LOGINCINNAMON:
I didn't even have time to properly wallow. One day. I'd been fired for exactly one day before Mr. Martin called. I was still in my pajamas, surrounded by crumpled tissues and half-eaten takeout, researching employment lawyers who specialized in wrongful termination cases. Three years of my life couldn't just be erased because some spoiled CEO had a tantrum over spilled coffee. I'd earned that promotion. Earned my place in that company. If Dante Moretti thought he could toss me aside without consequences, he had another thing coming. Then my phone buzzed. Mr. Martin's name flashed across the screen. I almost didn't answer. But curiosity and a sliver of desperate hope made me pick up. "Ms. Wealth, I hope I'm not disturbing you." "That depends on why you're calling." He cleared his throat. "Mr. Moretti would like to discuss reinstating your position." I sat up straighter. "Reinstating?" "Yes. Temporarily. For the Meadowbrook project specifically." And just like that, the hope died. "Let me get this straight," I said slowly. "He fires me, humiliates me in front of the entire executive team, has security drag me out of the building and now he wants me back because he needs my help?" "The company needs your expertise—" "He needs my expertise," I corrected. "And he's too proud to ask for it himself, so he's making it sound like he's doing me a favor. Like I'm some desperate nobody who should be grateful he's tossing me scraps." Silence on the other end. "Is that about right, Mr. Martin?" He sighed. "Ms. Wealth—" "No. He can find someone else." "We've already started this project with you. Starting off with someone new would be a hassle. Moreover, this would be beneficial to you." Oh, he was trying to play politics in my face because I knew that no one was capable to handle this deal but me. The field test months ago had been my idea. Go to Meadowbrook, blend in, learn what made the community tick, figure out how to win their trust. It was supposed to be straightforward. Except Meadowbrook wasn't just any town. It was my hometown. The place where Marcus left me standing at the altar in front of two hundred people. The place I'd avoided for two years because every street corner held a memory I'd rather forget. But I went anyway. Because the job mattered. Because proving myself mattered. I spent weeks there, reconnecting with neighbors, attending town meetings, volunteering at events. Slowly, painfully, I rebuilt bridges I thought had burned. And it worked. The elders trusted me. They liked me. So yeah. I was good at my job. And Dante Moretti had the audacity to fire me anyway. "I'm not interested, Mr. Martin." "Ms. Wealth, please, we can reach a compromise for all parties." Taking in a deep breath, I had one option left. "Get Mr. Moretti to have a meeting with me where I list more conditions and also have him issue an apology to me and maybe I'll reconsider." There was rustling of paper at the other end of the line and a brief silence before Mr. Martin spoke up. "Ms. Wealth, you're asking for the impossible. He wouldn't—" "Then I'm afraid I won't be accepting this offer." "Ms. Wealth, we—" I hung up, not interested to listen any further to him. Then I sat there, staring at my phone, heart pounding. What had I just done? The rational part of my brain scolded me. I needed that job. Needed the paycheck. Mom's medical bills were piling up faster than I could pay them, and my savings account was running on fumes. I should've swallowed my pride. Should've said yes immediately, kept my head down, done whatever Dante Moretti wanted just to stay employed. But I couldn't. I wouldn't. He didn't get to treat me like I was disposable. My phone buzzed again an hour later. Mr. Martin. I almost ignored it. But something made me answer. "He's agreed to meet with you," Mr. Martin said. "On your terms. Tomorrow. 6 PM." I blinked. "He… agreed?" "Yes." "To apologize?" "He agreed to a private meeting. I suggest you don't push your luck beyond that." A laugh bubbled up before I could stop it. Dante Moretti was actually bending. Which meant this deal was more important than his ego. Good. Maybe I could get my respect back, even if I didn't get my job. "Fine," I said. "Tomorrow at six." *** I spent the next day preparing. Not just mentally but physically. If I was walking into Dante Moretti's office, I needed to look like someone he couldn't dismiss. Someone who belonged in that room as much as he did. I stood in front of the mirror, smoothing my hands over the navy sheath dress I'd bought for interviews but never had a reason to wear. It was right for this I adjusted my hair for the third time, even though it was already in place. Checked my makeup. Reapplied lipstick. There was a popular saying, "Dress the way you want to be addressed." Maybe that was where I went wrong the first time. Maybe he didn't take me seriously because I looked like every other employee instead of someone who commanded attention. A cough echoed from the living room. I froze. Another cough. Wet. Painful. I rushed out of my bedroom and found Mom bent over on the couch, a handkerchief pressed to her mouth. When she pulled it away, red stained the white fabric. "Mom—" "I'm fine." Her voice came out raspy, strained. She wasn't fine. I guided her back against the cushions, my hands shaking. Two years ago, my mother could carry groceries up three flights of stairs without breaking a sweat. She worked two jobs, sometimes three, and never complained. She held our family together after Dad died, made sure my sister Maya and I never went to bed hungry, never felt the weight of how hard she was struggling. Now, ovarian cancer was eating her alive from the inside out. "Cinnamon." She reached for my hand, squeezing weakly. "Do you really want to go back there?" I swallowed hard. "It's just a meeting." "He treated you terribly. You don't deserve that. I don't care how much we need the money. Your well-being matters more." Another cough rattled her chest. She winced, pressing the handkerchief back to her mouth. My throat tightened. She needed chemo. It cost so much per session. More than I made in a month but Insurance covered some of it, but not enough. Never enough. If I didn't get my job back, if I didn't find something that paid just as well, I didn't know what we'd do. "I'm just going to hear him out," I said softly. "If anything feels wrong, I'll walk away. I promise." "Promise me, Cinnamon." I couldn't say the words. Couldn't lie to her face. So I smiled instead. Nodded. She studied me for a long moment, then sighed. "Be careful." I kissed her forehead. "I have to go. I don't want to be late." *** The office eerie when I walked in. Like the building itself was holding its breath. Employees glanced at me as I passed, then quickly looked away. No one smiled. No one said hello. They knew what happened. Of course they did. I kept my head high, shoulders back, walking like I owned the place. Like I hadn't been dragged out by security less than forty-eight hours ago. Dante's personal assistant met me at the elevator—a polite, good-looking guy in his late twenties who introduced himself as Tate. "Mr. Moretti is expecting you," he said, gesturing toward the executive floor. I followed him down the long hallway lined with glass walls and now minimalist décor. Everything had been redecorated and looked expensive and untouchable. They did all that within less than forty eight hours? Interesting. We stopped in front of a set of double doors. Tate knocked once, then pushed them open. Dante stood with his back to us, hands in his pockets, staring out the windows overlooking the city. The evening light painted him in gold and shadow, outlining the lines of his suit, the breadth of his shoulders. He didn't turn immediately. Just stood there, still as if he had all the time in the world. Then he turned. And every coherent thought I had evaporated. I forgot how to breathe. Had he always looked like this? High cheekbones, hazel eyes that pinned me in place making me seem like I was something he'd been hunting. His suit was charcoal, perfectly tailored, probably worth more than my rent. Better than the last one I ruined. But it wasn't just the suit. It was the way he looked at me. Like he'd been waiting. Like he knew exactly what kind of chaos this meeting would bring. I opened my mouth to say something, anything but no words came out. I just stood there. Staring. Tate cleared his throat. "Ms. Wealth is here." I noticed Tate didn't add sir like every assistant would. Dante's gaze didn't leave mine. "Close the door," he said quietly. Tate stepped out. The door clicked shut behind him. And suddenly, the room felt far too small. Dante took a step forward. Then another. He stopped three feet away, close enough that I could smell his dark and expensive cologne that made my pulse stutter. "Ms. Wealth." His voice was dangerous. "You wanted to talk." I swallowed hard, forcing myself to meet his eyes. "You fired me." "I did." "Unjustly." "That's debatable." Heat flared in my chest. He wasn't even offering me a seat or trying to keep his distance. "You humiliated me in front of the entire executive team. Had security throw me out like I was nothing." "And yet," he said, tilting his head slightly, "here you are." "Because you need me." Something changed in his expression. Annoyance. Maybe respect. "Careful, Ms. Wealth." He stepped closer. "Confidence is attractive. Arrogance gets you fired twice." My breath caught. He was so close now I could see the flecks of green in his hazel eyes, the slight tension in his jaw. "I don't need your threats," I said, voice steadier than I felt. "I need an apology and the conditions I'll lay out met." Dante's mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "Then I'm afraid you're going to be disappointed."DANTE.Later, once Oliver settled in the living room and the dishes were put away, we found ourselves on the back porch. The morning had brightened up. Thin sunlight filtered through, not quite warm yet but making an effort. Khole's chair remained in the yard; neither of us had moved it, and I doubted we would for some time.We stood there in silence, feeling no need to fill it with words. I gazed at that chair and recalled the sound of her laughter, along with Mrs. Patterson’s.I thought about the price of completely trusting the wrong person and what it meant to be naive enough to believe you could keep dangerous things close while managing them—thinking your own abilities provided enough protection for those around you. Jealousy flourishes when left unchecked; it doesn’t just desire what you possess but aims to dismantle everything you are until there's nothing left to compare.You couldn’t explain that to others: how love and envy could coexist within someone and how envy could ev
DANTE.Khole's lawyer called on a Wednesday morning.I was alone in my office when the email came through, forwarded from the estate. I read it twice before I understood what I was looking at. She'd had a will drawn up three years ago. Sweet, organized Khole that put her affairs in order.My heart hurt thinking about her.She'd written it all down. Every book in her collection and there were hundreds, catalogued in a spreadsheet she'd attached to the document were to be auctioned. Eighty percent of the proceeds was to go to a literacy foundation that worked with underprivileged girls in the South. The remaining twenty percent was to Cinnamon.'Of course,' I thought. 'Of course that's what she chose.'I sat with that for a long time. The auction house handled the logistics which included her rare first editions, signed copies and a collection that were yet to be published. When the final number came in, the foundation received enough to run their programs for six uninterrupted years. C
CINNAMON.Dante's breathing ceased. He looked downwards, his hand going limp and falling off from the steering wheel."Not right now, Dante. Maybe one day. However, you're not patient to wait for when I'm in the right frame of mind, I won't hold you back. That doesn't mean I don't believe everything you've explained." I looked back at the windshield. At the rain. "I just need you to know that. I believe you and I'm not okay and both of those things are true at the same time.""I know.""She's still gone." My throat closed on it. "They're both still gone and my baby is still—" I stopped. Opened my hands in my lap. Closed them again. "Believing you doesn't change any of that.""No," he said quietly. "It doesn't.. I won't force anything and I'm definitely not pushing you to let me in when you're not ready."We sat in the rain and we didn't try to fix it, because it wasn't the kind of thing that could be fixed in a parked car outside a cemetery, and we both knew it, and neither of us pret
CINNAMON.I wasn't existing. I was floating. Nothing was coherent to me. How I got here, I couldn't tell.All I knew was someone had picked yellow flowers.I stood at the edge of the burial site and stared at them laid across Khole's casket. Bright and wrong against all that white, like someone had made a terrible mistake with the order and I thought, 'she would've hated that.' Khole would've wanted red. Full, loud, decided red, the way she was about everything.But she wasn't here to say so.That was the part that kept arriving fresh, no matter how many times I'd already understood it. She wasn't here. She would never again be here. Every future I'd assumed she'd be standing in,she wasn't in any of them anymore, and the world had just continued regardless, grey sky and all, like her absence was something it could absorb without flinching.I couldn't cry.I'd expected to come here and fall apart. I'd braced for it on the drive over, rehearsed surviving it. But I stood at the edge of t
CINNAMON.Bright light and pain exploded in my eyes and body all at once. A pervasive discomfort that made my body feel like it had been taken apart and reassembled by someone who lost the instructions midway.I heard beeping and voices. Gradually , I began to open my eyes, laying there, just existing, breathing, trying to recall what had come before this whiteness.My memories began to flood back, making my heart ache. I turned my head.Dante was sitting in the chair beside my bed. Both hands resting in his lap, one wrapped in white bandaging that had started to yellow at the knuckles. His shirt was wrinkled. The weariness etched on his face was deep-seated.He looked up when he noticed me looking at him. He exhaled, immediately leaning forward. He opened his mouth to speak but I turned my gaze away from him.Swiveled my head in the opposite direction and spotted Dove and Miranda standing against the wall. Dove's arms were crossed, eyes red and swollen, lashes still damp from tears.
DANTE.Risa stilled, looking up at me with a smirk."Hey, what happened?" I knitted my brows. and locked my gaze onto hers, gently twirling a handful of her hair around my fingers."I have a surprise for you."I leaned back slightly, my face lighting up. "Really?""Yes."Risa got off me completely and walked towards the door. Before she left, she turned around and blew me a kiss.I pretended to have caught it with both hands and held it possessively. As soon as I heard the shutting of the door, I rushed for my phone and hit the signal send button. Then I reached for my pants and zipped it up, putting on my shirt. I grabbed the wine bottle casually, just in case she was watching.I weighed it. "Oh, my fucking baby girl Risa," I praised loudly. I didn't touch any of the fruits or snacks she'd prepared just in case they were laced.Suddenly, with all my strength, I hurled the wine bottle at that long mirror. It didn’t shatter as I expected; instead, it left a small dent while the bottle
DANTEI'd stayed away from her for seven days, hanging onto the thin thread of investigation work to prevent myself from losing my mind completely.The week had been brutal. I'd dissolved the board I'd set up for DreamHaven. Paid back every investor, taking massive financial hits I'd feel for awhil
CINNAMONLadies and gentlemen, I was in freaking Okinawa.Never in my wildest dreams had I imagined my life turning out this way. But here I was, healing, happy and held.We'd stopped in Virginia first, then boarded Dante's private plane for a twenty-hour flight that felt both endless and not long
DANTEThe meeting finally wrapped up around four. Residents filed out, most of them smiling, shaking our hands. Jensen left without a word, jaw tight.Cinnamon turned to me as the hall emptied. "Is Dove okay? And Thessa?"The question caught me off guard. She'd been thinking about my family. Caring
CINNAMONThe hangar lights felt like knives stabbing through my skull.I'd been waiting since seven. It was now past nine. My head throbbed with every heartbeat, nausea rolling in waves that threatened to break through the careful control I'd maintained.Mixing beer and wine had been stupid. I knew







