LOGIN"You are invading my space, Mr. Monteverde. And quite frankly, the air in this penthouse is already thin enough without your constant, suffocating presence."Ariana didn't look up from her tablet as she sat on the white boucle sofa, her fingers swiping aggressively through digital fabric swatches. The evening had brought another sudden, violent Parisian downpour, rattling the massive glass windows of her Place des Vosges penthouse."I am sitting exactly where your security detail told me to sit, Ariana," Damien replied, his voice a deep, gravelly baritone that vibrated through the quiet room. He was perch on a minimalist armchair across from her, a glass of untouched scotch resting between his large fingers. He had shed his tailor jacket... his white dress shirt unbuttoned at the collar, but his posture remained as rigid and imposing as ever. "The hotel logistics team explicitly stated that the strike at the Plaza Athenee made my suite unsafe due to the protests outside. Your own le
"I do not eat the green trees, monsieur. They taste like the wet grass from the Jardin du Luxembourg."Elijah crossed his small arms over his chest... his tiny brow knitting together in a rigid, stubborn line that sent a bizarre shock of familiarity straight down Damien’s spine. The boy sat at the massive, polished mahogany dining table of Ariana’s Place des Vosges penthouse, staring with absolute defiance at a small plate of lightly steamed broccoli."They are not trees, Elijah. It's broccoli," Damien said, his voice a deep, unpracticed rumble in the bright, sunlit room. He sat awkwardly on a sleek, modern chair that felt entirely too small for his imposing frame. He had rolled up the sleeves of his white dress shirt... his expensive Rolex catching the morning light, but he looked completely out of his depth. "And you need to eat them. They make you strong.""Maman says I am already strong because I eat my croissants. And Uncle Lucas says vegetables are only for the rabbits. Ar
"Is that your final answer, Ariana? You are going to shut me out completely?"Damien’s voice was dangerously quiet now. The raw, screaming grief that had torn through him moments ago had settled into a cold, lethal stillness. He stood in the middle of the Celeste reception lobby, his wet black coat dripping onto the white marble, the crumpled DNA report still clutched in his trembling fingers."I told you to stop using that name," Ariana replied, her voice as sharp and thin as a razor blade. She stood perfectly upright, her hands tucked into the pockets of her cream trench coat, her face a mask of absolute, unyielding stone. "And yes. I am shutting you out. You do not exist to us, Mr. Monteverde. You never have, and you never will.""He is my son," Damien growled, his jaw locking so tight the muscle pulsed under his skin. "I have the legal right to be in his life. I have his blood in my veins, and I have the paperwork to prove it in any court from Manila to Paris.""You have no
"Are you absolutely certain about this, Mr. Monteverde? The rain is turning into a deluge, and the French police are incredibly strict about unauthorized vehicles lingering around the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré." Mark’s hand trembled slightly on the steering wheel of the black Mercedes sedan as they navigated the slick, waterlogged streets of Paris. The windshield wipers scraped frantically back and forth, cutting through the heavy grey mist of the evening. "Drive, Mark," Damien commanded from the passenger seat. His voice was a low, terrifying growl, vibrating with an intensity that made the air inside the luxury vehicle feel suffocating. "I don't care if the entire French gendarmerie is waiting for us. If anyone blocks the entrance to her building, drive right through them." "Sir, please," Mark pleaded, his eyes darting nervously to the rearview mirror before focusing back on the wet asphalt. "I understand what the DNA results mean. Believe me, I am as shocked as you are. B
"You look like you're about to murder someone, Damien. Or jump out of that window. Quite frankly, with the way you're pacing, I can't tell which one it'll be."Dr. Julian Vance didn't look up from the sterile silver counter of his private laboratory in the 5th arrondissement. He was meticulously adjusting the settings on a high end thermal cycler, his laboratory coat pristine, his movements measured with the ease of an old Ivy League classmate who knew exactly how much weight the Monteverde name carried and exactly how little it impressed him."Just run the sequence, Julian," Damien commanded, his voice a low, gravelly rasp that hadn't found its proper register in days.Damien stopped his relentless pacing right in front of the floor to ceiling glass panel overlooking the foggy Parisian streets. He hadn't slept. The Tagalog words Ariana had thrown at his face in the pouring rain at the grocery store were still echoing in his skull, deafening and brutal.'At sinabi din niyang ayaw
The neon lights of La Grande Épicerie de Paris flickered through the heavy sheet of rain outside, casting long, fractured shadows across the covered entrance of the gourmet establishment. The air smelled of wet asphalt, damp wool, and the bitter, sharp ozone of a full-blown European thunderstorm. Damien Alaric Monteverde didn't move. He stood completely rigid under the concrete overhang, his hands buried deep inside the pockets of his tailored black coat, his eyes locked onto the glass sliding doors of the exit. The rain beat a frantic, chaotic rhythm against the pavement just inches from his leather boots, but his mind was dead silent. He was still breathing the same air the boy had just exhaled. His boy. His blood. "Sir," Mark spoke nervously from behind him, holding a large black umbrella that shook slightly against the wind. "We should return to the vehicle. The paparazzi—some of the local stringers who monitor the high-end districts—they might spot you standing out here li
The air between Damien and Ariana felt suffocating. They stood facing each other in the hallway outside the charity luncheon while the photographs remained clenched tightly in Damien’s hand.Ariana’s chest rose unevenly. “Damien, please listen to me first.”His eyes looked terrifyingly emotionless.
For the next several days, Ariana avoided Damien as much as possible. She left the room early. She ate meals quickly. And constantly made excuses whenever Damien tried speaking to her. The pregnancy terrified her. Every time she looked at Damien, guilt tightened painfully inside her chest. Because
The following weeks passed quietly inside the Monteverde mansion. Too quietly. Ariana slowly adjusted to her new life, but every single day still felt unnatural.Every morning, stylists chose her clothes. Etiquette teachers corrected the way she walked, talked, and even held utensils. At night, she
Morning sunlight slowly entered through the massive glass windows of Damien’s bedroom. Ariana woke up feeling disoriented. For several seconds, she stared blankly at the unfamiliar ceiling before reality came crashing back. She was married. Married to Damien Monteverde. Her chest tightened instantl







