LOGINFor a long, jagged moment, neither of them spoke.
The silence in the room pressed heavy against my chest, suffocating.
Gabriel’s stare didn’t waver. It was locked on me, unrelenting, sharp in a way I hadn’t seen since before the crash. The old Gabriel, the one who could slice through boardrooms with a single look, was standing in front of me now—only this time, his blade wasn’t aimed at an opponent across the table.
It was aimed at me.
Finally, he turned away. Just slightly. Enough to let out a slow breath that rattled with something between restraint and anger.
“I need air.”
And then he was gone—out the door, down the hall, his footsteps echoing until the sound faded entirely.
The silence he left behind was worse than his suspicion.
I sank into the chair, my hands trembling as I pressed them hard into my face. He didn’t believe me. Not really. Every word I had said had bounced off the wall he’d thrown up in those sharp, watchful eyes.
I thought I could handle this. I thought I could play both sides—protecting Gabriel while leaning on Sebastian in secret. But now, that careful balance was cracking. Gabriel was slipping, and if I wasn’t careful, I would drive him straight into Emily’s waiting arms.
My phone buzzed against the table.
I jumped. Snatched it up.
Sebastian.
My thumb hovered over the screen, my pulse hammering.
I answered.
“Eve,” his voice came through low and steady, carrying that calm charm he always had. The kind of voice that could talk someone out of a storm. “You sound rattled.”
“He knows,” I whispered. “Gabriel saw. The laptop, your name. Everything.”
A pause on the line. Then a sigh. “And how bad was it?
I shut my eyes, the image still carved into my mind—Gabriel’s sharp eyes, his clenched jaw, that dangerous silence.
“Bad. He doesn’t trust me anymore.”
“Then we don’t have time,” Sebastian said. “Emily’s going to keep pressing harder every day. The lies, the pictures, whatever game she’s playing—it won’t stop. If Gabriel’s already suspicious, you need proof. Hard proof. Something so real he can’t deny it, not even with that scrambled memory of his.”
Proof. The word hit me like a weight. Proof was what I wanted, what I needed. Proof that Emily was lying. Proof that the pregnancy was fake. Proof that Gabriel hadn’t just… forgotten me but had been manipulated.
Proof could save me.
But the thought of Gabriel finding out that I was conspiring with Sebastian—someone he hated, someone he never trusted—made my stomach turn.
“What if I lose him? I whispered. “What if digging deeper just—pushes him further away?
Sebastian’s voice softened, almost tender. “Eve. You already lost him once. Don’t let Emily take him again.”
My throat closed up. A tear slipped down my cheek before I could stop it.
I hated that he was right.
I hated even more that, at that moment, I needed Sebastian.
My grip on the phone tightened. “Fine. Do it. Find me the proof.”
When the call ended, I sat there in the dark, staring at the silent door Gabriel had walked through.
My husband thought I was lying.
My rival thought she was winning.
And I was standing on a knife’s edge, my marriage balanced on which way I would fall.
Emily sprawled across her velvet couch, the glow of the lamp catching the rim of her wineglass. Half-empty. She swirled the red liquid lazily, her lips curved into the kind of smile that only came when things were tilting in her favour.
Her phone lay on the cushion beside her, screen still lit from the post she’d made hours ago. The comments were pouring in, relentlessly.
“Poor Gabriel. His wife looks cold.”
“Emily is glowing. That baby will be so loved.”
“Eve should just step aside. She’s embarrassing herself.”
Emily chuckled. The internet was predictable—hungry for drama, easy to steer. All she had to do was dangle a piece of bait, and the wolves would tear me apart for her.
But tonight wasn’t about the comments. Tonight was about what came next.
She picked up her phone and opened her gallery. Row after row of carefully collected photos. Screenshots. Cropped images. Videos slowed down to catch me at the worst possible second. Most of it was taken through the eyes of strangers—Emily’s little network of “friends” scattered across the city. Some bribed, some manipulated, some just eager to please.
She tapped on one video and let it play.
Me, outside a boutique, looking over my shoulder like I was hiding. Another clip of me stepping out of Sebastian’s car one late evening. Our conversation was muffled, but their closeness was obvious. Another, me in tears at the courthouse months ago, just before filing for divorce.
Individually, meaningless. Together? Damning.
Emily’s smile sharpened.
The beauty of lies was how well they clung to truth. Twist the context, pair it with the right words, and suddenly innocence becomes guilt.
She poured the last of her wine into her glass and raised it in a mock toast to the empty room.
“To you, Eve,” she murmured. “To the woman who doesn’t know how to lose gracefully.”
She sent the first file.
An email. Anonymous. Attached are photos of me and Sebastian, timed carefully to look like a late-night rendezvous.
The subject line: “Your wife isn’t as faithful as she seems.”
And the recipient? Gabriel.
Emily exhaled slowly, satisfaction coiling through her veins. This wasn’t just about humiliating me anymore. This was about control. About twisting the knife deep enough that I wouldn’t crawl back from it.
But then, her phone buzzed again.
A message from one of her watchers.
> “Spotted Sebastian at the courthouse today. Looking tense. Talking to someone in records. Digging.”
Emily’s smile faltered.
She sat up straighter, pulse skipping. Courthouse. Records. Digging.
Her fingers tightened around the glass stem until it almost snapped.
Sebastian. Of course. She should’ve known I would call him back in. That smug bastard was sniffing around, and if he pulled at the wrong thread, everything could unravel—her fake sonogram, the staged photos, all of it.
Emily’s lips pressed into a thin line.
So. The game was changing.
She set down her glass, reached for her phone again, and began typing furiously. She needed to cut Sebastian out before he dug too deep.
And she knew exactly how.
Her eyes glittered as the plan unfolded in her head.
Gabriel wasn’t the only one she could poison against me.
The city blurred past the tinted car window, but Gabriel barely saw it. His temples throbbed, his jaw locked so tight it ached.He had left the house without slamming the door, without yelling, without breaking. That had to count for control. But inside, he wasn’t controlled. Inside, he was tearing apart.My words still rang in his head. “She’s lying. You know me.”But did he?The elevator doors opened into the Grayson Tower lobby, cool marble and glass gleaming under the morning lights. Conversations hummed, phones rang and heels clicked against stone. My kingdom. My empire. But for the first time, it felt… unstable.And then he saw her.Emily.She stood by the reception desk like she owned the place. A silk blouse, soft curls framing her face, a file folder tucked against her chest. When she looked up and saw him, her eyes softened instantly—rehearsed, perfect.“Gabriel,” she breathed, relief dripping from her tone.His gut twisted.“What are you doing here?” His voice came out shar
The kettle whistled.I barely heard it. My eyes were glued to the glow of my phone screen, my stomach knotting tighter with every passing second.At first, I thought it was a cruel coincidence. A gossip blog headline flashing across my feed:“Cold Wife? Sources Say Gabriel Grayson’s Spouse Neglects Family While Playing Homemaker.”My thumb scrolled lower, faster. Photos. Grainy, zoomed-in, but unmistakable—me at the grocery store, my face tight with exhaustion. Me at Lily’s school event, looking down at my phone during a speech.And then—my heart dropped—an audio clip.“…you never think, do you? Always so careless—”My voice. Cropped, harsh, jagged, twisted.The caption below screamed:“Exclusive: The REAL Eve Grayson. Cold. Heartless. Toxic.”I dropped the phone onto the counter like it was burning.The kettle screamed louder, steam hissing. My hands shook as I grabbed it and poured the boiling water too fast, scalding my fingers. I hissed, jerking back, water splashing onto the coun
Emily refreshed her feed for the twentieth time in ten minutes.The video had exploded. Comments poured in—sympathy, congratulations, and people calling her brave, radiant and an inspiration. Her smile curved sharper with every notification.#BabyGrayson was trending. Exactly as she planned.She sipped her wine, the glass catching the light, her reflection glowing back at her from the laptop screen. Let them all see. Let them all believe.Because that was the point—if the world believed her story, Gabriel would have no choice but to follow. What kind of man lets the mother of his unborn child suffer under another woman’s cruelty?She leaned back in her chair, stretching. Victory tasted sweet.Until the next notification blinked.Not a fan. Not a follower.A direct message.She frowned.The account was private. No name, no photo. Just one message.> Careful. Lies don’t last forever.Her heart skipped.Emily’s fingers tightened on the mouse. A prank. It had to be. Some jealous little no
I sat in the dim light of my kitchen; the only sound was the steady hum of the refrigerator.The folder Emily’s lawyer had left behind weeks ago lay on the table like a loaded weapon. It had sat there, unopened, daring me.I reached for it with trembling fingers. The embossed logo of the law firm glared up at me.My phone sat beside it, Sebastian’s name glowing on the screen.I pressed the call.It rang once. Twice. Then—“Eve?” His voice came low, alert, as if he’d been expecting this moment.“I need you,” I said, my throat tight.A pause, then the faint scrape of a chair on his end. I pictured him standing, straightening his tie, already moving. “What happened?”“She brought a lawyer to our door weeks ago.” My voice cracked under the memory. “She had papers—medical records, sonograms. Gabriel asked me to prove she’s lying.”Another pause. Sebastian’s inhale was sharp and deliberate. “Good.”“Good?”“That means he hasn’t chosen her,” Sebastian said evenly. “If he had, you’d already b
The café door slammed behind them, the tinkling bell jarring against the storm in my chest. The night air was sharp, cutting, but not sharp enough to clear the fog of rage clinging to me.Gabriel walked a few steps ahead, his stride clipped, shoulders stiff beneath his tailored jacket. He hadn’t touched Emily. Hadn’t spoken to her. But he hadn’t defended me either. Not once.“Gabriel.” My voice cracked like a whip.He stopped but didn’t turn.My heels clicked hard against the pavement as I closed the distance. “Why didn’t you say anything?”His jaw tightened. A muscle flicked. “Eve—”“No.” I moved in front of him, forcing him to look at me. My heart hammered, but my words came fast, unrestrained. She stood there in front of everyone and called me bitter, jealous, and hateful. She paraded her lies like gospel. And you—” my throat closed, hot with humiliation. “You just let her.”His eyes were dark, shadowed, and unreadable. “What did you want me to do? Cause a scene in the middle of a
The café was too bright, too loud. I had chosen the corner table, my back against the wall, but even that couldn’t shield me from the eyes.The women at the counter — wives of Gabriel’s colleagues, women I had once smiled at during charity galas — turned their heads together, whispering behind manicured hands. Their laughter wasn’t cruel on the surface, but the way their eyes flicked to me, then away, made my skin crawl.I stirred my coffee though I hadn’t tasted a sip. My phone lay face-down on the table, buzzing every few minutes with notifications. I didn’t have to look. I already knew what they were: the posts. The comments.Emily had made sure the world knew.#Blessed, one caption had read, beneath a sonogram picture. The kind of post designed to look innocent. Except the tag — #FamilyFirst #BabyGrayson — made my stomach twist.My friends had texted, cautious, pitying.Is it true? Do you need anything?Even my mother had called, voice tight with concern.“Eve?”I looked up, start







