LOGINThe footsteps stopped right outside Vivian’s door.
Not rushing. Not hesitant.
Deliberate. Measured.
Vivian stood frozen, one hand still gripping the door handle, the other instinctively covering her stomach.
Lucas shifted slightly in front of her, blocking her line of sight to the corridor.
“Don’t open it,” he said quietly.
A pause.
Then the footsteps stopped entirely.
Silence followed.
Too clean.
Too intentional.
Then, a faint click echoed through the hallway.
Like a door shutting somewhere far away.
Lucas’s jaw tightened.
“They’re testing you,” he muttered.
Vivian swallowed hard. “Testing me for what?”
Lucas didn’t answer immediately. His eyes stayed fixed on the peephole, as if he expected it to blink back.
Finally, he said, “To see how easy you are to reach.”
***
Against Vivian’s protest, Lucas refused to leave.
“I’m not asking,” he said flatly when she tried.
“This is my house,” Vivian snapped weakly. “You don’t just...”
“I do when you’re in danger,” he cut in.
That silenced her.
He moved a chair near the door and sat, arms crossed, like a guard posted at a gate.
Vivian stood awkwardly in the middle of her small apartment.
“This is insane,” she whispered.
Lucas didn’t look at her. “So is someone breaking into my systems to target you.”
Vivian exhaled slowly, fear still sitting in her chest like a weight.
“I don’t even understand why anyone would care this much about me,” she said.
Lucas finally looked at her.
His expression softened for a fraction of a second.
“Because you’re involved in something bigger than you think.”
Before she could ask what he meant, her stomach twisted sharply.
A wave of nausea hit her so suddenly she grabbed the table for support.
“Ah...”
Her knees weakened.
Lucas was instantly on his feet.
“Hey,” he said sharply, stepping closer. “Sit down.”
“I’m fine,” she insisted, but her voice betrayed her.
Another wave hit. This time stronger.
Vivian rushed to the bathroom before she could stop herself.
Minutes later, she sat on the bathroom floor, pale and shaking.
Lucas stood outside the door.
“You need water,” he said.
“I don’t need instructions,” she muttered weakly.
A faint pause.
Then.
“You’re dehydrated.”
“I said I’m fine!”
Silence.
Then Lucas spoke again, quieter. “You’re not fine.”
That stopped her.
Because for the first time, his voice didn’t sound like authority.
It sounded like concern.
Real concern.
She opened the door slightly.
Lucas handed her a bottle of water without looking away.
She hesitated, then took it.
Their fingers brushed.
It was brief. But it lingered. Too long in her mind.
By morning, Lucas had already arranged for a private doctor.
Vivian resisted.
“I don’t need a hospital,” she said, pulling a blanket tighter around herself.
“You fainted twice in two weeks,” Lucas replied calmly.
“That’s normal for pregnancy!”
“That’s not normal,” he corrected.
She glared at him. “Stop talking like you own my body.”
Lucas paused.
Then said quietly, “I don’t. I just don’t want anything happening to you.”
That sentence unsettled her more than his usual coldness ever did.
Because it didn’t feel strategic.
It felt honest.
At the clinic, the doctor examined her carefully.
Lucas stood by the window, arms folded, eyes scanning every movement.
Vivian lay back on the bed, exhausted.
After a few minutes, the doctor frowned slightly.
“Stress levels are elevated,” he said. “And your nutrition is inconsistent.”
Vivian looked away.
Lucas’s jaw tightened.
The doctor continued, “Given your condition, I strongly recommend reduced physical activity and emotional stress.”
Vivian let out a weak laugh. “That’s impossible.”
Lucas turned slightly.
“You’ll stay at my residence,” he said immediately.
Vivian sat up. “No.”
The doctor cleared his throat awkwardly and left them alone.
Silence filled the room.
Vivian stared at Lucas.
“You don’t get to decide that,” she said.
Lucas didn’t move. “You nearly collapsed on your floor last night.”
“I’m still standing,” she shot back.
Lucas’s voice lowered. “That’s not the point.” A beat. Then, softer, “You’re carrying my child.”
That sentence hit differently this time.
Not like ownership.
But like responsibility he couldn’t escape anymore.
Vivian looked down, conflicted.
“I don’t trust your world,” she said quietly.
Lucas replied without hesitation:
“Then trust me in it.”
Silence stretched between them.
Heavy. Unresolved. But no longer hostile.
Just fragile.
That evening, Vivian returned home.
Lucas insisted on escorting her, but she refused to let him stay inside.
“Just go,” she said, leaning against the door.
Lucas hesitated.
For a moment, it looked like he might argue.
Instead, he nodded once.
“I’ll be outside.”
“You can’t just camp outside my house,” she muttered.
“I already am.”
That unsettled her more than she wanted to admit.
He turned and stepped into the hallway.
Vivian locked the door.
For the first time in days, the apartment felt quiet.
Too quiet.
She exhaled slowly and walked to her kitchen.
That’s when her phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
She hesitated before answering.
A voice came immediately.
Calm. Feminine. Cold.
“You didn’t listen.”
Vivian froze.
“Who are you?” she whispered.
A soft laugh.
“You’re still alive because I allowed it.”
Her blood turned cold.
“What do you want from me?”
“Leave him.”
Vivian’s grip tightened.
“Lucas?”
The voice responded simply:
“He doesn’t belong to you. And neither does what you’re carrying.”
Vivian’s breath caught.
The line went dead.
She stood frozen.
Then slowly turned toward the door.
Just as she reached for it, a sharp knock echoed from outside.
Not Lucas.
Too heavy. Too slow.
Three knocks.
Pause.
Then one more.
Vivian stepped back.
The doorknob began to turn.
Vivian's entire body froze.The towel around Lucas's waist hung low on his hips, droplets of water trickling from his damp hair down the defined muscles of his chest before disappearing beneath the white fabric. Steam drifted lazily from the bathroom behind him, making the room smell faintly of cedarwood and fresh soap.For several long seconds, neither of them moved. Vivian was the first to recover."Oh my God!"She spun around so quickly that she almost tripped over her own feet, immediately covering her eyes with both hands."I-I'm sorry! I didn't know. I wasn't trying to..."Lucas sighed, running a hand through his wet hair. "You can open your eyes.""I absolutely cannot!""You've already seen everything.""I have not!""You definitely have.""I saw nothing!"Lucas couldn't stop the corner of his lips from twitching upward. "You walked into my bedroom.""I walked into what I thought was another closet!" She was still facing away from him, her ears burning bright red.Lucas picked
BEEP!The security alarm echoed once more through the mansion.Lucas's relaxed posture vanished instantly.His eyes sharpened."Stay here," he ordered.Without waiting for Vivian's response, he strode toward the security control room.Vivian's heart pounded.The staff members who had been cleaning the hallway moments ago suddenly became restless. Guards hurried past her with earpieces, speaking into walkie-talkies."What happened?" one maid whispered."I don't know," another answered nervously.Vivian wrapped her arms around herself. She had only arrived a few hours ago. How could trouble have followed her here already?Inside the security room, several monitors displayed every corner of the mansion. The chief of security looked uneasy."Sir...""What triggered the alarm?" Lucas demanded.The guard rewound the footage. Everyone stared at the screen.A shadowy figure appeared briefly near the western fence before disappearing behind thick hedges.Lucas narrowed his eyes. "Zoom in."The
The doorknob turned slowly.Not hurried. Not forced.Controlled.Like whoever stood outside already knew the door would open for them eventually.Vivian stepped back instinctively, her heart hammering against her ribs.“Lucas?” she called out, voice shaky.No answer..Another slow turn of the knob.Then, a firm stop.Silence.The kind of silence that felt intentional, like someone was waiting for permission without asking for it.Vivian grabbed a small glass vase from her table, holding it tightly. Her hands were shaking now.“Who’s there?” she demanded louder.A pause.Then a voice came through the door.Male. Calm. Familiar.“Vivian. It’s me.”Lucas.Her grip loosened slightly. But she didn’t move.“How did you...” she started.“I never left the building,” he said.Then the lock clicked again. The door opened.Lucas stepped inside. His eyes immediately scanned her face.“You’re pale,” he said.Vivian stared at him, still clutching the vase. “Someone was just trying to get in here.”
The footsteps stopped right outside Vivian’s door.Not rushing. Not hesitant.Deliberate. Measured.Vivian stood frozen, one hand still gripping the door handle, the other instinctively covering her stomach.Lucas shifted slightly in front of her, blocking her line of sight to the corridor.“Don’t open it,” he said quietly.A pause.Then the footsteps stopped entirely.Silence followed.Too clean.Too intentional.Then, a faint click echoed through the hallway.Like a door shutting somewhere far away.Lucas’s jaw tightened.“They’re testing you,” he muttered.Vivian swallowed hard. “Testing me for what?”Lucas didn’t answer immediately. His eyes stayed fixed on the peephole, as if he expected it to blink back.Finally, he said, “To see how easy you are to reach.”***Against Vivian’s protest, Lucas refused to leave.“I’m not asking,” he said flatly when she tried.“This is my house,” Vivian snapped weakly. “You don’t just...”“I do when you’re in danger,” he cut in.That silenced her.
The system logs were gone.Not partially corrupted. Not delayed. Not “under review.”Gone.Lucas stared at the blank audit screen in silence, his jaw tightening slowly as the reality settled in.Someone had not only accessed Alpha Zee systems, they had cleaned their trail like they knew exactly how he would investigate.That was not amateur sabotage.That was inside knowledge.“Bring me the backup servers,” Lucas said coldly.The IT manager hesitated. “Sir, those logs were purged from backup too.”Lucas turned sharply.“Impossible.”The man swallowed. “We checked twice.”A long, suffocating silence followed.Then Lucas exhaled slowly through his nose.“This wasn’t just access,” he said. “This was preparation.”Someone had planned this long before Vivian ever saw that email.***Vivian sat on her bed, staring at her phone like it might attack her.No new messages.No clarification.Just the silence after the threat.Her mind replayed everything again and again:The fake termination ema
Vivian stared at her laptop screen until the words blurred into one unreadable smear.“TERMINATION CONFIRMATION EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY.”Her breath caught.“No… no, no, this has to be a mistake.”Her fingers trembled as she refreshed the page again, hoping it would magically disappear. It didn’t. The company email system had already logged her out of internal access. Her ID badge access had been revoked too.Just like that, she was erased. From Alpha Zee.She sat frozen for a full minute, unable to move. The office around her continued like nothing had happened- phones ringing, keyboards clicking, colleagues laughing softly at distant jokes.But her world had tilted.She stood abruptly, nearly knocking over her chair.“Maybe it’s a system error,” she whispered to herself. “Maybe HR is updating records…”But even as she said it, she knew.This wasn’t a system error.This was intentional.She walked through the hallway with stiff steps, her heart pounding louder with each step. Every cow







