MasukThe car ride was a blur of violence and luxury. Valentina, still reeling from the cold grip of the man who called her Misha, tried to fling herself toward the door, her nails clawing at the leather.
"Let me out! Help!" she shrieked, her voice cracking.
But the men inside weren't men; they were stone walls in tailored suits. One bouncer, a giant with a face like a scarred mountain, caught her wrists in one hand.
He didn't hurt her, but his strength was absolute, pinning her against the seat as the car tore through the city at a breakneck speed.
"Quiet," the man in the front, Ian, commanded without looking back.
The car surged through massive iron gates, up a winding drive lined with ancient oaks, and skidded to a halt before a palace of glass and marble. This wasn't just a house; it was a fortress of wealth.
Valentina was hauled out, her feet barely touching the ground. Her throat felt like she had swallowed hot coals, dry, raw, and bleeding from the screaming and the choking.
The fight drained out of her, replaced by a cold, numbing terror. Is this Kennedy’s second act?she wondered. Did he hire this man to finish the job in a more expensive grave?
She was hurled into the living room, collapsing onto a white Persian rug that she immediately stained with alley mud and the copper scent of her own blood. She sat there shaking, a ruined bird in a gilded cage.
The children, Ivy and Ivan, rushed toward her, their little faces twisted with worry. "Mommy, are you cold? Why are you so dirty?"
As their small hands reached for her, Katherine recoiled, her eyes wide with panic. "Don't! Get away from me!"
The children flinched as if she’d slapped them.
Ian waved a hand, dismissing the bodyguards. They bowed in perfect unison, a chilling display of his power and vanished. He looked down at the sobbing children, his expression softening for a fraction of a second.
"Ivy, Ivan... go to your rooms. Nanny is waiting," he said, his voice a low coo. "Mommy is... she’s not in her right mind tonight. She’s had a long journey."
"I am not their mother! I don't know them from anywhere, Mister. "Valentina screamed, her voice a ghostly rasp.
The children’s faces fell, looking at her with heartbreaking sadness before they turned and walked up the grand staircase, their small shoulders slumped.
Now, the room was silent, save for the crackle of a fire that gave no warmth to Valentina’s shivering bones. She looked at the man she had come to know as Mr Ian. He was peeling off his leather gloves, his eyes tracking her every tremor.
With a sudden burst of desperate energy, Valentina lunged at him, her fingers curved like claws. She didn't know if she wanted to kill him or just make him feel the pain she felt.
Ian didn't even flinch. He caught her mid-air, his hand locking around her waist and pulling her flush against his hard, warm chest.
He let out a dark, low chuckle that sent a shiver of pure electricity down her spine.
"You've always been a feisty one, Misha," he murmured, his breath smelling of expensive bourbon.
"I’ll call the police! I’ll tell them you kidnapped me!" she cried, even though she knew the police probably worked for a man this rich. "I am not Misha! My name is…"
"Enough!" Ian’s voice dropped, vibrating through her chest. "You may have dyed your hair, you may have changed your clothes, but it’s still you. I’d know your scent in a room full of a thousand women."
"What are you..." Valentina started, her breath hitching.
Ian reached for a silver-framed photograph on the mantel and shoved it inches from her face.
Valentina froze. The woman in the photo was her. The same high cheekbones, the same defiant tilt of the chin, the same haunting amber eyes.
But the woman in the photo had vibrant red hair and a look of cold, predatory elegance that Valentina had never possessed.
"It... it may look like me," Valentina whispered, her eyes filling with hot, bitter tears. "But that's not me. Please... I’ve been through so much tonight. I was buried... I was choked..."
Ian’s eyes narrowed, studying her face as if searching for a crack in a mask. He didn't look convinced. He looked hungry.
"Roll up your sleeves," he commanded quietly.
"What? No!"
He didn't wait for permission. He grabbed her arm, his fingers brushing against her skin with a heat that made her gasp.
He shoved the tattered silk of her sleeve up to her elbow.
There, near her inner wrist, was a tiny, faded sunflower tattoo.
Valentina’s heart stopped. It was the tattoo her mother had forced on her as an identification mark, as was claimed. It was so tiny, so insignificant. No one knew about it except her or perhaps Kennedy, if he even cared to notice while they had sex.
"I may have believed your acting, Misha," Ian growled, his face inches from hers, his eyes burning with a possessive fire. "But with this? There is no fucking way you’re telling me you aren't my wife."
"Please, mister," she begged, her voice breaking into a sob. "I am not Misha. I don't know how I got this tattoo of her, I got it myself... I don't know who she is... just let me go. I have a baby to think about..."
"And why would I believe you?" Ian asked sarcastically, letting her go so abruptly she stumbled. "After you ran away and left your children for months?"
"Why would I run away from this?" Valentina cried, gesturing to the sprawling, golden opulence of the room. "I was living in a nightmare! I don't want your money! I just want to live!"
Ian didn't answer. He walked to the liquor stand, his movements fluid and predatory. He poured a glass of amber liquid and downed it, the muscles in his throat working.
Then, he began to unbutton his charcoal vest and remove his coat.
Valentina’s breath caught. As the fabric fell away, she saw the silhouette of a body honed by discipline, broad shoulders, a hint of golden, tanned skin peeking through his white shirt, and a raw, masculine power that made the room feel too small.
He turned back to her, his gaze heavy and dark.
"Three hundred and sixty-five days," he said, his voice echoing with a note of terrifying finality.
Valentina blinked, her heart racing. "For... for what?"
"A year," Ian said, stepping toward her until she was backed against the cold marble of the fireplace. He leaned in, one hand resting on the wall beside her head, trapping her in his heat.
"Within three hundred and sixty-five days, you prove to me that you are not Misha Kingston, the wife I am supposed to hate and the mother of my children. If you can prove you’re a stranger, I’ll let you go with enough money to disappear forever."
He leaned closer, his lips brushing against her ear, his voice dropping to a gravelly, intimate whisper that made her knees weak despite her terror.
"But if you can't... if by the end of this year you are still Misha in my eyes... then you stay. In my house, in my life, and most importantly... in my fucking bed!"
The key fumbled in Kennedy’s shaking hand, scraping against the lock of his luxury apartment with a metallic screech that set his teeth on edge. When the door finally clicked open, he didn't walk in so much as he tumbled, his legs giving out the moment he crossed the threshold.He lay on the foyer rug for a long minute, the stench of industrial-grade bleach and ammonia clinging to his skin like a second, poisonous layer of sweat.His designer suit, the one that had cost him a month’s salary, was stained with gray water and grime from the floors of sixty-two different restrooms when he could not bear the bleach smell of the cleaner’s uniform. He had five hundred and eighty-eight left to go."Martha?" he croaked, his voice raw from the fumes. "Martha, get me a drink. I need... I need a bath. Now!"Silence met his demand. The sprawling penthouse, usually humming with the quiet efficiency of his domestic staff, was as still as a tomb.Kennedy dragged himself up, leaning heavily against th
The sleek black car pulled to a sharp halt near a bustling intersection where a battered, chrome-painted food truck puffed out clouds of hickory-scented smoke. The neon sign on top flickered with a jaunty, dancing hamburger."We are here, sir," Angus announced, his voice hovering somewhere between professional duty and sheer bewilderment. "The... roadside burger establishment."I didn't wait for the door to be opened. I was out of the leather interior before Ian could even put his phone in his pocket. The air smelled of exhaust and beautiful, glistening grease."Misha! For God's sake, be careful!" Ian’s voice trailed after me, sounding more like a frustrated parent than a billionaire tycoon. I ignored him, my heels clicking rapidly against the pavement as I rushed toward the truck. My heart was still hammering against my ribs, not from the hunger, but from the sheer adrenaline of the lie I’d just spun. I was a heartbeat away from a medical tribunal, and I’d traded it for a patty and
The air in the hallway didn’t just grow cold; it vanished. Kennedy stood frozen, a deer caught in the high-beams of a semi-truck. His false bravado didn’t just deflate, it evaporated. Small beads of sweat began to pop out along his hairline, glistening under the fluorescent office lights. One second passed. Two. Three. By the fifth second, a thick droplet rolled down his temple, carving a path through his expensive foundation.Ian didn't just walk; he stalked. He moved with a predatory grace that made the marble floor seem to tremble. He stopped inches from Kennedy, looming over him like an ancient, vengeful god."You look like you’re having trouble breathing, Hale," Ian said, his voice a low, terrifying rumble. "Is it the air in my building? Or is it the realization that you just spoke to my wife as if she were a common street walker?""I... Mr Kingston, I didn't mean…" Kennedy’s voice was a pathetic squeak."I don't care what you meant," Ian interrupted, his eyes flashing with a vi
The silk sheets of the master suite felt like cool water against my skin, but they couldn't drown out the fire humming in my veins. I lay there, staring at the ornate crown molding of the ceiling, my fingers tracing the hollow of my throat. Playing "Misha" wasn't just a survival tactic anymore; it was an intoxication.For three years, I had been the quiet one. The supportive wife. The woman who dimmed her own light so Kennedy Hale could pretend he was a star.I had been a ghost in my own marriage long before he tried to put me in the ground. But today? Today, I saw Kennedy break. I had seen the efficiency he was so proud of dissolve into a puddle of humiliation on a designer carpet.I sat up, a slow, dark smile spreading across my lips. I wasn't just a girl from the grave. I was the architect of his nightmare. And God, it felt better than any prayer I’d ever whispered in the dark.But the silence of the mansion began to grate. My mind was too loud for sleep. My stomach turned, not wit
The moon was a sliver of bone in the New York sky, casting long, skeletal shadows across the manicured grounds of the Hale villa. The air was thick with the scent of damp earth and the heavy, cloying perfume of night-blooming jasmine, a scent that would, within the hour, be replaced by something far more foul.Kennedy and Lilith stood in the farthest corner of the garden, near the weeping willow where the earth was still slightly sunken. They were both dressed in obsidian black from head to toe, their silhouettes blurring into the darkness. Kennedy’s hands were shaking so violently that the shovel in his grip rattled against the stones. "Start digging," Lilith commanded, her voice a cold, sharp whip. Her cheek was swollen where he had struck her, the bruise a dark plum color in the moonlight, but she didn't seem to feel it. Her focus was singular, absolute."This is madness," Kennedy hissed, though he shoved the blade of the shovel into the dirt. "If anyone sees us doing this in our
The echo of the slap lingered in the air, a sharp, stinging ghost that refused to dissipate. For a heartbeat, the only sound in the villa was the rhythmic, frantic panting of Kennedy Hale, the sound of a man who had finally reached the end of his tether and snapped.Lilith didn't scream. She didn't cry. She remained frozen, her head turned to the side, her golden hair shielding her face like a curtain of spun silk. Slowly, she reached up, her manicured fingers grazing the skin of her cheek. It was already beginning to bloom into a violent, angry crimson.She turned her head back to him. Her eyes weren't filled with the tears of a victim; they were filled with the cold, calculating venom of a predator who had just been bitten by its own mate."You hit me," she whispered. It wasn't a question. It was a formal acknowledgment of a declaration of war."I gave you a reality check!" Kennedy roared, his voice cracking with the strain of his hysteria. He paced the length of the Persian rug, hi
“Mommy, you’re finally back!”The words were a physical blow, more shocking than the near-impact of the car. Valentina lay on the wet asphalt, the air forced from her lungs by the sheer weight of the two children clinging to her. Their warmth was a stark, jarring contrast to the icy rain and the st
The rain began as a cold, mocking drizzle, turning the grime of the alley into a slick black sludge.Valentina…. no, she had to stop thinking of herself as the woman who loved Kennedy forced her fingers to dig into the wet pavement. Her muscles screamed, the paralytic leaving behind a lingering, le
The world was no longer light and sound, it was weight.Valentina felt the viscous, poisoned water of the bathtub pressing against her eardrums, a heavy, silent shroud. She was suspended in a terrifying limbo where her mind screamed for air, but her lungs were filled with lead. Through the distort
“You’re pregnant.”The words hit like ice water. Valentina stared at the doctor, her hands trembling as she clutched the edge of the examination table. The sterile room smelled of antiseptic and faint lavender from the air freshener, but it did nothing to calm the storm raging inside her.Pregnant?







