로그인Ten minutes later, the residual chill of the black Cullinan still clinging to her bare shoulders, Luna finally slides into the plush passenger seat of the other Cullinan—Julian's actual ride.
"Next time, I'm keeping you in my pocket."
Julian says it with a half-laugh, but Luna can hear the thread of something real underneath it—relief, maybe, or the particular anxiety of someone who almost lost something before he'd fully learned how to hold it. His thumb traces a slow circle against the back of her hand as he drives. "No more texting while you get in the car."
"I know, I know." Luna turns toward the darkened window so he can't read the turbulence lingering in her eyes. "It won't happen again."
She expertly pivots the conversation before he can follow that thread any further, steering them toward safer territory.
They talk about his parents. She mentions wanting to meet them properly—not as a fleeting surprise, but a formal introduction.
He agrees, his demeanor instantly returning to the easy, warm comfort she relies on. "How about the day after tomorrow," he promises, his smile returning. "We'll do a nice dinner tomorrow, just two of us." His hand finds hers again, warm and solid, and she lets it.
"Actually—" She hesitates, the weight of her impending return pressing down on her chest. "I need to get back to Harlow the day after tomorrow."
"Yeah?"
"Mia's baby girl is getting christened." Luna keeps her voice light. "I RSVP'd months ago. I absolutely can't miss it."
Mia was the one who stayed.
When everyone else vanished—when Luna was lying in a sterile hospital bed, bleeding, hollowed out, and trying to comprehend how her entire universe had collapsed so thoroughly—Mia was the only one who held her hand.
She doesn't need to say it. She told Julian everything before they got together. The six-year relationship, the catastrophic betrayal, the agonizing reason it ended, and the pregnancy she had barely had time to process before it was violently taken from her. She'd done it because she needed him to understand who she was and what she was carrying.
Julian had listened to all of it without flinching. He had looked at her afterward with that steady, fiercely careful expression she had come to adore, and simply said I'm sorry I wasn't there.
She'd told him it wasn't his fault.
He'd said, I know. I'm still sorry.
She thinks about that now, watching the city lights blur past. His hand tightens slightly around hers, just for a moment, and she knows he's thinking about it too—the parts of her history he wasn't there for, the things he can't undo, the ache of arriving too late to prevent something.
"We'll do dinner tomorrow, then," he decides, breaking the silence. "Something incredible. You pick."
She picks sushi. Of course she does.
The restaurant embodies everything the city does flawlessly—candlelit, elegantly minimalist, and quietly excellent. Julian orders for both of them without making a production of it, and Luna lets herself relax into the evening, into the ease of him, into the profound comfort of being with a man who demands absolutely nothing she isn't ready to give.
She's laughing at something he says when his phone buzzes.
Then again.
When his mother's name lights up the screen, Julian's whole face changes.
Acute Appendicitis. Ambulance already en route. His father insisting he's fine while clearly not being fine.
"Go." She's already handing him his jacket. "I'll get a car back to the hotel. Go."
"Luna, I can't just—"
"I'm serious. Go." She squeezes his arm once. "Text me when you know more."
He kisses her fast and hard, a collision of gratitude and apology, and vanishes through the glass doors in under a minute.
Luna watches his car pull away into the busy intersection, then calmly sits back down at the table. She finishes her tea, leaves a generous cash tip, and orders a premium rideshare back to her suite. She is behaving exactly like the ruthlessly self-sufficient woman she has spent four years building herself to be.
***
Luna finds the first hidden camera by accident.
She's unpacking, shaking out a silk dress she'd folded carefully two days ago, and something catches her eye—a tiny, dark pinpoint in the vent above the minibar.
She goes still. Then she checks the bathroom. The closet. Behind the television.
Three minutes later she has found two more.
The hotel manager, summoned urgently to the suite, is apologetic—yet it's merely that typical brand of corporate apology. "I'm very sorry about this situation, Miss Quinn. But perhaps you're mistaken, it might be a legacy component of our internal security infrastructure."
The condescending subtext is glaringly unmistakable. Do not make this into a scandal. Do not be a difficult guest.
She doesn't argue. She simply locks the manager out and calls the police.
The officers who arrive forty minutes later are drastically worse. They take sloppy notes, nodding with thinly veiled boredom.
"You know, ma'am, these things are often misunderstood," one of them drawls, stepping slightly into her personal space. "High-profile women tend to get paranoid. Would you like to step outside to my cruiser if you feel unsafe here?"
She does not step outside.
She refuses to react, because she has learned—at an unimaginably brutal cost—exactly how to be perfectly still in a room full of men who desperately want to watch her fracture.
She is just pulling out her phone to call Julian, deciding she needs an aggressive lawyer, when the heavy suite door swings open.
A voice slices through the tense, suffocating air of the room.
"The cameras have already been logged by private security. My legal team is drafting the negligence suit against this establishment as we speak, and I strongly suggest you gentlemen step away from her."
Low, meticulously precise, and vibrating with a terrifying, absolute register of authority.
Ethan Caldwell.
The shift in the room's atmosphere is violent and instantaneous.
The condescending cops pale, stumbling back as Ethan steps fully into the light. He doesn't even look at the officers. His dark, storm-gray eyes bypass everyone in the room, locking directly onto Luna.
When the Cullinan finally comes to a halt in front of a safer hotel, Luna steps out into the biting night air without a backward glance. She leaves his vows sitting in the passenger seat exactly where they belong—in the past.She sleeps for two hours that night.By the time Julian calls the following morning, Luna has already ordered black coffee and begun constructing her armor."The surgery went well," Julian tells her, exhaling a long breath that sounds like a man who has just outrun a disaster. "He's awake.""I'll be there this afternoon," Luna says.She needs to do this. She needs to immerse herself in Julian's ground, uncomplicated reality to violently wash away the suffocating residue of Ethan's midnight confession.***Luna knows how to walk into a room.She has known how to do it since she was sixteen years old. She learned early that the entrance is everything—that the first three seconds dictate exactly how people will measure you, categorize you, and decide whether or not
Half an hour later, Luna is sitting on the cold concrete steps of the precinct, the adrenaline finally crashing.She is wrapped in a heavy, expensive wool coat that isn't hers—someone had draped it over her shoulders during the bureaucratic chaos, and she had pulled it tight without thinking.Ethan emerges from the glass doors. He crosses the distance between them without hurrying, holding two steaming cups, and silently extends one toward her.Hot chocolate.She takes it, her numb fingers wrapping around the cardboard."The officers from earlier have been officially suspended," he states flatly. "The hotel manager was fired ten minutes ago."She takes a slow sip. She says nothing."You shouldn't go back to that suite.""I know." She grips the cup tighter. "My luggage is still in the lobby.""I'll take you wherever you need to go."She desperately wants to say no. She opens her mouth to reject him, to spit venom, but what comes out instead is a quiet, ragged exhale."Fine," she whispe
Ten minutes later, the residual chill of the black Cullinan still clinging to her bare shoulders, Luna finally slides into the plush passenger seat of the other Cullinan—Julian's actual ride."Next time, I'm keeping you in my pocket."Julian says it with a half-laugh, but Luna can hear the thread of something real underneath it—relief, maybe, or the particular anxiety of someone who almost lost something before he'd fully learned how to hold it. His thumb traces a slow circle against the back of her hand as he drives. "No more texting while you get in the car.""I know, I know." Luna turns toward the darkened window so he can't read the turbulence lingering in her eyes. "It won't happen again."She expertly pivots the conversation before he can follow that thread any further, steering them toward safer territory.They talk about his parents. She mentions wanting to meet them properly—not as a fleeting surprise, but a formal introduction.He agrees, his demeanor instantly returning to
The kiss cam finds them first.Of course it does. Luna Quinn and Julian Hayes are standing near the pit of the amphitheater, bathed in the chaotic neon glow of the stage lights, and even in a surging crowd of twenty thousand, they possess the kind of magnetic, effortless beauty that a roaming camera simply cannot resist.Luna is draped in a bias-cut white slip dress that clings to her curves like a well-kept secret, while Julian stands broad-shouldered and immaculately sharp in a tailored dark shirt. The massive LED screen above the stage catches them, freezing them in fifty-foot-tall high definition, and the crowd collectively loses its mind.The rule is simple. The camera lands on you, you kiss.The host grins into his mic. "So—are we looking at a power couple, or just two incredibly good-looking strangers who are about to make each other's night?"Julian doesn't bother answering with words. His arm finds the curve of Luna's waist, pulling her in with a slow, deliberate grace, as th







