MasukThe night wind blows cool against Seraphine Vale’s skin, yet warmth clung stubbornly to her arms.
The child.
He was still wrapped around her.
She stood rigid, her posture straight, chin lifted but her hands had not yet told her heart to let go.
Footsteps approach behind the circle of bodyguards.
Measured. Controlled. Unmistakable.
Lucian Ardent stops before her.
His presence was not loud,it was absolute. His aura is cold like an iceberg. His face was unreadable. The black Armani suit with two of the upper buttons opened accentuates his tall and toned body. The Rolex watch he is wearing screams of wealth. The belt on his waist is inlaid with diamonds and the black shoe was shiny even in the dark.
Seraphine raises her gaze without hesitation. Her eyes were calm, distant, unyielding. No tremor of recognition, no softening.
Love was a language she no longer spoke. Even though she won't lie that he is the most handsome man she had seen.
Lucian’s attention went first to the boy clinging to her neck. His brow drew slightly inward — not anger, not confusion. Calculation.
Cassian never attaches himself to a stranger.
Not once.
“Cassian,” Lucian said quietly.
The boy tightens his grip.
“No.”
His face matched his father's.
The refusal came with a small shake of his head, curls brushing Seraphine’s cheek. She felt the movement more than she saw it …a small, fragile insistence.
Something stirs inside her chest.
The pull she refuses to name.
She loosens her hold with deliberate care and steps forward, placing the child gently into his father’s arms. Her touch was precise, controlled, impersonal.
Yet Cassian twists back immediately, arms reaching for her again.
“You’re not leaving,” he declares, voice trembling with fierce certainty.
Seraphine meets his eyes.
Clear. Searching. Familiar in a way that unsettles her.
“I am,” she said calmly.
Her tone held a softness she didn't realize.
Lucian watches closely.
Most people bent in the presence of his son’s distress. She did not. She remained composed — fearless, detached.
Interesting.
Cassian’s face crumples. His small hand grabs the front of her jacket again,tears roll down his chubby cheeks.
“Promise,” he demands softly.
Seraphine’s brow tightens.
“I do not make promises.”
The words were quiet …but they carried steel.
Lucian’s gaze sharpens.
She spoke like someone who had buried trust with her own hands.
Cassian shook his head fiercely, near tears again.
“Then say you will see me again!”
Silence hovers among them.
Seraphine looks at him… and something in her chest tightens quiet rebellion against her will.
She crouches slightly, bringing herself level with him. Her expression remains cool, but her voice lowers.
“If fate insists,” she said.
This is not comfort.
It is not affection.
But a permission for distance.
Cassian accepts it solemnly , as though sealing a pact with the universe itself. Only then did he allow his father to hold him without struggle.
Lucian did not miss the exchange.
Nor did he miss the faint tremor of breath Seraphine suppressed as she stepped back.
“You handled him efficiently,” Lucian said.
His tone was neutral.
But interest lingers beneath it.
“I do not indulge weakness,” she replied.
The words were simple.
Their weight was not.
Lucian studies her face in silence. It held no trace of flirtation. No nervousness. No attempt to please. Her gaze met him without challenge — and without submission.
A woman untouched by expectation.
Or broken beyond it.
He found himself wanting to understand which.
Cassian rested against his shoulder but continued watching Seraphine with unwavering focus.
“You smell like… something I forgot,” Cassian murmurs.
Seraphine did not react outwardly.
But inside, her heart was in turmoil.
She turns away first.
The engine of her black motorcycle roars to life, sharp against the quiet night. She mounts it in one smooth motion, posture straight, movements controlled.
Lucian watches her as one watches a phenomenon rather than a person.
Unfamiliar.
Compelling.
She did not look back.
But just before accelerating, she spoke — voice clear, steady, untouched by emotion.
“Teach him resilience.”
Then she rides into the darkness.
Cassian twists in his father’s arms, watching until the red tail light vanishes completely.
Only then did he whisper,
“She belongs here.”
Lucian did not respond.
But he did not dismiss the statement either.
Her new villa overlooks the city like a silent throne.
Inside, Seraphine removes her gloves slowly, methodically as though stripping away an unwanted sensation.
Yet the memory of small arms around her neck refused to fade.
Annoying.
Unacceptable.
She takes a relaxing bath in the jacuzzi and puts on a red robe.
She walked to the wide glass window holding a glass of red wine and stared at her reflection — composed, elegant, untouched.
No weakness.
No attachment.
No love.
Her phone vibrates once.
She answers immediately.
“Yes.”
A familiar male voice spoke from the other end — warm, efficient, steady.
“I’ve returned, Seraphine. I arrived this evening.”
A faint glint passes through her eyes.
“Good,” she said. “Report.”
Her assistant — her only trusted ally abroad — did not waste time.
“Lydia Vale has become extremely influential. Top model. Publicly acknowledged partner of Lucian Ardent. Social favor is entirely on her side.”
Seraphine’s reflection remained motionless.
But the air around her sharpened.
“And her reputation?” she asked.
“Immaculate. Carefully constructed. Untouchable — for now.”
Silence lingers.
Then Seraphine speaks with quiet certainty.
“Prepare a personality document.”
“For which sector?”
Her gaze settled on the city’s brightest commercial district.
“Modelling.”
A pause.
Understanding follows instantly.
“You intend to enter her field.”
“No,” Seraphine corrects softly.
“I intend to take it.”
She ends the call.
The room fell silent again — but the silence was no longer empty.
It was deliberate.
She stepped onto the balcony. The wind lifts her long hair, dark strands flowing like a banner of quiet war.
Six years of exile had not erased her.
They had refined her.
Below, the city glitters with illusion and applause — Lydia’s stage, Lydia’s kingdom.
Seraphine rests her hands lightly on the balcony rail.
Her voice was calm when she spoke, but it carried the weight of inevitability.
“Lydia Vale,” she whispers into the night,
“your spotlight ends where I begin.”
The silk didn’t crease beneath Seraphine’s fingers. She kept her hand there a moment longer than necessary, smoothing the fabric with quiet precision, as though the simple act required more care than it did. Something had shifted, subtle and unfamiliar, and for a fleeting second it lingered in her expression before disappearing beneath the calm composure she wore so effortlessly.“The sleeve,” she said, her voice even, controlled. “You were saying.”The consultant blinked, momentarily thrown off, then hurriedly continued, pointing at the structure of the garment. Seraphine listened, nodded, adjusted a detail here and there but her mind had already moved elsewhere.Mr. Laurent doesn’t ask twice.That thought stayed with her long after she left the atelier.Night settled over the city like a quiet secret.Seraphine stood before her mirror, no longer dressed in silk or statement pieces, but in something far simpler. Black. Clean. Functional. Her hair was pulled back tightly, her face str
The Chanel flagship understood that restraint was its own form of abundance. High ceilings. Pale stone. Things given space to exist rather than competing for it. On Tuesday afternoons, the upper floor consultation suite was occupied by appointment — and on Tuesday afternoons, the staff had learned to arrange themselves quietly around a particular presence without being asked to.Cassian had known about the Tuesday appointments since the previous week. He had written it in his notebook when he got home. Chanel. Tuesday. 3PM. Underlined. He had looked at it every day since and thought about the logistics, which were honestly not that complicated if you just committed to the plan properly.He had told his teacher he had an appointment — which was true. He had told the driver his father had authorised the stop — which was a projection of what his father would have said if asked, which wasn't exactly the same thing but was adjacent to it. These were the details that required a certain flex
Lucian's office was a room that told you something about the man who occupied it before he opened his mouth. Floor-to-ceiling glass on two sides, the city spread below like a diagram of things that answered to him. A desk that was almost aggressively clear. Two chairs across from it designed for function, not comfort — which meant he expected most conversations here to be concluded efficiently.He was standing at the glass when she came in.Jacket on. Hands in his pockets. Looking at the city with the stillness of someone who had been thinking for some time.He turned when the door opened."Lydia."Not warm. Not cold. Just her name, placed in the room as an acknowledgment.She walked to the center of the floor. Didn't sit. She had decided in the elevator that sitting would feel like a concession, and she could not afford concessions today."Thank you for seeing me," she said."You didn't give me much of a choice," he said. Not unkindly. Just accurately."I needed to speak with you.""
The Ardent Group headquarters had no logo on the building. It didn't need one. The address alone was enough,a fact understood by everyone who operated at the level where this building's existence mattered. The glass facade reflected the street below with the cool indifference of something that had nothing to prove, and the lobby inside was the kind of space that communicated, through marble and height and the precise temperature of its lighting, that not everyone who walked through the front doors was supposed to be here. Lydia Vale walked through the front doors like she was supposed to be everywhere. She wore ivory today,a structured coat dress that photographed beautifully and communicated exactly what it was meant to communicate: old money, controlled elegance, a woman who dressed for the room she intended to be in rather than the one she'd left. Her heels were four inches and silent against the marble. Her bag cost more than most people's monthly salary. Her chin was at the an
The numbers didn’t just change.They spiked.Nina’s finger hovered over the screen like she didn’t quite trust what she was seeing.“…refresh it again.”The assistant beside her obeyed immediately.Tap.The page was reloaded.Lydia’s collection,Still high.Still leading.But Seraphine’s—Climbing.Fast.“That doesn’t make sense,” Nina muttered, stepping closer. “You were barely moving stock last night.”Seraphine didn’t answer.She stood a few feet away, arms loosely crossed, gaze fixed on the screen.Not surprised.Just… watching.Because this was the shift.Across the city,Cassian leaned back in his chair, one ankle resting over his knee, phone balanced loosely in his hand.The room around him was dim, lit only by the glow of multiple screens.Charts.Graphs.Engagement metrics.All rising.“Push the clip again,” he said calmly.A man across from him hesitated.“We’ve already seeded it across three platforms. If we repeat too aggressively, it’ll look—”“Organic?” Cassian cut in, o
The studio of Gucci smelled like hairspray, hot lights, and quiet competition.“Cool tones go to Lydia’s rack.”The stylist’s voice cut through the morning rush, brisk and efficient.Assistants moved instantly.Garment bags shifted.Racks rolled.Seraphine stood by the far end of the room, fingers lightly resting on the metal rail in front of her. She didn’t speak. She just watched.Silk in shades of ice blue, muted silver, pale lavender—Lifted.Separated.Taken.Placed carefully under a tag:LYDIA VALE - SUMMER FEATUREA second rack was wheeled toward Seraphine.Slower.Less careful.The zipper slid open.Red.Not the deep, controlled red of power.Not the structured crimson of elegance.No.This was—Loud.Flame-orange undertones.Glossy fabric that caught light too sharply.Cuts that leaned toward dramatic instead of refined.The kind of collection that could easily become…Too much and so tacky.An assistant hesitated beside her.“…they said this was yours,” she murmured, almost







