Later that afternoon, I was alone in the west wing, walking the perimeter of the courtyard. The air smelled faintly of lavender and stone. A breeze teased the hem of my skirt as I crossed toward the fountain. And I saw her again.
Sera. She stood in the archway in a blue sundress, her hair held back in place by designer sunglasses. It took every shred of restraint in me not to turn around and walk the other way. But I didn’t. I approached her instead. “Sera,” I said quietly. She turned. A smile was on her lips, but it didn’t reach her eyes. “Amara,” she replied smoothly. “Enjoying the estate?” I stepped forward, chin lifted. “What are you doing here? Really?” Her brows lifted in mock surprise. “I told you. I’m Zane’s fiancée.” “No. What’s your real plan?” “Getting married to the man I love.” She shrugged. “Sorry of you can’t relate.” My stomach churned. “You were never part of this story. Not until after.” A flicker of something dark passed over her expression. “You mean after you left him? How… considerate of you to run away, especially when he needed you the most.” “I didn’t leave him,” I hissed. “You know what happened. You were there. You—” Her face snapped into something cold and cruel. “I was always there, Amara. You just never saw me.” “Because you were my friend,” I shot back. “Not his.” She smiled again, and this time it was all venom. “And now I’m both.” Ew, I thought. I don’t associate with backstabbers. I stared at her, chest heaving. “Does he even know who you are? Who you were? What you’ve done?” “Of course he does,” she said easily. “We met in college. We loved each other. You were the obstacle in our way. Don’t you remember?” My throat went dry. The rewriting of history nearly made me sick. “You are a snake and a manipulator. How can you do all that? And worse yet, you’ve made that man believe he’s in love with you.” “He’s a man like you said. Zane’s not a kid. You can’t manipulate someone into loving you. It’s obvious he made a choice and it isn’t you. That’s why you’re so butt hurt.” “So that’s why I was hired to plan your wedding? ‘Let her not watch the fire from afar. Let her burn in it.’ You think I’ll let you get away with this?” I asked, voice low and shaking. “Pretending you were always the one by his side?” Her smile widened. “Why not? He doesn’t remember you anyway.” She turned and walked away, her heels clicking on the ground. I stood there long after she left. My whole body was shaking with rage… and fear. I knew Sera. She was intelligent and ruthless. I should’ve known that she would stop at nothing to get what she wanted. What had Sera done throughout these years? What else was she planning to do? What if she was rewriting everything we had, price by piece, until I was something less than a footnote in her and Zane’s lives? ## By the time I got to my room that night, my fingers were shaking. I poured myself a glass of wine, stared at the wedding plans laid out on my bed, and felt the weight of five years pressing down on me like a heavy load. He didn’t remember me. He didn’t remember me. But the internet… surely there had to be proof of our relationship. I sat at the desk of my hotel room, fingers typing on the keyboard of my laptop. I did what any desperate woman with a Wi-Fi connection and a half-dead laptop would do. It began with a simple question. One that desperation pushed me to type into the search bar: Zane Blackwood engagement history. Then I Googled him. And then I Googled myself. “Zane Blackwood fiancée.” “Zane Blackwood engagement.” “Blackwood family scandal.” “Amara Ibe wedding planner.” “Amara Ibe whistleblower.” What I found (or rather, what I didn’t find) made my stomach turn. There was no articles. No photos. No scandal. No trace of the engagement that once consumed my world. Page after page. Click after click. And nothing. No mention of the exposé that had blown the lid off the Blackwood corporate empire. No sign of the girl who’d risked everything to do the right thing. No hint of the press conference, the interviews, the death threats that came after. It was like I never existed in his life. All I found was a clean, surgically prepared list of curated content: interviews about Zane’s recovery, charity events hosted by the Blackwoods, and a heart-tugging feature on his “struggle to piece his life back together” after the accident. There was even a touching quote from his supposed university sweetheart: Sera. I stared at the screen, heart hammering. Five years wiped out like they’d never happened. Like I had never happened. I typed my own name into a dozen search engines. My name. Zane Blackwood. Blackwood Pharma. Whistleblower. Nothing. Every article that had once torn through the internet like wildfire was gone. Scrubbed clean. Removed from history. What was left was a list of headlines about Zane’s mysterious accident and memory loss. There were carefully worded tributes and strategically vague interviews. They’d erased me from his past like I never existed. My heart sank to my belly. The erasure wasn’t just digital. At the estate, even the staff played their roles perfectly. Smiles too bright. Voices too careful. Always watching me like I might say the wrong thing and unlock a truth no one wanted Zane to remember. I searched every possible combination of our names. Every event. Every year. Every headline. Nothing. Then I clicked on a forgotten link buried three pages deep in an outdated blog. The site loaded painfully slow, full of broken image icons and old formatting. But finally, a blurry photo appeared. It was cropped at the sides, but I would recognize the angle of his jaw, the shape of his mouth, the curve of my hand on his arm anywhere. Zane was in a black tux. I was in a red dress with beaded sleeves. The Ashcroft Foundation gala, five years ago. We were smiling. At least I was. The caption underneath read: Blackwood heir Zane photographed with a disgraced former employee during the 2020 Ashcroft Foundation event. Sources say the woman was later involved in leaking sensitive company data. No name. No mention of our relationship. No engagement. No betrayal. No heartbreak. Just a whisper of scandal like I was a footnote in his story. I stared at the screen, my breath caught in my throat, the weight of it pressing into my lungs like concrete. Disgraced former employee. My vision grew blurry. My head was spinning. “Why would they erase me?” I whispered, my voice breaking in the silence. The only answer I got was the hum of the laptop fan echoing in the silence. The next morning, I headed straight to the physical archives to check on the old planning files from when Zane and I were together. That’s where we kept our venue sketches, menu notes, a draft of our vows. All of it was gone and replaced with perfectly labeled binders featuring Sera’s name in gold print. I laughed in disbelief. Sera was buying me alive under her fairytale. And just when I thought I couldn’t sink deeper, I looked up to see him Zane. He was watching me from the end of the corridor. His expression was blank and unreadable, even when our eyes met. Then he tilted his head, slowly. And he smiled.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