
Overview
Catalog
Chapter 1
The man who believed
The champagne flute felt slippery in Adrian Cole’s hand. He smiled, a practiced, gentle curve of his lips that made his cheeks ache. Around him, the glittering ballroom of the Skyview Hotel hummed with a sound he still couldn’t believe was for him. Soft light, the kind that made everyone look like a movie star, glinted off diamonds and Rolexes. Laughter, sharp and expensive, bounced off marble floors.
This was his engagement party.
His.
A part of him, a small, scared boy from a neighborhood where the streetlights flickered, wanted to pinch himself. The other part, the man who had worked eighty-hour weeks, who had saved every spare dollar, who had whispered promises into Lena’s hair in the dark, just felt tired. A good tired. Like he’d finally climbed the mountain.
He found her by the towering window that showed the city as a carpet of electric jewels. Lena Hart. His Lena. In a silver dress that seemed made of moonlight, she was talking with a circle of friends, her laugh like wind chimes. His heart did its familiar, painful squeeze. He still couldn’t believe she was his.
“There you are,” he said, coming up beside her. He slipped an arm around her waist, felt her tense for a fraction of a second before she relaxed into him. He ignored it. Nerves. She had nerves.
“Adrian,” she said, her smile not quite reaching her eyes. “We were just talking about the Avalon project. Victor was saying it’s the deal of the decade.”
Victor Hale stood across from her, a tower of tailored confidence. His suit probably cost more than Adrian’s car. He held a glass of amber whiskey, swirling it like he owned the room. He probably felt like he did.
“Adrian,” Victor said, his voice a smooth baritone. “Congratulations again. Lena here is a prize. A man has to have the capacity to keep up with a prize.”
The circle tittered. Adrian’s smile felt frozen. Capacity. He knew what that meant. It meant the trust fund Victor was born with. It meant the last name that opened doors Adrian had to batter down.
“Love’s the only capacity that matters, right?” Adrian said, pulling Lena closer. He meant it to sound strong, but it came out soft. Almost pleading.
Lena patted his chest, a light, dismissive tap. “Adrian’s a believer in hard work,” she said to the group. It sounded like an apology.
The conversation flowed on, a river of stock tips, yacht sizes, and vacation homes. Adrian stood in the center of it, holding Lena, feeling himself slowly turn invisible. He was scenery. The modest, hard-working fiancé, a quaint accessory to Lena’s glow.
A server passed with a tray. Adrian went to take a fresh glass, his hand fumbling. His damp fingers slipped.
The crystal flute hit the marble floor with a sound like a gunshot.
CRACK-SHATTER.
The music, the laughter, the chatter it all stopped. For a terrible, eternal second, a hundred eyes swiveled to him. He stood in a puddle of champagne and shame, glittering shards at his feet.
A hot wave of humiliation crawled up his neck. “I’m so sorry,” he stammered, bending down. “I’ll clean it—”
“Don’t,” Victor’s voice cut through the silence, cool and amused. He didn’t even look at Adrian, addressing the room like a showman. “The staff will handle it. Some of us aren’t used to handling fine things.”
A laugh, sharp and sudden, came from Lena’s friend, Chloe. Others followed, muffled behind hands, but their eyes were bright with cruel delight.
Adrian straightened, his face burning. He looked at Lena. His anchor. His love.
She wasn’t looking at him. She was looking at the mess, a tiny frown of disappointment on her perfect lips. As if he’d tracked mud on a white carpet.
That small frown broke something inside him. It was a crack in the dam.
The dam holding back three years of whispers. Her father’s “When will you be really stable, son?” Her mother’s sighs when he mentioned his five-year plan. The way her friends always asked him to take the group photo, never be in it. The feeling that he was perpetually auditioning for the role of her husband, and forever coming up just short.
The staff swooped in, efficient and silent. The music started again. The party’s bubble re-inflated, but Adrian stood outside of it, cold and wet.
“Lena,” he whispered, his voice thick. “Can we… can we talk for a second? Outside?”
She sighed, a soft, exasperated sound he knew well. The “you’re-being-sensitive-again” sigh. “Adrian, not now. Everyone is here.”
“Please.” The word was raw.
She glanced at Victor, who gave a barely perceptible shrug. “Fine. Five minutes.”
She led him not to the balcony, but to a sterile, quiet hallway near the restrooms. The hum of the party was a distant buzz.
“What is it?” she asked, folding her arms. The moonlight-from-the-dress seemed cheap here under the fluorescent lights.
“Do you…” he started, the words sticking in his throat. “Do you ever feel like… like I’m not enough for this? For them?”
“Adrian, don’t start.”
“I’m not starting, I’m asking. That laugh. Victor’s comment. You didn’t say anything.”
“What did you want me to do?” she snapped, her composure cracking. “Make a scene? Defend your honor? This is the real world, Adrian. People judge. You have to be… stronger.”
“I am strong!” The words burst out of him, louder than he intended. “I’ve worked for everything I have! For everything we have! I’m strong for you! But I can’t… I can’t be him.” He jerked his head toward the ballroom. Toward Victor.
“No one is asking you to be him!” she fired back, but her eyes flickered. That was the lie. They both knew it.
“Aren’t you?” The question hung in the cold air. He saw the truth in her face the hesitation, the doubt she’d hidden so well under sweet smiles and “be patient, my love.”
The dam shattered.
“You’re ashamed of me,” he said, the realization a physical pain in his chest. “Not all the time. But here. With them. I’m a project to you. A ‘hard worker’ you can point to and feel noble for loving. But you’re waiting, aren’t you? Waiting for me to magically become one of them, and you’re getting tired of waiting.”
Tears, hot and furious, sprang to her eyes. Not tears of sadness, but of anger. Of being seen. “You think it’s easy?” she hissed. “You think I don’t love you? I do! But love doesn’t pay the bills for the life I want! Love doesn’t silence my parents! Love is a feeling, Adrian. It’s not a plan!”
He felt the floor drop out from under him. All the late nights, the skipped meals, the dreams he whispered to her in the dark… they were just a feeling. Not a foundation. Not enough.
“So what’s the plan, Lena?” he asked, his voice now deadly quiet. “What’s the real plan?”
The door to the ballroom swung open. Victor stood there, a silhouette against the golden light. He didn’t look surprised.
“Lena,” Victor said, his voice calm. “They’re asking for the toast. Are you… alright?”
Lena looked from Victor solid, powerful, certain to Adrian, standing in a hallway with champagne on his shoes and heartbreak on his face. He saw the calculation happen in real-time. The weighing. The final, awful arithmetic of fear and ambition.
She smoothed her dress. She wiped her eyes. She took a step away from Adrian, toward the light, toward Victor.
“I’m fine,” she said, her voice clear and cold. “Adrian was just leaving.”
Three words.
Was just leaving.
They weren’t an argument. They were an erasure. He wasn’t her fiancé having a fight. He was a problem being removed.
Victor smiled, a small, victorious thing. He extended an arm. Lena took it, her fingers settling in the crook of his elbow with a familiarity that stole the air from Adrian’s lungs.
She didn’t look back.
Adrian stood alone in the humming silence of the fluorescent hallway. The sounds of his engagement party the clinking glasses, the laughter, the music wafted over him. He could hear Victor’s voice rise, telling a joke. A wave of laughter followed.
He looked down at his hands. Good hands. Strong hands. Hands that had held her, worked for her, built for her.
They were empty.
The gentle man, the hopeful man, the man who believed loyalty was enough and love was a promise… that man died right there, on the cold tile floor of the Skyview Hotel.
All that was left was a hollow shell. And a cold, gathering storm where his heart used to be.
Expand
Next Chapter
Download

Continue Reading on MegaNovel
Scan the code to download the app
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Comments
No Comments
Latest Chapter
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man The City of Secrets
Chapter 60: The City of SecretsAdrian didn't sleep. He lay in the dark, Lena breathing softly beside him, staring at the ceiling of a hidden city. The text burned in his mind.Not everyone here is your friend.His grandmother? His mother? Someone who loved him? The words offered comfort and warning in equal measure.When dawn filtered through the small window, he slipped out of bed and stood looking at Haven. The cavern stretched before him, buildings carved from stone, lights strung between them like earthbound stars. People moved through streets, living their hidden lives.A knock at the door. Daniel stood there, two cups of coffee in his hands."Thought you might need this." He offered a cup. "Walk with me?"Adrian took the coffee, nodded. They walked through quiet streets, past waking families, past guards who nodded respectfully at Daniel."Your mother loved this place," Daniel said quietly. "Grew up here. Learned to fight here. Met your father here."Adrian stopped. "My father?
Last Updated : 2026-03-03
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man The valley of bones
Chapter 59: The Valley of BonesSmoke filled the valley. Gunfire cracked like thunder. People ran past, faces twisted with fear and purpose.Adrian pulled Lena behind a concrete barrier, his mind racing. This wasn't supposed to happen. Not here. Not now.Eleanor appeared beside them, blood on her sleeve, eyes fierce. "They came through the east tunnel. Cut off our escape.""How many?" Silas asked, limping up, gun ready."Too many. Dozens. Maybe more coming."Adrian looked at the people around him. Strangers, mostly. But they'd taken him in, offered shelter, asked nothing. He couldn't let them die."We need to draw them away," he said. "Give the others time to evacuate."Eleanor shook her head. "That's suicide.""Maybe." Adrian checked his weapon. "But it's the only play."Lena grabbed his arm. "I'm coming with you.""No.""Yes." Her eyes blazed. "I'm not hiding while you die. We fight together or not at all."He wanted to argue. But he saw her face, felt her grip. She meant it."Stay
Last Updated : 2026-03-02
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man Road to Shadows
Chapter 58: Road to ShadowsThe cabin felt smaller now. Tighter. The walls that had been shelter became a cage of questions.Adrian moved through rooms, packing, touching things he might never see again. Lena's robe on the chair. Mark's boots by the door. The photos on the wall—smiling faces, captured moments of peace that already felt like another life.Lena found him in the bedroom, staring at a picture of them by the lake."You're thinking about staying," she said softly."Thinking about running." He turned to her. "Taking you somewhere far. Disappearing.""Would it work?"He shook his head. "They'd find us. Eventually. They always do."She took his hands. "Then we face them. Together."He pulled her close, breathing her in. "I don't want to lose you.""You won't. Not ever."They held each other as the afternoon faded.By dusk, they were ready. Small bags. Essential things. Weapons, because old habits don't die.Silas waited by the car, leaning on his cane, face grim. Mark sat ins
Last Updated : 2026-03-01
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man The Calm Before
Chapter 57: The Calm BeforeThree months passed like a slow river.The cabin became home. Not the temporary kind, but real home. Lena's garden flourished, defiant against the mountain cold. Mark found work in a small garage in town, fixing engines and laughing with customers. Miranda visited every other week, bringing news of the empire's final dismantling.Thomas stayed. Not in the cabin, but close. A small house a mile down the road. Adrian hadn't forgiven him, but they talked now. Brief conversations. Awkward silences. The first steps of a journey neither knew how to walk.Silas recovered slowly. He stayed with them at first, then moved to a small apartment in town. He came for dinners, for walks, for quiet evenings by the fire. He never apologized again, and Adrian never asked. They'd moved past words.Rylan disappeared, as he always did. But postcards arrived regularly. Mountains. Oceans. Deserts. Always the same message: "Still watching. Still proud."Lawson visited once, bringi
Last Updated : 2026-02-28
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man The Reckoning Road
Chapter 56: The Reckoning RoadThomas led them through the night. Silas moved slowly, pain in every step, but he refused to stay behind. Adrian walked beside his father, gun ready, trust fragile as glass."He's in the old mining town," Thomas said quietly. "Abandoned for decades. He has a compound underground. Hidden. Protected.""How do you know?" Rylan asked, suspicion in his voice."Because he told me. Years ago. In case he ever needed a bolt hole." Thomas's voice was hollow. "He trusted me. More fool him."They drove for hours, two cars full of ghosts seeking vengeance. Lena sat beside Adrian, her hand in his. Mark rode with Miranda and Rylan. Silas stared out the window, saying nothing.Dawn broke as they reached the mountains. The mining town was a skeleton of rust and rot. Empty buildings. Silent streets. The kind of place where people disappeared.Thomas stopped at the edge of town, pointing to a hillside. "There. The entrance is hidden behind that old warehouse."Adrian studi
Last Updated : 2026-02-27
They Regretted Betraying The Wrong Man The morning after
Chapter 55: The Morning AfterThe cabin was small, hidden deep in woods that had no name. They'd found it after walking all night, too tired to go further. Rylan knew the owner, an old friend who owed him. Safe, for now.Adrian sat on the porch as dawn broke, watching light creep through the trees. He hadn't slept. Couldn't. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw his father's face, heard Webb's words, felt the weight of thirty years of lies.Lena found him there, wrapped in a blanket, coffee cold in his hands."You should sleep," she said softly, sitting beside him."I know." He didn't move. "Can't."She leaned against him, her warmth a small comfort in the cold morning. "What are you thinking about?""Everything. Nothing." He paused. "My mother. What he did to her. How I'm supposed to look at him now."Lena was quiet for a moment. "You don't have to decide today. Or tomorrow. Forgiveness isn't a switch."He nodded slowly. She'd said that before, months ago. It still felt true.Inside,
Last Updated : 2026-02-26
You may also like
related novels
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
