LOGINChapter 5
**Cynthia's POV** The plane touched down at Charles de Gaulle Airport with a jolt that sent sharp pain radiating through my skull. I'd endured fourteen hours of fluorescent lights and recycled air and the constant hum of engines that seemed to vibrate directly into my brain but I'd made it. I was in Paris. The city I'd dreamed about for so long. The place where I would spend my final months alive. I gathered my small carry-on and shuffled off the plane with the other passengers, my legs felt disconnected from my body, like I was walking on stilts, my eyes were going on a hula-hoop. I made it halfway through the arrivals hall, and I couldn’t hold it any more, my muscles locked, the floor rushed up towards me, and in seconds, everything went black. *** I woke to steady beeping and the antiseptic smell of the hospital. Fucking hospital again. For a moment, I thought I was back in Missford in that sterile room where a doctor had told me I had six months to live and the past few hours had been a dream — that I'd never made it to Paris. "Ah, you're awake." I turned my head slowly toward the voice. A man stood beside my bed, probably in his thirties, on wire-rimmed glasses. A white coat with a name embroidered on it that I couldn't quite focus on. His eyes were kind and concerned. "How are you feeling?" he asked in English, though his accent was distinctly French. "Like I've been hit by a truck," I managed. My throat was raw. "That's not surprising. You had a grand mal seizure in the airport. You're lucky… you could have seriously injured yourself in the fall." He picked up a chart, scanning it with a deepening frown. "But what I don't understand is how you were allowed to board a plane in your condition." I said nothing. "You have a terminal brain tumor." He looked up from the chart, his expression somewhere between disbelief and anger. "Advanced stage, clearly causing severe neurological symptoms. Any competent medical professional would have deemed you unfit to fly. This is simply unreasonable!" "I didn't give them any medical report concerning that," I said quietly. He shook his head. "It doesn't matter now. What matters is that you're here, and you need immediate treatment. We'll need to run more scans, consult with oncology, possibly look at surgical options…" "No." I pushed myself up to sitting, ignoring the way the room spun. "I'm leaving." "Leaving? Madame, you just had a seizure. You're in no condition to…" "I'm discharging myself." I swung my legs over the side of the bed. Every movement sent shockwaves through my head, but I forced myself to keep going. "Thank you for your help, but I'm leaving." "You can't be serious." He moved to block my path. "Your condition is critical. You need to be hospitalized for observation at minimum. Without treatment…" "I'll die. I know." I looked for my shoes, my bag, anything. "I'm going to die anyway. I'd rather do it on my own terms." "This is madness…" "Please." My voice cracked. "Just let me go." "I can't do that. As your doctor…" "I don't have any money." The words came out flat, defeated. "I can't pay for treatment. I can't pay for this hospital stay. I can barely afford a hotel room for a few nights. So please, just let me leave before the bill gets any higher." He frowned, worried and trying to search my eyes for seriousness. My trembling hands betrayed me and my bag slipped, spilling my stuff out. "I'm sorry," the doctor said automatically, bending to help gather my things. “Thank you…” I said, picking up my stuff as hurriedly as I could, then I noticed his hand hovered over my pocket watch, not quite touching it. "Where did you get this?" "What?" I reached for it, but he got there first, picking it up with the care of someone handling something impossibly precious. The case had popped open from the impact of the fall, and inside was an old family portrait of a mother, a father, and four children… three boys and a little girl. I had had that pocket watch since the kidnap, since I was twelve and it was a wonder why the doctor stared at it like he was seeing a ghost. The doctor stared at the photo like he was seeing a ghost. "Where did you get this?" he repeated, his voice shaking now. "Please, I need to know. Where did you get this pocket watch?" "I don't… what business is it of yours?" I tried to take it from him, but he pulled back, his eyes suddenly bright with tears. "Please. Please, this is important. Where did you get it?" The intensity in his voice made me pause. "I don't know. I've had it since... since I can remember. It was with me when…" I stopped, uncertain how much to reveal. "It's been with me my whole life." He stared at me in disbelief "What city did you fly from?" he asked rapidly. "How old are you? When is your birthday?" "I… what? Why…" "Please!" His voice cracked. "Please, just answer me." "Missford. I'm thirty years old. My birthday is March fifteenth." The words came automatically, even as confusion swirled through me. "Why does it matter?" "Do you have a birthmark?" He was standing now, moving closer. "A star-shaped birthmark? On your back, just below your left shoulder blade?" What is he? Psychic? Because I have a birthmark exactly where he described. I'd always thought it looked like a small constellation. "How do you know about that?" My voice came out as a whisper. "Your parents," he said, and now tears were openly streaming down his face. "Are they still alive?" "I’m adopted… " The memory was hazy, fragments of things I'd been told. "I don’t know who my biological parents are. What is with the interrogation, Doctor?" "Oh my God." He sank into the chair beside the bed, the pocket watch clutched in his hands. "Oh my God, it's you." "What are you talking about?" Fear crept into my voice. "Who are you?" He looked up at me, his eyes red-rimmed, his hands shaking. "This pocket watch belonged to my little sister," he said quietly. My legs wouldn't hold me anymore. I sat back down on the bed, hard. "That's impossible," I whispered. "The photo." He opened the pocket watch fully, showing me the faded image. "This is my family. " I looked at the photo and the thought of him being my family frightened me. "No," I said, “You must be mistaken.” "Please." his voice broke. "Please… can you wait here for a moment…" He grabbed my hand, desperate. "Please. Just wait. Just give me a few minutes." I wanted to refuse, but he sounded so desperate and I was just too tired to even argue. “Okay…” Relief flooded his face. "Thank you. Thank you. Just… Please don't leave. I'll be right back." He rushed out, still clutching the pocket watch, leaving me alone in the sterile hospital room. I pulled out my phone with shaking hands, expecting to have received countless texts and calls but I was in awe at how not even a single soul tried to reach out to me. They probably haven’t noticed I’d been gone, or they just didn’t care. That was enough for me to move on completely. I opened the back of the phone, pulled out the SIM card and dropped it in the trash bin beside the bed. I didn't need it anymore. I wasn't going back, I would just die peacefully here. *** Fifty-three minutes later, the door burst open. A woman rushed in, old but elegant in the way French women always seemed to be. Gray hair swept into a neat chignon, wearing a cream cardigan and pearl earrings even though she'd clearly been crying. She stopped when she saw me, her hand flying to her mouth. "Oh my God," she whispered. "Oh my God, Cici." And then she was across the room, pulling me into her arms, "My daughter," she sobbed into my hair. "My Cici. My baby girl." I sat frozen in her embrace, my mind reeling. "I don't…I’m not…" I tried to filter my words just so I don’t hurt her feelings. She pulled back just enough to look at me, her hands cupping my face. "I have missed you so much Cici” It was confusing and endearing how she knew my nickname is Cici. "How… how do you know my nickname is Cici?" I asked, confused. Her smile was sad. "Because I'm the one who gave it to you. Your full name is Cynthia Cynclair Laurent. But when you were little, you couldn't pronounce Cynthia. You called yourself Cici, and it stuck." She stroked my hair, and the gesture felt so natural, so right, that it scared me. "You were only twelve when they took you. My beautiful, bright girl." "Cynclair Laurent," I repeated. The name felt foreign and familiar all at once. The doctor, Julian, clue from his name tag, said quietly. "We immigrated to France after we thought you died." "We spent years looking for you," his mother continued. "And then they found that poor girl's body, and we thought…" Her voice broke. "We thought we'd lost you forever." I wanted to believe them. God, I wanted to believe that this was real, that I'd somehow stumbled into a miracle, but I couldn't let myself hope. Not when hope had been beaten out of me over eight years of marriage. "We should do a DNA test," Julian said almost immediately, "I can have the lab run it tonight. Results in a few days…" "No," I said. They both stared at me. "No?" the woman repeated. "But why?" "Because I'm dying." The words came out matter-of-fact, empty of emotion. "I have a terminal brain tumor. Six months, maybe less.” The silence was suffocating. "So no," I continued, "I don't want a DNA test. Because if it turns out I'm your daughter, if this is all real, then you get to have me back for maybe six months before I die again. And that's…" My voice cracked. "That's crueler than not finding me at all." The woman made a sound like she'd been struck. "And I don't have money for treatment," I added, needing them to understand the full picture. Julian ran his hands through his hair. "Cici… if you are Cici, money is the least of our problems. I'm a neurosurgeon. One of the best in the world. And if there's even a chance to save you, we'll take it." "I don't want…" The woman pulled me back into her arms, and this time I didn't resist. "My darling girl," she whispered. "You've been hurting so much, haven't you?" And maybe it was the gentleness in her voice, or the exhaustion, or it was the tumor eating away at my brain. I sobbed into her shoulder like a child, and she held me like I was precious, like I mattered, like she would fight heaven and hell to keep me safe. "Please," Julian said softly. "Please, just let me try. Let me do the scans, review your case, see if there's anything we can do…" The woman pulled back, wiping tears from both our faces. "Will you let us try, Cici? Will you let your brother try to save you?" I looked between them, the eagerness in their eyes, I should probably try this. "Okay," I whispered. "Okay."Chapter 320 Third Person POV Six months after Ethan's return, the Laurent family gathered once again. The venue was spectacular: the Laurent estate's sprawling gardens, transformed into an elegant outdoor ceremony space with thousands of white flowers, silk draping, and enough champagne to float a small boat. But unlike most weddings, this wasn't just one ceremony. It was two. Julian stood at one altar, his hand clasped tightly in Tony's, both of them dressed in impeccably tailored suits that complemented each other perfectly. Tony's family sat on one side, beaming with pride and joy. And on the other side…. Victoria Laurent sat in the front row, tears streaming down her face, dabbing at her eyes with an embroidered handkerchief. Not tears of sadness or disappointment. But tears of genuine happiness. It had taken her months to truly accept Julian's relationship. Months of difficult conversations, of confronting her own prejudices and outdated beliefs, of watching her son
Chapter 319 Cynthia's POV The Walker mansion was alive with music, laughter, and the warm buzz of conversation. Ethan had insisted on throwing this party—a proper celebration to thank everyone who'd helped bring him home and to mark the beginning of our family's fresh start. The guest list was eclectic, to say the least. Gavin stood near the bar, looking uncomfortable in a suit that was clearly borrowed or hastily purchased, nursing a drink while surveying the opulence of the Walker estate with the expression of someone completely out of their element. His daughter Prisca hovered near him, and I'd caught her shooting daggers at me more than once throughout the evening. Ethan had warned me about her advances during his time at their farm—how she'd tried to seduce him, how Gavin had pushed for them to get married, how that final confrontation had led to Ethan being kicked out. So I understood the bitter looks. Understood that she was probably imagining what her life could have
Chapter 318 Cynthia's POV The knock on the door came far too early. I was still in bed with Ethan, both of us tangled in the sheets, my body deliciously sore from the night and early morning — we'd spent reacquainting ourselves with each other. We'd finally fallen asleep maybe two hours ago, and now someone was knocking insistently on the bedroom door. "Mom! Dad!" Amber's voice called through the wood. "Detective Susan is here! She says it's important!" Ethan groaned beside me, burying his face in the pillow. "Tell her to come back in ten years," he mumbled. I couldn't help but laugh, even as panic jolted through me. Detective Susan. Which meant something had happened with the investigation. "We'll be right down," I called back to Amber. Ethan and I scrambled out of bed, both of us wincing at various aches and pains—his from his injuries, mine from... well. We threw on clothes hastily — me in one of Ethan's shirts and yoga pants, him in sweatpants and a t-shirt. I caught
Chapter 317 Cynthia's POVEthan’s hands moved over my body with deliberate, possessive slowness, like he was memorizing me all over again after six long months of hell.He started with my hair, fingers threading through the wet strands, gripping just tight enough to tilt my head back as he massaged my scalp. The pressure sent little sparks of pleasure straight down my spine.Then his hands traveled lower.His thumb traced the line of my jaw before brushing over my bottom lip, pressing lightly until I parted for him. His dark eyes watched every reaction, hungry and unrelenting.Down my neck, across my collarbone, his touch feather-light yet electric. Goosebumps exploded across my skin even in the warm bathwater.“I forgot how fucking responsive you are,” he murmured, voice low and rough. “How every little touch makes you tremble for me.”He didn’t finish the sentence. Instead, his hands finally cupped my breasts, palms rough and hot as his thumbs circled my nipples until they tighte
Chapter 316 Cynthia's POV During the car ride from the Laurent mansion to the Walker estate, our son sat pressed against his father's side, one small hand gripping Ethan's shirt, his head resting on Ethan's shoulder. Like he was afraid that if he let go, even for a moment, Ethan would disappear again. I understood the feeling completely. I'd barely let go of Ethan myself since the police station. My hand had been in his constantly, our fingers intertwined, and even now in the car I kept reaching over to touch his face, his arm, his chest—anywhere I could reach—just to confirm he was real. Amber had fought sleep valiantly, his eyes drooping closed then snapping back open every few minutes as he forced himself to stay awake. "I'm not tired," he'd insisted, even as his head lolled against Ethan's shoulder. "I know, buddy," Ethan had said gently, stroking Amber's hair. "But your body needs rest. And I promise, I'll be here when you wake up." "You better be," Amber had mumbled, h
Chapter 315 Third Person POV The Laurent mansion's grand living room was filled with people—family members, friends, the elderly couple who'd brought Ethan home—all talking over each other in a chaotic symphony of relief and joy. Amber hadn't left his father's side, pressed against Ethan's leg like he was afraid his daddy would disappear if he moved too far away. Ethan kept one hand on his son's shoulder, grounding himself in the physical reality of being home, while his other hand remained intertwined with Cynthia's. He couldn't seem to let go of her. Didn't want to let go. After six months of desperately searching for her, having her here felt too precious to risk even a moment of separation. Victoria Laurent swept into the room, her usual composure replaced with genuine emotion. For a woman who'd made no secret of her disapproval of Ethan over the years — who'd blamed him for Cynthia's unhappiness, who'd urged her daughter to move on after just a few months, her reaction t
Chapter 20Ethan's POVI was staring at the acquisition contract when Margaret burst through my office door.I was already irritated. I'd been staring at these margin percentages for hours, supposedly reviewing numbers that would determine the future of Walker Industries, but my mind hadn't been on
Chapter 21Cynthia’s POVMy laptop screen glowed in the dim light of my bedroom, tabs upon tabs open, doing my investigations.Marcus Chen’s name typed into every search engine I could think of. His smug face stared back from an old alumni photo, his grin still as fake as it had been in middle scho
Chapter 22Cynthia’s POV“Come on, Cynthia, let’s go get some Foie Gras hot dogs. I’m craving them,” Kevin said, tugging my wrist like a child begging his mom for candy.I sighed and gave in. “Okay, okay, jeez. You’re worse than a toddler.”He grinned. “You love me for it.”Honestly, I did need a b
Chapter 57 Cynthia's POV It took the police less than an hour to track down Pierre's twin brother. Michel Beaumont was found hiding in a cheap hotel on the outskirts of Paris, trying to book a train ticket to Brussels. When they brought him in, he didn't even try to run. Just sat there with a re







