Clara Hayes sat in silence, her body heavy against the thin seat of the taxi as it rolled down the dimly lit streets. The city outside blurred into colors she could hardly register the traffic lights. but none of it mattered.
Her mind was a storm, every thought circling back to one man and one little girl. Victor. Amelia. Her ex-mate, who had broken her spirit piece by piece, and the daughter she couldn’t afford to lose. Clara’s hands tightened around her handbag as her heart drummed painfully in her chest. She had made her choice. The papers had been signed, the bond had been broken, the suitcases packed. There was no turning back now. Still, she couldn’t stop rehearsing in her head how she would explain everything to Amelia without shattering the child’s heart. Because in every separation, the children were the true victims. Clara knew this better than anyone. Her parents’ divorce when she was fifteen had carved a permanent wound in her. She could still recall the slammed doors, the hushed arguments, the loneliness that lingered even when the house was full. She had promised herself then that she would never put her own child through that. She had promised to give Amelia the stability she herself had been denied. But promises made in innocence were fragile things, easily broken by betrayal and years of silent suffering. Her mind whispered bitterly: Victor was my safe haven once. When my parents fell apart, he became my anchor. I believed him. I trusted him. I built everything around him. And now— “Ma’am,” the taxi driver’s gravelly voice broke her thoughts. “This is the nearest motel. Not exactly the kind of place your type usually stays in, if I’m being honest. Pretty far from that gated neighborhood you came from.” Clara blinked, dragging herself back to the present. She followed the driver’s gaze to the run-down building outside. Its peeling paint and broken sign board announced its mediocrity. A shabby motel, the kind of place she had never imagined calling shelter. But what choice did she have? “Ah. Thank you,” Clara murmured, pressing a few bills into the driver’s hand. She stepped out, gripping her bag tightly. The night air hit her like a slap. She stood there for a moment, staring at the poor door of the motel. She wasn’t afraid of what awaited inside. Luxury had never been her pursuit—she had lived for love, for family. But tonight, stripped of both, even this broken shell of a place felt like a mockery of what she had lost. Her only fear was Amelia. Her daughter had grown up surrounded by chandeliers and marble floors. To bring her here, to make her adjust to this new reality—it would break the child’s innocence. I’ll let her stay at Mom’s for a while. At least until I find us somewhere permanent, Clara thought, squaring her shoulders. She walked into the lobby and checked in for a week. The room was worse than she’d expected. A single lamp buzzed dimly in the corner, casting shadows across the stained wallpaper. Clara sat heavily on the bed, the springs groaning beneath her. For a moment, she simply stared at the wall, letting the silence soak into her bones. Then, slowly, her eyes drifted left. A tall mirror stood there, cracked along the edge. Her own reflection gazed back at her, weary and unfamiliar. Clara rose to her feet and approached it, her hand brushing over the fabric of her oversized shirt. She pinched the fabric at her waist, forcing shape into her outline. For years, she had avoided mirrors, avoided acknowledging what she had become. But now, she had no choice. She wasn’t fat anymore. Not like before. After Amelia’s birth, the weight had clung to her like a reminder. Motherhood had been demanding—sleepless nights, endless chores, the crushing expectation of perfection. Victor’s hatred had been the final blow. Each betrayal had stripped her will until she stopped trying altogether. But years of quiet depression had eaten her alive in a different way. Three years of skipped meals, of swallowing her pain instead of food, had hollowed her frame. She was thin now—too thin. The reflection in the mirror was almost fragile, like glass ready to shatter. Clara chuckled without humor. “What’s the point? I could starve myself to skin and bone, and Victor still wouldn’t want me. He never looked at me before. He never saw me at all.” Her hand lifted to her face. She traced the dark circles under her eyes, and the downturned corners of her lips. She forced a smile, but it looked wrong, like it belonged to a stranger. “It’s been so long since I saw myself smile…” she whispered. She wasn’t hideous. She knew that. She had been beautiful once—bright-eyed, hopeful, radiant in love. But sadness had dulled her, made her unkempt. Maybe… maybe she could change that. “I should try makeup again,” she muttered. “Cover the spots. Hide the tiredness. Maybe if I get myself some skincare, I could start looking alive again. If I can land a job… If I can stand on my own.” Her voice wavered. She hated admitting it, but Victor had been right about one thing: she had been just a housewife for too long. Twelve years of giving, of cleaning, of playing as wife and mother while her dreams rotted. She had been twenty-three when she graduated, ready to be a teacher, ready to make something of herself. But Victor had chosen and marked her as his mate. And she, young and naïve, had said yes. “I was such a fool,” Clara whispered. “I traded everything for a bond. For a promise that he couldn’t even keep.” A sharp ache welled in her chest. She swallowed it down. “No. Enough. I can’t keep thinking like this. Amelia needs me strong. I’ll find work. I’ll build us a future, even if I have to crawl to it. Hopefully that bastard signs the papers quickly so I can move on.” She fished her phone out of her bag. “But first, I need to check on Amelia.” The device gleamed in her palm—a sleek, expensive model Victor had once tossed her way to shut her up during a fight. Clara hated holding it, hated the reminder that even her smallest possessions came from his control. Still, she dialed. The phone rang twice before a gentle, familiar voice answered. “Clara?” Her heart eased slightly. “Hi, Mom. Is Amelia still at your house?” “Slow down, dear. You sound anxious. What’s going on?” Abigail Hayes asked, her tone both warm and sharp. She had always been able to read her daughter’s emotions, even through the smallest tremor in her voice. Clara hesitated. She couldn’t tell her mother everything. Abigail’s health had been declining, and Clara couldn’t risk shocking her with the whole ugly truth—not yet. “Nothing’s wrong, Mom. I just… I needed some space, that’s all,” Clara lied softly. There was a pause. Then Abigail sighed. “I see.” “Mom, can Amelia stay with you tonight? Maybe even tomorrow? I can’t bring her home just yet. Things are… complicated.” Clara’s grip on the phone tightened. “Ah.” Abigail’s reply was slow, almost hesitant. “Well, about that… Victor came by about five minutes ago.” Clara froze. Her blood ran cold. “He picked her up,” Abigail continued. “I thought you sent him. He said he was taking her to the mall to buy a birthday gift.” The phone nearly slipped from Clara’s hand. Her breath hitched. Victor had Amelia.“Thirty years old?”The HR interviewer frowned as her eyes skimmed Clara’s résumé. She leaned back in her chair, lips curling ever so slightly. “Wow. I’ll admit—you look younger than your age. You could probably pass for twenty-five at first glance. But…”Her voice trailed into a sigh as she set the document on the desk. “I can’t hire you.”Clara straightened. “Ah, don’t worry. I can work in anything here—cleaning, assisting—”The woman shook her head. “No, there’s only one opening right now. Receptionist. The age limit is twenty-six. You’re way past that.” She slid the paper across the desk with two manicured fingers, as though even touching it was a waste of effort. “My advice? Try a daycare. They’d certainly accept a thirty-year-old with… let’s say, limited competence.”Clara’s lips parted in protest, but the interviewer had already looked down at her phone. Dismissed.She swallowed the sting of humiliation, forcing her voice to remain steady. “Thank you for your time.”Outsid
“It’s okay, Mommy. Daddy took me to play in the mall! But I’m tired now. Can we go home, Mommy?”Clara’s face paled instantly. Her throat closed, and for a moment, she couldn’t breathe. The innocence in Amelia’s voice felt like a dagger.Her daughter didn’t know. She couldn’t know. Not yet.Clara pressed her lips together, forcing herself to smile. “S—Sweetheart, what do you think about a little… vacation?”Amelia tilted her head, her brows scrunching in confusion. “Vacation? But Mommy, I have school tomorrow. I can’t go!”Clara crouched down to meet her daughter’s wide brown eyes. The lies tasted bitter on her tongue, but what else could she do? “Ah, this is just a short vacation, like a picnic. We’ll stay somewhere else for a while, but it won’t be too far from your school. I promise.”Amelia’s face brightened. “Oh, that sounds fun! Daddy will go on a picnic with us too?”A lump rose in Clara’s throat. She forced her voice to remain steady, soft. “Ah… your dad is busy as always.
Gabriel Kane. President & CEO of Lumen Corporation.Office: 125 – 1874“12…5… 1874? Isn’t that…” Clara frowned as she read the office number on the business card Gabriel had handed her earlier. Her mind raced, as she recognized something, but she quickly shook her head. “No, that couldn’t be… probably just a coincidence,” she muttered to herself, trying to push the thought aside.She slipped the card into her small purse and turned her attention back to the crowd. Amelia was nowhere in sight. Panic gnawed at the edges of her mind, though she tried to suppress it. Her daughter had been to this mansion countless times, and Clara knew that Amelia was smart enough to navigate it safely—or so she hoped.No, she’s fine, Clara told herself. Amelia always knows her way around. There’s no way she’d get lost here with all the security around.Her phone buzzed in her purse. She rolled her eyes but snatched it out, curious despite herself.“What now?” Clara barked into the phone. “I’m still l
Elena Quinn’s words felt like poison in Clara’s ears.She blew cigarette smoke towards Clara. “If you want to live a good life, stick with my son. Kiss his feet if needed, because that’s the place where you can live.”Clara’s jaw tightened. The audacity of Elena Quinn never ceased to amaze her.“… Even if he is a cheating bastard who ignores his family?” Clara asked, her voice trembling with rage. She didn’t think Elena knew about Victor’s years-long adultery; Clara had kept it to herself.Elena paused, taking a slow drag of her cigarette. She looked away, avoiding Clara’s piercing gaze. “A powerful man like Victor needs to unwind sometimes, even from his responsibilities as an Alpha and your mate. One woman—especially an uninteresting one like you—won’t be enough for him. That is life. Men like him can’t be caged by ordinary expectations. You understand?”Clara’s hands clenched into fists. “So, he sees other women, that’s his business? That’s regular behavior for men, especially a
“Ditch your stupid nostalgia, Victor. Where is Amelia?” Clara demanded, her voice sharp as she glared at him.Victor’s eyes glinted with that same arrogance she had grown to hate. Everything seemed like a game to him. He didn’t laugh aloud, but the faint curve of a smug smile rested on his lips, enough to make Clara’s skin crawl.“Amelia is with my mother right now,” Victor replied smoothly. “She’s waiting for you in her room.”Clara’s gaze flicked to the half-sliced cake on the table. Elena had already returned to her private chambers, leaving the guests to enjoy the remainder of the party. Clara clenched her jaw. She didn’t need to say a word; her sharp glare said enough.Victor watched her back. Clara’s dress revealed the graceful curve of her back, a form she had once taken pride in. Though motherhood and years of marital stress had altered her figure, she had slowly regained the original curves that had first captivated him.Depression, stress, and her years-long struggle with
The moment Victor Quinn made his offer, Clara Hayes gritted her teeth. This man still had the audacity to toy with her, even now, when she had finally summoned the courage to break the bond with him. She knew exactly why she couldn’t return to his house. Not after everything. Victor had a way of using Amelia, their daughter, as a pawn, a reminder of the cage she had been trapped in for years. He would instruct Amelia to prod, question, and tease until Clara’s resolve faltered, and he could regain his control.“You’re so funny, Victor,” Clara said, her tone sharp, dripping with bitter sarcasm. “I thought I’d given you the golden opportunity to indulge in whatever you want with your secretary. Hell, you can sleep with anyone without guilt—not that you’re capable of feeling guilt in the first place.”Victor’s laugh was light, careless. “Hmm? I’ll still indulge with my secretary after this little…‘running away’ episode you pulled. I just don’t want Amelia to feel like she’s lost her mo