The city’s heartbeat was relentless, a rhythm of horns, voices, and rushing feet. For Liana, every step on the crowded sidewalk felt like a declaration: I am free.
The suitcase she pulled behind her was light—most of her belongings had been left behind in the Hale mansion. Jewelry, gowns, the countless trappings of wealth—all of it had been meaningless, bought to cage her rather than to honor her. The only things she carried now were her documents, a few cherished books, and the determination not to look back. She had rented a modest two-bedroom apartment on the twenty-first floor of a downtown complex. It wasn’t glamorous, but when she stepped inside and locked the door, the silence felt hers alone. She pressed her back to the door, closing her eyes. For the first time in years, she wasn’t being watched, judged, or dismissed. No more Miranda’s mocking laughter. No more Victor’s cold indifference. No more suffocating pretense of being the “perfect wife.” Her phone buzzed. It was a text from her lawyer, Sonia: Victor hasn’t signed. His team is pushing for negotiation. He’s furious. Wants to meet. Liana’s jaw tightened. Of course, he would resist. Control was Victor Hale’s religion; he wouldn’t surrender it willingly. But this time, she had no intention of bowing. She typed back quickly: Set the date. I’ll be there. >>>>>> Two days later, the storm broke. The courtroom wasn’t yet in session—it was only a preliminary meeting in a conference chamber between both parties. But the atmosphere was electric, every lawyer’s briefcase like a weapon drawn. Victor arrived in a tailored navy suit, radiating arrogance. Miranda clung to his arm, dressed as though she was walking a red carpet rather than entering a legal battlefield. She smirked openly when she saw Liana, her voice pitched sweet and mocking. “Oh, darling. You look… plain. Freedom doesn’t come with a stylist, does it?” Liana ignored her and took her seat. She had chosen a simple black dress, her hair neatly tied back. No frills, no distractions. She wanted her strength, not her wardrobe, to do the talking. Victor leaned back in his chair across from her, lips twisting. “Liana, you’re embarrassing yourself. This circus will end when you drop the papers. I’ll give you a generous settlement. Just sign the NDA and walk away quietly.” Her spine straightened. “No.” Victor’s eyes darkened. “You think you can win against me? You’re naive.” The door opened before she could answer. A man entered, tall and composed, dressed in a charcoal suit that exuded quiet authority. His presence shifted the entire room, and even the lawyers paused mid-whisper. He carried no briefcase—just a folder tucked beneath his arm. He walked straight to Liana’s side and placed the folder before her. “Ms. Liana, I’ll be representing you from this point forward.” She blinked. “But—Sonia—” “I’ve already spoken with her. She agreed to the transfer.” His tone was calm, but his eyes… they were sharp as cut glass, scanning the room with a quiet intensity that made Victor shift in his seat. Victor’s brows snapped together. “And who the hell are you?” The man met his gaze with the calm ferocity of a predator. “Cassian Carver. Senior partner, Carver & Associates. And your attempts to intimidate my client will fail.” A murmur rippled through the room. Carver & Associates wasn’t just a law firm—it was the law firm, known for taking down conglomerates twice Victor’s size. Victor’s arrogance faltered for the briefest second before he sneered. “So what? Lawyers can be bought. She can’t afford you forever. Then she’ll crawl back.” Cassian didn’t so much as blink. He slid the folder across the table toward Victor. “You might want to read this before underestimating her.” Victor flipped it open, scanning the documents. His face paled. These weren’t simple divorce papers. They were financial records—proof that Liana’s dowry had been directly invested into Hale Corporation, proof that without her money, Victor’s empire wouldn’t exist. Cassian’s voice cut through the silence. “As per contractual law, my client is entitled not only to her full dowry but also to any profits accrued from its use. By our calculations, that accounts for forty-seven percent of Hale Corporation’s net worth over the last three years. Shall I continue?” Victor slammed the folder shut. “This is—this is outrageous!” Miranda’s face twisted. “You can’t do this! You’re nobody! She’s nobody!” Cassian turned his gaze to her, a faint trace of disdain flickering across his features. “If she’s nobody, why are you so afraid?” Miranda’s cheeks flushed crimson. Victor shoved back his chair, standing abruptly. “I won’t be blackmailed. You’ll regret this, Liana. Both of you.” Cassian rose as well, but his calm was unshaken. “No, Mr. Hale. The only one who’ll regret this is you. The court date is set. If you refuse to settle, we’ll proceed publicly. I’m sure the shareholders will be fascinated to learn how much of their empire belongs to my client.” Victor’s fists clenched, but for once, he had no immediate comeback. He stormed out, Miranda scrambling after him, her heels clattering angrily on the marble floor. The room emptied, leaving only Liana and Cassian. She exhaled slowly, tension draining from her shoulders. “You didn’t have to—” “Yes, I did,” Cassian interrupted, his tone softer now. His gaze lingered on her, steady, almost… protective. “You shouldn’t face this alone.” Something about the way he said it made her chest tighten. “Why?” she asked, almost whispering. Cassian’s expression didn’t change, but there was a flicker—something raw, restrained—in his eyes. “Let’s just say… protecting you is more than a duty.” Her breath caught, but before she could press further, he gathered the folder and adjusted his cufflinks. “I’ll keep you updated on the case. Don’t worry, Ms. Liana. He won’t win.” And then he left, his presence lingering in the room long after his footsteps faded. >>>>>> That night, in her modest apartment, Liana sat by the window staring at the city lights. Her phone buzzed with messages—Victor’s threats, Miranda’s insults, media speculation. She silenced them all. But Cassian’s words replayed in her mind. Protecting you is more than a duty. Her heart warred with itself. She wanted to believe she was strong enough alone. Yet for the first time, she wondered if maybe—just maybe—she wasn’t as alone as she thought. Far across the city, in a private penthouse, Cassian placed a call. “She’s holding up,” he reported. A deep voice answered, calm and commanding: “Good. Keep her safe until we move.” And then another, warmer but edged with steel: “If Victor pushes harder, we’ll push back harder. She’s ours to protect. She’s finally ready.” Cassian closed his eyes briefly. “She doesn’t know yet.” “She will,” the commanding voice said. “Soon. But for now… let her stand. She’s earned it.”Liana had lived most of her life quietly, so quietly that sometimes she wondered if she had ever truly existed.In Victor’s house, she had been like a shadow: invisible, unappreciated, endlessly pushed aside. Days were measured by humiliation, nights by tears. No one had cared whether she smiled, whether she ate, or whether she dared to dream.But in the Carver mansion, life was completely different.She awoke that morning to silk curtains fluttering gently in the breeze, the scent of fresh lilies drifting from the vase Dante had insisted be placed by her bedside. Breakfast—a tray laden with fresh fruit, buttery croissants, and her favorite hazelnut latte—had been delivered without her asking. She blinked at it, still not accustomed to the idea that someone could care for her so lavishly, not as a duty, but as a joy.By the time she dressed, the day had already been planned for her—not with chores or obligations, but with delights.“Try this one,” Dante said with dramatic flair, holdi
The file still lay open in front of Liana long after Leo left the study. His words echoed in her ears, heavy as iron. Ignorance is the sharpest weapon they wield.Her fingers brushed over the photographs inside—faces she didn’t recognize, companies she couldn’t pronounce. Each page felt like a window into a world she hadn’t asked to inherit, a battlefield she didn’t know how to fight on.She closed the folder at last, exhaling shakily. The silence pressed on her chest until a knock broke it.The door creaked open. Cassian stood there, his dark suit crisp, his tie perfectly aligned. Unlike Leo, whose presence was cold steel, Cassian radiated quiet control. His gaze swept over her once, lingering just enough to read her tension.“You look like that file swallowed you whole,” he said softly, stepping inside.Liana tried to smile, but it faltered. “Maybe it did.”He shut the door behind him, crossing the room with unhurried steps. He carried no file, no phone, no weight of business in his
The mansion was alive with chatter by the time Dante swept back inside with Liana at his side. Bags upon bags trailed behind them, carried by staff who looked more like soldiers than servants. Dante’s booming laughter filled the hallway as he draped an arm around his sister and proudly announced her return like a victorious knight.“Look at her, gentlemen!” Dante declared as if addressing a stadium rather than his brothers. “Doesn’t she look like she could own half the city already? And to think she started the day looking like—well—” he gave a dramatic pause, “a lost lamb.”Liana rolled her eyes but couldn’t stop the small smile tugging at her lips.From the grand staircase, Leo descended like a shadow. His steps were measured, his expression carved from stone. The weight of his presence alone was enough to hush the staff, and even Dante toned down his theatrics for a moment.Leo’s eyes swept over his sister once, cold and clinical, before they rested on the mountain of shopping bags
Dante leaned back against the velvet couch, his arms crossed, but his eyes never left Liana. The moment her phone had slipped from her hand and those troubling words flashed on the screen, she had gone pale. He’d seen panic like that before—on fans cornered by scandal, on people pushed into a spotlight they weren’t ready for. But with Liana, it cut deeper. This was his sister. His little sister. And he’d be damned if he let her drown in fear.“Hey,” Dante said lightly, deliberately softening his voice. He reached out and tilted her chin up, forcing her gaze away from the floor. “Don’t worry about that message. Leo and Cassian will take care of it. You’ve got the two scariest men in the country on your side. Trust me, whoever sent it won’t even dare breathe once they find out.”Liana bit her lip. “But what if it’s Victor?”“Then even better,” Dante replied smoothly, a smile tugging at the corner of his lips. “I’ve been dying to see that man fall flat on his face. Let our dear brothers
The phone slipped from Liana’s trembling fingers, clattering against the polished marble floor. For a moment, the sound echoed louder than her heartbeat. Her breath caught, shallow and uneven, as if the walls themselves had closed in on her.Dante was the first to move, crouching quickly to pick up the phone. His brows furrowed when he read the message, his playful warmth replaced by a flash of anger. “Who the hell sent this?”Leo snatched the device from his brother’s hand before Dante could respond. His eyes scanned the words, his jaw tightening, every line of his body rigid with control barely maintained. “Anonymous number,” he muttered, scrolling with quick precision. “Untraceable at first glance, but we’ll find the source.”Cassian stepped closer, his calm presence an anchor against the storm brewing in the room. “Liana,” he said softly, “did you recognize this threat? Is there anything Victor might be holding over you?”Her throat constricted. For years, Victor had fed her lies,
The morning sunlight spilled across silk curtains, too bright, too golden. Liana stirred awake in a bed so vast it could have swallowed her entire apartment back in Victor’s penthouse. For a moment, she lay still, listening to the silence. No clattering from Miranda in the kitchen, no sharp voice demanding her obedience.Just quiet.And yet, the weight in her chest wouldn’t lift.A knock sounded at the door. Before she could answer, it swung open. Dante bounded in, casual in a white T-shirt and joggers, holding two cups of coffee. “Rise and shine, princess.”Liana blinked at him. “Princess?”“You’d prefer ‘rockstar’s baby sister’?” he teased, plopping onto the edge of her bed like he belonged there. He handed her a steaming cup. “Hazelnut latte. I remembered you mentioned once you liked nutty flavors.”Her lips parted. She hadn’t realized he’d been listening. “Thanks,” she murmured, wrapping her hands around the cup.The warmth seeped into her palms, but it didn’t soothe her nerves. H