ログインFor 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.
Standing there, shadowed by the pale morning light, was Daniel.Only this time, his expression wasn’t gentle.It was cold. Controlled.And in his hand… he was holding another envelope.For a long, breathless moment, I couldn’t move. The air between us felt charged, tight, and humming like the space right before lightning strikes.Daniel stood just inside the doorway, his hair still damp from the rain outside, the faintest sheen of sweat on his brow.He looked exhausted, like someone who hadn’t slept in days. But there was something else too, something sharper in his eyes.He held out the envelope. “You left this in the lobby yesterday,” he said quietly.His voice was calm, careful, as if he knew how close I was to breaking.I didn’t take it. My hands were balled into fists at my sides. “What’s in it?”He hesitated. “Documents from Pierce’s board. They might help your foundation.”His tone was even, but I caught the flicker of tension in his jaw, the same one that used to appear whenev
My fingers trembled so hard I could barely hold the note.The words blurred as my tears fell onto the page, bleeding the ink into tiny blue rivers.The paper felt thin, fragile, like my entire world. My father’s hand lay limp beside it, pale against the white hospital sheet.“Dad,” I whispered, shaking his arm gently. “Dad, wake up. Please, wake up.”No response.His breathing was steady, but faint. The rhythmic beep of the monitor was the only sound filling the sterile air. I pressed the nurse call button, but my hand was shaking too badly to even hold it down.When the nurse rushed in, I stepped back, clutching the note behind me.“He’s fine,” she said after checking his vitals. “Just sleeping deeply. You should get some rest too, Miss Riley.”Rest. The word felt like a cruel joke.I nodded anyway, forcing a weak smile, and waited until she left before sinking into the chair beside him. My heart was pounding, my palms damp.He lied to protect himself.Who was he?Was it Daniel? Or P
I dashed into the hospital, where the air smelled of bleach and worry.I pushed through the corridor doors, my chest burning from the sprint up the stairs. Every step echoed in my skull.My hands were shaking so badly I nearly dropped my phone. All I could see was that text burned into my mind.“Choose, or watch him die.”“Please, please,” I whispered to no one. “Let him be okay.”When I reached my father’s room, the world tilted.He was there. Alive. Breathing. But pale, his chest rising and falling in slow, uneven rhythms. The heart monitor beeped a tired rhythm, steady but weak. A nurse looked up from her chart, startled by my entrance.“Miss Riley…”“What happened?” My voice came out strangled.“He’s stable,” she said gently. “No change since last night. But someone left this.” She pointed to the pillow beside him.My blood ran cold.A single white envelope rested against his pillow, perfectly placed, as though someone had been careful not to wake him.I moved closer, each step lo
I don’t remember walking home that night.My mind was too full, replaying my father’s words over and over, each repetition sinking like an anchor into my chest. Daniel knows… the truth about the accident.The accident. The one that broke my father’s body and left him clinging to borrowed time.The one I’d told myself was nothing more than a cruel chance. But now? Now the ground under me cracked wide open.And yet, I still couldn’t bring myself to believe Pierce was at the center of it all.It was too neat, too obvious. My gut said the truth was uglier, more complicated, and Daniel was somehow tied to it.The next morning, I buried myself in work. Or tried to. The office, usually my refuge, now felt like a trap.The eviction notice was still taped to the glass outside; I hadn’t had the heart or courage to peel it down.Inside, the place buzzed with nervous energy. Volunteers whispered in corners, throwing me uncertain looks.A couple of donors had already pulled out after hearing rumor
The city blurred outside the cab window, neon lights smearing into streaks of gold and red. My pulse hadn’t slowed since I left the nonprofit.The envelope, the report, and the photo burned against my chest like poison I couldn’t spit out.Daniel.His name had been pounding in my skull the entire ride.My father’s weak voice in the hospital bed replayed over and over: Daniel knows… the truth about the accident.And then the photo I found—the crash site, the blood on the asphalt, and that blurred silhouette that looked too much like him to ignore.I wanted to believe he wasn’t capable of that. But every new piece of evidence pulled me closer to a terrifying possibility: maybe I didn’t know Daniel at all.By the time the cab stopped in front of the high-rise on Fifth, I was shaking with anger and adrenaline.Daniel’s penthouse loomed above like some glass-and-steel fortress. Cold. Impenetrable. Perfect for a man who’d mastered secrets.I stormed through the lobby, past the doorman who b
I couldn’t shake my father’s words.He was there.Those three syllables had carved themselves into my skull, echoing every time I blinked.By morning, I was still replaying them in my mind, trying to convince myself I’d misheard, that his illness and medication had scrambled reality.But deep down, I knew he hadn’t been confused. He’d been terrified.And that terrified me.I skipped breakfast, my stomach too knotted for food, and went straight to the nonprofit office.The building felt different now. Every creak of the floorboards, every flicker of light carried a weight I hadn’t noticed before.I paused at the door, half-expecting another envelope taped to it, but this time it was clean.Inside, though, something was waiting for me.On my desk, lying like an accusation, was a plain brown envelope. No name. No address. Just sitting there.My throat went dry. My hands shook as I opened it.Inside was a single black-and-white photograph.The crash scene.Twisted metal. Shattered glass.







