LOGINIsabella gripped the suitcase handle tighter, her fingers shaking. Behind her, the imposing Sinclair mansion stood tall with its high windows glowing warmly.
A vicious lie. Not for her, that house has never been warm.
She listened as she walked cautiously and slowly down the stone walkway. Awaiting.
Any moment now, she told herself. He would come. Nolan would yell at her, tell her to stop and demand an explanation. He would fight for her.
But the night remained silent.
Her chest began to ache intensely. She paused beside the sleek black car parked in the driveway.
Isabella turned her head slightly, stealing one last glance at the mansion. The front doors stayed shut. The windows, though lit, revealed nothing.
No footsteps. No deep, commanding voice breaking through the night.
Nolan wasn't coming for her.
Her eyes welled up in tears but she fought the urge to cry.
Not yet. Swallowing hard, she placed her suitcase into the car’s trunk, her every movement slow, as if giving him more time.
More time to understand she was leaving him.
More time to be concerned.
However, the mansion doors never opened.
Isabella's hands curled into fists, nails bitting into her hands. It has been foolish of her to hope.
Taking a deep sigh, she reached into her coat pocket and pulled out a folded piece of paper. A letter.
Everything she could never bring herself to say to his face was contained in those words.
I cherished you. I made an effort. However, I can't be the only one fighting for this marriage.
After holding the letter tightly for a while, Isabella looked at the elderly woman behind the doorway—Mrs. Hathaway, the housekeeper who has always been nice to her.
With a voice hardly audible above a whisper, she said, “Give this to Nolan, Ensure he reads it.”
Mrs. Hathaway hesitated, sorrow flashing in her gaze. “Are you sure, dear?”
Isabella nodded. She was sure.
But as she got into the car, as
she pulled away, she didn’t see the shadow lingering near the doorway. A pair of cold, calculating eyes watching her leave.
She didn’t see the fingers that reached for the letter once she was gone.
Didn’t see it disappear into the darkness, never to reach Nolan's hands.
°°°°
Ahead, the highway extended in a never-ending ribbon of darkness illuminated solely by the headlights of the vehicle.
Isabella felt anything but steady inside the car, even though the engine hummed steadily. Her knuckles turned white as her fingers clenched around the steering wheel.
All she felt was the crushing weight of everything she was leaving behind, even though every mile she put between herself and the Sinclair mansion should have made her feel free.
The memories were unexpected.
Nolan's icy stare when she first
understood that marriage was only a contract to him. On those night when she waited up in the hopes that he would return home early, she was let down. The way he stood with Evelyn in that study, remaining silent and allowing the harm to be done by silence.
She pressed her foot harder against the gas pedal. Faster.
She needed to get away.
However, the road seems to be taunting her by going on forever. The pain in her chest would not go away no matter how far she drove.
A road sign flashed green. The name of a town she was unfamiliar with. A place to vanish to.
Even though she was exhausted, she continued to drive, her vision fading at the edges. She only knew she had to go; she had not planned where she would go.
Ahead, a motel with a neon sign that flickered through the darkness came into view. ROOMS ARE AVAILABLE.
Isabella slowed the car and pulled into an empty lot. The building was old, the paint peeling from its wooden walls. A single light buzzed above the office door. She didn't need much but it wasn't much either.
A place to breathe, that's all.
She parked, shutting off the engine. The following silence was oppressive. As she exchanged money for a room key inside the motel, the clerk hardly looked up.
Room 12.
She locked the door behind her and entered the tiny, poorly lit room. A faded floral blanket covered the bed, and the air smelled of stale something and cheap soap.
Isabella pressed her hands on her stomach, trembling.
Had she made a mistake?
Leaving wasn’t supposed to feel like this.
Her throat tightened. She curled up on the stiff mattress, her body sinking into the thin sheets.
And for the first time since
walking out of that mansion, she let herself break.
Tears spilled silently onto the pillow as she sobbed into the darkness, convinced this was the end of her story with Nolan.
°°°°
With a heavy heart, Nolan entered the bedroom and untied his tie. Evelyn had stayed behind, lingering too long with meaningless flirtations, while his meetings had run late.
It had been a mistake to let her get too close, but he hadn’t pushed her away fast enough. Not before Isabella had seen.
He gave a sharp exhale.
Isabella.
He thought she would be waiting for him to explain, curled up on her side of the bed, stiff with rage. Rather the room was empty.
His steps slowed. His sharp gaze scanned the space—something felt off.
The closet door was open. Her clothes were missing.
Nolan's jaw clenched. A humorless laugh escaped him.
“So, she left?”
Of course, she did. Isabella was proud, too proud. He should’ve known she would pull something like this.
He unbuttoned his shirt, forcing himself to stay calm. She would be back. She always came back.
She would get tired of being angry, or maybe she would call just to argue, to demand answers. She possessed that kind of fire. The ice dropped into the glass as he poured himself a drink.
An hour passed. Then two.
Silence.
No calls. No messages.
Nolan's frown deepened as he sat on the edge of bed and rolled his glass between his fingers.
There was a problem.
Isabella might be stubborn, but this… This was not like the others.
His grip tightened around the glass. Had she really left for good? Over a misunderstanding?
His gaze flickered to his phone. He could call her. Find out where she was. Bring her back.
But then, something dark and unyielding settled inside him.
If she wanted to leave, let her.
His pride wouldn’t allow him to chase after her. He wouldn’t beg. He never begged for anything.
He finished his drink in one slow swallow, forcing the unease deep down where it couldn’t touch him.
Yet, as he lay back on the empty bed, the whisper wouldn’t leave him.
Was this really just about an argument?
And why did it feel like this time, Isabella wasn’t coming back?
Isabella couldn’t breathe.The phone trembled in her hand as she stared at the screen. Nolan knelt on a concrete floor, hands bound behind his back, shirt torn and stained with blood. His head was bowed, dark hair falling into his eyes.But he was alive.For now.Her knees threatened to give out.Juan whimpered softly behind her. “Mommy…?”The man tightened his grip on her wrist. Not hard. Just enough to remind her he could.“Don’t scream,” he murmured. “Not in front of the child.”Her heart pounded so violently she thought it might tear itself apart.“What do you want?” she whispered.The man smiled. “Not money.”Her breath hitched.“Money is boring,” he continued. “Money doesn’t make people bleed the right way.”She swallowed hard. “Then what?”“Choices,” he said.She shook her head. “You don’t want me. You want him.”“Oh, no,” he said softly. “We already have him.”Her vision blurred.“This,” he continued, tapping the phone screen, “is about you.”Her chest tightened painfully. “Wh
The third letter arrived the morning Nathan signed the consent forms.It wasn’t slipped under a door this time.It was waiting on Isabella’s car.Tucked neatly beneath the windshield wiper like a parking ticket.Isabella froze when she saw it.Her pulse roared in her ears as she approached slowly, every instinct screaming.Nolan was only a few steps behind her, phone in hand, mid-conversation with his legal team.He saw her stop.“What is it?” he asked.She didn’t answer.She reached out with shaking fingers and pulled the envelope free.Her name was written on the front.Perfect handwriting.Elegant.Intentional.Nolan ended the call instantly.She opened it.Inside was a single sheet of paper.But this time… there was a photo attached.Juan.Sleeping.In his hospital bed.Isabella’s breath left her lungs.Her knees buckled.Nolan caught her before she hit the ground.“What?” he demanded, taking the paper.His face darkened instantly.The message was short.The first was a warning.T
Nathan didn’t stay.Not at first.After agreeing to the tests, he left the hospital without another word, hands shoved into the pockets of his worn jacket, shoulders tight as if holding himself together by sheer force.Isabella watched him go through the glass doors, rain blurring his silhouette until he disappeared completely.Her chest felt hollow.“He didn’t even say goodbye,” she murmured.Nolan stood beside her, jaw clenched. “He doesn’t owe me politeness.”She didn’t answer.She was thinking about what Nathan did owe them.And how terrifying it was that they were waiting on the mercy of a man who hated the world they belonged to.The tests took two days.Two long, unbearable days.Juan was quieter than usual, his small body exhausted, his laughter softer, his eyes less bright. Isabella barely left his side. Nolan barely slept.Nathan came and went silently, allowing blood draws, scans, and consultations without complaint—but without warmth.He didn’t speak to Nolan unless necess
Nathan Sinclair hadn’t expected to hear Nolan’s voice again.Not after eight years of silence. Not after walking away from everything the Sinclair name stood for. Not after burying a woman he had loved and raising a daughter alone under a different name.And certainly not at two in the morning.He stood in the dimly lit kitchen of his small mountain house, phone pressed to his ear, the scent of coffee and pine drifting through the open window.“You have a son?” Nathan repeated quietly.Nolan closed his eyes on the other end of the line.“Yes.”Silence stretched between them, thick and heavy with everything they had never said.“You don’t call to tell me about children,” Nathan said finally. “So what’s wrong?”Nolan’s voice lowered. “He’s sick.”Nathan’s grip tightened on the phone.“How sick?”“We don’t know everything yet,” Nolan said. “But he needs a donor. A genetic match.”Another pause.“And you think that’s me,” Nathan said.“You’re our best chance.”Nathan exhaled slowly. “You
It started with a fever.Not the dramatic kind that sends parents running to emergency rooms, but the subtle, unsettling kind that made Isabella pause when she pressed her lips to Juan’s forehead before bed.“You’re warm,” she murmured.Juan groaned softly, curling deeper into his blankets. “I’m sleepy.”She brushed his hair back gently. “I’ll get you some water.”By midnight, the fever hadn’t broken.By two a.m., Juan was shivering.By three, he was crying in his sleep.Isabella sat beside him, heart pounding, wiping his forehead with a cool cloth. She had cared for him through colds, scrapes, and the occasional flu, but something about this felt different.Wrong.She stood quietly and stepped into the hallway.Nolan was already awake.He stood near the window, phone in hand, tension etched into his posture like it had been carved there.“He’s not well,” Isabella said.Nolan turned instantly. “What’s wrong?”“Fever. Chills. He won’t stop crying.”Nolan followed her back to the room w
The first letter arrived on a Tuesday.It wasn’t threatening at first glance. No red ink. No dramatic language. Just a plain white envelope slipped through the café’s mail slot sometime between the morning rush and lunch.Isabella didn’t think much of it until she saw there was no return address.Her fingers hesitated before tearing it open.Inside was a single sheet of paper.You should have stayed gone.Her stomach dropped.She read it again, hoping she’d misunderstood. Hoping it was some tasteless prank from a bored local caught up in the gossip storm.But her instincts screamed otherwise.She folded the letter slowly and slipped it into her pocket just as the bell above the café door chimed.Nolan stepped inside.He took one look at her face and knew.“What is it?” he asked quietly.She shook her head. “Nothing.”He didn’t believe her. “Isabella.”She exhaled slowly and pulled the paper from her pocket, handing it to him without a word.Nolan read it once.Then again.The air arou







