The boardroom was silent, the air so thick it could’ve cracked glass. Helena stood frozen, her lips parted in disbelief as Damian’s hand still rested, trembling, on the polished mahogany table.
“Get out,” he said again, each word like broken glass.
She didn’t argue. Just turned sharply on her heel and exited, heels clicking like gunshots against the marble floor.
Damian didn’t move. He just stared at the spot where she’d stood, eyes distant, knuckles white.
But the damage wasn’t done.
Not even close.
⸻
Two hours later, the dossier was in his hands.
She’d waited for the heat to fade before striking again. This time, she didn’t scream or sabotage in public. She waited until Damian was alone in his office, lights low, tie loosened, and handed him a single, unmarked folder.
“No cameras. No reporters,” Helena said. “Just facts.”
Damian opened it. Slowly. Warily.
Inside were half a dozen glossy photos. Surveillance-style. One looked like Ava entering a run-down building in East London, head low, makeup thick. Another showed her speaking to a man with a blurred-out face heavily suggestive in posture.
A business card fell out next.
Exotique Elite Agency – Discreet. International. Untouchable.
Damian said nothing, but his jaw twitched. The kind of twitch he only allowed when something got to him.
“She used another name back then,” Helena said coolly. “I had it traced through a defunct email and a payment account that was wiped six years ago. She was desperate for money. Sound familiar?”
He didn’t look up. “You forged this.”
“Then prove it,” Helena replied, voice sweet and slow. “I’m just trying to protect the company. Again.”
She turned and walked out, leaving the folder open on his desk.
Damian didn’t move for a long time.
But that night, for the first time since their marriage began, he didn’t come home.
⸻
Ava sat in the kitchen long after the sun went down, a half-eaten apple turning brown beside her.
Something had changed.
She felt it in the stillness of the house, in the way Naomi wouldn’t meet her eyes that morning, in how Damian’s texts had gone from clipped to nonexistent.
He was distant again. But different. This wasn’t coldness.
It was suspicion.
It was watching.
⸻
The next morning, he returned. No apology. No explanation.
He walked in like the night hadn’t swallowed him whole and poured himself a black coffee, flipping through emails on his phone.
Ava studied him from across the counter.
“You didn’t come home last night.”
“I had meetings.”
“At 2 a.m.?”
He didn’t answer. Just took a slow sip and walked out.
Naomi entered moments later, clutching a file she clearly didn’t want to deliver.
“Where was he?” Ava asked quietly.
“I’m not sure.”
“You always know.”
Naomi hesitated. “Maybe… he just needed space.”
Ava stared. “Did Helena show him something?”
Naomi’s shoulders stiffened.
Ava’s heart thudded. “Naomi, if there’s something I should know…”
“There isn’t.” The reply came too fast. Too practiced. “Helena’s playing her usual games. Don’t let her get to you.”
But Ava already felt the walls shifting.
The way Damian’s eyes lingered on her just a little too long.
The way his tone tightened when she mentioned her past, even in passing.
He hadn’t asked her anything.
But he was watching everything.
⸻
That afternoon, Ava sat outside in the garden, trying to ignore the static building in her chest.
The sun was warm. The flowers are fragrant. But none of it touched her.
Not while she felt like a suspect in her own home.
She thought of Lily, of the recent article, of the pain that still pulsed in her sister’s eyes when she visited. Ava had fought so hard to keep the past buried. But if Helena had found something real or forged it wouldn’t matter.
The perception was everything.
And Damian didn’t need the truth to pull away.
He just needed a reason.
⸻
That evening, Ava heard the door creak at midnight and peeked through the hallway.
Damian stood outside her bedroom door.
Not knocking. Just… standing.
His expression is unreadable.
She pretended to be asleep when he finally entered, walked across the room, and paused by the window.
A full minute passed.
Then he turned back toward the bed. Toward her.
Ava’s breath slowed. She kept still.
He moved closer. Slowly. Each step was like a question he couldn’t ask out loud.
Then… he spoke.
So now it was barely a whisper.
“What are you hiding from me, Ava?”
The words sank into the dark like poison.
She didn’t answer. Couldn’t.
Not when she didn’t even know what he’d seen.
But one thing was clear.
He didn’t trust her anymore.
⸻
The next morning, Naomi appeared in the garden where Ava had taken refuge again.
“He asked me to make dinner reservations,” Naomi said cautiously. “Private chef. Here. No staff. Just you and him.”
Ava looked up, startled.
“He said no press. No distractions. Just… talk.”
Talk?
After three days of silence, suspicion, and stares?
Ava stood, brushing invisible dust off her lap.
Maybe this was the moment. The unravelling. The point where everything was either going to fall apart or finally fall into place.
Either way…
She was done sitting in the dark.
“Check your email.”Click.The call ended.And for the first time in my life, I was truly afraid of what came next.I stared at the phone like it could still burn me. My thumb hovered, then tapped into my inbox.There it was.No subject. No signature.Just screenshots. Fake ones except they didn’t look fake. The layout was exact. The wording is professional. It was me… my email address… sending confidential board reports to an anonymous investor. Time-stamped. Watermarked.I wanted to be sick.My hands shook as I backed away from the screen like it might drag me under. She’d forged everything. Or bribed someone to do it. I didn’t know which was worse.But Damian had seen these or ones just like them. That’s why he looked at me like that in the boardroom. Like a stranger. Like I didn’t belong.Maybe I didn’t.But I couldn’t do this alone.Not tonight.Not anymore.I moved on instinct, out of the guest room, and down the hallway that still echoed with the absence of voices. The house fe
The conference room emptied in whispers and stiff backs.No one looked at me.Not really.Not like before.The silence left behind wasn’t quiet. It was shattered.Glass silence. Blade silence.Mark touched my shoulder like he didn’t know what else to do, and I didn’t pull away. I just sat there, staring at the screen long after it had gone black.My name was on it.My words. My signature.My betrayal.Except it wasn’t mine.I stood slowly. My legs didn’t want to hold me, but I made them. One foot in front of the other. That’s what I’d always done, even when it burned, even when the whole world told me to fold.I barely made it to the hallway bathroom before the sob hit.I locked the door and collapsed against the sink, my breath a mess of sharp exhales and blurry noise. My reflection looked like a stranger, with wet eyes, pale skin, and mascara smudged like guilt.I wanted to scream.At him.At myself.At the silence, he left behind.Tell me you didn’t send those emails.I did. I told
I drifted in and out of sleep, tangled in heat and fragments of memory glass shattering, rain soaking through my skin, Damian’s voice breaking as he caught me.When I opened my eyes again, the room was dark, washed in a soft bluish hue. The fever had broken, or at least dulled to a simmer. My body ached, not from illness but from everything it had held onto too long.Damian was still beside me.He hadn’t moved.His jacket was folded neatly over the armchair now. His eyes were closed, head resting against the headboard, one hand still near mine as if he hadn’t meant to fall asleep but did anyway.I didn’t wake him.I just watched him breathe.He looked younger like that. Not softer, exactly but less guarded. Like the weight he always carried had slipped for a moment while no one was watching. And maybe, just maybe, he’d finally let himself care.My throat was still raw when I whispered, “I don’t hate you.”He didn’t stir.But his fingers twitched, just slightly like some part of him he
The world blinked in and out like a dying star.Voices blurred… one urgent, one low, one sharp with panic but all I could feel were the hands. One behind my back, another against my cheek. Warm. Strong. Real.“Don’t just stand there, Mark… open the door.”Damian. His voice wasn’t loud, but it cut clean. No trace of the fight, no trace of the man who told me I didn’t matter. Just command. Just fear.“I’ve got her,” he said, arms wrapping around me like armour, like a net catching something he hadn’t meant to lose.I couldn’t open my eyes. Couldn’t speak. But I felt it; him. The way he lifted me. Careful. Too careful. Like he thought I might break if he breathed wrong.Somewhere in the haze, the car door opened. Rain and warmth battled in the air, the storm outside dripping through my consciousness-like memory.“She’s burning up,” Mark’s voice. Close now. “We should get her checked”“No.” Damian again. Sharper this time. “Not with reporters everywhere.”He pulled me into the car like he
“Then maybe you should’ve picked someone stronger,” he said.I didn’t move.Not at first.I just stared at him. That single sentence cracked through me louder than the shatter of anything I could’ve thrown. I didn’t even flinch when the tears hit the back of my throat. I just stood there, chest tight, my vision burning.“Stronger?” I repeated, low and disbelieving. “That’s what you think this is about?”Damian didn’t say a word. His jaw was tight. His arms crossed. Like he was holding something back.“You think I wanted him?” I took a step closer. “You think I stayed because I was weak?”Still no answer. But something flickered in his expression. Something close to regret but he buried it before I could be sure.My voice cracked. “You don’t get it. I stayed alive because of Lily. I stayed quiet because I was protecting her. You think I wanted to be someone’s punching bag?”His silence was worse than shouting.So I did the one thing I never thought I would do. I grabbed the wine glass
So close.The words stayed in my head. I stared at the spot where Damian had just been. I could still feel the moment at dinner, his hand almost touching mine. That pause. That heat. The way he didn’t pull away, not because he didn’t want to, but because he didn’t know if he should.Now he was gone. And Lily was in danger. None of it felt real.I stood from the floor, phone tight in my hand. The screen was dark now, but I still saw the photo. Lily is in the hospital. Tubes. Oxygen. And that awful message.Protect her. Or I will.He was back. And this time, he wanted me to know.I didn’t even have time to think before I heard footsteps. Damian came down the hall. His face was hard to read.His eyes went to me. Then to my phone.“I talked to Mark,” he said.I nodded. “Someone got into her room.”He looked tense. “Security said no one without access came or left.”“They wouldn’t catch him,” I said. “He’s careful. Always has been.”Damian raised his eyebrows. “Who?”“Ethan.”The name felt