The morning after my first meeting with Zane leaves a sour weight in my chest, like a nightmare I can’t fully get over. I was going over flower arrangements with Leah who was a bit chatty, but her words went right through my ears. I nodded when I was supposed to, smiled when I should. Acted like everything is okay. Gave Zane’s pretense a run for his money.
Because how could he not remember me? Was it perhaps a trauma response? Like when you want to forget something so bad you manipulate your brain into forgetting it. I could understand that. But the accident-induced amnesia storyline? I won’t fall for that. I closed the binder and excused myself. I stepped out into the balcony of the hotel suite that I was lodging at during the planning period. The skyline stretched out in the distance, a wide expanse above Manhattan. It was a thousand feet away from who I used to be. It had been five years. Five years since I set fire to my old life with one desperate choice and helplessly watched everything I’d built burn to ashes. ## Five Years Ago… It was raining that night. It wasn’t so heavy, just enough to smudge the ink of the letter inside the envelope I was grasping. I had tried everything – calling, messaging, sending emails. Zane didn’t respond. My voicemail was succinct and brief. Zane, you need to listen to me. Something’s going down. I found something. Please. Don’t do that meeting tomorrow. You have to get out of there. Don’t trust– The voicemail cut off. I tried again and again. Nothing I don’t think Zane had listened to it. He would’ve responded. So I panicked and sent him a brief email. I attached all the proof and documents to the email, apologized for the short notice and I told him that he was being set up and he should get out while he can. With trembling fingers, I shoved the letter into his mail slot outside his apartment. It was an old fashioned method, but at least I tried. I didn’t want him blindsided. I wanted him to hear the truth from me. The truth about his family’s foundation and what they did behind the scenes. The ghost beneficiaries, falsified grants, shell accounts. The USB drive was in my palm as I stood in the parking lot of an empty car garage. My breath was fogging with the night air my thick cardigan barely from shivering. I had gone through the files in the drive ten time. Emails, contracts, coded, encrypted bribes. It was the kind of corruption that could bring people down – both the corporations involved, and the person who dared expose it. Zane’s name wasn’t on the documents. But he was close to the men who were. And although Zane was smart, very brilliant, he trusted too easily. Especially when it came to loyalty to his family and their legacy. Loyalty to his father. Zane was unreachable, and I was desperate. So I did the next thing I could think of. I handed over all the proof to a journalist I trusted so that they could oust the criminal billionaires and corporate dynasties. I thought I could save him by doing so. And someone was on my trail, so I had to hasten up because they could silence me forever. I had to do something. And I did. A rash decision, maybe. But it was for Zane. I just didn’t realize how late I already was. My father had helped me to dig up all the evidence. He handed it over to my in a coffee shop, hands trembling over a cup of tea. “Are you sure about this? You could get into trouble. If they find out that it is you… they don’t play fair.” “They don’t deserve to play at all,” I whispered back. I took his fingers in mine and tried to smile reassuringly. “Daddy, don’t worry, I’ll be fine.” His grey brows tightened even more. “And Zane?” “I’ll explain everything to him. Hopefully he will understand.” He sighed deeply. “Amara, this can ruin your relationship with him.” “I know,” I admitted. “But I can’t keep this a secret from him. He will understand.” Zane didn’t understand. Hours later, when everything had leaked, he gave an impromptu press statement. Nestled in my bed, clinging to a cup of coffee and distracting myself with N*****x, I received a news alert with Zane’s name in bold. Zane stood under a sea of microphones, his jaw tight. Lights and clicks from cameras and hushed paparazzi voices accompanied him. Anger and fury radiated through every inch of him. His voice was cold, eyes even colder. “This cowardly act of betrayal was orchestrated by someone very close to me. Someone I trusted and let into my house, into my life. Whoever leaked these lies against my father and everything he has worked for over the years will be held accountable. I won’t stop until they are.” My blood ran cold. He knew it was me. And it didn’t matter that I had done it for him. In his eyes, this was the biggest form of betrayal. I grabbed my jacket to take a walk. Anything you distract myself, to forget the press statement that Zane gave the media. I was out for about 30 minutes when I heard sirens of tire trucks and an ambulance… headed towards the house I shared with my dad. I ran as fast as my feet could carry me. By the time I reached the house, flames were licking the night sky. The air was thick with smoke. Neighbors stood on the sidewalk, watching in horror. “No!” I cried, pushing past spectators. “No! My dad… he’s inside! No!” Someone grabbed me and pulled me back. I fought against them, screaming. Fighting. Kicking. Two burly men came to hold me down. All I could do was scream as I watched our house burn to ashes. Our home, our photos, our letter, our memories, our years together as struggling immigrants. And the man who had given me everything. The man who always stayed by my side. Gone. Just like that. I ran, ran until I could no longer feel my legs. I stopped by at a bus station miles away, my body coated with soot and blood. I could still remember the pungent choking scent of smoke in my lungs, the tears I buried deep in my heart. I became someone else that night. The girl I had been – Zane Blackwood’s fiancée – died that night, along with her father. And the blood – there was lots of it. That night, the next day, two days later. I never told anyone about how I doubled over in the bathroom of a motel room, hands pressed to my lower abdomen as pain ripped through me. I bit down on my own screams because crying would make it real. I couldn’t afford real. That was a loss I buried so deep that I forgot how to grieve it.The sight was like a needle to my chest. Through the small sliver of the doorway, I saw them. Inside the room, Julian had Sera pressed against a table, her hands tangled in his hair, lips fused to his. Hands roaming. Bodies flush against each other in a way that left no room for misinterpretation. The kiss was frantic, hungry, not the kind that came from politeness or drunken impulse. His hand was at her waist, her fingers tangled in his hair. They were kissing like the world had ended and only they had survived. It was the kiss of betrayal. My body had turned to stone, frozen at the edge of the corridor as I watched Sera’s hands slide up Julian’s chest. His mouth captured hers with familiarity—too smooth to be a mistake, too practiced to be new. And Zane… he stood just a few feet away from them. Silent. He hadn’t looked at me once. Instead, his eyes were pinned on the entangled pair like a lion observing prey. Quiet, controlled fury simmered beneath his skin. I didn’t realize I
The magic shattered the moment Sera slipped her arm through Zane’s. I stood there, stiff and silent beside Chase, as cameras flashed and guests buzzed with curiosity. The golden lights above refracted off Zane’s tailored tuxedo, throwing glints of gold against his dark silhouette. He looked like a man carved from secrets: sharp jaw, piercing gaze, the curve of his mouth unreadable. But it was her presence beside him that gutted me. Sera, in a silk gown that clung to her like memory, offered smiles too sweet and fingers that curled possessively into the crook of Zane’s arm. She glanced my way just once, lips twitching with the ghost of a smirk, as if to say, You’re still the outsider here. I blinked and turned to Chase, whose fingers flexed slightly around mine. He smiled at me, not the glossy, performative grin I’d grown used to seeing on wealthy clients, but something genuine. Still, my chest tightened. “I suppose the prince chose his queen after all,” he said lightly. I forced
The red dress looked like sin. Not the polite kind of sin that could be forgiven with a whispered prayer, but the kind that scorched flesh and ruined reputations. I hadn’t even zipped it up fully before I knew it would stir something dangerous. Leah gasped the moment I stepped out of the closet. “Amara. Oh my God.” I turned slowly, watching her reflection meet mine in the mirror. Her hair was up in soft curls, pinned by gold clips, and her emerald satin gown hugged her curves like second skin. But her eyes weren’t on herself. They were on me. “It’s too much,” I whispered, smoothing a hand down my waist. “The slit is... indecent.” “It’s perfect,” she said, her smile wicked and warm. “If you want Zane Blackwood to swallow his tongue.” I rolled my eyes, but the thought curled inside me like a secret flame. The dress was tight-fitting, hugging every part of me with the kind of confidence I didn't feel. A long slit rode up my thigh, almost scandalous. The neckline dipped in a way tha
The entire estate abuzz with whispers, like bees trapped behind velvet drapes. A ball. An actual, full-scale, high-profile, invitation-only ball organized by Zane Blackwood himself… on less than three days’ notice. It sounded like a joke, but the gold-trimmed invitation lying on my desk said otherwise. “An impromptu celebration of love,” the invite had read, sealed with the Blackwood family crest. But whose love were we celebrating exactly? I tapped the edge of the card as Leah adjusted swatches beside me in the planning office. My thoughts weren’t on fabric or florals. They were tangled around one man. Zane. No one had seen this coming, not even Sera. When she stormed into the main office earlier, cheeks flushed and eyes narrowed, it was clear she’d only just received her invitation too. She didn’t say anything outright, but her presence left a chill in the room. “Are you going?” Leah asked me now, carefully pinning ivory silk to a foam board. She eyed me over the edge of her c
I closed my eyes tightly for a short while. Why did Zane have to interrupt? “Zane,” Chase replied, unfazed. “Always good to see you. Though I think your timing is... inconvenient.” Zane didn’t even look at him. His eyes were on me. And God, they were burning. There was a heat there I hadn’t seen in days. He took me in, from the plunging neckline of my blouse to the high-waisted pencil skirt that hugged my hips, and his jaw flexed twice. “You’re needed upstairs,” he said curtly, addressing me. I lifted my chin. “You could’ve sent a text.” “I don’t trust phones anymore,” he said, his voice like gravel. “Too many people listening.” Chase gave a mock-wounded look. “Now I feel left out. Should I be jealous?” Zane finally turned to him. “You should be careful.” “I’m not scared of you, Blackwood.” Zane’s smile was deadly. “You should be.” I stepped between them, chest tight. “Okay. That’s enough. I have work to do, remember?” Chase nodded and stepped back, lifting his hands in sur
Outside, the heat clung to my skin, but it was nothing compared to the heat radiating off Zane as he followed me out to the terrace. He didn’t say anything for a moment. Just stood there, fists in his pockets, breathing unevenly. “You’ve been avoiding me,” he finally said. I faced him, arms crossed beneath my chest. His eyes flicked there instantly, then away like he regretted looking but couldn’t help it. “You noticed?” I said coolly. “Shocking.” “You look—” He stopped, then swallowed. “You look like you’re trying to kill someone with that dress.” “Do you always make it a habit to comment on women’s clothes?” “No. Just yours.” I laughed, low and dangerous. “That sounds possessive, Zane.” His eyes darkened. “I am possessive.” My breath caught. I tried to pass. He stepped in front of me. “I see you’ve made a new friend,” he said, voice low. I blinked. “Excuse me?” “Mr. Carter,” he said. “Didn’t realize he had such… personal interest in our staff.” I tilted my head, fury sp