I woke up the next day to the smell of pancakes.
God I love Pancakes.
For a second, I forgot where I was, until my gaze met the high ceiling, intricate moldings, and soft silk curtains of the guest room.
With a soft groan, I sat up, stretching the soreness from my limbs. The bed was far softer than anything I’d slept in recently, too soft, too clean, too foreign. This wasn’t home. It never would be.
After a quick shower, I stepped out, towel-drying my hair and rummaging through the small bag I brought. My only property. Everything I had left fit inside it, like my life had been stripped down to essentials, and even those were borrowed.
My fingers landed on a pair of denim shorts. I slipped them on and pulled a white shirt over my head. Nothing fancy, but good enough. I didn’t come here to impress anyone, least of all him.
This was my first official day in the Petrov mansion.
I checked the time, 7:00 a.m. Still early.
This was my first day in the Petrov mansion. I hadn't come for Andrew this time around, but for his father.
Then I made my way downstairs.
"You're up," A voice said from behind. I turned to see it was Irina.
I gave a slight nod.
"The chef's are making Breakfast. Come and sit at the dining.
I followed her to the dining, and took a sit.
"What of Milo?" I asked.
"Oh, he doesn't eat with us. He prefers eating alone." Irina replied. "Don't worry, you'll get used to everything around here." She assured me.
"What of……" I paused.
"Andrew?" She asked and I nodded slightly.
"He, uhm…. He isn't around for now. I guess he'll be back this week. No one knows when he comes back." Irina answered. "Missing him already"
Her gaze flicked to mine. “He’s not around at the moment. No one knows exactly when he comes back, but it should be sometime this week.”
I swallowed.
“Missing him already?” Irina smirked.
“I wish I could.” My voice cracked, softer than I intended.
Silence fell over the table until the double doors opened and a line of chefs walked in. The head chef, a man with a French accent, bowed slightly.
“Bonjour, mademoiselle. In front of you are Japanese-style pancakes with chocolate sauce, whipped cream, and cookie crumbs. Fresh fruit juice has been served beside it. We hope it pleases you.”
The pancakes looked divine, golden, soft, and jiggly, and also attractive. The whipped cream curled like clouds.
“Bon appétit.” the chef added before leaving with his team.
“Merci,” Irina replied, then turned to me with a tilt of her head. "So tell me, what happened between you two?"
"Who?" I raised an eyebrow.
"Andrew." She asked
"Everything that happened between her and Andrew is now in the past. She belongs to me now. Not him." The voice was sharp.
My breath hitched.
I turned slowly, and there he was.
Milo.
Wearing a crisp white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, a black coat hung loosely over one arm. He walked down the stairs like he owned every inch of this place.
Because he did.
The tension in the room snapped taut.
I stood, unsure of what to do or say. “Good morning.”
He said nothing.
Just stared at me like a ghost.
God. His gaze can kill a person.
He stood there, arranging his tie. It seems he was having a hard time doing so.
Irina walked over to him, standing a little too close. She adjusted the knot of his tie gently, smoothing it down with deliberate slowness.
But something seemed off.
“You’re late,” she said, her voice low and almost sultry.
“I wasn’t aware I needed to explain my schedule,” Milo replied dryly, brushing her hands away.
Irina’s smile faltered. She took a step back but didn’t leave.
Milo turned his attention back to me. His gaze swept down my body — slow, unreadable, and lingering far longer than was polite.
“You slept well?” he asked, voice smooth but edged with something darker.
“I did,” I replied, forcing myself to hold his gaze.
“You like pancakes?”
“Very much.”
“Good,” he said. “You’ll be needing your strength.”
I swallowed hard. “For what?”
He didn’t answer.
Instead, he walked past Irina, past the table, stopping just beside me.
He leaned in, not enough to touch, but enough for me to feel the heat of him, smell the faint scent of his cologne. Woodsy, Masculine and Dangerous.
“I hope you remember the deal, Emilie,” he murmured. “Because I never play games I don’t intend to win. Mercy isn't in my dictionary.”
My heart thudded against my ribs.
He pulled back and walked off, leaving the tension crackling in the air behind him.
I hated the way my heart skipped when he leaned in to me. The way I felt drawn to the same man I was sold to.
Forty two does look good on him.
"You should eat while it's warm," Irina said softly, snapping me out of my daze.
I sat back down, but the pancakes had lost their appeal. I poked at them with my fork, chocolate sauce smearing the edges of the plate like guilt.
What was I doing here?
This wasn’t supposed to happen.
I was only meant to stay a few nights. Lay low. Regain my footing.
I wasn’t supposed to feel anything.
I took a bite out of spite. It was sweet and airy and rich enough to make my throat tighten with emotion.
Irina sat back down and took a sip of her juice. “He’s not usually like that with strangers.”
“I’m not a stranger,” I muttered, chewing slowly.
Her eyes flicked to mine. “Right. Andrew.”
I nodded, more to end the conversation than confirm anything.
Irina scoffed "Don’t take it personally.”
I didn’t answer.
Because I had taken it personally.
Eve
ry word. Every look. Every reminder that in this house, I wasn’t just a guest. I was a pawn.
And Milo Petrov?
He was the player moving all the pieces.
Andrew’s POVI sat in a dark corner of a rundown bar, the kind of place where nobody asks your name. The air smelled like old beer and cigarette smoke. My glass of whiskey sat half-empty on the sticky table, but it wasn’t helping. Emilie’s words from last night kept playing in my head, over and over, like a song I couldn’t stop: “It’s too late, Andrew. I’m his wife now.” Every time I heard them, my chest tightened, like someone was squeezing my heart. I’d told her I still loved her, spilled my guts on that balcony, and she’d pushed me away. Her eyes had been full of guilt, but there was something else too, something for him. My father, milo Petrov. The man who’d taken her from me.Last night’s party was a blur of fancy suits and fake smiles, everyone watching Emilie like she was a prize to be won. She’d worn that green dress, looking beautiful but scared, like she was trying to hide how much she didn’t belong. I’d seen the way she looked at me when she thought I wasn’t noticing, and
Emilie’s POVThe penthouse felt like a cage tonight, its opulent walls closing in as I stood by the window, the city’s restless pulse mocking my own. Milo’s words from earlier, “There is no way out. You belong to me now”, echoed in my mind, each syllable a chain tightening around my heart. His touch, the way his fingers had lingered on my jaw, had ignited something dangerous, a spark I couldn’t extinguish. I hated myself for it. I was supposed to be a prisoner, a pawn traded for my father’s debts, not a woman who felt her pulse quicken at the sound of his voice.The memory of Andrew’s pain on the balcony last night twisted the knife deeper. “I never stopped loving you,” he’d said, his voice raw with desperation. I’d pushed him away, told him it was too late, but the truth was messier. I still cared for him, for the boy who’d once been my safe haven, but I was no longer that girl, and he was no longer that boy. We were both trapped in Milo’s world now, and every choice felt like a
Milo’s POVThe meeting room was a den of wolves, each man at the table cloaked in ambition and deceit. The air hung heavy with cigar smoke, the acrid scent mingling with the faint metallic tang of tension. I sat at the head, my posture relaxed but my eyes sharp, scanning the faces of Russia’s most ruthless bosses. They spoke of territories, shipments, and profits, their voices a low rumble of greed, but my mind was elsewhere, back on that balcony, where Emilie’s trembling voice had declared her loyalty to me, even as her eyes betrayed a flicker of doubt. “I’m your wife. That’s where my loyalty lies.” The words should have anchored me, but they didn’t. They stirred a restlessness I hadn’t felt since the early days of building my empire, when every shadow held a knife.Dimitri’s voice sliced through my thoughts, his tone dripping with mockery. “Petrov, you’re awfully quiet tonight. Is it the new wife keeping you distracted?” The scar across his cheek twitched as he smirked, his eyes
Emilie’s POV:The cool night air brushed against my skin as I stood on the balcony, the city lights sprawling below like a constellation of secrets. My fingers still tingled where Milo had touched my cheek, his words…“Something worth keeping”, echoing in my mind like a dangerous lullaby. I should hate him. He was the devil who’d bought me, the man who’d trapped me in his gilded cage to settle my father’s debts. But that moment, the way his dark eyes softened, the way his voice dropped to a murmur, had stirred something inside me I couldn’t name. Desire? Fear? Or something far more treacherous?I pressed my hands against the cold stone railing, trying to ground myself. The gala’s opulence lingered in my senses, the clink of champagne glasses, the predatory smiles of mafia wives, the weight of every gaze sizing me up as Milo Petrov’s new possession. I’d held my own tonight, deflecting their veiled barbs, but now, alone, I felt the cracks in my facade. How long could I play this role
Emilie’s POV:The morning sun filtered through the penthouse windows, casting long shadows across the marble floor. I stood in front of the mirror, smoothing the fabric of the deep emerald gown Milo had chosen for me. It hugged my frame tightly, the neckline plunging just enough to make me feel exposed, yet the elegance of it was undeniable. Tonight, I wasn’t just Emilie, the girl who’d traded her freedom for her father’s life. Tonight, I was Milo Petrov’s wife, and he intended for the world to know it.“Stop fidgeting,” Irina snapped, her voice sharp as she adjusted the diamond necklace around my throat. The stones glittered coldly, matching her gaze in the reflection. “You’ll ruin the look.”“I’m not fidgeting,” I replied, though my fingers betrayed me, twisting the hem of the dress. “I just don’t see why this is necessary.”Irina’s lips pressed into a thin line. “It’s a gathering of the families. Milo’s allies, his enemies—everyone who matters in this world. You’re not just arm ca
I hadn’t seen Emilie in over a year.Not since the night she disappeared without warning, leaving nothing but an aching silence in her place. I told myself I’d moved on. Buried the memories. Convinced myself that she didn’t matter.I was wrong.I was fucking wrong.I never moved on. Emilie is a part of me that I can't let go. It's like she took a piece of me, cause no matter what I did or do, she's always on my mind.But still I lied to myself that I didn't need her. That she and I won't be together.And then, once more, I was wrong.Because today, I saw her again.She was the first person I saw as I walked into the house.The glass in her hand trembled slightly. Her eyes widened—not in happiness or even anger. Just shock. Like she’d seen a ghost. Or maybe she had hoped never to see me again.“What the hell…” I whispered, the words barely audible.She opened her mouth, but nothing came out. No excuses. No fake smiles. No welcome home. Nothing.The weight of disbelief settled on my che