로그인SHAWN
“If anything happens to Elara, just know that you will lose your position in the company! Every single share…!”
Grandfather’s voice thundered across the hospital room, heavy with an authority that usually made my blood run cold. But I didn't look at him. Instead, I rolled my eyes discreetly, tightening my grip on Miranda’s hand as she lay in the bed next to mine, looking like a wilted lily.
“How can you not even go to visit your wife while she’s in a hospital bed?” he snapped, his glare boring straight into the side of my head.
“Elara is strong. She’s a country girl, she’ll be okay,” I replied flatly, forcing a calm I didn’t entirely feel. My chest felt tight, but I pushed the sensation down. “Miranda here has a weak heart, Grandfather. She needs actual care. I will see Elara later when things have settled.”
“I’ve told you what I told you… if she—”
My mother stepped in quickly, barely masking her irritation with the old man. “Father, let it go. He will see Elara after this drip is over. Priorities.”
Grandfather Max didn’t look convinced. His displeasure was written plainly in the deep lines of his face as he shot me one last look of pure disappointment before turning on his heel. He left the room without sparing Miranda a single glance.
“Is he gone?” Miranda whispered, her voice a fragile reed. She fluttered her lashes open, her beautiful eyes filling with tears that looked like shards of glass on the verge of shattering.
“Yes, he’s gone,” I murmured, brushing my thumb lightly over her knuckles. “Don’t worry about him, love. His bark has always been worse than his bite.”
She sniffed, managed a small, trembling smile when my mother praised her for her "strength" in the face of such a tragedy.
“Don’t mind that peasant,” my mother scoffed, her voice dripping with a bitter contempt she usually saved for the help. “I can’t wait for my son to be done with his plans and finally get married to you, Miranda. I would kill that girl off myself if I could… why didn’t she just drown?”
I pushed away the faint, irritating twist of guilt in my chest at the thought of Elara actually dying. I shrugged it off, leaning back in my chair with a nonchalant exhale. “She’ll get what’s coming to her soon enough. I still have those pictures I took... the ones that prove she's been unfaithful.”
“Good, my son. Good,” my mother nodded. “Make sure you get rid of her. Once and for all.”
I would. I had to.
I was tired of tolerating Elara. Tired of the fake debt I carried for her. Every time I looked at her, I felt the phantom itch of the scar on my back, a constant reminder that I owed her my very life. It was a cage.
Watching her pretend to care for me, pretending to be the perfect, doting wife, when I knew she had been the reason for my near-death six years ago grated on me more than I cared to admit. It was a game of shadows, and I was done playing.
Maybe if her barren womb had taken pity on her, I would have stuck around longer. Maybe if she had given me something tangible—an heir to the family name, a reason to stay—I could have tolerated her boring presence.
But the fates were clearly against her. So why should I be on her side?
Since my grandfather was hellbent on denying me a marriage filled with actual passion, I would simply grab what I wanted by force. By the time the doctored images surfaced, Grandfather would be the one pleading with me, begging me to divorce Emma so that our family name wouldn't be dragged through the mud.
Just then, a sharp knock sounded on the door.
Cassius stepped in, his face an unreadable mask.
“Hey, man…” I greeted him casually, expecting the usual updates. But he ignored my greeting entirely, walking straight over to me and thrusting a thick stack of documents and a pen into my hands.
“Sign.”
I frowned, releasing Miranda’s hand to take the papers, the weight of them feeling strange. “What is this? What’s going on?”
He didn’t answer. His eyes were cold, distant.
My gaze dropped to the bold heading at the top of the first page.
PETITION FOR DIVORCE.
What?
Elara was divorcing me?
“What the hell is the meaning of this?” Rage flared instantly in my veins, making me see red as I jumped to my feet.
I told myself I was angry because my game had been stolen from me. Because I wouldn't get the satisfaction of watching her break under my terms.
“Elara wants a divorce. Grant it,” Cassius said, his voice as cold as a winter morning.
“Good! The peasant finally came to her senses and realized she doesn't belong here,” my mother scoffed from the corner.
But I was restless. Why now? Why so suddenly? What the hell was going on that I didn't know about?
“Are you not my best friend, Cassius?” I snapped, the plastic of the pen creaking under my tightening grip. “Wait… tell me the truth. Are you sleeping with my wife? Is that why you're doing her dirty work?”
Cassius’s laugh was short, dripping with sarcasm.
“You think she’s anything like you, Shawn?” he scoffed, shaking his head. “She is a respectable woman who has finally come to her senses. She’s done being your doormat.”
How the hell had that woman managed to get my best friend on her side?
“What is wrong with you, Cassius? Why are you defending her like she’s some kind of saint?”
“Just sign the damn papers, Shawn. Isn’t this exactly what you’ve spent the last five years wanting?”
He turned his gaze to my mother. “Right? You want him to be free? Get him to sign.”
My mother looked momentarily confused by his intensity, but she still urged me to go ahead. “Shawn, be fast and sign before the fool changes her mind! This way, my father will have no choice but to accept it since it came from her!”
But I knew my grandfather better than anyone. He would twist this, find a way to blame me, to accuse me of pushing that "gracious" girl away until she broke.
In a fit of blind fury, I tore the papers into pieces. The sound of the ripping paper matched the violent energy inside my chest.
“Where is she?” I snarled, stepping into Cassius’s space. “Where is that damn woman? How dare she try to leave me before I discard her?”
I was about to demand he take me to her when my jaw suddenly went slack. My attention was caught by the television across the room. A breaking news broadcast was flashing a "Special Report."
Elara’s face filled the entire screen.
But it wasn't the Elara I knew. This was a glowing younger version, little below eighteen years old, her hair perfectly styled, her eyes sparking with a life I had never seen.
Next to her was an image of the Viking family, the richest, most powerful dynasty in the country.
My hand began to shake, the torn papers fluttering to the floor like snow.
The little girl laughing in the family portrait—surrounded by five older boys—had the same hair, the same unmistakable eyes as my wife, as Elara’s picture by the side.
With trembling fingers, I grabbed the remote and turned the volume up.
“...In a shocking twist of events, the daughter of billionaire mogul Silas Viking, Elara Viking—who has been hidden from the media for over a decade—has been identified. Sources confirm she is currently at Gracefilled Hospital, where she is recovering from a near-fatal incident...”
What?
My wife... a Viking?
The room went deathly silent. My mother’s glass hit the floor, shattering into a thousand pieces, but no one moved.
If Elara was a Viking... if those five men were her brothers…
My heart hammered against my ribs so hard it was painful, as my mind conjured up the current identities of these men.
Fuck.
I looked at the television again, then at the shredded divorce papers at my feet. A cold, paralyzing dread began to seep into my bones.
What have I done?
ELARA“How can you be smiling when your reputation is in tatters, in shreds, sugar?”My head, which had been bent over my laptop as I focused on the glowing screen, snapped toward my doorpost. Killian stood there, leaning casually against the doorframe, looking deceptively relaxed. He was dressed in a black long-sleeve shirt that clung to his broad shoulders, paired with black suit pants and polished Italian shoes. His sleeves were folded back toward his elbows, exposing forearms that spoke of a strength he rarely had to exert. His hands were tucked into his pockets, and while his face remained easy and unsmiling, there was a sharp, calculating intensity in his gaze that made my skin prickle.“What’s more, you’re still in your nightwear…” He raised a brow, his eyes shamelessly appraising my choice of attire—a flimsy, silk gown that barely reached mid-thigh.I felt a hot blush creep up my neck, realizing with a jolt of annoyance that I was wearing nothing underneath the thin fabric.
SHAWNI watched Miranda struggle to rise from the bed, her small hand clutching at her chest as if trying to hold her heart inside her ribs, and I felt nothing. Absolute nothing. Well, except for a simmering, insane anger that threatened to boil over again. She had messed up my life, walking into my world only to turn it into a graveyard. How could she have been so reckless as to release those photos without my consent? Wasn’t she supposed to be intelligent enough to grasp the catastrophic consequences? To understand that Elara wasn’t some peasant housewife anymore?Did she honestly think the Vikings would take this lying down? Did she mistake their silence for unraveling, or think that Elara’s "Queen of Tech" moniker was just empty branding? I watched her with a mounting sense of disgust, wondering if this woman had ever stopped to research the sheer scale of the Queen of Tech’s accomplishments before engaging in this suicidal nonsense.“Sha…”“Miranda, if you call me ‘Shawny’ ag
MIRANDA“Yes! Tear her apart!” I sneered, as I laughed at the carnage on my phone screen. I was practically vibrating with a dark glee, scrolling through the snarky comments made by aggrieved netizens and the sudden, explosive outrage of the public. With my left hand, I gripped the phone like a weapon; with my right, I threw cheese balls intermittently into my mouth from the large container nestled between my thighs. I sat cross-legged on my bed, clad only in my underwear, feeling the cool air of the room against my skin, though my blood was boiling with excitement.My eyes would probably have heavy, dark eyebags underneath them considering I couldn’t sleep a wink last night, but I didn't care.I was just too amped up, flying from one social media handle to another, making sure that my posts had gone viral—that every singular being in the country, and even outside its confines, would see those well-curated, devastating photos. I laughed some more and shook my head as I watched crud
SHAWNThe canopy of the forest was a jagged, suffocating ceiling of interlocking branches that bled into a sky the color of a fresh bruise. I was running, my lungs burning with the sensation of inhaled glass, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird desperate for escape. I didn’t know who was behind me, but I could hear them… the rhythmic thud of heavy boots on damp earth, the snapping of twigs, and a low, dissonant humming that made the hair on my arms stand up. Every shadow seemed to stretch toward me, clawed fingers reaching out from the bark of gnarled trees to snag my clothes.Terrible fear saturated my senses. It was the frightened desperation that kept my legs moving even as they turned to lead. My thoughts were a jumbled mess of static and guilt; I knew I had messed up. I had crossed a line I couldn't uncross, and now they were coming for me.The forest felt like a maze, shifting and twisting until I was running in circles, the air growing colder, the humming
MIRANDAI was soaking in the tub, doing my nightly ritual, trying to calm my nerves so I could sleep, when my phone rang. At first, I thought to ignore it, but the possibility that it could be Shawn—that he had had a change of mind—had me reaching my lavender-scented, bubbled hand to the stool just by the head of the tub and collecting my phone. A knowing smile touched my lips as I saw his name blinking on the dial. I answered after waiting for a few beats, my fingers tracing the sleek edge of the device; it was best not to have him thinking I had been waiting for his call.“Hello…” I kept my voice stark, like a petulant girlfriend, but the voice that answered me wasn’t my Shawn’s, and it had me sitting upright in the tub, the warm water sloshing against the porcelain.“Who is this? And what have you done with my fiancé?!” My heart picked up a faster rhythm as my mind went haywire. Why was a stranger answering Shawn’s call? Had he gone and involved himself in an accident? My heart
SHAWN“Hey! Let me have two more!” I screamed at the bartender, holding up my empty glass before slamming it down to join the others—seven, maybe nine cups already cluttering the wood in front of me. My vision was beginning to smear into a blur of neon and shadow, my voice thick and slurry, aggressive even to my own ears. Yet, my mind remained cruelly, agonizingly sharp. And it was that mind I wanted to dull… to silence the voice that screamed profanities, branding me a failure and a loser. I watched one of the bartenders approach, his brow furrowed in a look of pity that made my stomach churn.“Sir, you are already drunk… I think you should get home…” he said, reaching for the empty glasses.As he made to leave with them, I lunged forward and grabbed his sleeved arm, my fingers digging into the fabric. “What did you say?” I screamed in his face, the smell of cheap whiskey heavy on my breath. “What did you just say? Do you know who I am? Do you?” I punched the aisle, the wood rat







