Chapter 4: The Storm Before
Four days left. The house feels like it’s holding its breath, same as me. Everything’s too loud and too quiet at the same time. The fridge humming, the clock ticking in the hallway, Claudia’s TV blaring some daytime talk show upstairs. Every sound grates because my head’s full of timelines, routes, account numbers, and the one face I can’t stop picturing. Bella. Since that moment in the kitchen, we’ve been circling each other like magnets that aren’t sure if they’re supposed to pull or push away. A brush of hands when we both reach for the same coffee mug. Her standing a little closer than necessary when we’re loading the dishwasher. Me catching her watching me from across the room when she thinks I’m not looking. We haven’t said anything more. Not out loud. But the words are there anyway, hanging in the air every time our eyes meet. Tonight the house is fuller than usual. Sophia’s boyfriend, some tech bro named Ethan with a watch that costs more than most people’s rent, is over for dinner. Claudia insisted on proper family time, which really just means she wants an audience for her complaints. I offered to eat in my room, but Bella shot me a look that said stay, so I stayed. We’re crammed around the dining table that’s too small for six people. Claudia at the head, Sophia and Ethan side by side giggling over their phones, Bella across from me, and me at the end like the unwanted guest I technically am. The food is takeout Italian. Lasagna, garlic bread, salad nobody touches. Claudia’s already on her second glass of wine and warming up. “So, Damian,” she says, drawing my name out like it tastes bad. “Any luck on the job front this week?” Sophia snickers. Ethan glances up, curious. I keep my voice flat. “Still looking.” Claudia rolls her eyes. “You’ve been ‘still looking’ for years. At some point a man has to admit he’s just lazy.” Bella’s fork pauses halfway to her mouth. “Mom.” “What? It’s true.” Claudia gestures with her wine glass. “We’ve been more than generous. Five years of free room and board. Most people would be grateful enough to at least try.” Ethan shifts in his seat, uncomfortable. Sophia just smirks and scrolls on her phone. I feel the old heat rise in my chest, but I swallow it down. Four days. I only have to eat this for four more days. “I am grateful,” I say quietly. Claudia scoffs. “Could’ve fooled me.” Bella sets her fork down harder than necessary. “Can we not do this tonight? Please?” Claudia turns on her. “Don’t you start. You’re the reason he’s still here, Isabella. Always defending him, always making excuses. When are you going to admit you made a mistake marrying him?” The table goes dead silent. Bella’s face flushes deep red. Her hands clench in her lap. I’ve seen her take a thousand hits without flinching, but this one lands. I push my chair back slowly. Everyone looks at me. “I think I’m done,” I say. “Thanks for dinner.” I walk out without waiting for permission. Head straight through the kitchen, out the back door, into the cool night air. The yard’s small, overgrown in places, lit only by the weak glow from the porch light. I pace the length of it twice, hands shoved in my pockets, trying to breathe through the anger. I’m not mad at Claudia. Not really. She’s been saying the same shit for years. I’m mad because she’s aiming it at Bella now, and Bella doesn’t deserve a single drop of it. The door creaks behind me. Soft footsteps on the wooden steps. She doesn’t say anything at first. Just comes up beside me and leans against the railing, arms crossed tight like she’s holding herself together. We stand there in the quiet for a long minute. “I’m sorry,” she says finally, voice small. I turn to her. “You don’t have anything to be sorry for.” She shakes her head. “I should’ve said something sooner. Stood up to her. I just… I hate fighting. Always have.” “I know.” Another silence. Crickets chirp somewhere in the bushes. A car passes on the street out front. “I meant what I said the other day,” I tell her. “About why I stayed.” She looks up at me. The porch light catches the shine in her eyes. She’s close to crying, but fighting it. “I know you did.” I take a step closer. “Bella, I…” “Wait.” She holds up a hand. “Just… let me say this first, okay?” I nod. She takes a shaky breath. “I married you that day in the courthouse because I wanted to help you. After everything went down with your family, with the business, with her. I saw what it did to you. And I thought if I could just give you a place to land, somewhere safe, you’d get back on your feet. But somewhere along the way it stopped being about helping you and started being about not wanting you to leave.” Her voice cracks on the last part. I feel like the ground shifts under me. “I told myself it was fine,” she goes on. “That we could just keep living like this. Roommates, friends, whatever. Because at least you were here. At least I could see you every day. But it’s not fine. It hasn’t been fine for a long time.” She wipes at her eyes quickly, like she’s mad at herself for crying. “I don’t know what happens next,” she says. “I don’t know if you even feel the same, or if I’m just making a fool of myself. But I’m tired of pretending I don’t care. I’m tired of acting like I don’t lie awake at night wondering what it would be like if we’d ever actually tried.” The words hang between us. I reach out slow, give her time to pull away. She doesn’t. I cup her face with one hand, thumb brushing the damp trail on her cheek. “I’ve been in love with you for years,” I say. The confession feels huge and simple at the same time. “Every single day in this house, watching you hold everything together, watching you be kind even when no one deserved it, especially me. I stayed because I couldn’t stand the idea of a world where I didn’t get to see you every morning.” Her breath hitches. I lean in, slow enough that she can stop me. She doesn’t. Our lips meet, soft, careful, like we’re both afraid it’ll break. But then she makes this small sound and steps into me, hands fisting in my shirt, and the kiss deepens. Five years of wanting pouring out all at once. When we pull apart, foreheads still touching, she’s breathing hard. “Tell me this is real,” she whispers. “It’s real,” I say. “I swear.” She laughs a little, wet, relieved. “We’re idiots.” “Yeah,” I agree. “We are.” We kiss again, slower this time. Her arms slide around my neck. Mine settle at her waist like they belong there. The night feels warmer suddenly. Eventually she pulls back just enough to look at me. “What do we do now?” I want to tell her everything. The phone. The plan. The money that’s coming. How in four days I’ll be able to give her a life where no one ever talks to her like that again. Where she never has to work double shifts or apologize for existing. But I can’t. Not yet. Too much risk. “We take it one day at a time,” I say instead. “Starting tonight.” She smiles, small, real, beautiful. “Okay.” We go back inside eventually. The dining room’s empty, everyone retreated upstairs. Dishes are still on the table. Bella starts clearing them without thinking. I help. We move around the kitchen in easy quiet, bumping hips on purpose now, stealing glances. Later, when the house is dark and quiet, I’m in my room, door cracked open like always. I hear her footsteps in the hall. She pauses outside. I get up, open the door wider. She’s in an old T-shirt and soft shorts, hair loose around her shoulders. Nervous. “Can I?” she asks, nodding toward the room. I step aside. She comes in, closes the door soft behind her. We stand there a second, awkward in the best way. Then she laughs quietly. “This feels weird.” “Good weird?” “Yeah. Good weird.” I pull her close again. We kiss standing up, then move to the bed, slow, careful, like we’re learning each other for the first time. Clothes come off piece by piece. Hands explore. Whispers and quiet laughs when we bump elbows or get tangled in sheets. It’s not rushed. It’s not some big dramatic thing. It’s just us, finally, after all this time, being honest with skin and breath and touch. Afterward, she curls against my side, head on my chest. My fingers trace lazy patterns on her back. “I used to imagine this,” she murmurs, half asleep. “Back when we first got married. Wondered what it would be like.” “Me too,” I admit. She tilts her head up. “Was it better?” I smile in the dark. “Way better.” She settles again, breathing evening out. I lie awake long after she’s asleep, listening to her, feeling the weight of her arm across me. Four days. I’m going to give her everything I promised. And nobody, not Claudia, not Sophia, not the ghosts from my past, is going to take it away from us. Not this time.Latest Chapter
chapter 130
Chapter 130: The First BriefingThe threat briefing room on the executive floor felt different with Elena in it.She sat at the long table in a simple black blazer over a white shirt, hair pulled back neatly, notebook open and pen ready. No one treated her like a child. The senior security analysts, Lydia, Marcus, and Rico all nodded to her with quiet respect when she entered. Damian sat at the head of the table. Bella had joined by video from her advisory office across town so she could stay involved without leaving Alex’s school event.Lydia started the meeting with the latest intelligence.“Julian Dragomir — confirmed identity through three separate back channels. Age 34. Former cyber-security specialist who went dark after the collapse of his grandfather’s and uncle’s operations. He operates through layered private equity vehicles and offshore tech consultancies. No flashy public profile. No criminal record. But the pattern is clear: he’s been acquiring small stakes in companies t
chapter 128
Chapter 129: The WarningThe next morning arrived with a crisp autumn chill that slipped through the penthouse windows. Damian and Bella waited until after breakfast — pancakes for Alex, fruit and yogurt for Elena — before they asked both children to join them in the living room. No tablets. No distractions. Just the four of them on the big sectional couch.Elena sensed it immediately. She sat cross-legged, back straight, journal resting on her lap like armor. Alex sprawled beside her, still in his pajamas, but even he picked up on the serious energy and stopped fidgeting with his truck.Damian spoke first, voice calm and measured.“Yesterday we received another message. Similar to the ones after your birthday, Elena. It mentioned the past returning. It also mentioned you specifically.”Elena’s eyes sharpened. “Me?”Bella nodded. “The person claims to be connected to the old Dragomir family. Not Viktor — someone new. Julian. He seems to blame our family for what happened to his relati
chapter 127
Chapter 127: The Past Returns The message about Elena’s birthday lingered like smoke in Damian’s mind for days. He told Bella the next morning while the kids were still asleep. They stood on the balcony with coffee, voices low. Bella read the words twice, her expression hardening into the same steel he had seen during the Viktor years. “‘A friend of the family,’” she repeated. “Not Viktor’s style. He was direct. Cold. This feels… personal in a different way.” Damian nodded. “Lydia’s running it. New number, bounced through multiple proxies. No immediate trace. But the timing — right after Elena’s first real day in strategy — tells me someone’s been watching her closely.” They agreed to keep it from the children for now. Elena was already carrying enough weight with her new responsibilities. Alex was still young enough to enjoy the innocence they had fought so hard to give him. The week passed in careful normalcy. Elena threw herself into her internship with quiet intensity. She
chapter 126
Chapter 126: The New ThreatElena turned sixteen three weeks later on a quiet Saturday in early October.The rooftop party had evolved with her. No more balloons and piñatas. Instead, a long table under soft string lights held her favorite foods — Rico’s empanadas, fresh sushi from the place she loved downtown, and a simple chocolate cake with sixteen candles. The guest list stayed small and familiar: the core team, a few close school friends who had known her since kindergarten, and the family.She looked older than sixteen in her deep green dress that caught the light when she moved. Her laugh was still bright, but her eyes carried a new depth. She had spent the last month diving deeper into the strategy division at Lockwood Empire, asking questions that made senior analysts pause and take notes. Damian watched her from across the rooftop as she explained something about sustainable supply chains to one of her friends, hands moving with quiet confidence.Alex, now twelve, stayed clo
chapter 125
Chapter 125: Elena at FifteenFifteen came fast.It felt like only yesterday Elena was drawing shields on the rooftop and declaring she would run the company with her little brother one day. Now she stood in front of the full-length mirror in her room adjusting the collar of her crisp white blouse, dark hair falling in loose waves past her shoulders, eyes sharp and focused the way they had been since she was eight.She was tall now, almost as tall as Bella, with the same determined set to her jaw that Damian saw in the mirror every morning. Today was her first official day shadowing at Lockwood Empire headquarters — not as a curious child in the side room, but as a real intern in the strategy division. She had earned it through straight A’s, summer programs in business and coding, and the quiet persistence she had shown since the Viktor days.Damian stood in the doorway watching her. “You ready?”Elena turned, a small confident smile on her face. “I’ve been ready for years, Dad. But I
chapter 124
Chapter 124: Normalcy AchievedThe next morning brought a fragile kind of quiet.Damian woke before dawn again, but this time the penthouse felt steadier. No new messages. No fresh photos. Lydia’s overnight report confirmed the inside contractor had been fully removed and the service corridor sealed. Marcus had personally swept every inch of the building twice. For the first time in weeks, the immediate threat inside their walls had been cut off.Bella stirred beside him and reached for his hand. “Any new nightmares?”“None,” he said. “Not from him.”They let the kids sleep in. When Elena finally wandered out in her favorite purple pajamas, she rubbed her eyes and asked, “Is today a normal day?”Bella smiled and pulled her into a hug. “Today we try. Schoolwork at home, but after lunch we’re going to the rooftop for some fresh air. Just us. No cameras. No worries.”Elena’s face brightened. “Can I bring my journal? I want to draw the empire the way it should be.”“You can bring anything
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