The Vexley mansion’s sitting room had always looked like it belonged in a magazine—one of those impossibly perfect spreads where nothing was ever out of place and nobody had real problems. Plush cream armchairs sat primly beneath oil paintings of landscapes so peaceful they almost felt smug about it. Sunlight poured through the towering French windows, stretching long golden beams across the polished hardwood floors.
Normally, the room whispered comfort. Today, it practically shouted panic.
The air felt too thick, too still, as though even the dust particles had paused to watch the drama unfold.
Right in the center of it stood Eliana Bennett.
Frozen.
Not the delicate, fainting-heroine kind of frozen—but the dangerous kind. The kind where emotions stack up quietly until they’re one sarcastic comnt away from erupting.
Her slender fra carried both elegance and tension, like a violin string pulled just a little too tight. Warm brown skin flushed beneath the sunlight, betraying the storm brewing under her calm exterior. Her honey-brown eyes—usually soft, hopeful things that saw the best in everyone (even when they absolutely did not deserve it)—were now locked onto Jas with laser precision.
If looks could file lawsuits, Jas would already be bankrupt.
Eliana shook her head slowly, curls bouncing with the movent, each coil catching the light like a warning signal. Her full pink lips parted, but for a mont, disbelief stole her words.
One hand rested over the gentle curve of her pregnant belly, protective and instinctive. It wasn’t just a gesture—it was a silent vow.
Nothing touches this child. Nothing breaks us.
The irony, of course, was that Eliana had always been the loyal one. The forgiving one. The woman who believed love could be talked through, healed, saved.
Turns out, love sotis arrived carrying red flags the size of parade banners.
Still, sothing inside her had shifted. The hopeless romantic who once clung to fairy-tale endings was evolving—painfully, stubbornly—into a woman who understood that choosing herself wasn’t selfish.
It was survival.
Nearby, Clara Norman hovered like a very well-dressed guardian angel with anxiety issues.
Raised within the polished machinery of wealth, Clara knew exactly how to move through rooms like this—quietly, efficiently, without disturbing the illusion that rich families never argued. But no amount of training prepared you for emotional landmines.
Her impeccable uniform remained wrinkle-free (honestly, impressive given the tension), yet worry carved faint lines across her face.
She reached for Eliana’s arm and gave it a gentle squeeze.
Not dramatic. Not intrusive.
Just enough to say: If you need soone to help hide a body... I an—emotionally support you—I’m available.
Her voice, when it ca, was soft enough to anchor a hurricane.
Across from them, Jas looked like a man who had sprinted through ten disasters and lost every single one.
He adjusted his wire-rim glasses—a nervous habit that fooled absolutely no one—while attempting to ta his already defeated hair. It sprang right back into chaos, clearly siding with the tension in the room.
His face, usually the definition of dependable, now showed the unmistakable cracks of exhaustion... and guilt.
Lots of guilt.
The kind that sat heavy on the shoulders and refused to make eye contact.
He swallowed, Adam’s apple bobbing like it was trying to escape the conversation altogether, then lifted both hands in a calming gesture.
The universal sign for: Please don’t panic while I say sothing that will absolutely make you panic.
When he finally spoke, his voice was steady—but urgency threaded through every syllable, tight and unrelenting, like a clock ticking down sowhere no one could see.
"Eliana, please—don’t panic. Rafael’s fine. Really. I just... I need to take you to him. It’s better if you see for yourself," Jas said, his words tumbling out a bit too quickly, his eyes darting between the two won.
Eliana’s soft face hardened, her honey-brown eyes narrowing as she crossed her arms over her chest, the movent accentuating her natural elegance even in distress. She didn’t believe a single syllable; the air between them crackled with her skepticism, born from past deceptions. "Fine? Jas, you show up here looking like you’ve seen a ghost, dodging my questions, and now you want to just... follow you blindly? After everything? No. Tell what’s going on. Right now."
Clara glanced between them, her curly hair catching the light as she tilted her head, her maternal instincts kicking in. "Jas, she’s right. You’re scaring us. If Rafael’s okay, why the rush? Why not bring him ho?"
Jas sighed, running a hand through his dark hair, his glasses slipping slightly down his nose. He pushed them back up, his kind eyes pleading. "Look, I promise—it’s not what you think. Just trust this once. Co with , both of you. Clara, you’re family too. It’ll make sense when we get there."
Eliana hesitated, her lips pressing into a thin line as mories flooded her—mories of London, where Jas had aided Rafael in a web of lies. They’d manipulated her into believing Rafael had lost his vision again, suffering from ntal stress because she’d left. It had been a ploy to draw her back, to chain her with guilt and love. That deception had shattered her trust, fueling her demand for divorce. How could she discern truth from fiction anymore? Her emotional resilience, that quiet strength she hid behind a hopeful smile, wavered. But beneath the doubt, a flicker of worry for Rafael—the man whose cold, calculating facade had cracked for her—propelled her forward. "Alright," she said finally, her voice tight, laced with reluctance. "But if this is another ga, Jas... I swear."
Clara nodded, her beautiful face softening with resolve. "I’m coming too. Let’s go."
The three stepped out into the warm afternoon, the mansion’s grand doors closing behind them with a resonant thud that echoed like a finality. Jas led them to his sleek black sedan, parked in the sweeping driveway where gravel crunched underfoot like brittle secrets. Eliana slid into the back seat, Clara beside her, while Jas took the wheel. As the engine purred to life and they pulled away from the estate—past the manicured hedges blooming with vibrant roses, the towering oaks shading the path—Eliana’s restlessness grew. She fidgeted with the hem of her simple yet elegant dress, her long curly black hair falling over her shoulders like a curtain she wished could hide her turmoil. The cityscape blurred outside the window: bustling streets lined with upscale boutiques, pedestrians hurrying under the golden sun, oblivious to her inner storm.
To be continued...
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