LOGINPOV: Evelyn Reeve
4:00 a.m.
The Tribeca penthouse was a tomb of glass, where even the shadows felt expensive. Aside from a single dim lamp in the corner of the living room casting a jagged sliver of light across the floor, the world was charcoal-gray.
I lay on my side, my hazel eyes half-open, staring at nothing. The only sound was the low, persistent hum of the climate control—a sterile, mechanical breath that made the silence feel heavier. I’d tried to sleep. God, I’d tried. But my mind was a crowded room, filled with things I wasn't supposed to know.
Then, the faint click of the front door.
Soft, practiced footsteps moved through the foyer. I adjusted my breathing, forcing it into a slow, rhythmic lie. I shut my eyes tight, bracing myself. Through the thin veil of my lashes, I saw Archer’s silhouette. He moved like a ghost, closing the door without a sound, heading toward the master suite.
He stripped, the rustle of his clothes hitting the hamper the only evidence of his late-night excursion. Then, the hiss of the shower from the en-suite bathroom.
I bit my lip so hard I could taste the metallic tang of blood. My chest was a storm of tremors I had to suppress.
Minutes later, the bathroom door creaked open. Archer, now in clean sleepwear, approached the bed. He pulled back the heavy duvet and slid in beside me. Within moments, his breathing turned heavy and rhythmic—the sound of a man with a clear conscience, or perhaps just a very good liar.
I stole a glance at his profile in the dark. He looked peaceful. I looked back at the shadows on the ceiling, the ache in my chest deepening until it felt like a physical weight crushing my ribs.
An hour passed in a blur of agony.
I rose slowly, making sure Archer remained under. I watched him for a few seconds—studying the man I thought I knew—before slipping into the bathroom. My reflection was a stranger. Pale, porcelain skin washed out by the vanity lights, eyes swollen enough to tell a story I wasn't ready to share.
I stood there for a long time, surveying the wreckage of my thoughts. I splashed cold water on my face until my skin felt numb, forcing my lungs to accept a steady pace of air.
I dried my face with a hand towel and stepped into the kitchen. I didn't turn on the overheads. I didn't need them. My hands moved with the mechanical precision of a machine. Artisan omelets, sourdough toast, and a carafe of freshly brewed coffee.
The sizzle of the pan and the aroma of roasted beans usually brought me comfort. Today, it just felt like a funeral rite for a dying relationship.
"What am I even doing?" I whispered to the empty kitchen.
A part of me wanted to drive to Sienna’s place, to scream until my throat was raw, to demand the truth. But logic—the cold, analytical part of my brain that made me a good finance analyst—held me back. What was the point if Archer was the one seeking her out?
By 6:00 a.m., the spread was ready. I checked the placement of the silverware, my breath hitching. This wasn't about being a perfect partner anymore; it was the desperate clinging to a routine that no longer had a soul.
Fifteen minutes later, I was showered and dressed. I’d opted for high-waisted jeans and a cream silk blouse, my hair brushed into soft, deceptive waves. I was staring at myself in the bedroom mirror, practicing a smile that didn't reach my eyes, when Archer sat up.
He rubbed his face, his voice gravelly with sleep. "Morning, babe."
"Morning," I replied, keeping my back to him for a heartbeat longer.
Archer’s eyes lingered on my outfit, his brow furrowing slightly. "You’re not in your work suit?"
I smoothed the hem of my blouse, hiding the tremor in my fingers. "I’m taking a personal day. Honestly, Archer, I feel like hell."
He was off the bed in an instant, crossing the room to me. He leaned in, the heat of his body radiating against mine as he pressed the back of his hand to my forehead. His eyes searched mine for a fracture.
"You have a fever?"
I shook my head, gently brushing his hand away. "No. Just... burnt out." I paused, forcing my voice to stay level. "Before you head to the office, could you drop me off at my place? I want to rest in my own bed. And... tell HR I’m out for the day. My parents are actually driving down from the Hudson Valley this morning."
Archer looked surprised, his eyebrows shooting up. "Gideon and Eleanor are coming down? Why didn't you mention it?"
"They called early this morning," I lied. The words tasted like ash.
He nodded, seemingly satisfied. "Alright. I’ll let the team know."
He reached for my waist, intending to pull me into a morning embrace, but I stepped back, catching his wrists. The sudden movement made him freeze, his expression shifting to confusion.
"Archer?" I said, forced laughter bubbling up. "You haven't showered yet. You’re... ripe."
POV: Evelyn Reeve"Shae? What are you doing here?"The voice was deep, a rich baritone that vibrated through the glass-walled lobby of the Meridian Miami building. I froze. I knew that voice. It was Jovan.Shae let out a soft laugh, shifting her weight to the side so I was no longer hidden behind her."Just playing career coach for the day, Jovan," she replied easily.Jovan’s dark brows knitted together. He looked between us, his sharp eyes lingering on me for a second longer than necessary as if he were trying to solve a complex equation."Career coach? Are you planning on jumping ship, Shae?"Shae shook her head, a playful glint in her eyes. She gestured toward me with a casual flick of her wrist."Not for me. For Evelyn."Jovan’s eyes widened. The realization seemed to hit him like a physical wave. He adjusted his stance, his shoulders squaring under his tailored blazer as he turned his full attention to me.I
POV: EvelynThe mirror didn’t lie, but it didn’t tell the whole truth either.I smoothed the front of my bone-white silk blouse, tucking it firmly into a black pencil skirt that hugged my frame. I looked professional. I looked put-together. I looked like a woman who hadn't spent the last month picking up the shattered pieces of her life.I ran a brush through my waves one last time, letting them settle over my shoulders.Breathe.My heart was doing that frantic, uneven thrumming again. I pressed a palm to my chest, trying to anchor myself. Once I was sure my mask wouldn't slip, I grabbed my clutch and walked into the living room.Shae was already there, her eyes glued to her phone. She looked up the second she heard my heels click against the floor, her expression softening into a supportive smile."Ready to do this?" she asked, standing up."As ready as I'll ever be," I murmured.We stepped out into the humid Miami air. Shae locked the door with practiced efficiency while her thumb s
She turned and marched toward the elevators. I reached out one last time, but there was nothing to catch. No gap. No opening.I stood there in the middle of the hallway, my hand hanging uselessly in the air before it dropped to my side. My shoulders slumped.In the theater of my mind, the image of Evelyn walking away with that stranger played on a loop. The bitterness was deeper now, a dark tide rising in my chest.I was losing control. The world was moving on, and I was being left behind in the dark.I walked toward the elevators, my face blank, my mind a hollow shell of unanswered questions.***POV: EvelynThe scent of garlic and fresh basil wafted through Shae’s kitchen, a small, domestic comfort that felt like an anchor. I’d just turned off the stove, the steam from the pasta I’d tossed together rising in a gentle white cloud.I set the wooden spoon aside and carried the plates to the small breakfast nook. My eyes drifted to my phone, lying face down on the granite counter.It ha
POV: ArcherThe harsh Manhattan sun bled through the slats of my blinds, carving jagged lines across my mahogany desk. Even with the AC humming at a steady sixty-eight degrees, the air in my office felt stifling. Heavy. Like a storm was about to break.I leaned forward, digging my fingers into my scalp, tugging at hair that hadn't been trimmed in weeks.Since dawn, I’d been a ghost haunting her phone. I called until the ringing became a taunt. I sent texts that vanished into a digital void. She hadn’t even glanced at my Instagram stories. Nothing.I was being erased.I gripped my iPhone so hard the casing groaned, then hurled it across the desk. It skittered over the leather inlay, the sound of glass meeting wood echoing like a gunshot in the silence of the room.The screen stayed dark, but my mind was a riot of images. That man at the airport.He hadn't just been a stranger. He’d been a presence—stoic, tegap, radiating the kind of effortless authority that made my skin crawl. The way
I really believed him. I believed every word of the 'forever' he’d sold me.The memory hit me in waves. His voice in my ear, the way he’d promise the moon while he was already planning his exit. Then, the darker layers bled through—Sienna’s smug, high-pitched laughter, the way he’d snapped at me in front of the whole department at Kensington Tech, and the sickening knowledge that they’d been together in the very bed where I’d shared my most private self.I closed the app with a jagged swipe, as if I could physically shut the wound. I dropped the phone on the table and rubbed my eyes until I saw spots.My breath hitched, but I didn't let the sob out. There was no screaming today. Just a heavy, suffocating weight and a quiet vow to keep that app closed.*Thirty minutes later, we were stepping out into the heat. The sun was high, but the ocean breeze kept the humidity from becoming a chokehold. Shae had a small crossbody bag, while I carried nothing but my phone and my wallet.We walked
POV: EvelynI didn't wake up to the jarring, mechanical hum of my Manhattan alarm clock. Instead, it was the Florida sun—unapologetic and gold—forcing its way through the gaps in the linen curtains. I stared at the ceiling for a few seconds, my mind a complete blank, before the weight of reality settled back into my bones.I wasn't in my apartment in Tribeca. I was miles away from the cold, marble corridors of Midtown.My body felt heavy, as if I’d spent the night running a marathon I hadn't signed up for. But for the first time in weeks, the air didn't taste like Archer’s lies or the metallic tang of betrayal. It was just quiet. A hollow, fragile kind of peace that gave me just enough room to breathe without choking.I scanned the room. Clean white walls, a minimalist oak bookshelf in the corner, and sheer cream drapes dancing in the humid Atlantic breeze.On the hardwood floor, a pair of light blue flip-flops had been placed neatly by the bed. Shae. It had to be her. I pulled the du







