LOGINThe sound carried down the polished marble hallway, muffled at first but unmistakable. Laughter — low, intimate, sharp-edged. Mya paused, the tray in her hands balanced so carefully it might have been made of glass itself. She hadn’t been asked to bring anything to Damon’s study. No one ever asked her for anything in this house. But sometimes she walked the corridors with a book or a cup of tea, just to feel present. Just to remind herself that she was still here, still alive, still human.
She shifted the weight of the tray slightly, her fingers tightening on its handles as another ripple of laughter floated through the half-open door. This time, it was clearer. Damon’s voice first, rich with amusement — a sound so unfamiliar that it startled her. When was the last time she’d heard her husband laugh like that? Certainly not with her. Not at her jokes, not at her attempts to make conversation over cold dinners.
Then came the second voice, lilting and satisfied, smooth as cream poured over a blade. Sloane Monroe.
Mya’s pulse thudded in her ears.
“I can’t believe you put up with her this long,” Sloane drawled, the words soaked in delighted cruelty.
Mya’s breath hitched. The tea cup rattled faintly against the saucer.
Damon chuckled in reply, the sound low and indulgent. “You know how it is. She’s… harmless. Quiet. It’s easier to keep her around than deal with the mess of a scandal.”
Harmless. The word stabbed deeper than any insult Lorraine or Caroline had ever lobbed her way. Harmless, as though she were a piece of furniture, some mute decoration without the power to hurt or to matter.
“Harmless?” Sloane scoffed, her tone edged with disbelief. “She’s pathetic, Damon. Every time she smiles, I swear she looks like she’s begging for scraps. Doesn’t it drive you insane?”
Their laughter mingled then, sharper this time, slicing through the hallway like the snap of a whip.
Mya’s grip tightened on the tray until her knuckles whitened. She held her breath, praying they wouldn’t hear her, that the frantic hammering of her heart wouldn’t betray her. She should turn away. She should move, retreat, flee before she collapsed. But her body refused to obey. Her feet were rooted to the polished marble as though the house itself had decided she was part of its architecture — another silent fixture meant to be ignored.
“She still believes she’s your wife,” Sloane teased, a cruel lilt threading the words. “Can you imagine? Playing dress-up, trying to look like she belongs here. It’s almost adorable.”
Mya’s chest tightened, her throat burning.
Damon’s reply was casual, dismissive. “She belongs in photographs, not in my life. The magazines call her beautiful, and that’s enough. Beyond that…” He trailed off, but Mya could see it — the dismissive wave of his hand, the gesture he used so often to close meetings, end discussions, discard people. “She doesn’t matter.”
The words hollowed her out.
Sloane laughed softly, intimately, the sound sliding under Mya’s skin like venom. “Well, at least you have me now. A real partner.”
Silence followed, thick and weighted, more telling than any declaration. Mya didn’t need to see the look on Damon’s face. She knew. It was the expression she had begged for years to see turned toward her: warmth, devotion, affection. But all of it belonged to Sloane.
Her hands trembled. The tray shifted. The porcelain saucer clinked against the cup, the sound small but deafening in the silence of the hallway.
Mya flinched. The echo rang out like a gunshot.
The voices inside fell quiet.
For a suspended moment, Mya considered running. She imagined herself turning on her heel, retreating into her wing of the mansion, burying her shame beneath the covers of her too-large bed. She imagined waiting, swallowing the humiliation, pretending nothing had happened — as she always had.
But something inside her hardened instead. She straightened her spine. Lifted her chin. And waited.
The door opened.
Damon stood there, framed by the golden glow of his desk lamp. His phone still rested in his hand, but his expression was cool, unreadable, as if she were nothing more than an interruption. Behind him, Sloane perched elegantly on the corner of his desk, one shapely leg crossed over the other, her lipstick-red smile curving with smug satisfaction.
“Mya,” Damon said, his voice flat, not a trace of surprise or guilt in it. “Do you need something?”
Her throat closed around the thousand words she wanted to scream. Do I need something? I needed you. I needed love. I needed respect. I needed my husband. Instead, she swallowed it all, her voice emerging soft and steady.
“No. I was just passing by.”
Sloane tilted her head, her smile widening like a cat playing with its prey. “You should join us sometime, Mya. We were just reminiscing. Damon and I have so many memories together.”
Her voice dripped with triumph, as though every syllable was designed to remind Mya that she was the outsider here, the imposter.
Damon’s lips curved faintly, not at Mya but at Sloane, as though they shared some private joke.
Mya’s heart twisted painfully. Her vision blurred at the edges, but she refused to let them see her crumble. She forced her breathing even, forced her expression to remain composed, even as her insides screamed.
“Enjoy your evening,” she said, her voice calm, almost gentle.
Then she turned and walked away.
Her heels struck the marble floor with precision, each step faster, sharper, echoing like the toll of a bell. She didn’t allow herself to falter, didn’t allow herself to break until she was out of sight.
She didn’t go to her bedroom. She didn’t go to the garden. She went straight to the small sitting room at the edge of the east wing, where she kept a desk tucked away from the rest of the house. It was her only refuge, her only claim of space in this cavernous mansion that had never felt like hers.
Her hands shook violently as she pulled open the drawer.
Inside, hidden beneath stationary and half-finished letters, was a manila envelope. She had prepared it weeks ago in a moment of quiet desperation, though she had convinced herself she wasn’t ready to use it. Not yet. Maybe Damon would change. Maybe she could endure. Maybe she was being too dramatic.
But now, as his laughter with Sloane still echoed in her ears, all those fragile excuses dissolved.
She pulled the papers out, spreading them across the desk with trembling fingers. The black-and-white text blurred with the wetness gathering in her eyes, but she blinked it away, steadying herself.
Her pen felt heavy in her hand, as though the weight of her entire life rested inside it. For one breath, she hesitated — not because she doubted, but because she understood the finality of what she was about to do. Once she crossed this line, there was no return.
Her name flowed across the page, each stroke deliberate, neat, steady.
It was done.
The divorce papers were complete.
Mya exhaled slowly, her chest tightening then loosening in the same breath. Tears slid hot and silent down her cheeks, but her hands no longer shook.
For the first time in years, she felt something close to power.
She gathered the papers, slipped them back into the folder, and held it against her chest. The house around her was silent now, but she no longer felt trapped in its silence. She had made her choice.
Tomorrow, she would deliver the papers to Damon. Tomorrow, the gilded cage would open, and she would step out.
Tonight, she allowed herself a single whisper into the still air:
“No more.”
The second leak dropped at 9:03 p.m.This time, it wasn’t subtle.It wasn’t speculation wrapped in careful language or blurry images framed as questions.It was clear.Deliberate.Explosive.Casey was in the Cross estate gym when his phone buzzed violently against the bench beside him. He’d been pushing himself harder than usual lately—lifting until his arms trembled, running until his lungs burned. It was the only place the noise in his head quieted.The phone buzzed again.And again.He grabbed it, sweat cooling against his skin.Cameron’s name flashed across the screen.He answered immediately. “What?”Cameron didn’t sound like himself. His usual humor was gone. “You need to see what just posted.”Casey’s stomach sank. “Where?”“Everywhere.”Casey hung up and opened his browser.The headline was already trending.CROSS HEIR IN BED WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT? Shocking Photos Raise QuestionsHis pulse spiked.He clicked.The photos loaded in a series.The first was unmistakable.The street
Rowan knew the email was coming before she opened it.She’d felt it in the shift in tone that morning—the way conversations lowered a notch when she walked past. The way her lieutenant avoided direct eye contact. The way the captain’s office door had remained half-closed instead of open, like it usually was.Her phone buzzed at 8:12 a.m.Subject: Internal Review — Immediate Attendance Required.She didn’t let her face change.She finished her coffee.Then she walked upstairs.The Internal Affairs office was too bright. The kind of fluorescent lighting that made every expression look harsher, every hesitation more visible.Two officers sat at the table when she walked in.Sergeant Mills. Older, methodical. The type who believed in rules more than people.Detective Alvarez. Younger. Sharp eyes. Always evaluating.“Officer Vale,” Mills greeted evenly. “Have a seat.”Rowan sat.Back straight. Hands folded on the table. Calm.“What’s this about?” she asked, even though she already knew.Al
The photos surfaced at 6:42 a.m.Casey was halfway through his morning run on the estate’s outer trail when his phone began vibrating relentlessly in the pocket of his hoodie. He ignored it at first. The Cross family group chat was active at all hours. Cameron sending music drafts. Mya sending pregnancy updates. Adrian sending legal links no one else wanted to read before coffee.It wasn’t until the fifth vibration—long, sharp, insistent—that Casey slowed to a stop.He pulled the phone out, breath fogging in the cool morning air.Thirty-seven notifications.Four missed calls.Two from Alexander. One from Adrian. One from a number he didn’t recognize.His stomach tightened.Casey tapped the first message in the family thread.Alexander: Do not respond to anything. We are handling it.Adrian: Call me immediately.Casey scrolled.Cameron had dropped a link.He clicked it.The headline loaded slowly, then slammed into him.CROSS HEIR’S DARK NIGHT: Drug-Fueled Chaos, Arrest, and What the F
Rowan had spent most of the week pretending the late-night phone call hadn’t changed anything.It had been easier when the city was loud and chaotic, when her shifts ran long and her thoughts were drowned out by sirens and paperwork and the endless rhythm of police work. It had been easier when she could tell herself the pull toward Casey Cross was just proximity, just adrenaline, just the strange intensity that sometimes came from shared vulnerability.But quiet had a way of peeling away lies.And tonight was quiet.Her shift ended just before midnight, the station thinning into the slow exhale of a city beginning to sleep. Rowan shrugged into her jacket, tugged her hair into a loose knot, and stepped out into the cool air. The streetlights painted everything amber and soft, turning the sidewalk into long ribbons of shadow and light.She should have gone straight home.Instead, she found herself walking slower than usual, her thoughts drifting back to his voice. The honesty in it. Th
Rowan didn’t save Casey Cross’s number.That was the lie she told herself as she stood in her kitchen at one in the morning, staring at her phone like it was an object that might bite.Her apartment was quiet in the way only small spaces could be—refrigerator humming, the city muffled beyond the windows, a faint ticking from a cheap wall clock she kept meaning to replace. Her boots were kicked off near the door, her hair twisted up in a messy knot, and she wore an oversized sweatshirt that still smelled faintly like detergent and smoke from the bar.She had been home for hours.Had showered. Had eaten two bites of leftover pasta. Had tried to read a book she didn’t care about.None of it stuck.Because her brain kept circling back to him.Not to his name. Not to his family. Not to the scandal.To the way he’d stood at the bar and looked at her like she was the first person in his orbit who didn’t want something from him.Rowan hated that she understood that feeling.Her phone lit up o
Rowan didn’t drink much.Not because she was morally superior, and not because she didn’t like the warmth in her bloodstream after a long shift. She just didn’t like feeling dulled. The job trained you to stay ready, even when you weren’t on the clock. Even when you told yourself you were.Tonight, though, she’d agreed to one beer.One.It was a Thursday, which meant the bar was half-full of exhausted office workers and people who hadn’t figured out their lives yet. Rowan sat at the far end of the counter in a corner stool—back to the wall, sightline to the door. Habit. Her hair was down, black waves brushing her shoulders, and the tattoos that usually stayed hidden under a uniform sleeve were on full display now—ink climbing over her forearms and peeking at the edge of her collar.She liked this version of herself. The one who belonged only to her.Her friend Lana was halfway through a story about a disastrous date when Rowan’s phone buzzed with a text.Lana: You’re not listening. Yo







