Se connecterAdeline Royce is the heiress to the rich Royce family, influential with a promising future, and living the simplest of lives, until she meets Conrad Basquire.He played with her heartstrings, tugged at her pockets and five years later, he pushed her off the terrace on the night of their big day sending her falling headfirst to the cold ground. Hours later after being declared dead, Adeline Royce is revived, vengeance in her heart and a new light in her life someone she never imagined herself falling for Mikhail Leonidovich her godfather and her father's best friend. Mikhail is a recent divorcee he is a skilled surgeon a composed man with roots in Russia and a man of mystery. She never thought she would find her salvation in Mikhail. But when Conrad fights back and the twists begin to spiral, Adeline realizes that her tale is only just beginning.
Voir plusADELINE'S POV
"He looks at you like he simply wants to eat you up." Bella playfully covered her lips with her gloves and cackled like a witch. I pursed my lips together, tightening my arm around Conrad. Emphasizing my mark. "The next step is kids? Right?" I clicked my wine glass against hers. "Yeah. Conrad and I... We've decided that we will try for kids." He took my hand, kissing my cheek lightly. I struggled to hide the way it made me feel. "Yes, maybe... who knows, we could be lucky on the next… swimmer release." The idea warmed me as he said so. This was the life, standing in this extravagant hall full of people who actually recognized and loved the things our foundation did for the world. And with the man that I loved, holding my arm and sheepishly talking about the thought of growing our family. Within minutes, more people had gathered around us. We were celebrating the foundation's official opening. The test run had been good but this... even better. "It's amazing, really. What your husband does for those people." I smiled, squeezing his hand as he waved to his PA, Davon. "Babe..." He leaned into my ear. "Attend to the guests, I'll be right back." I nodded, taking his forehead kiss like the princess he had made me. "Aww, you both are so sweet it hurts." "Shh, Daila. You'll find yours when the time is right." "I'm heading on thirty and it isn't yet?" I refilled her glass. "Baby steps Daila. Baby steps." Before the drink tipped into her cup, a toddler in blue ran past us in a blur. "Fara," I handed the bottle and glass to Dalia, and then chased after the caramel-skinned ball of energy. She was looking for her favourite uncle. Of course, Conrad had promised her a bag of Skittles earlier and the girl was eagerly looking forward to the promise being maintained. "Uncle!" She ran all the way to the terrace. Due to the speed at which I was trotting like a horse, my heel snapped and I hissed. I leaned against the wall, away from the crowd's sight and took off the shoe. Tch. It had cost a fortune. "Uncle Conrad." I heard Fara say. I giggled at her enthusiasm and decided to 'cutely eavesdrop.' Normally I expected Conrad to magically, resourcefully pull out a mini packet of Skittles from his pocket or something, and then hand it over to her. But something was off. Conrad's expression was tight. He was obviously frustrated about something. And so was Devon. He swatted Fara aside. She almost fell down if not for Devon who steadied her by the arm and tucked a lollipop into her hand to contain her pout. I gasped. I had never seen Conrad act like that. Even at his angriest. Something was definitely up. Fara went to the far corner and sat on the ground, licking at her lollipop with a sad expression on her face. I wanted to step out of my crouching point and ask what the matter was. But I decided to stay and listen instead. "So what do we do?" Devon murmured, running his hands tiredly through his hair. "What we've always done. Put on a show, hire people. Show the cops that all they are sniffing at is grass." "Mr Morelli then? What do we tell him? Do we return his investments? Try to talk things out?" Mr Morelli. One of Conrad's top investors. He donated heavy charity lumps into the foundation. Return his investments? What were they talking about? "No. We won't do that." Conrad pressed the bridge of his nose. "If we do that, then we will definitely seem guilty. All we have to do is get that little fag, Isaac, to spin him..." He looked around and I crouched lower. "A different narrative." Fag? Who was he referring to? Conrad never used offensive slurs on anyone. "What narrative should I spin?" Devon whispered harshly. "I'm your assistant, not a magician. Do you think Mr Morelli is stupid? If we don't give him something airtight, he'll definitely smell a rat." "Then disinfect the rat goddamnit! I can't be doing all the thinking here." Conrad never cursed. What was happening today? "Fine. Let's... um, I'll tell him that the boy was in love with you and tried to harass you or something, and when you didn't reciprocate. He acted out." Conrad snapped his fingers in the air. "Perfect." He reached for Devon's hair. "See? I don't pay you thousands of bucks for nothing." I wanted to move. To let them know that I had been listening, but Devon's next sentence halted me. "I'm afraid of anyone finding out that we run a fake foundation." My blood ran cold and my brain tweaked off for a second. Was it hearing failure? Or... or had I just heard what I thought I heard? "Yeah." Conrad chuckled. "Mal would nag me if anyone found out. She already thinks parading our daughter around as my niece is reckless enough." Wait. Did he just say... 'our' daughter? As in he and whoever the hell Mal was. "Yeah. Your wife is one... intense female." Conrad laughed heartily. "She is. A pity Fara doesn't take after her." "I think Fara is just—" "Your wife?." I hadn't even realized when I had stepped out from behind the wall. Conrad and Devon froze, their faces going instantly pale. "A-Adeline..." "Fara is your daughter? You're married, Conrad? Mal? Who is Mal?" Conrad blinked, his lips parting like he was searching for the right lie, the right tone, the right excuse that would make it all dissolve into thin air. "Adeline, listen—" "No. You listen!" My voice echoed off the marble, and Fara startled from her corner, her lollipop clattering to the floor. "You—" I pointed at him. "You are running a fake foundation?!" "Adeline, please," Devon tried to interject, but my glare halted him. "Don't you dare," I snapped. "Not a single word from you." Conrad reached out. "It isn’t what you think." "It never is, is it?" I stepped back, pressing my palm to my stomach because I could feel it twisting and tightening like a knot. "Go ahead, Conrad. Tell me how exactly this isn’t what it looks like." He sighed, rubbing his temples. "Adeline. Keep your voice down. We are not doing this here." "Here?" I gestured around wildly. "At your grand event for your fake foundation? Oh no, Conrad, I think here is exactly where we should do this." Devon shot him a nervous glance, whispering, "Sir, the guests are starting to look this way" "Let them lo" Before I could complete my sentence, Conrad shoved at my chest and sent me tumbling over the terraceAdeline's POVNatasha knew.I had not said a word. I had walked back into that room with a perfectly assembled face and set the coffees down and taken my seat beside my father's bed.And within approximately four minutes Natasha had looked at me, looked at the door, looked back at me, and arrived at the correct conclusion using nothing but whatever antenna she had been born with that had always made her impossible to keep secrets from."Something happened," she said. Not a question."Nothing happened."She raised one eyebrow.I lasted another thirty seconds before I said, very quietly, "Promise me you will not tell him."I did not have to specify who him was. She understood.Natasha looked at me for a long moment. Then she reached over and took my hand on the arm of the chair and squeezed it once."I promise," she said.I nodded. Looked at my father's face. Exhaled."Thank you."She did not ask any more questions after that. That was the thing about Natasha, she knew the difference
Adeline's POVThe silence on the drive back was the loudest thing I had heard in weeks.Not the silence of an empty house or a waiting room or a conversation that had run out of words. This was different. Completely still, completely mine.The silence of a woman who had decided something and had not yet opened her mouth to say it but felt the decision settling into her bones like concrete setting.I did not cry.I noticed that. Noted it the way you noted a significant change in a set of numbers.Without drama, just accurately. I had cried in a car park last night and cried in a boardroom two days before that and cried in a hospital corridor and in a bedroom and in my childhood home.And somewhere between Mikhail's front door and the dual carriageway I had apparently run out.First Conrad.Now Mikhail.I was done falling to pieces over men. I had a finite supply of pieces and I could not afford to keep distributing them.I texted the secretary general from the driveway."Running lat
Adeline's POVThe silence on the drive back was the loudest thing I had heard in weeks.Not the silence of an empty house or a waiting room or a conversation that had run out of words. This was different. Completely still, completely mine.The silence of a woman who had decided something and had not yet opened her mouth to say it but felt the decision settling into her bones like concrete setting.I did not cry.I noticed that. Noted it the way you noted a significant change in a set of numbers.Without drama, just accurately. I had cried in a car park last night and cried in a boardroom two days before that and cried in a hospital corridor and in a bedroom and in my childhood home.And somewhere between Mikhail's front door and the dual carriageway I had apparently run out.First Conrad.Now Mikhail.I was done falling to pieces over men. I had a finite supply of pieces and I could not afford to keep distributing them.I texted the secretary general from the driveway."Running lat
Adeline's POVDevon did not show.I waited for twenty-three minutes in the lobby of Conrad's office building, heels in my hand, the marble floor cold against my bare feet.The security desk empty because it was eleven forty at night and the building was dark except for the emergency lighting and whatever fluorescent strip was running above me like an accusation.Twenty-three minutes.I knew the exact number because I had watched every one of them on the clock above the lifts, willing them to change faster and then slower and then willing Devon to materialise from one of the elevators with a flash drive and an apology.He did not.At midnight I put my heels back on and walked out.I cried in the car.Not the quiet kind. The ugly kind, the kind I had been keeping a tight lid on for approximately six hours while I sat in that bar and ordered two more drinks than I should have.And refused the bartender's cab offer with a confidence that the floor beneath my heels had not entirely support
Author's POVConrad stood in front of the glass, his eyes scanning the road below him. The media had spent almost the whole day camping in front of his office. Finally, they had left. He could finally breathe freely.It wasn't as if he didn't want them but they were becoming too much. They weren't
Adeline's POVJackson had left a while ago and now it remained Mikhail and I. He seemed to be busy and so I sat quietly to think. My hands grabbed my phone as I began to scroll on the page again, checking to see if what I was looking for would hit me.It did, just that moment when it hit. I let out
Adeline's POVDinner had gone as well as it could that night. My father had been a little quiet but as usual, Natasha had been there to make sure that he wasn't so for long. She had a way of bringing out the energy in him.We had finished eating just then and I wanted to go to bed. Mikhail had know
Adeline POVWhen she left, I felt a wave of loneliness hit me. I had no idea why. It was as if now she had gone, all that was left was my fight again. I heard him come in before I heard his voice, “Why don't we go talk to Jackson?" He said.I looked up from where I had been staring into a portrait






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