INICIAR SESIÓNFor a heartbeat, I couldn’t breathe.
Daniel Logan.
The boy 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?”
He hesitated, just for a fraction of a second, and I caught it. His eyes flicked toward the envelope on my desk, the one with the words that had haunted me since last night.
CHOOSE YOUR SIDE, JANE.
My pulse quickened. “You know something,” I whispered.
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.
By nightfall, I forced myself to leave the office. The streets were quiet now, shadows stretching long across the pavement. I pulled my coat tighter and hurried toward the subway.
That’s when I felt it.
The sensation of being watched.
I glanced across the street.
A man stood under a flickering streetlight, his face hidden in shadow. He didn’t move. He didn’t speak. He just watched me.
A chill ran down my spine.
I quickened my pace, my heart hammering. When I looked back again, he was gone.
But in my pocket, the envelope felt heavier than ever.
Someone else was in this game. Someone was watching me.
And I didn’t know if Daniel Logan was here to protect me… or destroy me.
“This isn’t a threat,” Aaron had said. “It’s an execution.”Those words followed me into the building.They clung to my skin, my breath, and my thoughts as I pushed past the broken entrance and stepped inside.The building smelled like old smoke and wet concrete.That was the first thing that hit me as I stepped inside – not fire, not danger, but memory. Burned paper. Rusted metal. A place that had already died once and refused to stay buried.My pulse thudded in my ears as I moved deeper into the structure, every footstep echoing too loudly. The flashlight in my hand trembled, cutting through dust and shadows. This was the building Pierce was supposed to destroy again.The past, erased twice.I swallowed and checked my phone. No signal. Of course.The investigator had stayed outside, insisting this part was too risky. I hadn’t argued. Some truths felt like they were meant to be faced alone.That was when I saw the gasoline cans.Three of them. Bright red. Carefully lined up near the
I told my father I would be back.The words tasted hollow as I said them, like a promise made with fingers crossed behind my back. He lay there in the hospital bed, smaller than I remembered, his eyes tired but sharp with fear.He nodded, squeezing my hand as if he wanted to hold me there, to keep me from walking straight into whatever fire Pierce was planning next.“I need to stop him,” I said quietly. My father swallowed. “Be careful, Jane.”I didn’t trust myself to answer, so I just turned and left.The moment the hospital doors slid shut behind me, the weight crashed down again. Pierce is planning another fire. The words replayed in my head, over and over, like a match striking again and again, refusing to go out.I should have gone straight to Daniel.That was the logical choice. He had the resources. The connections. The experience of fighting Pierce and surviving it. And yet, as I stood in the parking lot, keys shaking in my hand, doubt crept in.What if Pierce was right?What
Daniel frowned slightly. “That was your dad, right? What did he say?”I looked at him, feeling the air shift around us, heavy with the weight of everything unsaid.“He wants to talk,” I whispered. “He says he needs to tell me the truth.”Daniel then nodded. “You should. I’ll go with you.”I shook my head. “No. I need to do this alone.”He opened his mouth to argue, but I lifted a hand, stopping him. My chest tightened as the words pushed out of me, low and shaky.“Daniel… you’re still hiding something from me.”His face fell. “Jane…”“No,” I said softly. “Don’t deny it. I can feel it. And whatever it is… it’s sitting between us like a wall I can’t climb.”He swallowed hard, guilt flickering across his eyes.“This thing with my mother, with Pierce, with
The confusion clung to me like fog as Daniel and I stood in the middle of my living room, staring at the sheet of paper lying on my desk – the missing page.The one someone had broken into my home to deliver. A message. A threat. A warning. I didn’t know which.My pulse hammered. Daniel stepped closer, gently touching my arm. “Jane… we should read it.”I wasn’t ready. I was terrified of whatever truth waited on that page. But I nodded, because we had already gone too far to turn back.I picked it up with trembling fingers.My mother’s handwriting, the soft, looping cursive I recognized from childhood notes tucked into lunchboxes and birthday cards, stared back at me.And from the very first sentence, my world cracked open.The missing page explained everything. Everything I was never supposed to know. Everything that destroyed my family long before I understood there was anything to break.I sank onto the sofa as the words burned into me:“If the warehouse ever goes up in flames, it w
The torn edge of the missing page haunted me through the night.I kept staring at the envelope, at my mother’s handwriting, at the way the letter ended mid-sentence, as if she had been interrupted, as if someone suddenly came into the room, as if she never got the chance to finish.By morning, my head ached from piecing together fragments that made no sense. One thing was clear: the missing page mattered. It wasn’t just lost. Someone took it.Someone who didn’t want me to read it.I grabbed my car keys, determined to confront the only person alive who might know what had been written – my father.I had barely pulled out of my driveway when my phone rang.Daniel.For a moment, my heart stalled. Since his collapse in the interrogation facility, every call from his number made my stomach twist.I answered quickly.“Daniel? Are you okay?”His voice was steadier than before, but still soft. “Jane… I’m out. They cleared me temporarily, said I’m stable enough to go home as long as I check in
The envelope sat in my palm like something alive, pulsing with secrets I wasn’t sure I wanted to know. Mrs. Calloway’s words still echoed through my head.“Your father wanted you to have this.”I stood there in her office, unable to speak, unable to even breathe normally. My hands were shaking as I stared at the envelope’s edges, yellowed, soft, and familiar.My mother’s handwriting.I knew it instantly. I’d recognize those looping curves anywhere. She used to write little notes and tuck them in my lunchbox. Have courage, sweetheart. You shine everywhere you go. Never let fear decide your future.I swallowed hard.“My mother wrote this?” My voice cracked.Mrs. Calloway gave a slow nod, her eyes unreadable. “Your father gave it to me years ago. Told me to protect it. Told me to give it to you only… when the past caught up.”“When the past caught up?” I repeated, stunned. “What does that even…”But I stopped myself. I didn’t want another word from her. Not after what she’d confessed. No







