LOGINDamien barely slept. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the same scene: the private café, the birthday display, Michael Ashford standing beside Selene. No, beside his ex-wife. The image irritated him more than he cared to admit, and it made no sense, because none of this should have mattered to him. He had wanted the divorce and signed the papers himself. He had made it clear that their marriage was over. So why couldn't he stop thinking about her?
He arrived at his office earlier than usual the next morning. The floor was quiet, most employees still hadn't come in, and he loosened his tie and dropped into his chair before calling his secretary. The line connected at once. "Good morning, sir." "I need more information on Michael Ashford." A brief silence followed. "Sir?" "You heard me." "Yes, sir." The call ended, and Damien turned toward the floor-to-ceiling window behind him. The city stretched out below, and normally the view helped clear his mind. A soft knock broke his concentration. His secretary stepped in carrying a tablet. "I've gathered everything available so far." Damien motioned for him to go on. "The car that picked up Mrs Vance yesterday was registered personally under Michael Ashford's name." Damien already knew that much. "What else?" The secretary glanced at the screen. "Michael Ashford cleared most of his schedule yesterday." Damien frowned. "What do you mean?" "He canceled two meetings and postponed a business lunch." The secretary hesitated, then added, "According to the timeline, his only personal activity all day was driving out to the Vance estate." The office seemed to go quieter. Damien stared at him. "You're telling me Michael Ashford personally drove across the city to pick up Selene?" "Yes, sir." It made no sense to him. Men like Michael Ashford didn't act as chauffeurs. The man ran billion-dollar companies, with entire teams working beneath him. Yet here he was, driving himself to collect a woman who, as far as Damien knew, had once worked part-time at a small bookstore. The contradiction stuck with him. "Anything else?" "No, sir." Damien dismissed him, and the secretary left, leaving the silence to settle back in. For a long moment Damien just sat there, fingers tapping slowly against the desk. When he'd first met Selene, she'd been living in a small town with no family nearby, no connections, no wealth, no influence—or so he'd believed. Yet somehow Michael Ashford was tangled up in her life now, and the more he turned it over, the less it added up. His eyes narrowed. "Who exactly are you, Selene?" Across town, at the Ashford estate, Maureen sat at the breakfast table without really eating. The food on her plate went untouched while her thoughts drifted—back to Damien. Footsteps approaching pulled her back into the room, and a servant stopped beside her chair. "Miss Maureen, Mr. Ashford would like to see you in his study." Her grip tightened around her coffee cup. Her father rarely summoned anyone for casual conversation, and the unease set in immediately. "Did he say why?" "No, miss." The servant lowered her head respectfully. "He only asked that you come right away." Maureen nodded, and once the servant left, what little appetite she'd had vanished completely. Something told her this conversation wouldn't be pleasant. A few minutes later she stood outside Richard Ashford's study, where most of their old arguments had started. She knocked softly. "Come in." She took a steady breath and pushed the door open. Richard Ashford sat behind his desk with a thick file in front of him, and the moment she saw it, something in her chest sank. "Sit." She obeyed. Neither of them spoke for several seconds; Richard simply studied her the way he always did when he was trying to work something out. Finally he leaned back in his chair. "Did you sleep?" "A little." "You cried." It wasn't a question. Maureen looked away, and Richard sighed quietly. Years ago she'd always been terrible at hiding her emotions, apparently that hadn't changed. His gaze shifted to the file. "After you went upstairs last night, someone came to see me." Maureen's stomach tightened as he opened the folder. "A private investigator." The room felt colder all at once. Three years ago, after Maureen disappeared, Richard had hired investigators to find her—she knew that; her brothers had told her countless times, but she'd never imagined the search would drag on this long. Richard pulled out several documents. "I hired him not long after you left." His voice stayed calm. "Most investigators eventually gave up." A bitter smile crossed his face. "This one didn't." Maureen lowered her eyes, guilt settling quietly in her chest. "For three years I got nothing useful," Richard continued, fingers resting on the report. "Then last night, I finally got answers." Without warning, he slid one of the pages across the desk until it stopped in front of her. Maureen's heart nearly stopped. Printed clearly across the page were two words: Selene Vance. The name felt strange now, like something out of another life. Richard watched her carefully. "Would you like to explain why my daughter spent three years pretending to be someone else?" Maureen stared at the paper as memories flooded back. "What happened, Maureen?" Richard's voice had softened. He leaned forward. "Was being an Ashford really that terrible?" "No." The answer came immediately, because it was true. Despite everything, she still loved her family so much. Richard frowned. "Then why?" Maureen took a slow breath. "You wouldn't understand." "Try me." A dry laugh escaped her. "You said the same thing three years ago." The memory came rushing back, the one that changed everything. Richard had wanted her back in medical school, but Maureen wanted freedom. Neither of them had been willing to listen, and neither had been willing to bend, so eventually she packed her bags and left. Neither of them had imagined it would be three years before they saw each other again. Richard's expression grew complicated; he remembered that day too. "I wasn't trying to control your life." "Maybe not intentionally." Maureen finally lifted her eyes. "But you'd already planned out every year of my future." Silence filled the room. "You chose my schools. You chose my tutors. You chose my internships." Her voice stayed calm. "I woke up one day and realized I was living a life that belonged to everyone except me." Richard had no immediate response, for once. Maureen looked back down at the report, at the name staring up at her. Selene Vance—a name she'd once believed would save her. Instead it had become attached to some of the most painful memories of her life. Richard finally broke the silence. "Who was Selene Vance?" This time Maureen answered. " A girl who thought she could start over if nobody knew who she was, she thought if she worked hard enough, loved hard enough, sacrificed enough." her voice faltered "things would eventually work out." Pain flickered across her face. Richard's brows furrowed slowly. For the first time, he understood there was far more behind this story than a simple change of name. Maureen looked directly at him, and the sadness in her eyes caught him off guard. "Selene Vance doesn't exist anymore." The room went silent, but this time she wasn't dodging the question—she was telling the truth. "Because the person who carried that name spent years trying to become everything someone else wanted." A bitter smile touched her lips. "And in the end, she forgot who she was." Richard stared at his daughter, unsettled by those words. They didn't sound like an explanation. They sounded like a wound—one that had never healed. He looked back down at the report, eyes moving across page after page: addresses, employment records, rental agreements, medical records. The investigator had documented everything. Then something caught his attention—a name, appearing again and again throughout the file. Richard's expression changed, and his eyes narrowed. Maureen noticed immediately, and a terrible feeling settled in her stomach. He turned another page, and the same name appeared. Slowly, he closed the file, and the study fell completely silent. His gaze lifted to meet hers, and for several seconds neither of them spoke. Then Richard asked quietly, "Who is Damien Vance?"Michael jumped up the second the restroom door started to swing open.Maureen came out looking really pale and a little shaky on her feet. Both brothers were on her in a flash, Michael grabbing her arm gently, while Ethan shoved a bottle of water into her hand like it might fix everything."Sit down," Michael said."I'm fine.""You're not fine. You almost vomited your intestines""I just got nauseous for a second. It's gone now." She took the chair Ethan pulled out for her, mostly so they'd stop hovering. "Can you guys please stop looking at me like that?""No," Michael said."Absolutely not," Ethan agreed right away.She sipped the water a few times and waited for them to relax. They didn't. The two of them just stood there with the same worried faces, and even though it was kind of annoying, it was also the nicest thing she'd felt in a long time."Ethan." She looked up at him. "Weren't you supposed to be in Singapore?"His face lit up. "Finally, a question that doesn't involve calli
Aurora laughed softly as Damien pulled her closer on the couch. for the first time in years, Damien felt genuinely at peace. Aurora rested comfortably against his shoulder, scrolling through old photos on her phone, until she held the screen up to him."Look at this one."He glanced down. It was a photo from their teenage years. Aurora was grinning at the camera while a younger version of him stood beside her looking thoroughly unamused."You always had terrible timing with cameras," he said.Aurora gasped. "I looked adorable.""You still do."Her cheeks went pink before she could think of a response. Then footsteps approached from the hallway, and Diana Vance walked in carrying her morning coffee. The moment she saw them sitting together, quiet satisfaction crossed her face."Good morning, Aunt Diana," Aurora said, sitting up straighter.Diana smiled and settled into the armchair across from them, her eyes moving between the two of them with something close to approval. "You know, th
The question hung in the air between them, heavier than anything Richard had said so far.Maureen forgot how to breathe for a second. She had known this moment was coming the instant her father started flipping through the report. She'd known he would find the name eventually. She just hadn't expected it to happen this fast.Richard waited behind his desk, calm and quiet. He wasn't raising his voice. Somehow that made it worse than if he had.Maureen looked down at the file between them. Damien's name was everywhere in it—rental agreements, hospital records, employment papers. Whoever had put this report together hadn't missed a thing."Maureen." Her father's voice softened. "Who is he?"She swallowed hard. For the first time since walking into this study, she wanted to bolt for the door—not because she was scared of Richard, but because she wasn't ready to dig up any of it again.Richard studied her, and something in his expression shifted. "Did he matter that much to you?"The quest
Damien barely slept. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the same scene: the private café, the birthday display, Michael Ashford standing beside Selene. No, beside his ex-wife. The image irritated him more than he cared to admit, and it made no sense, because none of this should have mattered to him. He had wanted the divorce and signed the papers himself. He had made it clear that their marriage was over. So why couldn't he stop thinking about her?He arrived at his office earlier than usual the next morning. The floor was quiet, most employees still hadn't come in, and he loosened his tie and dropped into his chair before calling his secretary. The line connected at once."Good morning, sir.""I need more information on Michael Ashford."A brief silence followed. "Sir?""You heard me.""Yes, sir."The call ended, and Damien turned toward the floor-to-ceiling window behind him. The city stretched out below, and normally the view helped clear his mind.A soft knock broke his concent
The moment the black Escalade rolled through the towering iron gates of the Ashford estate, Maureen felt her chest tighten. She had been gone for three long years.The familiar fountain stood proudly in the center of the circular driveway, illuminated by soft lights. Beyond it stretched the grand mansion she had once called home. Every stone and every carefully manicured garden looked exactly as she remembered.Nothing had actually changed, but yet it felt so different to her.The vehicle had barely come to a stop before several servants hurried out of the mansion. One look at her stepping out of the car was all it took."Miss Maureen!" The cry came from Mrs. Lewis, the elderly housekeeper who had practically helped raise her.The older woman rushed down the stairs with tears already streaming down her cheeks."Oh my goodness... it really is you."Before Maureen could react, she found herself wrapped in a tight embrace. The familiar scent of lavender nearly broke her. For years, she h
Aurora had not only been Damien's first love — she was the daughter of a longtime family friend of the Vances, a connection that guaranteed her a seamless invitation to a private dinner at the estate. Even so, the mood at the table remained suffocating.Damien sat rigid, a hard crease pressed between his brows, his food untouched. His mind kept circling back to the same image: his wife walking out beside Michael Ashford without a single backward glance. What gnawed at him most was the contradiction of it. She had practically begged him to reconsider the divorce, and then turned around and left with another man.Gerald Vance set down his cutlery and swept a confused look around the table. "Where is she? Why hasn't she come down?"Damien kept his eyes on his plate, his voice flat and clipped. "We've already signed the paperwork. I intend to finalize the divorce as quickly as possible."Gerald went completely still, his expression caving into open shock. "Why would you do that after ever







