LOGINAria’s POV
I had forgotten what it felt like to wake up with a heavy heart of how to sort the next bill. Arthur had made life more easier for me and Bryan. It wasn’t a dramatic change, not the kind of transformation that comes overnight. It had crept in slowly over the weeks since that first hospital bill was sorted by Arthur, and the subsequent financial assistance, especially after the first visit to Arthur’s estate. The relief that came with it was a feeling I haven’t experienced in the last five years. Mornings still started the same way. The alarm at six-thirty. The scramble to get Bryan fed, dressed and out the door with his backpack and his lunch box and whatever stuffed animal he decided needed to accompany him to school that particular week. “Mom, Arthur said next time I can feed the koi,” Bryan announced over breakfast, spooning cereal with the enthusiasm of someone delivering breaking news. “He has actual koi in a real pond.” “Did he,” I said, smiling into my coffee. “He said some of them are older than you.” “Wonderful,” I said. “Being out-aged by fish now.” Bryan grinned, showing off his missing tooth, and went back to his cereal with the satisfaction of a boy whose world had recently gotten considerably more interesting. ************************* It had happened almost by accident, the way I imagine most uncomfortable truths slipped out, not through confession, but the exhaustion of lowering the guard you didn’t realize you were still holding. We had been at the estate for one of our usual weekend visits, seated around the long dining table for dinner while Margaret cleared the first course. Arthur had asked, the way he often did, how my week had gone, and I had answered honestly without thinking too hard about the question. I was tired, distracted and the particular openness that comes after a long day and a glass of wine you didn’t realize was being refilled. “It’s been a lot,” I admitted. “Rent’s gone up again this month. Landlord says it’s the market, but it’s the third increase in two years.” I had laughed it off, the way I laugh off things that weren’t actually funny. “I’ll figure it out anyway.” I had said. Arthur didn’t say much in response. Just a nod and a few quiet words about the unpredictability of city landlords, nothing that suggested the comment had strayed anywhere beyond polite conversation. I hadn’t thought about it again until the following week when my landlord called to confirm receipt of “the additional deposit covering the increase, care of Mr. Arthur.” I called Arthur immediately. “You didn’t need to do that,” I said, the words coming out sharper than I intended, equal parts gratitude and frustration. “I mentioned it in passing, I wasn’t asking for help.” “I’m aware you weren’t asking,” Arthur said, entirely unbothered by my tone. “That’s rather the point, Ms. Ashford. The people who needs help most rarely ask for it directly. I’ve learned to listen for it instead.” “Arthur.” “You work two jobs,” he said, gently but without retreat. “You raised a remarkable child essentially alone, with no family to share the weight. I have spent the last several weeks watching you carry all of that with a composure most people twice your resources couldn’t manage.” A pause. “Allow an old man the small dignity of lightening a load he’s in a position to lighten. I don’t offer it as charity. I offer it as someone who values what the two of you have brought into my life.” I hadn’t known what to say to that. I still didn’t most days, when I thought back on it. *************************** It hadn’t stopped at the rent. Bryan’s school fees for the new term was already sorted when I went to make the payment myself, the front office informing me, with mild confusion at my surprise, that the account had been cleared the week before. New shoes appeared, the kind built to survive a five-year-old’s relationship with mud and football fields, along with a small note in Arthur’s looping handwriting that read simply: He mentioned his old ones were embarrassing. I couldn’t allow that to stand. I had tried, more than once, to draw a line. I didn’t want Bryan growing up believing money solved everything, didn’t want to lose the version of myself that had built our life through sheer stubborn effort rather than someone else’s generosity. I said as much to Arthur over the phone one evening, cautiously, trying to find the right words that wouldn’t sound ungrateful. “I hear you,” he said, when I finished. “And I respect it more than you know. You’ve built something remarkable out of very little and I would never want to diminish that.” He paused. “But Ms. Ashford, there is a clear difference between raising a child with values and raising a child while carrying burdens that were never meant to be carried alone. I am not trying to replace what you’ve built. I am simply trying to ensure it doesn’t cost you more than it should.” I had cried a little after that call, quietly, sitting alone at my dressing table while Bryan was asleep on the bed. The tears were not from sadness but from the strange, disorienting relief of being seen by someone who asked for nothing in return. *********************** Work had moved into a steadier rhythm too, helped along by one less financial fire to put out every month. Mr. Murphy had started giving me more responsibility at the accounting firm, small things at first, then eventually trusting me with direct correspondence to a handful of smaller accounts. I had also picked up a new contract through my cousin’s pest control company, servicing a rotating list of corporate clients across the city. That evening, I sat at the kitchen table going through the week’s schedule, a new contract sheet spread out beside my laptop. Beaumont Group Tower: Quarterly service contract. I stared at the name for a moment, something flickering at the edge of recognition before I dismissed it. Beaumont was a common name in this city; buildings, foundations, hospital wings, half the skyline seemed to carry it. It didn’t occur to me, signing off on the assignment with Bryan’s homework spread across the other half of the table, that the name belonged to the same family who now called our apartment most evenings. ********************************* Bryan’s ankle had healed completely now, the limp long gone, replaced by his usual restless energy. He had gone back to football with single-minded determination and Arthur came to one of his Saturday games. He arrived in the third quarter in a coat far too elegant for a children’s football field, settling into a folding chair near the sideline like there was nowhere else he’d rather be. Bryan spotted him from the field and nearly tripped over the ball in his excitement. “Eyes on the game,” I called out, laughing despite myself. Afterward, Bryan ran straight to Arthur instead of me, breathless over a single decent pass he’d managed in the final minutes, and Arthur received the recap with the patient delight he gave everything Bryan told him. I stood a few feet back, watching the two of them, and felt a slight shift in my chest I hadn’t expected to feel again. Not just gratitude, a feeling closer to safety. The relief of not carrying every single burden alone anymore. For five years, it had been just the two of us against whatever came next. But now, there is a folding chair on the sideline that hadn’t been there before. A voice on the phone that asked about Bryan’s day before I even finished thinking about how to answer it. A quiet hand that kept steadying the floor beneath us before I even realized it was tilting. I didn’t know exactly what Arthur Beaumont wanted from any of this, or where this thread of our life was leading. But standing on that sideline, I let myself believe, for the first time in longer than I could remember, that something good had finally arrived without a catch attached.Xavier’s POVI came back from Thailand with several unread reports, a fourteen-hour time difference still sitting behind my eyes and the particular exhaustion of a man who had spent three weeks closing a deal that should have taken two while fielding daily calls from Kingsley Sinclair about a wedding timeline I had no interest in discussing from a different continent.The penthouse felt too quiet when I landed. Too organized, like a space maintained rather than lived in. I had a driver, a housekeeper who came twice a week, and a refrigerator that contained exactly the things my nutritionist had approved, but nothing I actually wanted to eat after a fourteen-hour flight.I stayed at the penthouse for two days before I decided to visit the estate. I hadn’t called ahead, I rarely did when I came to the estate, it was still my grandfather’s house more than any other definition and it was also the closest place to home since my father died. Calling ahead to your own home felt like a formal
Aria’s POVI had forgotten what it felt like to wake up with a heavy heart of how to sort the next bill. Arthur had made life more easier for me and Bryan.It wasn’t a dramatic change, not the kind of transformation that comes overnight. It had crept in slowly over the weeks since that first hospital bill was sorted by Arthur, and the subsequent financial assistance, especially after the first visit to Arthur’s estate. The relief that came with it was a feeling I haven’t experienced in the last five years. Mornings still started the same way. The alarm at six-thirty. The scramble to get Bryan fed, dressed and out the door with his backpack and his lunch box and whatever stuffed animal he decided needed to accompany him to school that particular week. “Mom, Arthur said next time I can feed the koi,” Bryan announced over breakfast, spooning cereal with the enthusiasm of someone delivering breaking news. “He has actual koi in a real pond.”“Did he,” I said, smiling into my coffee.“He
Arthur’s POV I had the east wing guest room prepared three days before Bryan was due to arrive. Margaret had looked at me sideways when I gave the instruction, though, not impolitely but with the expression of a woman who had managed this household for over three decades and knew when there were particular changes in the owner’s behavior. The east wing guest room was the one with the window seat overlooking the garden, the one I had repainted twice in the last decade trying to get the color right, but had being left unused since Xavier was a boy grown enough to no longer need it. I didn’t explained myself to Margaret. I simply told her to have it ready, to stock it with things a five-year-old might find useful, and to ensure the kitchen had the ingredients for the pancakes I intended to make myself on Saturday morning regardless of what the cook had already planned. The truth was, I had been thinking about Bryan Ashford since the afternoon I met him in that hospital play are
Aria’s POVI never got the chance to call him first. I spent the morning after the bill was cleared trying to find a way to reach Arthur Beaumont, turning the gesture over in my mind and grateful in a way I couldn’t explain. I wanted him to know that this kind gesture matters to me a lot. That it wasn’t just a number disappearing from an account, but a small mercy that had let me breathe properly for the first time after I saw that bill at the hospital monitor.I was still working up the nerve to track down a contact number when my phone rang with an unfamiliar number on the screen.“Ms. Ashford.” It was a man from the other end of the call, but I recognized the voice immediately. It was him, Arthur. His voice was warm and unmistakable. “Arthur Beaumont. I hope I’m not intruding.”“Not at all,” I said, surprised into honesty. “I was actually trying to find a way to reach you.”“Were you.” There was a quiet pleasure in his voice at that, like the coincidence amused him. “I suppose we
Aria’s POVI told Denise I needed until the end of the day, thanked her and walked out of the office.It wasn’t a real solution, just a delay dressed up as one, a way to buy myself a few hours to figure out which obligation I could push back furthest without consequences catching up to me first. She accepted it without argument, the way people in her position learned to, and handed me a folder of paperwork I folded into my bag without reading properly.Bryan had been moved to a regular room on the second floor for observation, more out of caution than necessity, the doctor explained, since the sprain itself didn’t require an overnight stay but the hospital preferred to monitor swelling for a few hours before discharge. I sat beside his bed while he flipped through a worn picture book someone had left in the room, his bandaged ankle propped on a pillow, his attention already drifting from the pain toward boredom which I had learnt in the last five years as his mother, was always a go
Aria’s POVI was halfway through reconciling a column of receipts when my phone buzzed against the desk. I almost let it go to voicemail. Mr. Murphy had already mentioned twice this month, that personal calls during work hours weren’t part of the job description he hired me for and I needed this job too much to test his patience over what could wait. But the screen showed Bellmont Elementary in plain block letters, my heart skipped a bit before I even picked it up.Schools don’t call during work hours unless something was wrong.“Hello?”“Ms. Ashford?” A woman’s voice sounded from the other end of the phone, brisk but gentle, the tone people used when they were about to deliver news they had rehearsed well. “This is Mrs. Doyle from the front office. I’m calling about Bryan.”My hand tightened around the phone. “What’s wrong?”“He took a fall during the football tournament this morning and he sprained his ankle, the school nurse looked at it and recommended he be seen properly. We’ve
Aria’s POVI sat with the acceptance letter and the pregnancy test side by side on my desk for three days before I made the decision. It was a painful decision to make all by myself but there was no one to call.That was the part nobody warned you about, it’s not about the fear, not the morning si
ARIA’s POVThe first thing I noticed was the dead silence. The second was the pounding headache threatening to split my skull into two.I squeezed my eyes shut and buried my face deeper into the pillow. Bad idea.The unfamiliar scent hit me immediately. Cedar, warm and masculine.My eyes snapped op
XAVIER’s POVIt was five o’clock in the morning and I had ejaculated thrice already. I looked at the pretty lady on the same bed with me, I had fucked her so hard in the last few hours, as we explored different sex positionsShe was now sleeping peacefully beside me, like all her problems had been
ARIA’s POVThe suite was nothing like the bar beneath it. While the bar beneath was all amber shadows and deliberate dimness, the room the bartender led us to was clean and looked quite expensive, cream walls, dark wood furniture, a king-sized bed dressed in white linen that looked untouched and in







