. “What have I done to you?” I whispered, my eyes stinging. “Why do you hate me this much?” His jaw clenched. He turned as if to leave, but my question froze him. He spun back, his face twisted with pain he tried to hide. “You’re asking me that?” His voice was raw, burning. “You shattered me, Vanessa. One word—just one word—‘No’—and my entire world collapsed. Do you know what it’s like to give someone your heart and have them crush it like it was worthless? You broke me.” Tears blurred my vision. My voice cracked as I whispered, “Vincent… I was young. I didn’t understand— I’m sorry.” “Sorry?” His bitter laugh sliced me open. “Sorry doesn’t change the past. Sorry doesn’t erase the nights I tried to forget you and couldn’t. Sorry doesn’t undo the years of hate.” I flinched. My hands trembled at my sides. But then my own pain clawed its way out. My voice rose, trembling but fierce. “And you think you didn’t break me too? You left without a word, Vincent. No goodbye. I was waiting—hoping you’d ask again, because I was ready to say yes. But you vanished. You left me with nothing but silence.” The words hung heavy between us. His breath caught, his eyes widened, shock flickering in his dark gaze. For once, the mask slipped. “You were ready to say yes?” His voice cracked, softer now but heavy with disbelief. “After everything… after tearing me apart… you mean to tell me you wanted me too?” My lips trembled. Tears slipped down my cheeks. “I was scared. Too young to understand what I felt. But I loved you, Vincent. I still do. And it’s killing me that you don’t see it.” Something shattered in his eyes. His fists unclenched slowly, his chest rising and falling as if he were at war with himself. Then, in two quick strides, he was in front of me. His hand cupped my face, rough but trembling, desperate and tender all at once. My tears smeared against his palm, but he didn’t pull away. His forehead pressed against mine, our breaths mingling. “I hate you for breaking me,” he whispered, his voice ragged. “But God help me… I can’t stop wanting you.” My answer came in a whisper, heavy with truth. “Then stop fighting me.” The next second, our lips collided. The kiss was fierce, trembling, desperate. It wasn’t gentle—it was years of longing and regret, pain and love crashing together. I clutched his shirt, pulling him closer, while he held me as if letting go would kill him. Tears streamed down my face, mingling with the kiss, salt and fire blending into something that hurt and healed all at once. When we finally broke apart, breathless, our foreheads remained pressed together. His chest heaved. Mine ached. And for the first time in years, the wall between us cracked, letting in a fragile, dangerous hope. We weren’t whole. We weren’t healed. Yet in that moment, I knew neither of us was truly lost. We were moving. Still breathing. In the moment.{Vanessa’s POV}I had known him all my life… or at least, I thought I did.We grew up on the same street where autumn leaves clung stubbornly to the sidewalks and children’s laughter carried through the air like background music. Our houses weren’t far apart—just a few doors, really—but somehow, he always felt distant.Our siblings played together sometimes, running wild between porches and driveways. Me? I was usually with his cousin Diane, giggling about nothing and everything, sharing secrets that weren’t really secrets. And whenever he walked past us—books tucked under his arm, headphones snug around his ears like they were part of him—I pretended not to notice. Pretended he was invisible. Pretended he didn’t make the air shift whenever he was near.That was him. Vincent. The boy I decided not to like. Too quiet. Too unreadable. Too… everything. The kind of boy a girl like me was supposed to ignore.But then his father died.That night the neighborhood shifted. Even the air seemed
{Vanessa’s POV} Ten years. That’s how long it had been since I last saw him. Ten years since his family packed up and left, their house swallowed by silence. Ten years since Vincent — the boy down the street who once sat broken on his porch — vanished without a goodbye. In those years, life dragged me along. Graduations came and went. I worked small jobs, nursed heartbreaks I pretended were bigger than they really were. And now, at twenty-eight, I was just another boutique attendant in the city, folding dresses I couldn’t afford, smiling at customers whose lives looked shinier than mine. I told myself I’d forgotten him. That I’d buried him in the past. That even if I remembered his face, it no longer had power over me. But then the bell above the boutique door rang, and I looked up. Vincent. My chest tightened, every inch of me going still. Not the boy I remembered — no. This man was different. Taller. Broader. A black suit fit him like it had been sewn onto his body.
{Vanessa’s POV}Life had a cruel sense of humor.One week, I was folding dresses for women who would never remember my name, smiling politely while they complained about sizes and colors as if I were invisible. The next, I was standing at the gates of a mansion so big it made me feel like I had shrunk to the size of an ant.The iron gates rose like something out of a fairy tale—or a nightmare. Beyond them stretched long manicured lawns, fountains that sparkled beneath the sun, and a house so wide and tall it looked like it had swallowed the sky.I didn’t know who owned it. I didn’t care. All I knew was that the pay was more than any boutique could ever offer, and I needed it. My younger sister’s hospital bills weren’t waiting for me to figure out pride. My other sister’s school fees loomed over me like a shadow I couldn’t outrun. And then there was my father—crippled, bitter, surviving only because I made sure there was food on the table.I couldn’t afford to turn down this opportunit
{Vanessa’s POV}The first time I saw her, I almost dropped the grocery bag in my hands.A sleek black Mercedes purred to a stop in front of the mansion gates, its tinted windows flashing against the afternoon sun like polished obsidian. The driver—tall, crisp in a tailored suit—was out in a heartbeat, circling the car with trained precision. He moved with the quiet obedience of someone who had practiced this routine a hundred times before.Then the back door opened.And out she stepped—like she had walked straight off the glossy pages of a fashion magazine and into my world.Lisa.Her presence hit like a slap. Her heels struck the marble driveway in sharp, precise clicks, each one echoing power and privilege. She didn’t just walk—she owned the ground beneath her. Her black dress clung to her figure as though it had been molded around her body, every seam sculpting confidence and entitlement. Around her wrist, a diamond bracelet caught the sunlight in cruel flashes, scattering pieces o
{Vincent’s POV}Power was addictive.It coursed through my veins every time I walked into a boardroom and watched men twice my age lower their voices when I spoke. Success had carved me into steel, and money had given me a throne. But none of it silenced the emptiness that followed me wherever I went.That morning, I sat at the head of a long glass table in my company’s headquarters, overlooking the skyline. The city pulsed below like a living thing, but all I cared about were the figures on the screen in front of me. Stocks, mergers, expansion. My world was numbers, and I bent them to my will.“Mr. Vincent, if we secure the partnership with the Westin Group, your hotel branch will double its international reach within a year,” one of the executives said nervously.I nodded, my eyes cutting into him. “I don’t chase partnerships. I command them. Arrange a meeting with their chairman. If they won’t bend to our terms, we’ll make them.”The man swallowed and nodded quickly. The meeting w
{Vanessa’s POV}The silver tray rattled in my grip, the sound matching the rhythm of my heart.“Take this to Vincent’s room,” Lady Sinclair had ordered, her tone leaving no space for protest. “Now.”Every part of me wanted to beg her to send someone else. Anyone else. But her eyes were sharp, her patience thin, and I knew the consequences of disobedience.So I walked. Step by step, the weight of the tray grew heavier, though it wasn’t the glass of wine or the plate of fruit that burdened me. It was his name. Vincent. The man I had spent ten years trying to forget and ten seconds falling apart in front of at the boutique.The hallway stretched endlessly, my footsteps muffled against the thick rug. The air was heavy, filled with the faint scent of polished wood and roses from the vases that lined the corridor. The walls were covered in oil paintings of grim ancestors whose eyes seemed to follow me as I moved. Diana had whispered earlier that he was in the bathroom, and I clung to that f