로그인Cassie pulled Rose tightly into her arms, holding her as if she could shield her from everything waiting outside those walls. “Rose, sweetheart… please go upstairs and wait for me in your room, okay?”
The little girl hesitated, her brows knitting, the innocence in her eyes quickly flooding with fear. “Are they coming for you? Daddy said you did something bad. Is it true?”
Cassie’s heart plunged, a painful weight settling so quickly it stole her breath. Across the living room, Adrian and Corinne stiffened.
Julius stood by the far corner near the staircase, his jaw tight, fury radiating off him as he glared at the mention of his brother’s name. But Cassie steadied herself. She had been a mother far longer than she had been a victim.
“You don’t have to worry about anything,” she whispered, brushing a curl behind Rose’s ear. “And I might be gone for a little while… but you told me you wanted to stay with Daddy and Aunt Sienna for now, right?”
Rose nodded twice, small, hesitant dips of her head, and Cassie felt the heartbreak lodge even deeper. She swallowed it, forcing a gentle smile. “Good girl. Go upstairs. We’ll talk about it later, okay?”
She didn’t know if she’d ever get to have that talk. But she had at least this moment.
Rose ran up the steps, her footsteps echoing softly through the house, just as a firm knock rattled the front door.
Adrian moved to answer, but Cassie lifted a hand. “I’ll go.”
Still, they followed—Adrian on her right, Corinne on her left, Julius lingering behind them like a silent wall of support.
Two uniformed officers stood on the doorstep, their expressions apologetic but professional. “Are you Cassie Monroe?” one asked.
Cassie nodded slowly.
The other officer unfolded a document, the paper catching the light from the foyer chandelier. “Ma’am, we have a warrant for your arrest on charges of assault resulting in miscarriage.”
The world went silent.
So Frederick had actually done it. He’d taken it this far. The realization hit her like a physical blow, her blood turning cold as ice.
He believed she had intentionally harmed Sienna. After everything, after all the years, he believed that of her.
She remembered the day she first brought Sienna home, back when the girl had been fragile and frightened. Frederick hadn’t even wanted to look at her, but Cassie had insisted, encouraged, defended her.
She had helped Sienna find a place in their lives… and somehow Sienna had taken hers.
Now she was being framed for something she didn’t do.
Corinne’s face drained of color. “This is outrageous. Frederick filed this? My own son?” Her voice trembled with disbelief and disgust. “I raised better than this. Or at least I thought I did.”
“I’m sorry, ma’am,” the officer said quietly. “We’re just executing the order.”
Cassie shook her head, tears flooding her vision. “This is a mistake,” she choked out. “I didn’t hurt her. She grabbed me—I only pulled away. I didn’t attack her, I didn’t push her. I swear it.”
Adrian stepped forward, his presence suddenly towering, voice edged with restrained fury. “Nobody touches her. Not in this house. Not until I talk to my son.”
He pulled out his phone, his tone sharpening like a blade. “Frederick. Two officers just arrived for Cassie. What the hell have you done?”
Cassie could hear Frederick’s voice faintly through the speaker—cold, clipped, defensive. “I told you not to take my daughter to her,” he said. “I’m willing to let it go if she signs a waiver stating she’ll never see Rose again.”
Cassie felt her knees weaken. She might have collapsed if Corinne hadn’t quickly moved to her side, wrapping her arms around Cassie’s shaking shoulders. “It’s okay, dear,” she whispered. “We’re right here. We’ll fix this.”
Adrian’s voice dropped lower, a warning, quiet but lethal. “Withdraw the charges, Frederick. Now. Or I’ll contact the silent shareholder and have them pull their stake.”
Cassie stiffened. That silent shareholder… was her. Those shares were meant for Rose someday. Never for destruction. Never for this.
A beat of silence passed on the line.
“You heard me,” Adrian continued. “Fix this. Today. You’ve humiliated your wife enough. I won’t let you ruin her life.”
On the other end, Frederick exhaled sharply, his voice cold as ice. “This is between me and her. She knows what she has to do.”
“And I am your father,” Adrian snapped. “If these officers drag her out of this home, you’ll be preparing my funeral next.”
Frederick scoffed. “All I want is my daughter. Why are you threatening me? If you want to die, that’s on you. And if your precious shareholder wants to withdraw, let them. But Cassie will not take my daughter.”
Cassie felt something inside her break. An emotional snap she wasn’t sure she could recover from. Twenty-two years of knowing him. Seven years of marriage. And this was the man he had become.
“It’s okay, Dad,” she whispered. “Let him have Rose.”
“What? No.” Adrian turned to her, stunned. “You are her mother.”
“And she’s your granddaughter,” Cassie said quietly. “I know you’ll protect her.”
Regret washed over Adrian’s face. He wished he had never named Frederick CEO, had never handed him the company’s reins. But Cassie had never complained, never once. Maybe that had been the real mistake.
“I’ll bring Rose down now,” he said at last. “Tell the officers to—”
“No,” Frederick interrupted over the phone. “Let the officers bring her. I don’t trust you, Dad. Not when you’re taking Cassie’s side.”
His words splintered Cassie’s heart completely, and she yelled for her daughter. “Rose, come down here, please.”
Rose appeared at the top of the stairs, eyes wide, face pale. Cassie knelt as her daughter rushed into her arms.
“Rose,” she whispered, smoothing her hair back. “These officers… they’re taking you to Daddy. I’m so sorry I won’t see you for a little while.”
Tears gathered in Rose’s eyes. “Why, Mommy?”
Cassie swallowed the pain burning in her throat. “You said you wanted to live with Daddy and Aunt Sienna for now… but listen to me.” She held Rose’s cheeks gently, forcing a brave smile she didn’t feel. “I will come back for you. Tell that to your daddy.”
For the first time since all this started, she felt certainty. Not in Frederick, not in justice, but in the truth. Evil never lasted forever. She would gather proof. She would expose the lies. And she would return for her daughter.
The moment Rose disappeared with the officers, Cassie’s strength shattered. She crumbled onto the floor, sobbing. “Am I a bad mother? Was it wrong to love him?”
Julius dropped beside her, pulling her into a steady, grounding embrace. “Cass,” he murmured, fury simmering beneath his calm, “my brother is the fool. And he will regret this.”
Adrian exhaled heavily. “You should’ve let me destroy him. We created the man he is today.”
Cassie shook her head, lifting her tear-streaked face. “What about Julius? He’s a Jones too. And what about Rose? If the company falls, her future falls with it.”
Corinne stepped forward and gathered Cassie into her arms. “After everything he’s done,” she whispered, “you still think of this family. That alone proves he never deserved you. I’ll help push the divorce through… but Cassie, what’s the plan?”
Thank you for your support. It’s truly what fuels me and keeps me writing. I had planned to start updating on Monday but couldn’t, as seeing how excited you are for more chapters gave me the push I needed.
Franklin typed back immediately. ‘Don't. Seriously. You need to be resting. Both of you.’He sent the same message, in slightly different words, to Scarlet. After everything he had just watched his wife go through, every moment of it still vivid and sitting close to the surface, his respect for pregnant women had expanded in ways he didn't entirely have language for yet.It wasn't that he hadn't respected them before. It was that he understood now, in his body rather than just his head, like watching and reading and being told simply could not have given him.✧༺♥༻✧Hours later, when Cassie woke up and had eaten enough to put some color back in her face and some steadiness back in her hands, the squad arrived.They came in with the particular energy of people who have been somewhere else, somewhere good, and redirected themselves the moment the news landed."We were at Lila's when your message came through," Thelma said, still slightly breathless from moving quickly, her face bright wi
Everything moved quickly after that. She was taken through to the labor ward with Franklin right beside her, his hand finding hers and staying there, his voice low and steady in her ear even when his own heart was clearly hammering away behind his ribs.He said whatever came to him, that she was doing so well, that he was right there, that she was the strongest person he had ever known, and whether or not any of it actually helped, the fact that his voice was there helped, and she held onto it.The gynecologist looked up at one point, her tone matter-of-fact but not unkind. "If you want to come see, you can. Come watch your baby arrive."Franklin moved forward without hesitating, stepping around to where he could see, and the moment the baby's head appeared, that small, perfect, impossible crown of life pressing into the world for the first time, the room tipped sideways.Franklin grabbed the nearest surface.The dizziness that took him was total and immediate, the kind that doesn't n
Cassie's whole face lighted up, and for just a moment she felt the pull of it so strongly, the urge to get up, to get in the car, to go and hold that baby and sit with Lila and be present for it the way she always tried to be for the people she loved.But she felt the weight of herself when she moved, felt it in her back and her hips and the deep, settled heaviness of a body that was carrying two lives and had been doing so for a very long time now.The twins could come any day. Before the due date, or after it. There was no reliable way to know, and Franklin had been clear, in that gentle but completely immovable way of his, that he wanted her close to the hospital.Close enough that there was no scrambling, no last-minute panic, no unnecessary distance between her and the place she needed to be when the time came.She wouldn't have made it anyway. And even if some stubborn part of her had decided to try, Franklin would have stood in the doorway with his arms folded and that look on
Cassie didn't hesitate. She rose from her seat, moved into the aisle, and pulled Sienna into her arms right there in front of everyone, in the middle of all of it, without caring even slightly about the setting or the timing or the hundred pairs of eyes watching the whole thing unfold."Yeah," she said quietly. "It's me."Sienna came apart. Not gracefully, not in the composed and photogenic way people sometimes cried at weddings, but fully and completely, the way you cried when something you had been carrying for a very long time finally set itself down.Her shoulders shook and she held on to Cassie like she was afraid she might disappear."I'm so sorry," she managed between breaths. "I wanted to call you so many times to apologize after my sins caught up to me. So many times, Cassie. But I was scared you wouldn't want to hear from me."Cassie held her for a moment before drawing back just enough to look at her properly. "I forgive you, Sienna. You want to know why?"Sienna pulled bac
"Don't worry about Rose," Cassie said, and the warmth in her voice was the uncomplicated kind, the kind that doesn't ask anything in return. "I'll talk to her. She's my daughter too."Giselle's smile came up slow and genuine, reaching her eyes like she’s been carrying something heavy and someone has just offered to help hold it. "Thank you, Cassie. Again."Cassie waved her hand as though the gratitude was more than the moment required. "It's nothing," she said simply, and meant it."I have to agree with Nathan," Sebastian said from the corner of the room where he'd been settled comfortably with Scarlet, his voice carrying the easy, unhurried warmth of a man who has been watching something unfold all evening and has finally decided to say what he's been thinking."You really are something else at this."Scarlet nodded without hesitation, her expression bright and genuine. "She deserves an actual award for bringing this many people together in one room and making it feel like it was alwa
"Sienna is still your sister," Cassie said, and her voice carried the particular steadiness of a woman who has already done the hard work of making peace with something and isn't going to pretend otherwise."Just the same way Frederick is still Franklin's twin. I knew that before I ever let you get close to me, so go ahead. Say what you need to say."Violet took a breath. "My mom called," she began, her hands folding together in her lap. "She said Sienna has changed. A lot. And even though she'd been holding on, waiting for Fred, she finally agreed to an arranged marriage. A businessman out in San Francisco."She paused, like the next part needed a moment to be said properly. "The wedding is next week. And she asked me to be her maid of honor again."The room went quiet in that full, weighted way it does when something lands that nobody was entirely braced for. Not a bad quiet, just the kind that comes when people are genuinely processing something and don't want to rush past it.Cassi
Franklin kept one hand loose on the steering wheel while the other tapped lightly against his thigh, the city lights streaking across the windshield in long, blurred ribbons of gold and white as the car cut through the afternoon traffic, Sebastian sitting rigid in the passenger seat and Tristan q
“Nathan… is it true?”Debbie’s voice trembled with fragile hope, her eyes searching his face as though the entire world might rearrange itself depending on what he said next.There was vulnerability there, raw and unguarded, and for a fraction of a second it almost looked like Nathan might falter u
The nightclub’s VIP booth pulsed with low golden light, a stark contrast to the storm that had been hanging around Chicago ever since Cassie disappeared.Sienna sat curled into the velvet seat between Audrey and Pearl, a glass of champagne sweating in her hand.She finally felt free to breathe here
Frederick’s expression hardened, the muscles in his jaw tightening as though he were swallowing shards of glass.The humiliation clung to him like a second skin. Sebastian hadn’t just challenged him. He had stripped him bare in front of teachers, parents, security, and half the schoolyard.He could







