LOGINLila’s POV
AFTER THE burial, tradition demanded we hold vigil at the house, where family and the inner circle gathered. No press, no outsiders, only blood and those bound by loyalty.
And it was suffocating.
Everywhere I turned, shadows clung to the walls, thick with smoke and grief. The room buzzed with low voices, whiskey glasses clinking, leather jackets shifting like restless wolves in mourning. My heels clicked against the hardwood floor, far too loud, like I didn’t belong in a place carved from blood and grit.
Eyes followed me, some pitying, some openly sneering. I lifted my chin higher, fingers brushing the cool diamond on my hand, as though that sparkle could shield me. Adrian’s voice echoed in my head, sharp as glass: Always hold your head high, Lila. Don’t let them see weakness.
But weakness was all I felt.
I was holding a paper-thin version of myself together when the perfume hit me, heady, expensive, laced with poison.
“Lila Montgomery,” Vivienne purred, her voice slicing through the haze. She stepped into the flickering light like a goddess carved in silk. Her black dress hugged every curve, her lips painted a cruel red that matched the gleam in her eyes. Her manicured nails grazed my bare arm, a touch that made my skin crawl.
“You came back after all. I thought the city had… refined you.” Her gaze slid over me, pausing at the snug dress I’d chosen—wrong for this world, too polished. “Or maybe softened you.”
Heat rose in my cheeks. I forced a smile. “I came for my father.”
Vivienne’s laugh was low, rich, and utterly cruel. “Oh, sweet thing. You’re still clumsy, Lila. Do you think anyone here will take you seriously? Do you think he will?”
The “he” was sharp, deliberate. Jacob.
I swallowed, pulse thudding. “I’m not here for Jacob.”
Her lips curved in a smirk that promised devastation. “Of course, why would you come here for Jacob if you already have filthy rich fiance—what’s his name again?”
I clenched my fist. “Adrian Cross—”
“Right. So where is he now? I heard you brought him here to flaunt his wealth?”
“O-Of course not—”
“So where is he?” Vivienne raised an eyebrow as she waited for me to answer.
“He… He went back to his car for a phone call,” I answered in a low voice. I could feel my cheeks turning red.
“Why don’t you go after him and leave this estate? You don’t belong here anymore.” Vivienne leaned closer, whispering so only I could hear. “And, Jacob would never want you. Not then, not now. You trip over your own feet. You break more than you fix. He’s a man who bleeds steel, and you—” her eyes raked over me with venom, “—you’re made of glass. And glass shatters.”
The words pierced deeper than I wanted to admit. My throat burned. I felt the eyes around us, the weight of judgment.
I excused myself before my voice could crack.
The kitchen was dim and smelled of stale coffee. I gripped the counter, steadying myself, pressing a trembling hand over my chest like it could hold me together. Don’t cry. Not here. Not now.
“Lila?”
I turned at the soft sound of my name. Marco Moore stood in the doorway, tall and quiet, a gentle contrast to the storm outside. His dark eyes softened when they found me, his posture careful as though he was afraid I’d break.
“I—” My voice failed.
He stepped closer, offering a glass of water. “Here. Sip.”
The cool liquid steadied me, grounding me in a way my diamond ring never could. Marco’s presence had always been like that, calm, steady. Even as kids, when the world burned, he was the one who sat with me in silence until the flames quieted in my head.
“You still wrinkle your nose when you’re upset,” he said gently.
My lips parted. “You remember that?”
His mouth quirked into a small smile. “Of course. You used to do it every time your dad told you to stay off the bikes. And every time Jacob teased you until you threw rocks at him.”
A laugh slipped out, small, broken, but real. “I can’t believe you remember that.”
“I remember everything,” he said simply.
The truth in his voice sank into me, warming the cracks Vivienne had carved open. I found myself studying his face, softer lines, a kind steadiness in his eyes that Adrian’s sharp perfection would never have.
“You’re stronger than they think, Lila,” Marco added, voice quiet. “Don’t let them make you forget it.”
My chest tightened. I wanted to believe him. For a moment, I almost did.
But reality clawed back when Adrian’s shadow fell across the doorway. His smile was flawless, polished as ever, but the grip he wrapped around my elbow was iron.
“Excuse us, Marco,” Adrian said smoothly, not waiting for a reply before pulling me away.
Adrian brought me to my old room, where we’d stay as long as the arrangements of my dad’s assets are done. I don’t know Adrian suddenly decided to follow me here at Minnesota, I thought he doesn’t like this place, especially my dad’s biker’s club.
“You embarrassed me tonight,” Adrian told me as soon as the door closed behind me.
My stomach dropped. “What?”
“You hid in the kitchen like a child,” he said, his tone low and controlled, each word precise. “Do you know how that looks? You’re supposed to be Mrs. Adrian Cross. You carry my name, my reputation. You don’t get to run off when someone whispers something unkind.”
I bit my lip until I tasted blood. “Vivienne wasn’t just—”
“Vivienne is irrelevant,” Adrian snapped, then caught himself, smile smoothing back over his face like silk hiding a blade. His hand found mine, too tight. “But what’s very relevant is us. Our future. You need to understand, Lila—your inheritance, your family’s assets, they matter now. To me. To us.”
His thumb stroked the diamond he’d given me, and the gesture made my stomach twist. His touch wasn’t comforting, it was ownership.
“You’ll stop this nonsense,” he murmured, eyes gleaming. “No more running off, no more weakness. You belong to me.”
I turned my face toward the window, hiding the tears burning behind my eyes.
For the first time in three years, I felt regret for leaving my father’s estate… and Jacob.
Lila’s POV“THIS PLACE finally feels like mine.”The words slipped out of me in a hush, almost like I was afraid the house itself might hear and decide to argue.For a long moment, no one said anything.Dust motes drifted lazily in the sunlight, turning the air almost dreamlike, and for the first time since I had stepped back into Montgomery Estate after my father’s death, the silence did not feel hostile.It felt peaceful.Jacob stood beside me, close enough that the warmth of his shoulder brushed mine.His gaze moved slowly across the room before settling on me.“It always was yours.”I let out a soft breath that almost became a laugh.“No,” I said, turning to look at him. “Not really. Not until now.”He studied my face, his expression gentling.The kind that came from knowing every fracture in me and loving me
Lila’s POV“STAY WITH me.”The words left me before I could second-guess them.Barely above a whisper.But in the quiet aftermath of everything, they sounded louder than any scream I had made that night.Jacob had just turned toward the door, as if to give me space after the authorities escorted Adrian out and Marco disappeared down the hall with the restored estate documents in his hands.That was who Jacob had always been.Never taking more space than I offered.Never assuming his presence was owed.Always leaving the choice with me.But tonight, after the storm, after the chapel, after the truth cracked open inside my father’s study, I could not bear the thought of being alone.His hand stilled on the brass doorknob.Slowly, he turned back to me.The fire had burned lower behind us, throwing the room into a softer gold, and in that light, the ex
Lila’s POV“WHERE IS Adrian?”The question ripped out of me before the rain had even stopped stinging my face.It came out sharper than I meant it to, raw with panic and fury, and it cut through the storm-dark garden where Theodore was still pinned beneath Jacob’s control.Marco’s chest rose and fell hard as he reached us, rain dripping from his hair onto the collar of his shirt.“He’s not in the front drive,” he said, breathless. “The car is gone.”“No.”The word left my mouth like a refusal of reality itself.Theodore laughed from the ground, the sound ugly and thin.“He always was good at knowing when the floor was about to collapse.”I turned on him so fast the world seemed to narrow into that one moment.“Where?”His smile sharpened.“You really don’t kno
Lila’s POV“JACOB!”The scream tore out of me before I even realized I was shouting.It split through the chapel like a blade.One second the room had been frozen in the aftermath of my father’s voice ringing through the speakers, the truth cracking open in front of every guest seated beneath the vaulted ceilings of Montgomery Estate’s private chapel.The next, Theodore moved.He did not stumble into panic the way guilty men in stories did.He moved with calculation.With survivaland cold instinct of a man who had spent his life building exits before anyone knew there was a fire.His chair scraped sharply against the marble floor as he shoved back from the front pew.Gasps erupted around us.Someone near the aisle cried out.The officiant stepped back, pale and confused, the ceremony abandoned in the wake of ruin.Theodore’s f
Lila’s POV“IF ANYTHING happens to me…”My father’s voice cracked through the speakers like a ghost tearing its way back into the world. The sound was distorted. Broken at the edges and threaded with static and digital corruption.But it was him. No matter how fragmented the audio was, I would have known that voice anywhere. Deep. Steady.The same voice that had once called me sunshine when I was too young to reach the kitchen counter without climbing onto a stool.The same voice that had calmed me through my worst nights.The same voice that had been ripped from me weeks ago and buried under polished stone and orchestrated condolences.For one terrible second, the entire chapel froze. Every whisper died. Every breath seemed to hold in the air.The guests stood suspended in shock, eyes lifted to the screen above the floral arch where the image flickered in and out.
Lila’s POV“BEFORE THISceremony continues…”My own voice rang through the chapel before the officiant could finish the next line.It cut through the room cleanly.Sharp enough to make every whispered conversation die.Sharp enough to stop the soft rustle of silk, the shifting of polished shoes across the marble aisle, the faint clink of champagne glasses from the reception tables set beyond the open garden doors.For one suspended moment, the entire Montgomery Estate seemed to hold its breath.I stood at the center of the aisle in white.The gown felt heavier now than it had when Vivienne had fastened the last button behind my back.Not because of the fabric.Because of what it represented.A trap.A transfer.A legal execution dressed as a wedding.At the far end of the aisle, Adrian stood waiting in his tailored black suit, on
Lila’s POVTHE GARDEN looked different at night. Not romantic. Not soft. Just older.The hedges rose higher than they did during the day, shadows folding inward like they were listening. The stone path held the day’s warmth, seeping up through the thin soles of my shoes, grounding me in a way the h
Lila’s POVTHE LIGHTS went out like the house exhaled and forgot how to breathe.One second, the hall was glowing with warm chandeliers and polished surfaces. The next, everything snapped into darkness, sharp and sudden, followed by the low mechanical groan of generators struggling to wake.Someone
Lila’s POVI DID not hear Adrian at first.That was the worst part. Not the anger. Not the certainty in his stride. But the silence before it.Jacob and I had been standing in the kitchen, the afternoon sun was bathing us with golden hues. The kind that made everything feel suspended, like the worl
Jacob’s POVI DID not go back upstairs right away.After Vivienne’s voice cut through the basement air and her flashlight swept the concrete like a claim, I did what I had learned to do years ago. I stepped aside. I created space. I made it look like nothing had happened.Lila disappeared first, us







