LOGINFor a heartbeat, I couldn’t breathe.
Daniel Logan.
The man who once swore I was his future, the man who shattered that promise without explanation. The ghost I had spent years trying to bury now stood in my office like he had every right to.
I gripped the edge of my desk, my knuckles white. “You’ve got to be kidding me.”
His lips curved, but it wasn’t a smile. More like a mask, calculated, professional. “It’s been a long time, Jane.”
Too long. Eight years of silence, and then he thought he could walk back into my world?
I swallowed the lump in my throat, anger sparking. “What are you doing here?”
Daniel stepped inside, closing the door behind him. The sound echoed in the dim, powerless office. His suit was sleek, his shoes polished to a mirror shine, every inch the billionaire I’d read about in magazines but never allowed myself to imagine in person.
“I heard your nonprofit was in trouble,” he said.
The audacity. “So what? You came to gloat?”
“No,” he said, his tone sharp, almost defensive. “I came to help.”
A bitter laugh escaped me. “Help? The last time you said you’d be there for me, you disappeared without a word. Forgive me if I don’t jump at the offer.”
For the first time, his mask cracked. His jaw tightened. His eyes, still impossibly blue, softened in a way that made my chest ache. “Jane, it wasn’t what you thought.”
“Don’t.” I cut him off, my voice shaking. “You don’t get to rewrite history just because you’re rich now.”
Silence filled the space between us, heavy and suffocating.
The truth was, seeing him again hurt. It wasn’t just anger; it was memory. The smell of summer grass from our hometown. The way he used to hold my hand was like it was the only thing tethering him to the world. The whispered plans about escaping, building a life together.
And then the betrayal, the day he left without a goodbye.
I forced myself to stand taller, hiding the quiver in my body. “I don’t need your charity, Daniel. I can figure this out on my own.”
His gaze swept over the darkened office, the eviction notice still taped to the door. “Really?”
The word stung because he wasn’t wrong.
I crossed my arms, defensive. “Why now? After all these years, why show up today?”
Daniel didn’t deny it. His silence was answer enough.
Before I could demand more, the office door burst open.
“Jane?”
It was Sophia, my younger sister, her arms full of grocery bags. Her eyes widened when she spotted Daniel. “Wait a second. Is that…”
“Yes,” I snapped, not giving her the satisfaction.
Sophia’s jaw dropped. “Holy crap. Daniel Logan. In our office. Looking like…” Her gaze flicked over him, impressed despite herself. “…like he stepped out of a Wall Street magazine.”
Daniel gave her a polite nod. “Sophia. You’ve grown.”
Sophia set the bags down with a dramatic thud. “And you’ve got nerve.” She crossed her arms, glaring at him. “After what you did to my sister, you don’t belong here.”
I should have defended myself, but I couldn’t. Sophia was saying everything I didn’t have the strength to voice out loud.
Daniel’s shoulders stiffened. “I didn’t come here to hurt her.”
“Too late,” Sophia shot back.
The air between them crackled, and I suddenly felt like a spectator in my own life.
“Both of you, stop,” I said finally, my voice raw. “I can’t do this right now.”
Sophia’s eyes softened when she looked at me, catching the exhaustion I couldn’t hide. She squeezed my hand before lowering her voice. “Just… don’t let him fool you again, Jane.”
With that, she grabbed her bag and stormed out, leaving me and Daniel in suffocating silence once more.
Daniel stepped closer, his voice low. “She’s right to hate me. I hate myself for what I did. But whether you want to admit it or not, you need help. And I’m offering it.”
I shook my head. “Nothing comes free with men like you.”
“I’m not asking for anything,” he said firmly. “Not now.”
His words carried a weight I couldn’t understand. At least, not now, as though a price waited for me in the future.
I turned away, unable to look at him. My eyes landed on the envelope again, still sitting on my desk like a curse.
I grabbed it and shoved it toward him. “Do you know who sent this?”
He glanced at the message just once, and his jaw tightened. “I might.”
My heart slammed in my chest. “Then tell me.”
“I can’t. Not yet.”
I wanted to scream. “You show up out of nowhere, act like you’re here to save me, and then you dangle half-truths? No. Get out, Daniel. Just get out.”
He looked at me for a long moment, his expression unreadable, then turned and left without another word.
I sank into my chair, trembling.
Sophia was right. Letting Daniel back in would be a mistake, a catastrophic one.
But as I sat there in the dark, staring at the eviction notice, the swindler’s betrayal replaying in my mind, my father wasting away in the hospital, one truth gnawed at me.
I couldn’t survive this alone.
And worse, Daniel knew something about the threat in that letter.
The intercom crackled to life before I could even stand.
“Jane,” the consultant’s voice said, low and urgent, “we need to talk. Now.”
I pressed the button, my pulse racing. “Go ahead.”
“If you don’t take this offer,” he said, not wasting time, “there won’t be another one. I’ve made the calls. Doors are closing. Investors don’t wait, and they don’t circle back.”
My throat went dry.
“You’re telling me Daniel is my only option?” I asked.
“I’m telling you he’s the last,” he replied. “Walk away, and this nonprofit is finished.”
Before I could answer, the intercom chimed again, sharp and impersonal.
“Reminder,” the automated voice announced, “final eviction notice on file. Seventy-two hours remaining.”
The words hit harder than any slap.
I closed my eyes, my chest tight, Daniel’s presence still lingering like a storm that hadn’t passed. Pride told me to run. Fear told me to lock the door and pretend none of this was real.
But the faces of the kids flashed through my mind. My father’s weak smile. Everything I stood to lose.
I stared at the door Daniel had walked through.
Accept his help, and risk my heart again.
Or refuse, and lose everything I’d built.
The world didn't just explode.It vanished into a roar of white light and a wall of pressure that felt like the hand of a god flattening the earth.The sound was so immense it surpassed the capacity of human hearing, becoming a raw vibration that rattled my teeth and shook the very marrow of my bones.I felt myself lifted off my feet, weightless for a terrifying heartbeat, before being tossed through the air like a rag doll. The archives, the rows of history, the heavy ledgers, and the hidden secrets of a hundred years, were erased in a single heartbeat of fire.The "Scorched Earth" protocol was no longer a theoretical threat; it was a devastating reality.Dust, pulverized concrete, and the ancient fibers of burnt paper turned the air into a thick, choking gray soup. I hit the floor hard, the breath driven from my lungs in a sharp, agonizing burst that left me gasping for air that was no longer there.I scrambled to sit up, my head spinning
I stood over Pierce, the handgun steady in my grip, while the shattered remains of his hidden camera lay scattered on the floor like glittery teeth.The hallucinogen he’d fed me made the shadows dance, but the cold weight of the weapon anchored me to the present. Behind me, Daniel had dragged himself to a secondary terminal, his fingers dancing across a keyboard with a frantic, rhythmic intensity."It’s not enough to kill him, Jane!" Daniel shouted, his voice strained and wet. He didn't look up from the screen, his face illuminated by a harsh, flickering blue light. "If he dies now, he dies a martyr. The deepfakes stay. The lie becomes the history book."Pierce let out a low, rattling laugh from the floor, clutching his shoulder where a stray shard of glass had grazed him. "You’re too late, boy. The world has already seen the killer. They saw you in that room. They saw the sedative.""They saw a ghost!" Daniel roared, slamming his fist onto the console. "But I found the original packe
I stood at the centre of a triangle of death: Daniel bleeding out in front of me, and Pierce standing behind me, his revolver a heavy weight against the back of my skull.My mind was a storm of static, the recording of my mother’s voice still echoing in my ears.The Riley Debt. My family had been owned by his for twenty years."Do it, Jane," Pierce urged, his voice as smooth as silk. "Pull the trigger. End the man who destroyed your father. Clean the slate."I stared at Daniel. He looked so small against the towering metal shelves. His eyes were closed, his head lolling back against the oak cabinet. He looked like a man who was ready to die. My finger tightened on the trigger, the metal cold and final. But as I leaned in, the watch on the floor, the one Daniel had tossed to me flickered.The laser beam, still active, was reflecting off the polished silver plaque on the opposite wall.The plaque was an honorary award given to m
I moved through the gloom, the weight of the handgun in my pocket feeling like a lead sinker pulling at my soul.Every creak of the building's settling frame made me flinch, my thumb tracing the cold safety switch of the weapon Pierce had given me."Jane."The voice was a ragged, hollow rasp that seemed to come from the very air itself. I spun around, my heart hammering against my ribs, and raised the gun with shaking hands. The barrel wavered in the dim light of the emergency exit sign.Daniel leaned against a heavy oak filing cabinet, his silhouette swaying dangerously. He looked like a ghost that was finally fading. The shoulder of his tactical vest was dark and sodden with the blood I had drawn, and his face was a mask of gray exhaustion.He wasn't holding a gun. He wasn't even in a defensive stance. His hands were empty, held out to his sides in a gesture of total surrender."Stay back!" I screamed, the sound echoing off the cold stone walls. "I know about the contract, Daniel. I
I sat in a high-backed leather chair, my hands shaking so violently I had to tuck them under my thighs. The blood from Daniel’s shoulder was still a drying, copper-scented smear on the edge of my mother’s locket.Pierce moved with a quiet, practiced grace, pouring a glass of amber liquid from a crystal decanter. He didn't look like a villain; he looked like a man carrying the weight of the world. He set the glass on the desk in front of me, but I couldn't touch it."He’s gone, Jane," Pierce said softly, his voice full of a weary kind of grief. "My security lost him in the maintenance tunnels. He knows this building better than the architects. He’s a ghost, just like he always claimed.""He killed my father," I whispered, the words feeling like jagged stones in my mouth. I looked down at the locket. The silver heart that had been my anchor now felt like a poisoned barb. "He used me to open the vault. He used my name to hide his money."
The ballroom was no longer a place of celebration; it was a cold, high-stakes theater where I was the primary witness to my own betrayal.My legs feeling like they were made of cooling glass, watching Daniel. He was surrounded by a ring of security guards, their hands on their holsters, but it was Pierce who dominated the center of the room. Pierce looked like a man who had finally brought a criminal to justice."Check him," Pierce commanded, his voice a low, authoritative rumble.The lead guard, a man with a face like carved granite, stepped forward and forced Daniel to his knees. Daniel didn't fight, he kept his eyes on me, and searching for a spark of the trust we had built in the shadows. But all I felt was a cold, numbing hollow. The guard ripped open a hidden seam in Daniel’s tactical vest, a compartment I hadn't even known existed.He pulled out a small, glass vial. It was filled with a clear, colorless liquid that caught the blue light of th







