Mag-log inCeleste sat long after he left.
The bar was nearly empty now. The bartender had begun stacking glasses, wiping down the counter, humming softly to himself. No one told her to move. No one looked at her twice. Her head felt heavy, thick with alcohol and thoughts she couldn’t slow down. Counselor. The word wouldn’t leave her. She pressed her fingers to her temple, then to the bridge of her nose, breathing slowly. That was impossible. No one called her that unless they knew exactly who she was. And she hadn’t told him her name. When she finally stood, the room tipped slightly to the left. The bartender looked up. “You sure you’re good to drive, miss?” Celeste didn’t move. Every instinct in her screamed to run, but her body wouldn’t listen. Her fingers curled into the sheet at her chest as if it could anchor her to reality. “You’re supposed to be in prison,” she repeated, louder now. Dante took a slow step inside the room. Then another. “I was,” he said calmly. “For five years.” Her throat tightened. “You—You lied to me.” He tilted his head slightly. “I didn’t tell you anything.” She shook her head, breath coming faster. “You knew who I was.” “Yes.” “And you still—” She stopped herself, unable to finish. His gaze darkened. Not with anger. With something colder. “You destroyed me,” he said quietly. The words didn’t sound like an accusation. They sounded like a statement. Her chest tightened. “You were guilty.” “Legally,” he replied. “Yes.” She swallowed. “Then why are you here?” A faint smile touched his mouth. “Because I wanted to see what kind of woman ruins a man’s life and then falls apart when hers does.” That hit harder than any shout would have. “You followed me,” she whispered. “Yes.” “You waited.” “Yes.” Her pulse roared in her ears. “This was planned.” “Not last night,” he said. “But this moment? Very much so.” Her knees felt weak. She sank onto the edge of the bed, still clutching the sheet like armor. “What do you want from me?” she asked. He stepped closer. Close enough that she could feel his presence—solid, unmovable. “I want what you took from me,” he said. Her stomach dropped. “My career—” “No.” “My freedom—” “No.” “My reputation—” “No.” He crouched in front of her, bringing his eyes level with hers. “I want your control.” Her breath hitched. “I want your certainty,” he continued. “Your composure. Your sense of safety. I want you to know what it feels like to lose all of it.” Tears burned behind her eyes. “So this is revenge.” His gaze softened. “No,” he said. “This is interest.” That was worse. “You slept with me,” she whispered. “Yes.” “And you knew.” “Yes.” Her hands trembled. “You’re sick.” His mouth curved. “And yet you came with me.” She looked away. He reached out and gently lifted her chin with one finger. “Don’t,” he said. “You don’t get to pretend this was all me.” Her breath stuttered. “You chose me,” he said softly. “Even without knowing who I was.” She hated that he was right. “Get dressed,” he said, standing. Her head snapped up. “What?” “You’re leaving,” he said. “For now.” Relief and fear tangled in her chest. “You’re letting me go?” “For now.” She stood slowly, wrapping the sheet tighter around herself. “What happens next?” she asked. Dante smiled. “That,” he said, “depends on how much of your life you’re willing to gamble.” She waved him off. “I’ll take a cab.” Outside, the rain had softened to a thin mist. Cold pricked her skin instantly, making her shiver. She fumbled for her phone, blinking against the blur of the streetlights. That was when she saw him. Across the road, leaning against a dark car, a cigarette glowing faintly between his fingers. He looked up, as if he’d been expecting her. “You shouldn’t be out here alone,” he said. Celeste stiffened. “And you shouldn’t be following women out of bars.” A faint smirk curved his mouth. “Maybe I was making sure you got home safe.” She rolled her eyes. “You do that often? Chase strangers to protect them?” “Only the ones who look like they’re about to break.” That made her laugh once—short, humorless. “You really don’t quit.” He crushed the cigarette beneath his shoe. “Come on. I’ll drive you. You can barely stand.” “I’m fine.” “Sure you are,” he said quietly. “But get in anyway.” Every instinct in her body warned her not to. And yet—silence felt worse than risk. Her chest was heavy. The night was too long. And she didn’t want to be alone with her thoughts. So she opened the door.The car smelled faintly of clean cologne and rain-soaked leather. Celeste buckled her seatbelt with unsteady fingers. The engine purred to life, smooth and quiet, too controlled for a man who should have felt like chaos. Neither of them spoke at first. The city passed in streaks of gold and red outside the window. Her reflection looked unfamiliar—eyes glassy, lips parted, hair damp at the edges. “Where to?” he asked at last. She turned her head toward him. “I don’t know.” He glanced at her once, slow and deliberate. Then he nodded. “Then I’ll decide.” That should have frightened her. Instead, it made her feel… relieved. The silence stretched. Not awkward—heavy. Like something waiting. “You always trust strangers this easily?” he asked. She gave a quiet laugh. “I usually don’t do anything easily.” “Tonight, you are.” She didn’t answer. The car slowed. Stopped. They were no longer on a main road. The building beside them was tall, dark, elegant. Lights glowed faintly behind wide windows. “Where are we?” she asked. “Somewhere safe.” She looked at him. “That’s vague.” “So is ‘I don’t know,’” he replied. For a moment, neither of them moved. Her hand rested on her lap. His was still on the steering wheel. They were close enough that she could feel the warmth of him. Too close. “You don’t even know my name,” she said. He turned toward her. “Do you want me to?” Her breath caught. Logic screamed at her. Every rule she had ever lived by was begging her to step out of the car, call a cab, go home. But she had no home anymore. Not really. And the look in his eyes—steady, unreadable—made her feel like she was already falling. “Do you want me to stop?” he asked quietly. Her heart thudded. She shook her head. “No.” His jaw tightened slightly. Just a fraction. “Then come inside.” She followed him. The moment she stepped inside, the air changed. Warmer. Quieter. Too quiet. The door closed behind them with a soft click that sounded far too final. Celeste stood there, unsure what to do with her hands, her thoughts, her breathing. The room was dim, lit only by the city glow through tall windows. Everything felt expensive. Intentional. Controlled. Just like him. “You don’t have to do this,” he said, watching her carefully. She laughed weakly. “Now you’re giving me an out?” “I’m giving you a choice.” She swallowed. Every rational part of her knew this was wrong. Knew she should leave. Knew she would regret this in the morning. But she was already full of regret. And she was tired of being strong. She took a step toward him. Then another. That was all it took. His hand brushed hers—light, deliberate. Not possessive. Not rushed. A question. She answered by closing the distance. When Celeste woke, it took her a moment to understand where she was. The ceiling was unfamiliar. White. High. Too perfect. Her head throbbed. Her mouth felt dry. The sheets were cool and impossibly soft beneath her fingers. Memory came back in fragments. The bar. The rain. His voice. The way he had looked at her like he already knew her. Her heart began to pound. She sat up abruptly, clutching the sheet to her chest. Her clothes were gone. On the nightstand, a glass of water and two painkillers waited beside a folded note. Drink. You’re going to need it. Her hands trembled as she reached for the glass. She swallowed. Slowly, she stood. The room was immaculate. Masculine. Minimal. Then she saw the newspaper on the dresser. Folded neatly. Waiting. Something in her stomach dropped. She unfolded it. And froze. DANTE NAVARRO FREED AFTER FIVE YEARS BEHIND BARS. Her vision blurred. “No,” she whispered. “No… no…” The room tilted. The man from the bar. The way he had looked at her. The word counselor. The calm. The control. Her breath turned shallow. A voice sounded behind her. Low. Familiar. “Morning.” She turned. He stood in the doorway, shirt unbuttoned, expression calm—almost amused. “Morning, counselor,” he said softly. “Miss me?” Her heart slammed against her ribs. “You’re supposed to be in prison,” she whispered. His smile widened. “Not anymore.”For a long moment Celeste could not breathe.The photograph filled the screen of her phone, the glow reflecting faintly against the glass of the study window. Rain continued to hammer against the estate outside, but the sound seemed distant now, muted by the sudden roar inside her ears.Her brother stood in the image with one hand resting against the roof of a dark sedan. His posture was relaxed in the way it always had been when he spoke to someone he trusted. His head tilted slightly, as though listening.And behind him, reflected in the polished side panel of the car, stood Adrian Navarro.Celeste’s fingers tightened around the phone.“That’s him,” she whispered.Dante stepped closer beside her, his shoulder brushing hers as he studied the screen. The light from the photograph cast a sharp glow across his features.“Yes,” he said quietly.The confirmation settled into her chest like a stone.The timestamp sat in the lower corner of the image.9:52 p.m.Two hours before Nate’s accid
The storm broke just after midnight.Rain struck the estate windows in sharp, relentless sheets, thunder rolling across the sky like distant artillery. Celeste stood in the darkened study alone, Ethan’s final message still glowing faintly on her phone screen.You still don’t know everything.The words would not leave her.Behind her, the house was quiet. Dante had taken a call with his security team regarding the restraining order filing. Marcus had left an hour earlier to coordinate additional surveillance near her mother’s old property.Everything was controlled.Everything was guarded.Yet the message felt like a fracture running beneath it all.She tried to approach it logically. Ethan thrived on intimidation. He planted doubt like a seed and waited for it to grow. He would not reveal anything directly. He would let her imagination do the damage.But this felt different.She walked toward the desk and opened the case files again, spreading the documents across the surface with car
The backlash began before they reached the estate.Celeste’s phone would not stop vibrating. News alerts stacked over one another, headlines shifting by the minute as commentators dissected her statement in court. Some called her brave. Others called her reckless. A few went further, suggesting she had always been compromised.The word affair appeared more than once.She turned the screen face down on her lap.Dante sat beside her in the back of the car, silent but alert. He had not released her hand since they left the courthouse. It was not a display for the cameras. It was something steadier than that. Something protective.“They’re escalating the narrative,” Marcus said from the front seat, glancing at the rearview mirror. “Ethan has given an interview.”Celeste felt her stomach tighten.“Already?”“Yes.”Dante’s jaw hardened.“What did he say?”Marcus hesitated only briefly.“He expressed concern for your mental state.”A cold laugh escaped her before she could stop it.“That’s p
The courthouse steps had never felt this heavy.Celeste stepped out of the car into a wall of flashing lights and shouted questions. The sound struck her all at once, sharp and relentless, dragging her back five years to the day she stood here as the city’s rising legal star. Back then, the noise had felt like applause. Now it felt like judgment.“Ms. Morgan, were you involved with Dante Navarro during the original trial?”“Is it true you fabricated evidence?”“Did your marriage end because of this scandal?”She kept her gaze forward, shoulders straight, the discipline of years settling over her like armor. Dante stepped out of the car beside her, his presence steady and deliberate. The crowd shifted when they saw him. Cameras angled. Voices sharpened.For a brief moment, their hands brushed. Not a display. Not a performance. Just contact.Grounding.They walked inside without answering a single question.The courtroom smelled the same.Old wood. Paper. Stale air that had absorbed dec
The news broke before noon.Celeste watched it unfold on the large screen in Dante’s study, her name appearing in bold letters beneath archived footage from five years ago. There she was in a navy suit, younger, sharper, standing on courthouse steps with cameras flashing and microphones thrust toward her face.The Ice Queen of Justice.The woman who put Dante Navarro behind bars.The anchor’s voice carried a rehearsed neutrality that barely concealed the hunger underneath.“Federal Judge Malcolm Hollis has announced a procedural review of the Navarro conviction, citing newly discovered irregularities in evidentiary documentation. Sources suggest former prosecutor Celeste Morgan may be called to testify.”Her stomach tightened.“This is calculated,” she said quietly.Dante stood behind her, his presence steady but charged.“Yes.”“They want to control the narrative before we do.”He did not deny it.“If they reopen it publicly,” she continued, “they can reframe the inconsistencies as c
Celeste did not sleep that night.Not because she was afraid.But because something inside her had shifted into place with frightening clarity.For years she had believed she was the architect of Dante Navarro’s fall. She had carried the weight of that conviction like armor, convincing herself that every sacrifice, every late night, every ruthless cross examination had been justified in the name of justice.Now she understood something far worse.She had been selected.Chosen because she was brilliant. Because she was relentless. Because she would not stop once she believed she was right.She had been the perfect weapon.And someone else had pulled the trigger.The estate was quiet when she walked into Dante’s study just after dawn. He was already there, seated behind his desk, jacket discarded, sleeves rolled neatly above his wrists. A map of financial networks glowed across the large screen mounted on the wall behind him.He did not look surprised to see her.“You’ve decided,” he sa







