I didn’t sleep.
Not really.
Just curled into the corner of that perfect bed, listening to the walls breathe. Marble doesn’t creak like old floorboards whisper like it’s trying to warn you without making a sound.
By morning, I was done pretending. I needed to see Lily. I didn’t care if it broke every clause in the contract.
I crept out before sunrise. No, Naomi. No staff. No Mark.
Only silence.
The city was still wet with night. I stole a coat from the hall, one of Naomi’s probably, and left the house like a ghost. Flagged down a cab with trembling fingers and gave the driver the address I’d memorized from the hospital bracelet tucked in my pocket.
Lily’s new ward was on the eighth floor. Private. Cold. Too quiet.
She looked smaller. Paler. Her eyes fluttered open when I walked in, and for a second, the fear broke me in two.
“Ava?” she croaked, her voice barely more than a breath. “You came?”
I sank beside her and kissed her forehead. “Of course, I came.”
Her hand in mine was too light, like paper.
“I dreamed you lived in a castle now,” she whispered, trying to smile. “With gold walls and silent butlers.”
I laughed. It cracked. “You weren’t far off.”
We didn’t speak much after that. Just sat, breathing the same air, pretending that was enough.
Until a nurse entered. Young, polite but her eyes widened just a little too much when she saw me.
And her phone was out before she even left the room.
I swallowed hard.
My fingers tightened around Lily’s.
Later, in the hallway, I ducked into the bathroom. Splashed water on my face. Looked into the mirror and didn’t see myself.
Just a girl in someone else’s coat. A stranger pretending to be rich. Someone clinging to a deal with a man who had rules like barbed wire and eyes like knives.
I pulled the contract from my bag. My hands shook as I found the page I hadn’t dared to read before.
Clause Eighteen: Any public exposure outside the pre-approved narrative constitutes reputational damage and is subject to litigation and financial penalty.
Litigation. Penalty.
The words blurred. I shoved the page back and backed away from the sink.
Outside the bathroom, my name echoed in a nurse’s call. Loud. Curious.
Time to go.
But as I stepped outside the hospital doors, the morning sun catching my skin like glass
I froze.
Because there it was.
A black car. Familiar. Quiet. Parked at the curb.
And inside?
Damian.
No expression. Just watching.
The rear window rolled down an inch.
“Get in,” Mark said from the front seat. His voice was flat.
I did.
The door shut with the softest click like a secret being sealed.
Damian didn’t look at me. Not once. His jaw was tight. His hands on his phone. But he wasn’t typing.
He was waiting.
I didn’t speak either.
Not until we were halfway across the bridge and the silence choked me.
“I had to see her.”
“I didn’t ask for an explanation,” he said, still not looking at me. “You already know the consequences.”
My chest squeezed. “She’s dying, Damian.”
“And if you break the contract again, so will everything you signed it for.”
The words cut. And yet something behind them, his voice was too steady. Too rehearsed.
He wasn’t angry.
He was worried.
I blinked at him, searching his profile. “You cancelled a meeting.”
His head tilted just slightly. “Mark told you?”
“No. You’re wearing the same suit from yesterday.”
Silence.
His fingers tapped the phone again. Still not typing.
“I’ve had press alerts all morning,” he said. “There’s already a picture of you. Outside the ward.”
I curled my hands into fists. “I didn’t ask to be photographed.”
He turned to me then. Slowly. “You asked to be my wife.”
That stung. Even if it was true.
“Then maybe stop treating me like a prisoner.”
He looked at me like I’d said something ridiculous. “You’re not a prisoner, Ava.”
“Really? Because I signed a paper that says I can’t even breathe without your permission.”
His jaw tightened. “And yet you left. You got in a cab. Alone.”
The words hovered between us.
He wasn’t furious.
He was…calculating. Like he couldn’t decide if I was brave or just foolish.
We said nothing else the entire ride back.
—
Across the city, another screen lit up.
In a sleek penthouse lined with glass and steel, Helena Montague lounged on a velvet couch, eyes locked on the morning gossip segment.
Ava’s face flashed on the screen.
“Damian Kingsley’s new wife caught sneaking into St. Jude’s Medical Center early this morning. Witnesses claim she looked distraught…”
Helena smiled.
Not wide. Not joyful.
Sharp.
She picked up her phone and dialled.
“He’s watching her,” a man’s voice said on the other end. “He’s starting to care.”
“Then it’s working,” Helena replied, eyes still on the screen. “But she won’t last.”
She swirled her wine, even though it was barely past ten.
“No girl walks into the fire and comes out whole,” she added. “Especially not that one.”
And as the camera froze on Ava’s anxious face outside the hospital, Helena’s smile deepened.
“She doesn’t even know what she’s stepped into.”
Ava’s POV⸻“We might need a bigger library,” I whispered.He froze. His hand on my stomach. Like moving might break it like if he moved, this fragile, impossible moment might disappear.“You’re serious?” he asked softly.I nodded. My throat tightened.But not from fear.He just stared for a while—at me, at my stomach, at the space between us that suddenly felt… full.Too full. Like it held something neither of us knew how to name.Then he laughed. Soft, broken in the middle.Not because it was funny.Just because joy shows up messy sometimes.“I don’t deserve this,” he whispered, resting his forehead against mine.“But I swear… I’ll protect it. You. Both of you. With everything I have.”His hands trembled. But when he kissed me, he didn’t.—That night, he didn’t rush.He touched me like I was something rare. Like he had all the time in the world to learn me again, or maybe for the first time.His lips went to my neck first, just under my jaw.Slow kisses. Open. Warm.I tilted my head
Ava's POV⸻“Let’s not start over,” Damian said softly.He slid the velvet box across the marble like it weighed more than it should.“Let’s start right.”I stared at it.Not because I didn’t know what it was. But because I did.And this time, it wasn’t backed by a contract. No lawyers. No deadline. Just us.He didn’t rush me. He didn’t move at all.But then—slowly, like the choice had to be his too—he dropped to one knee.Not dramatic.Not rehearsed.Just real.“I should’ve done this… way before now,” he said, barely above a whisper, his eyes not letting go of mine for even a second. “But back then I was… God, I was clueless. I didn’t understand what any of it meant. What you meant.”My breath caught.“I don’t have an empire to promise you. Just this,” he said, tapping his chest, voice raw. “Just a man who had to lose everything before he understood what he was trying to build.”He opened the box.The ring wasn’t flashy. It wasn’t even new.It looked like something old. Something mean
Ava’s POV⸻We didn’t move.Lily had gone upstairs, but neither of us said anything. We just… stayed like that.The rain was still tapping on the window. Same steady sound. Like it didn’t care that everything had changed inside.No documents between us. No script. No mask. Just the quiet. And his hand, still holding mine.He didn’t let go.Even when I crossed the room to switch off the lights. Or when I turned the lock on the door. He stayed close, quiet. No pressure. No moves.And maybe that’s why I didn’t ask him to leave.Because for the first time… we weren’t pretending.—We didn’t say much the next morning either.The rain hadn’t stopped. Just kept going like a rhythm we were already used to. The sea sounded rougher outside, and the quiet between us felt full but not heavy. Just there.Like air after you’ve been underwater too long.I was barefoot, wiping down the counter, not really thinking when the bell over the door rang.It wasn’t soft. It rang like someone who knew why the
⸻He didn’t come back the next day.Or the one after.The café stayed open, but I barely noticed the hours. Customers came and went, voices in the fog. I stacked books, cleared tables, pressed coffee, but my hands weren’t really in it. My head wasn’t, either.And then, on the third morning, I found him.Damian.Sitting on the steps outside the café. Damp from mist. He looked wrecked. Like the coat was dragging him down, and his eyes hadn’t seen rest in a while. He didn’t knock.Didn’t speak.Just waited.I stood at the window for too long. He didn’t move. Didn’t check his phone. He didn’t move. Just kept sitting there, like he was waiting on something I hadn’t decided to give.After a while, I got up and cracked the door open. Didn’t say anything. Just left it that way.He didn’t come in right away.But he came.Quietly. Carefully.Like someone who understood that presence was a privilege.—He didn’t call my name. Just stayed in the doorway, wet sleeves and everything, like he didn’
Ava’s POV⸻The sea kept coming.That’s all it did. Just wave after wave, like it didn’t care who was standing on the shore watching. Sometimes I told myself that was a strength. Other times I knew it wasn’t.It was just what happens when you forget how to stop.I was putting books away behind the counter, not really thinking about the titles. Just moving. The wind tapped against the windows like it had something urgent to say but kept forgetting the words. Lily was upstairs humming something soft. Off-key. Familiar in a way I couldn’t name.The bell on the café door rang here and there. It always did. Locals. Strangers. A woman who only came in for warm bread and left with poetry she never meant to buy.Two days had passed.Since Damian.Since I saw him vanish into fog and choked on a goodbye I never meant to say aloud.I hadn’t touched the letter. Not once.Not because I didn’t want to but because once I opened it, the truth would be real. And once it was real, I’d have to feel all
Ava’s POV⸻He stood in the doorway like the storm had followed him in.Wet hair. Wrinkled shirt. Eyes too tired to lie.Damian.Alive. Here.And too late.I didn’t move. I didn’t speak. The bell over the door had stopped ringing, but somehow it still echoed between us.He took one small step forward. “I’m not too late… am I?”His voice cracked on the last word.I looked at him—really looked. The man who once stood in boardrooms like he owned time itself now stood across from me like a boy who’d just lost it.But I didn’t move.Because this was the same man who let me walk away without a word. The same man who stood beside Helena when she twisted everything I was into something shameful.And now he was here, drenched in regret, hoping I’d just… forget.I didn’t answer.Then upstairs, Lily’s voice floated down.“Mom?”My breath hitched.Not because of the word, but because she’d never said it out loud before.It wasn’t really about motherhood. It was muscle memory. Reflex. I was the on