YOUNG MADISON'S POV:
The bus arrived like a burst of sunlight against the dull, gray orphanage walls. Children poured out, laughing, talking, filling the air with an energy I wasn’t used to. They wore bright clothes, their sneakers neat, their faces glowing with a kind of ease I didn’t know. I sat in my usual corner, half-hidden in the shadows, watching as my peers welcomed them with wide grins and eager hands. No one looked my way. They never did. I wasn’t the best-looking child—too small, too quiet, too forgettable. While the other kids got pulled into games and laughter, I simply existed, slipping between their moments like a ghost. And I was fine with that. Or at least, I thought I was. Then, I saw him. He wasn’t like the others. While they basked in attention, he gave it. Every child mattered to him, every voice was heard. He had an easy laugh, one that made people lean in, wanting to hear more. His chestnut hair was neatly buzzed, his skin smooth, glowing beneath the afternoon sun. But what struck me most was his eyes—warm, curious, alive. And then, somehow, his gaze found me. I stiffened, gripping the hem of my worn dress as he made his way toward me. He didn’t tower over me, didn’t let his shadow swallow mine. Instead, he crouched down to my level, elbows resting on his knees, a playful smile tugging at his lips. "Why are you sitting here alone?" he asked. I shrugged. "Just watching." "Well, that's no fun." He tilted his head toward the others. "Come on, we’re about to hit the water slide. You should join us." I hesitated, but there was something about the way he said it—not as a request, but an invitation. Like I belonged. So I went. For the first time in forever, I played. I laughed. I let myself be a kid. *** The day faded into evening, and we gathered in the dining hall, wiping down tables, stacking chairs. I reached for a stray glass plate, but it slipped from my fingers, shattering at my feet. A sharp sting shot up my palm. I gasped, clutching my hand as a thin line of red bloomed across my skin. He was there in an instant. "Let me see," he said, voice laced with concern. I flinched, but he gently pried my fingers open, inspecting the wound. His brows furrowed. "Stay here," he ordered before disappearing through the doorway. I exhaled. He was gone. Just like they all go. But then—he came back. Not just with a first aid kit, but with three roses. "Hold onto these," he said, pressing them into my free hand. "Focus on them, not the pain." I did as he said, eyes tracing the delicate petals, the deep red color, the way they felt between my fingers. But soon, my gaze drifted back to him—his concentrated expression, the way his hands worked, careful and sure. A quiet chuckle slipped from my lips. His head lifted. "What’s funny?" "Nothing," I whispered, shaking my head. When he finished bandaging my hand, he took it on his own and led me outside. We walked under the dimming sky, the evening breeze cooling my flushed skin. The moment was short-lived. A voice called out. "We’re leaving! Get on the bus!" I felt it then—the inevitable goodbye. He turned, about to walk away, when I grabbed him, pressing my face against his chest, my small arms barely wrapping around him. My voice wavered, but the words tumbled out before I could stop them. "I’ll find you." I pulled back just enough to meet his startled gaze. "And when I do, I’ll marry you." A deep laugh rumbled from him, warm and teasing. "And what if I don’t want to get married?" I glanced at the roses, then back at him. "I’ll make you change your mind. And then, marry me." He shook his head, amusement dancing in his eyes. Sprinting toward the bus, he called over his shoulder, "You’re too young to understand matters of the heart." Maybe he was right. I was only ten. My espresso brown curls, thick and wavy, were always half-done, tied back in a frizzy ponytail. My skin, a rich, warm dark-brown, held the remnants of a childhood spent playing under the sun, though I never played as much as I wanted to. I was small for my age, but my spirit never was. So I ran after him. "That might be true," I shouted. "But when I’m old enough, will you help me understand?" He took a window seat, waving. The bus engine roared to life. My heart clenched as I cupped my hands around my mouth and screamed, "I’ll marry you someday, stranger!" His laughter carried through the wind as the bus disappeared down the road. I stood there, clutching the roses, their scent curling into my lungs, settling deep into a place I didn't know existed. I kept staring at the road, even after the bus had gone. I didn’t know why. Maybe I'd been waiting for it to turn back. Or maybe I just didn't want to move. It felt like if I stood still enough, I could hold onto that feeling a little longer. He'd talked to me like I mattered. Like I wasn’t just some kid people forgot about. He'd looked at me like he actually saw me—not just the outside part—but all of me. That almost never happened. Not at school. Not even at the orphanage. It had been strange how quiet everything felt when he was around. Like all the noise in my head had taken a nap. It felt... safe. I didn’t know who he really was. But he smiled like his world wasn’t broken. Like maybe he didn’t carry the kind of heavy I carried. I wondered what his life was like. Probably better than mine. Probably full of people who hugged him just because. People who didn’t forget his birthday. I wish I could live in that kind of world. Maybe one day... maybe I’d find it. Or maybe I’d find him again. And maybe he’d remember me. I hope so. Though I was only a child, something told me that it wouldn't be the last time I would see him. "The heart never forgot where it first learned to beat for someone."THANE’S POV:"Thane, can you hear me?" Jules shook me a little to get my attention.“No, say that again?” My voice echoed off the walls, hollow, like it belonged to someone else.“You’ve been distracted since practice.” Coach’s voice came clipped. “We can’t have that. Tournament’s around the corner. You need to be present.”Present. The word was a joke in my mouth. How could I be present when my chest felt like someone had taken a hammer to it? How could my head be clear when all I saw was Madison’s face and everything breaking around her?The team’s meeting room smelled like sweat and disinfectant—long rectangular table scarred with puck marks, framed jerseys on the wall, a whiteboard full of plays in the corner. A row of windows let the late-afternoon light spill in, dust motes drifting through the beams like a thousand tiny spectators. I’d never noticed the dust before. Today they were all I could focus on.Practice had been a disaster. I'd missed easy catches, fumbled plays I coul
MADISON'S POV:The drive to Thane's felt both too long and too short. Sawyer dropped me at the gate with another hug, another reminder that I was going to be okay.I stood at Thane's door, my hands fidgeting around the preserved roses he’d once given me—three fragile symbols of a love I was desperate to keep alive. I'd kept them safe through everything. They were a symbol of our love, proof that something beautiful could survive even when everything else fell apart.I prepared my speech. Where would I even start? With the Wallaces? With the deportation? With how much I loved him?I punched in the door code.Access denied.My stomach dropped. I tried again, slower this time, making sure each number was right.Access denied."Joe?" I called out, looking for his familiar face. He wasn't at his usual post. Another security guard approached."Can I help you?""I need to see Thane. Mr. Slade. But the door code isn't working.""Joe's out on errands, miss.""Madison?" Marie's voice shrieked o
MADISON'S POV:I did it.For once, something went right and maybe, just maybe, it wasn’t too late for Thane and me.Three days of hell and sleeplessness. Ana's trembling testimony, my investigator's folders spread across Sawyer's conference table, hours of prep that left my throat raw and my hands shaking, but, I did it."With this case," Sawyer had said that morning, his hand warm on my shoulder, "you're staying."Sawyer had promised me, no, sworn that with this case I wasn’t going anywhere. No more living in shadows, no more pretending. My life was finally my own.Now, sitting in the back of Sawyer's Mercedes, Ana pressed against my side, tears slipping through her fingers, I watched the Wallaces being led out in handcuffs, squad cars lining the estate.Mrs. Wallace's face twisted with rage, her designer dress rumpled, hair falling from its usual perfect arrangement. Mr. Wallace kept his eyes down, shoulders hunched like a man trying to disappear. Owen looked at me with pure murder
MADISON'S POV:I tore myself loose, bolting down the road. My purse slipped somewhere behind me, gone, but I didn’t dare look back. My phone gone. Everything gone except the burning need to survive.I barely made it ten steps before headlights roared, the car accelerating with purpose. Hunting me.I pushed harder, breathless, legs burning. But the car was faster. It cut in front of me, tires screeching. Doors flew open. Hands grabbed me from multiple directions."No! Let me go!" I kicked, thrashed, fought like my life depended on it because maybe it did.Something dark descended over my head—a bag or hood, blinding me. Hands tied my wrists despite my struggling.But they were gentle. Too gentle for kidnappers."You're safe," a male voice said. "We're not going to hurt you."I screamed until my throat burned raw. Kept kicking until my legs went numb. Thrashed against the zip ties cutting into my wrists until I felt warm blood trickling down my palms."Stop! Please, just calm down!" A
MADISON'S POV:The words exploded from Dr. Hall's mouth like shrapnel."If trying to seduce my son wasn't enough for you—" She advanced, her perfectly manicured finger poking toward my face. "Now you've extended your slutty self to try fucking my husband?""Helen!" Dr. Carter's voice cracked like a whip.But she was already lunging. Her hands found my shoulders, nails digging through fabric into skin as she shoved me backward. I stumbled, my heel catching on the runner."You think I don't see what you're doing?" Spit flew from her lips, her face contorted with rage. "Coming into my home, batting your innocent eyes at my family—"Strong hands grabbed her waist, pulling her off me. Dr. Carter's face had gone from warm to granite. "Helen, stop this right now!"Maverick appeared, his hands joining his father's to restrain his mother. "Mom, what the hell—""Don't you dare defend her!" Helen thrashed against their hold like a feral animal. "She's poisoning you, both of you! Can't you see it
MADISON'S POV:An hour must have slipped by since I’d first stepped foot into this house, and I'd learned something that made my chest ache: Dr. Carter Hall was genuinely wonderful.He'd joined Maverick in showing me around. I couldn’t deny the warmth in my chest watching them together. He was… nothing like I imagined.Dr. Carter's energy was infectious as he pointed out renovations with childlike pride. He cracked jokes that actually made me laugh—real laughter that momentarily pushed away the thoughts troubling me. When I tried to refuse eating, he'd insisted with such warmth that saying no felt cruel."So, physiotherapy," he said over plates of gourmet leftovers he'd heated himself. "What drew you to nursing?"And he actually listened. Not the polite nodding most people did before changing the subject, but genuine interest. He asked follow-up questions, shared stories from his own residency, treated my modest nursing career like it mattered as much as his decorated surgical one.It