Henry Wynthorne had never considered himself the type of man who chased after beautiful women. His father had raised him with different priorities: intellect, ambition, and the responsibility that came with the Wynthorne name. Pretty faces were distractions, Edward Wynthorne had warned, from the path to greatness.
And for seventeen years, Henry had adhered to this philosophy without question. Until the day his father collapsed in the middle of Westlake Academy's Spring Benefit Gala. The memory still came to him in fragments. The clink of champagne flutes. The murmur of wealthy donors. His father mid-sentence about the new science wing donation, suddenly clutching his chest. The sickening thud as Edward Wynthorne's body hit the marble floor. And then, somehow, Verity Langford kneeling beside his father while everyone else stood frozen in shock. "Call an ambulance!" she had commanded, her voice cutting through the stunned silence. Her blue dress pooled around her as she loosened his father's tie, checked his pulse, turned him onto his side with surprising strength when he began to choke. Henry remembered watching her golden head bent over his father's ashen face, her movements sure and precise, while his own limbs felt leaden with panic. "He's breathing, but his pulse is irregular," she'd told the paramedics when they arrived, her voice steady even as her hands trembled slightly. "It started with chest pain, then collapse. No convulsions, but his breathing was labored." Only later, as they waited in the sterile hospital corridor, did Henry learn that Verity volunteered weekends at the hospital. That she planned to study medicine. That beneath the stunning exterior everyone admired was a mind as sharp as his own. And that, Henry realized, was the moment everything changed. Not because Verity Sinclair was beautiful—though she undeniably was—but because in that moment of crisis, she had been capable, decisive, and kind when it mattered most. * * * "Your coffee." Henry blinked, the hospital memory dissolving as Lavinia Hartwell placed a steaming cup on his desk. She'd been so quiet entering his office that he hadn't heard the door. "Thank you," he said, accepting the cup. Three months into his senior year, and he still found himself disoriented by these small interactions with Lavinia. Ever since their encounter in the library, she seemed to materialize in his periphery at unexpected moments, always quiet, always observant. She lingered by his desk, clutching a folder to her chest. "The calculus study group is meeting today. Verity asked me to remind you." "Right." Henry took a sip of coffee, perfectly prepared with the exact amount of cream he preferred. Had he ever told her how he took his coffee? "Will you be there?" Something flickered across Lavinia's face, too quick to interpret. "I have a family dinner. My brother's home from college." Henry nodded, feeling an odd disappointment. Their calculus study groups were objectively more productive when Lavinia attended. She had an intuitive grasp of mathematics that even he sometimes envied. "Give him my regards," he offered, though he had never met Lavinia's brother. He knew only what Verity had mentioned in passing—that he was some kind of prodigy at Yale, the pride of the Hartwell family. "I will." Lavinia turned to leave, then paused. "Your father... I heard he's back in the hospital?" Henry stiffened. His father's health had been declining steadily since the collapse six months ago, but he didn't discuss it at school. Image management, his father would call it. Never let them see weakness. "Just tests," he said dismissively. Lavinia studied him, her gaze disconcertingly perceptive. "If you miss any assignments because of hospital visits, I have notes you can borrow." Before Henry could respond, she slipped out, closing the door with barely a sound. He stared at the space she had occupied, unsettled by her offer. Not by the offer itself, but by the fact that she had noticed what he worked so hard to conceal—that his perfect academic record was becoming harder to maintain as hospital visits consumed more of his time. His phone buzzed with a text from Verity: *Still at the hospital? Need company?* A smile tugged at his lips despite his fatigue. This was another change since his father's collapse—Verity's steady presence during hospital vigils, bringing him coffee and conversation, occasionally falling asleep against his shoulder in uncomfortable waiting room chairs. *Just left. Heading to school now.* he replied. Three dots appeared, then: *Good. Missed you this morning. Save me a seat at lunch?* Something warm unfurled in his chest. *Always.* Henry slipped his phone into his pocket and gathered his books. As he headed toward the economics classroom, he caught sight of Lavinia at her locker, head bent over a textbook, seemingly oblivious to the chaos of the hallway around her. A strand of brown hair had escaped her practical ponytail, and she absently tucked it behind her ear as she turned a page. He considered stopping, perhaps thanking her properly for the coffee and the unexpectedly thoughtful offer of notes. But the bell rang, and the moment passed as students flooded the hallway. Later, he told himself, and continued toward his class. * * * Verity was already at their usual lunch table when Henry arrived, her golden head bent in conversation with several members of the debate team. She glanced up as he approached, her smile widening, and she immediately shifted to make space beside her. "There you are," she said warmly as he set down his tray. "How was the hospital?" Henry shrugged, keeping his voice low. "Same as always. More tests, inconclusive results." Verity squeezed his arm gently. "I'm sorry. Is there anything I can do?" This was the Verity that so few people saw—not just the dazzling exterior that everyone admired, but the genuinely compassionate person beneath. It was this duality that had captivated Henry from the moment she'd saved his father's life. "You're already doing it," he told her honestly. Her smile softened into something more intimate, and for a brief, dizzying moment, Henry thought she might lean in closer. But then someone called her name from across the cafeteria, breaking the spell. "Student council emergency," she explained apologetically, gathering her things. "Prom committee drama. I should handle it before it escalates." "Of course," Henry nodded, masking his disappointment. "Go save the day." Verity laughed, touching his shoulder lightly before hurrying away. Henry watched her progress across the cafeteria, drawing glances and greetings as she passed. Even among Westlake's wealthy, privileged student body, Verity Sinclair stood out—not just for her beauty, but for the effortless charisma that made everyone want to be in her orbit. "She's something else, isn't she?"The week after the stalker incident passed in deliberate silence. Henry Wynthorne made no attempt to follow Lavinia Hartwell’s evening routines, telling himself he’d done enough damage simply by being discovered. But by Thursday, the restlessness had returned—a gnawing uncertainty that pulled at him like an undertow. He found himself lingering near the office windows as five o’clock approached, watching the street below with the careful attention of someone pretending not to care. When Lavinia emerged that evening, her shoulders bore the same tired slump he’d noticed before. Something about the sight made his chest tighten with an emotion he refused to name. Without conscious decision, his feet carried him to his car. The distance he maintained was greater this time, more careful. He told himself it was prudent caution after her obvious displeasure at being followed. But the truth sat heavier in his stomach—he couldn’t bear to stop, and he couldn’t bear
The question hung between them like an accusation, and Henry felt heat rise in his cheeks. How could he explain that he’d been following her? That he’d become the kind of man who lurked in shadows, driven by impulses he couldn’t name or control?“I was nearby,” he said, the lie sitting poorly on his tongue. “Client meeting.”Lavinia’s eyes searched his face, and Henry had the uncomfortable sensation that she could see through him as easily as window glass. Her gaze moved past him to his car, parked haphazardly across the street with the driver’s door still hanging open.“In a residential neighborhood? At eight o’clock at night?”“Lavinia—”“How long have you been following me, Henry?”The directness of the question stole his prepared excuses. She stood there in the harsh glow of the store’s fluorescent lights, her grocery bag still clutched against her chest, waiting for an answer he couldn’t give without revealing more about him
The following Tuesday arrived wrapped in the kind of October chill that crept through wool coats and settled in bones. Henry had spent the better part of the week fighting the urge to repeat his Tuesday evening surveillance, telling himself it had been a moment of temporary madness brought on by Uncle Peter’s revelation about the emerald set. Rational men didn’t follow their former fiancées through city streets. Rational men respected boundaries.But Tuesday evening found him parked across from Sterling & Associates at half past seven, his hands gripping the steering wheel with white-knuckled determination to simply drive away. The rational part of his mind catalogued all the reasons this was inappropriate: Lavinia had made her wishes clear, he had no right to monitor her movements, and Verity was expecting his call about their dinner plans.The irrational part—the part that had been growing stronger each day—noted that the streets weren’t entirely safe after dark,
She walked with purpose through the financial district, her heels clicking against the pavement in a rhythm that was distinctly hers. When she turned onto a quieter residential street, Henry had to duck behind a parked car to avoid being seen, his heart hammering with the absurdity of it all. What was he doing? This was madness. Lavinia Hartwell was a grown woman perfectly capable of taking care of herself. She’d made that abundantly clear. But he couldn’t seem to stop. She stopped at a small convenience store wedged between a dry cleaner and a flower shop, the kind of place that stayed open late for the neighborhood’s working population. Through the large windows, Henry watched her move through the narrow aisles, her selections sparse: instant noodles, canned soup, a bottle of headache medicine. The fluorescent lights overhead cast harsh shadows under her eyes, making her look younger and older simultaneously. When she
The afternoon light had begun its slow retreat from the windows of Wynthorne Enterprises when Henry found himself standing at his office door, watching Lavinia Hartwell pack her things with the same methodical precision she brought to everything else. Her movements were economical, purposeful—no wasted motion, no lingering glances around the space that had been hers for nearly five years. “The Morrison contract revisions are on your desk,” she said without looking up, her voice carrying that polite distance that had become her default tone with him. “I’ve flagged the sections that need your attention.” “Thank you.” The words felt inadequate, but what else could he say? That he’d spent the better part of the week finding excuses to walk past her temporary workspace? That the sight of her empty office next to his felt like a missing tooth he couldn’t stop probing with his tongue? His phone buzzed against his desk. Verity’s name flashed on t
“By work? Or by her?” Henry couldn’t bring himself to lie. “I keep thinking I should call her. Just to check in.” “But you promised yourself you’d give her space,” Verity finished knowingly. “How did you—” “Because I know you, Henry. You’re honorable to a fault, even when it makes you miserable.” That evening, Henry stood in his penthouse apartment, staring at Lavinia’s contact information on his phone. His finger hovered over the call button for ten full minutes before he finally set the device aside, honoring his commitment to respect her wishes despite the growing certainty that something fundamental was missing from his life. The next afternoon found Henry on the Hartwells’ doorstep, armed with the excuse of retrieving a project file Lavinia might have accidentally taken. Diana Hartwell greeted him with excessive warmth, ushering him into their modes