LOGINLeyla’s Pov
"Hey girl," Mira taps my shoulder. "Heard about your brother. Sorry about that." "Linda and her big mouth," I mutter, slipping off my heels. "What?" I force a smile. “Nothing. Thanks but he’ll be out soon.” Mira snorts. “I’d say ‘thoughts and prayers,’ but those don’t usually beat murder charges.” I slowly turn to stare at her. She lifts both hands immediately. “Okay, damn. Too soon.” "Excuse you? Bitch, get out." She laughs on her way to the door. “You got it." The second she leaves, I let out a hard breath and lean closer to the mirror, dabbing at the corner of my lipstick before it smudges any further. Unbelievable. This bitch was not about to ruin my night. I tighten my grip on the curling iron and drag it through another section of hair, forcing myself to breathe through the irritation. This night is already bad enough. Then the door swings open again. I don’t bother turning around this time. “Leyla!” a voice snaps over the music outside. “You seriously need to learn how to knock before barging in like a possessed landlord, Mira,” I snap, dragging the curling iron through my hair. “And if you came back to run your mouth again, save it. I’m already one bad vibe away from beating your ass tonight.” "You will not speak to me like that." I freeze. That's not Mira. I spin around so fast the curling iron slips from my hand and slams onto the table. Alora stands at the door. Pale, rigid and breathing too hard. My stomach drops immediately. Oh no. I already know that look. I slowly shake my head before she can even speak. “No,” I mutter quietly. “Please don’t start.” “Of course you saw the news!" Alora explodes, her voice cracking. "Our brother is sitting in a cage downtown waiting to be slaughtered like a chicken and here you're getting ready for your fucking dance?” She storms into the room, kicking an empty champagne bottle out of her way. “We need to pull our savings. Every dime. He needs a real defense lawyer. Not that bloody idiot they gave to him.” “A lawyer won’t do shit, Alora!” I grab the lipstick off my table, but my hands are shaking so badly it slips from my fingers and rolls under the table. “Damn it!” “Did you at least go see him?” she asks quietly. That tone hits harder than the yelling. I shove a hand through my hair and look away. "I was working, okay? I sent Linda. He's fine." Alora lets out a short laugh that sounds almost cruel. “You sent Linda?” she repeats slowly. “He’s your brother, Leyla.” Her eyes lock onto mine. “And he is not fine.” Something twists painfully in my chest. “You wanna know how I know?” she asks, a bitter little smirk pulling at her lips. “Because I actually went there.” Typical Alora. Always the reliable one. Always making me feel like garbage for not being the same. “Why do I even bother?” she mutters. “I’ll get him out myself.” “How?” I snap. “Do you even know who the Vales are?” I laugh bitterly. “You seriously think some regular lawyer can beat the Vale family?” I laugh bitterly. “They own judges. They own cops. Hell, they probably own the building George’s being held in.” Alora’s eyes narrow as she steps closer. “Then what’s your plan, Leyla? Because this conversation or dancing isn’t helping anybody.” I wipe a tear from my cheek, smudging my dark eyeliner. Then I straighten slowly, a dangerous resolve settling in me. “I’ve got it,” I whisper. “Called his office. I have a meeting in an hour.” Alora goes pale immediately. “Whose office?” “Lucien Vale.” I grab my heels from the floor. “The son. The new CEO.” I shrug lightly, trying to sound calmer than I feel. “Apparently tonight’s gala was also some huge welcome party into the company for him. It’s been all over the blogs for days.” She stares at me blankly for half a second, the way she always does whenever I bring up celebrity gossip or billionaire drama like it’s normal news. She never keeps up with this stuff. “I’m going to make him a deal,” I continue. “Whatever he wants, if it gets George out, I’ll do it.” "You're not going," Alora says, her voice dropping to a terrifying, quiet level. I look up at her. “Watch me. I’m the twin that actually does things, remember?” I grab my purse. “You just write about them.”Alora's Pov The plan is already in motion by dawn. I get lost twice trying to find Lucien's office. It wasn't the directions. In fact, Leyla is whispering them into my ear with saint-level patience. It's the building itself. The glass corridors feel like a maze designed to unsettle you, reflections folding into one another until I didn't know which way was out. “Left now,” Leyla's voice crackles in my ear. “The small door beside the massive one.” “I’ve got it,” I lie, wiping my damp palms on my dress. “You still there?” she asks. “Unfortunately.” “Lora, if you want us to stop...” “I don’t.” The elevator opens onto the top floor. It’s actually quieter up here. “There’s no one at the reception,” I murmur. “Just a corridor and one door at the end.” “That’s his office,” Leyla says. Her voice tightens now. “Wait for his secretary before you go in. Don’t just walk...” I end the call. A small waiting area sits off to the side. Two leather sofas, a glass table, and
Leyla’s Pov Alora didn’t let me finish. The moment I mentioned Lucien Vale, she went deathly pale. She grips the bedsheets so hard her knuckles turns white, her whole body trembling as if she is bracing for a physical blow. “You can’t do this,” she rasps. “I won’t let you.” “You don’t understand, Lora,” I say, my voice cracking. “George is just twenty. He’s still a kid who forgets to lock the front door and leaves his sketches all over the kitchen floor. He won’t survive a week in a place like Ravenlock Prison. Friday is his hearing, and if I don't give Lucien what he wants, George doesn't come home. Ever.” The room is deathly quiet. I can hear the frantic ticking of the clock on the bedside table, sounding like a countdown. “Are you saying this because you actually think he's guilty?” I snap, the heat of desperation rising in my chest. “That our brother, the boy who still cries over dead birds, actually killed someone?” She looks up quickly, her eyes burning. “What? No.
Leyla's Pov By my fourth visit, I'm invisible. The secretary doesn't even look up; she just acknowledges my presence with a cold, silent stare before returning to her typing. I stand there a second too long, waiting for a "hello" that isn't coming. To her, I’m just the stripper sister of the man who killed Raymond Vale. I shift my weight, and a sharp, familiar pain shoots up my calves. My feet are still swollen from six hours on the main stage, and the skin around my ankles raw from the straps of seven-inch platforms. I reek of a life Lucien Vale wouldn't touch even with a gloved hand, yet here I am. George’s hearing is the morning after tomorrow. Somehow, his two million dollar bail was denied and even worse... his hearing pushed forward. So, if I don't get to Lucien today, my brother is as good as dead. I’m his only hope, and I’m running out of time. "Mr. Vale is in a meeting,” the secretary dismisses me. “I’ll wait.” She snaps, her patience breaking. "Look, I’ve told you a
Leyla’s Pov "Hey girl," Mira taps my shoulder. "Heard about your brother. Sorry about that.""Linda and her big mouth," I mutter, slipping off my heels."What?" I force a smile. “Nothing. Thanks but he’ll be out soon.”Mira snorts. “I’d say ‘thoughts and prayers,’ but those don’t usually beat murder charges.”I slowly turn to stare at her. She lifts both hands immediately. “Okay, damn. Too soon.”"Excuse you? Bitch, get out."She laughs on her way to the door. “You got it." The second she leaves, I let out a hard breath and lean closer to the mirror, dabbing at the corner of my lipstick before it smudges any further.Unbelievable. This bitch was not about to ruin my night.I tighten my grip on the curling iron and drag it through another section of hair, forcing myself to breathe through the irritation. This night is already bad enough.Then the door swings open again. I don’t bother turning around this time. “Leyla!” a voice snaps over the music outside.“You seriously need to
Alora's Pov"Chris!" I hiss as my body stiffens under the sharp, blinding spike of agony shooting up my heel. Hopping on one foot and clutching my toes, I glare down at the culprit. It's the jagged, green plastic dinosaur. Of course, it had to be the one toy designed like a medieval weapon.“Fantastic,” I mutter, teeth clenched. “Nothing says career fulfilment like being taken out by a seven-year-old’s weaponized Lego collection.”"Chrisssssss!" I try again, louder this time, my voice tightening as I pry the toy off my foot.A tiny, breathless giggle echos from the balcony, immediately followed by the quick scuffle of sneakers running away. Mischievous and unapologetic, of course. I exhale sharply and bend to pick up the toy when I spot two more scattered across the kitchen tiles like landmines.I limp slightly as I gather them. "Who needs a pension plan when you can just die of septic shock from a stubborn toddler?"The television hums softly in the living room, its glow spilling i







