SEIRRA'S POINT OF VIEW
The car pulled up beside me.
The window rolled down.
And the last person I expected to see… was behind the wheel.
“Um… hi?” Her voice was smooth. Effortless. Like silk with a little spice. The kind of voice you hear and instantly know—this woman doesn’t beg for anything.
I blinked, frozen.
Bianca Brown.
The Bianca Brown.
Billionaire. Fashion icon. Business mogul. The woman every magazine couldn’t get enough of.
Her honey-blonde hair was pinned back in a loose bun, oversized sunglasses on, and a gold watch that probably cost more than my whole life.
“Are your good?” she asked, frowning at me through her window. Her gaze swept over my bags, then up to my tear-stained face. “What’re you doing out here with all that luggage?”
I opened my mouth.
Closed it.
Then opened it again. “Uh… I—um…”
“Look,” she said, voice softening just a little. “You lost or something? What’s your name?”
“Sierra,” I croaked, hugging my purse to my chest.
She pulled off her glasses and studied me. “Sierra what?”
I hesitated. “Hart.”
Her brows lifted slightly. “Hart?”
My stomach tightened. Crap. I should’ve just said something else. I didn’t even know if she knew Logan. Probably did. They all knew each other in those high towers and charity galas.
She tilted her head. “As in… Logan Hart?”
I nodded slowly. “Yeah. He, um… just kicked me out.”
Bianca blinked. “Wait. You worked for him or something?”
I looked down at my shoes. My toes were already numb from the cold.
“I was his wife,” I mumbled.
Her eyes widened a little, like I’d just told her I was the Queen of England.
“You… were married to Logan Hart?”
I gave a small nod.
She stared at me for a beat, lips parting slightly. “Damn.”
I sniffed, wiping my face with the back of my hand. “Yeah.”
Bianca looked genuinely confused now. “He kicked you out? Just like that?”
I gave a weak laugh. “With bodyguards and his new girl in my robe. It was a whole performance.”
Her mouth dropped open. “What the actual hell…”
“Yeah,” I said again, voice cracking.
She stared at me, like trying to figure out if this was a prank. Then she glanced around the street.
“This part of town isn’t exactly… you know, safe. Especially not with luggage. You got somewhere to go?”
I quickly nodded. “Yeah. Yes. My friend. Rebecca.”
She raised an eyebrow. “Where’s she live?”
“Um… Long Beach,” I said, making it up on the spot. I didn’t even know if Rebecca was home, but it sounded far enough to end this conversation fast.
Bianca tapped her fingers on the wheel. “That’s not exactly walking distance.”
“I’ll… I’ll find a way. Don’t worry.”
“Don’t worry?” she repeated, then shook her head with a scoff. “Girl, you’re crying, standing in the cold, dragging a suitcase like someone dropped you out of a moving car, and you're telling me not to worry?”
I laughed a little through my tears.
Bianca sighed, popped the door open, and leaned over. “Get in.”
I stared at her. “What?”
“Get. In. I’m not leaving you here to get robbed or hit by a truck.”
“I’m fine, really. I can call an Uber—”
“With what phone?” she snapped gently, eyeing my cracked screen sticking out from my tote. “And with what money?”
I didn’t answer.
She tilted her head. “Exactly.”
I hesitated a moment longer, then slid into the passenger seat.
Her car smelled like vanilla and power.
She reached back, pulled a pack of tissues from her bag, and handed it to me. “Here. Clean up your face. You look like a sad raccoon.”
I smiled faintly. “Thanks.”
She started the engine and pulled off smoothly. “So… ex-wife of Logan Hart. Didn’t see that coming today.”
“Yeah,” I muttered. “Me neither.”
“How long were you married?”
“Two years.”
She glanced at me. “You’re… what, twenty-four?”
“Twenty-five next week.”
“Damn. Happy early birthday, I guess.”
I let out a shaky laugh. “Thanks.”
We rode in silence for a moment. The kind that wasn’t awkward—just full. Heavy.
Then she spoke again.
“You hungry?”
I shrugged. “A little.”
“Good. I know a place. You need food, coffee, and someone to remind you that idiots like Logan are born every day.”
I looked over at her.
She was smiling now. Not in a pity way. More like… a woman who’d been through storms and learned how to drive in the rain.
“Thanks,” I whispered.
She shrugged. “Don’t thank me yet. I might be crazy.”
I laughed softly.
Bianca reached for the intercom. “Jay, pull over at that bakery up ahead. Grab me my usual and get whatever looks warm and filling for her, alright?”
“On it, ma’am,” came the voice through the speaker.
She leaned back, eyes flicking to me. “You like croissants? Or are you more of a grilled sandwich kind of girl?”
I shrugged, still gripping the tissue. “Honestly? I’ll eat anything that doesn’t come in a microwave box.”
Bianca chuckled, resting an elbow on the door and watching traffic lazily through her window. “So… who's the chic Logan was following, huh?”
My stomach tightened just at the name. “Tessa Black.”
She turned to me, brows raised. “Tess? As in… the Tessa Black? Petite, fake smile, always overdressed for brunch?”
I nodded slowly, biting my lip. “Yep. That one.”
“Damn,” Bianca muttered, shaking her head. “I knew she was a little shady but… I didn’t know she had it in her. Girl always came to those events acting like a humble daisy.”
I looked down at my lap, voice low. “She wore my robe. And she had the nerve to wave goodbye from the balcony. I mean, who does that?”
Bianca scoffed. “Women with no home training, that’s who. And Logan—ugh. Girl, the moment a man trades a diamond for a pebble, that’s on him.”
“I just…” I paused, fighting the burn in my throat again. “I thought he was my person.”
Bianca didn’t say anything at first. She just looked at me. Really looked. Then sighed.
“You’re allowed to feel sad,” she said softly. “Heartbreak’s not some switch you flip off. It’s more like a leaking tap. You deal with the drip ‘til it stops.”
I gave a small smile. “You talk like you’ve been through it.”
“Oh, baby,” she snorted, “I’ve been through worse. Trust me. At least yours didn’t run off with your assistant and your dog.”
I blinked. “He took your dog?”
“And named it after his new girlfriend.”
We both burst out laughing, and for the first time, it didn’t feel forced.
The car door opened, and her driver leaned in with two brown paper bags.
“Ma’am,” he said, handing them over.
“Thanks, Jay,” she said, taking them and passing one to me.
I opened it and the smell hit me—cheese, butter, warm bread. My stomach growled loud enough to embarrass me.
I didn’t wait. I dug in, chewing like someone who hadn’t eaten in days. Because honestly? I hadn’t.
After a few bites, I realized Bianca was watching me with a small smile.
“I’m so sorry,” I said through a mouthful, wiping my lips. “That was so rude. I didn’t even say thank you—”
She waved her hand. “Girl, hush. Eat. You’ve earned it.”
We rode in silence for a bit while I devoured the sandwich like it was gold.
Then she spoke again.
“Sierra Hart, huh?”
I paused, blinking at her.
“You shouldn’t go by that name anymore,” she said, voice calm. “Hart’s done with you. Time to be done with Hart.”
I stared at her, heart thudding in my chest.
“What’s your real last name?” she asked.
I swallowed and said it softly. “Morgan.”
She smiled. “Pretty. Strong. Has a ring to it.”
Then she turned to the driver. “Jay, take us to the Long Beach. And from now on—this girl right here?” She tapped my shoulder. “She’s Sierra Morgan.”
And just like that, we drove off.
And for the first time in a long time… I didn’t feel like I was falling.
I felt like I was starting.
SEIRRA'S POINT OF VIEW
The car slowed in front of a cute little townhouse tucked away in a quiet street in Long Beach. The sun had dipped lower now, painting the sky in soft orange and pink. The air smelled like salt and peace. For the first time in hours, I could breathe a little.
Bianca turned to me with a soft smile. “This the place?”
I nodded. “Yeah. That’s Becca’s house. She’s… kind of all I’ve got right now.”
Bianca reached for her purse and pulled out a small stack of crisp bills, folded them once, and handed them to me.
I blinked. “Wait—Bianca, no, I can’t—”
She pressed it into my hand. “You’re not taking charity. You’re taking a soft place to land until your wings grow back.”
I swallowed. “Thank you. Seriously.”
She smiled, that calm, expensive kind of smile. “Get some rest, Sierra Morgan.”
I gave a small laugh. “Right. Morgan.”
“You don’t owe him anything anymore. Not even the name.”
I nodded, heart swelling with something between relief and a brand new kind of sadness. “I’ll never forget this.”
Bianca winked. “Just don’t forget who you are.”
Then the car door opened, and I stepped out onto the sidewalk with my bags. I turned back one last time. Bianca gave a little wave before the tinted car glided away, smooth and clean, like her.
I exhaled, turned to the gate, and walked up to the door.
My knuckles hovered a second, then I knocked.
A few beats later, it creaked open—and there she was.
Becca.
Brown curls tied in a messy bun, wearing a huge tie-dye shirt and fuzzy socks, mascara smudged like she hadn’t taken it off in two days. Her mouth dropped open.
“Sierra?” she blinked. “What the hell—what happened?!”
My voice cracked. “Logan kicked me out.”
Her eyes flared, and she yanked me into a hug. My bags dropped, my arms wrapped around her tightly.
“I knew that man was trash. I knew it,” she mumbled into my hair. “But you—oh my God, are you okay? Did he hurt you again?”
“No,” I whispered. “Just… broke me a little.”
We pulled apart, and she looked at my face—mascara streaks, dried tears, puffy eyes.
“Come in, come in,” she said quickly, dragging me and my bags inside. “Wait, how’d you even get here?”
I wiped my face. “A woman helped me. Bianca Brown.”
Becca froze mid-step. “Bianca Brown?”
I nodded slowly. “Yeah.”
Becca’s eyes widened. “As in the billionaire beauty icon Bianca Brown? The woman with the yacht named Freedom?”
“Yup,” I said, exhausted.
Becca stared at me like I had grown a halo. “Girl, you left Logan Hart this evening and you’re already rubbing elbows with the queen of glow-ups? This is fate.”
I laughed, tired but real. “Yeah, it’s wild.”
“Wild?” she said, grinning. “It’s divine intervention. You’ve been upgraded by the universe!”
She nudged me toward the guest room. “But first—go lie down. You look like you’ve wrestled with life and lost.”
I laughed again. “I feel like it.”
She pulled back the covers and gestured. “Rest. We’ll talk more after you’ve eaten and slept for ten years.”
I dropped onto the bed, the weight of everything hitting me all over again—but this time, it wasn’t crushing. It was just… real.
And somehow, in the chaos of it all, I was finally safe. So I slept off..
The scent of bacon and buttermilk pancakes dragged me out of sleep like a warm hand pulling me gently from the weight of darkness.
My head still hurt. A slow, dull throb settled right behind my eye. My neck was stiff. My arms, my legs… they still carried the soreness from last night. From his fists. From all the nights before this one.
But the ache in my chest? That one stayed the same. It never left. It was just… there. Constant. A hollow.
I blinked, trying to adjust to the soft morning light streaming through the sheer white curtains in Becca’s living room. She’d thrown a comforter over me sometime in the night. A real one. Soft. Clean. It smelled like lavender and her vanilla body spray.
For a moment, I didn’t move.
And then I heard her heels.
Click. Click. Click.
I looked up and there she was—Becca. Dressed already in her work outfit, like the boss she was. Long black pencil skirt hugging her hips, light blue shirt tucked in, sleeves rolled neatly at her elbows. Her hair was up in the tight bun she always wore when she meant business. She had this no-nonsense look on her face, but when her eyes met mine, it melted.
“Morning,” she said gently, setting a glass of orange juice on the coffee table next to a steaming plate.
“Morning,” I croaked. My voice sounded broken.
She crouched in front of me again, just like last night, and brushed a few strands of hair off my face. “I made you breakfast. Pancakes, eggs, bacon. Toast, too. I didn’t know what you’d feel like, so I made a little of everything.”
My throat tightened.
“You didn’t have to—”
“Yes, I did,” she cut me off softly, with a small smile. “You need food." You need warmth. You need to feel like a person again.”
She paused, eyes scanning the bruise around my eye, the small cuts on my lip. I saw the fire flash again in her gaze. The anger. She wanted to kill him. I knew it.
“You going to eat?” she asked.
I nodded slowly.
“Good. The tea’s still hot. I put the painkillers right next to the plate.” She stood, smoothing down her skirt. “I’m heading to work, but I’m just a call away. Literally. My phone stays in my pocket all day.”
I watched her walk toward the door, grabbing her purse and keys. Then she stopped. Turned. Walked right back over to me.
She sat beside me on the couch and took my hand.
“Seirra,” she said, voice softer now. “It’s gonna be okay.”
I stared down at my hands. They were trembling.
“I know it doesn’t feel like it right now. But it’s over. You’re out. And I’m proud of you. Do you hear me? You got out.”
Tears welled in my eyes, finally.
“You’re safe. And we’ll take it one day at a time.”
I leaned my head on her shoulder and whispered, “Thank you.”
She kissed the top of my head and stood again.
“Eat something, babe. Then shower, take a nap. Watch trash TV. I don’t care what you do today, but just—rest. I got you.”
And then she was gone.
And for the first time in forever, someone actually meant it when they said they got me.
The pancakes were sweet. A little too sweet. But I kept eating.
My legs were curled under the blanket, my hair still stuck to the side of my cheek with dried tears and sweat. The TV screen glowed in front of me, playing one of those movies Becca loved—where the woman rises up, becomes a boss, runs a company, and wears designer heels while stepping on necks. That kind of story.
The lady in the film had this confidence. This fire. She didn’t take shit from anyone. Every time she walked into a room, people looked. Every time she spoke, people listened. She had money. Power. Control.
Everything I didn’t have.
I stared at her, then at myself. I let the fork drop from my fingers onto the plate, half-eaten bacon still there. Something heavy sat in my chest. I couldn’t shake it off.
I got up slowly, limbs aching as I walked to the small mirror hanging near the front door. Becca’s apartment wasn’t huge, but it was neat. Bright. Soft. The kind of place that looked lived in with love. It didn’t match the reflection staring back at me.
I looked horrible.
My eye was bruised purple and yellow. My lip cracked and dry. My skin looked dull, lifeless. My hair was a matted mess of sweat and shame. My shirt was wrinkled, probably still stained from the soup I spilled days ago while begging Logan to just sit down with me—to just see me.
And then I said it.
Out loud.
“Pathetic.”
My voice cracked.
I was pathetic.
Dirty. Poor. Unloved.
I stepped back from the mirror like it was going to slap me. Then I stormed into the guest bathroom, ripped off the shirt, the pants, the stained bra. I turned on the shower as hot as I could take it, and I stood under it like I was trying to burn the past off my skin.
I washed until I didn’t feel the ache in my muscles anymore. Until the sob that was stuck in my throat finally came out. Until my legs gave out and I sat down, hugging my knees as the water poured down on me.
When I was done, I wrapped myself in a towel and walked into the room Becca said I could use. I pulled on a black hoodie and some faded jeans. My old clothes. I didn’t bother opening the suitcase I packed from Logan’s place. The designer dresses. The jewelry. The heels.
What was the point?
I wasn’t going anywhere fancy again. Nobody was inviting me to galas or fundraisers. I wasn’t a wife anymore. I was just… me.
But even being me felt foreign.
Still, one thing stuck in my mind like a splinter:
I couldn’t keep depending on Becca.
I couldn’t keep eating her food, using her power, showering in her bathroom like a stray dog. She wasn’t just giving me space—she was giving me a second chance at breathing. And I didn’t want to waste it.
I needed to get a job.
I needed to do something.
But who would even hire me? Looking like this. Feeling like this.
And if I’m being honest—I didn’t even want to leave the house. I didn’t want to face anyone. Not with these bruises. Not with this shame.
But what choice did I have?
I had to live. Somehow.
SEIRRA’S POINT OF VIEW
It started with a knock.
A slow, deliberate knock.
I froze.
Sitting on Rebecca's couch, curled in her blanket, a bowl of cold mac and cheese in my lap. Not even hungry—just filling the silence.
Then it came again.
Three sharp pounds. Thunder on wood.
My heart rammed my chest.
No. Please no.
Was it him?
Becca said I was safe here. She swore.
But what if Logan found me?
I crept to the window, pulled the blinds with shaking fingers—and there it was.
A Silver Audi.
His Silver Audi.
And in front of it… two men in black suits. One holding a briefcase.
My stomach twisted.
My legs moved before I could stop them, carrying me to the door. I didn’t want to open it. But not knowing felt worse.
I opened it.
And there he was.
Logan Hart.
Looking flawless.
Like he hadn’t shattered me into a thousand pieces just nights ago.
Same slicked-back hair. Same cold, dead eyes. Same twisted smirk.
“Logan…” I whispered. “Please. Don’t make me go back. I—I can’t.”
He chuckled. A low, cruel sound.
“Relax,” he said. “You’re not coming back.”
I blinked. “W-What?”
He nodded at the man beside him. The guy stepped forward and tossed a stack of papers at my feet.
They scattered across the porch.
I stared at them, heart hammering.
“What is this?” My voice cracked.
Logan stepped closer. “A gift.”
I shook my head slowly. “What do you mean?”
He smiled. Cold. Lazy. Like this was a game.
“Divorce papers, sweetheart. Signed and sealed.”
He tapped the page with his ring finger. “Congratulations. You’re finally free.”
I bent, picked them up with trembling hands.
His signature was right there. Ink black and final.
“I can’t believe you did this,” I said. “After everything?”
He tilted his head. “Believe it or not, baby…”
He laughed, short and sharp. “I’m done playing husband.”
“But you said you’d never let me go.”
He shrugged. “People change. Or maybe I just got bored watching you beg.”
I flinched.
One of the men held out a pen.
I looked down at the papers. No emotion. No apology. Just terms, clauses, and the death of something I once believed in.
I signed.
Hands shaking. Vision blurred.
The men grabbed the documents and stepped back. Logan turned, already walking toward his car.
“That’s it?” I called. “That’s how it ends?”
He paused, one hand on the door.
“Don’t pretend you didn’t want this too,” he said. “I just gave it to you first.”
Then he slid inside. Engine roared.
And he was gone.
Silence poured over the porch.
I collapsed, the blanket slipping off my shoulders. The divorce papers crushed in my grip. My heart felt like glass—cracked in places I didn’t know existed.
I’d begged for this moment. Prayed for it.
But now that it was real… it felt like drowning.
He didn’t love me. He didn’t even hate me.
He just wanted me gone.
And that hurt worse than the bruises.
I sat there, tears slipping down my cheeks.
I didn’t know who I was anymore. Not Logan’s wife. Not the broken girl from before. Just... empty.
But deep inside, something stirred.
A flicker. A whisper.
You’re free now.
Not strong yet. Not healed. But free.
And maybe that was enough to start over.
“I won’t be the victim again,” I said, barely above a whisper. “I’ll pray. I’ll fight. I’ll find myself again.”
I wiped my face, gripped the papers tighter.
This was the end.
And maybe—just maybe—the beginning too.
The sound of the engine faded.
I sat there, on the porch, clutching the divorce papers. My fingers curled so tightly around them, the edges cut into my palm—but I couldn’t let go.
Not yet.
Not when everything felt this final.
The door creaked open behind me.
“Seirra?”
Becca.
I didn’t move. I couldn’t.
She stepped out, barefoot and in pajamas, eyes wide. “Why are you out here? It’s freezing—”
Her gaze dropped to the papers in my lap.
“Oh my God,” she whispered. “Is that…?”
I nodded slowly. “He came.”
Becca knelt beside me, wrapping her arms around my shoulders. I didn’t realize I was crying again until her thumb brushed a tear from my cheek.
“He gave me the papers,” I said, voice hollow. “Didn’t even come in. Just tossed them at me like trash.”
Becca didn’t speak. Just held me tighter.
“He really did it,” I whispered. “He signed them, Becs. No fight. No argument. Just… done.”
She pulled back, looked me in the eye. “That man was poison. You know that, right?”
I managed a weak nod.
“But it still hurts.”
“Of course it does.” She helped me up. “Come on. Let’s get you inside.”
I let her guide me back to the couch. The blanket was still there, still warm. Everything was the same. And yet, I wasn’t.
Becca handed me a cup of tea. I didn’t remember her making it, but I held it anyway.
She sat across from me, legs folded beneath her. “So… what now?”
I shrugged. “I don’t know.”
“You’re free. That’s something.”
“Yeah. It just doesn’t feel like it yet.”
She gave me a soft look. “Well, you’re not going back to him. That much I know. You’ll stay here as long as you need.”
“Thanks,” I whispered.
Becca tilted her head. “So, tell me. What do you want to do now? What are you good at—besides cleaning up after a man-child?”
I laughed, broken and quiet. “I don’t know…”
“Come on. There must be something. Everyone has a thing.”
I stared into my tea, thinking. Then slowly, a memory surfaced—warm and distant.
“Well,” I began, “when I was younger, before I met Logan… I went to this really good school. Learned a bunch of stuff.”
Becca leaned in. “Like what?”
“Web design. Graphics. A bit of coding.” I smiled faintly. “I loved it. I used to stay up all night tweaking designs, learning HTML, playing with Photoshop.”
Becca’s eyes lit up. “Girl, are you serious? That’s huge!”
I blinked. “It is?”
“Uh, yes! Do you know how many people make real money doing that stuff? Freelancing, designing websites, even teaching!”
I shook my head. “I haven’t touched a laptop in years.”
“So what? It’s like riding a bike. You never really forget.”
I stared at her. “You think I could actually… work again?”
“I think you’re smarter than you give yourself credit for,” she said. “And honestly? It’s time you start building something that belongs to you.”
The words sank deep.
Something that belonged to me.
Not Logan. Not his world. Not his control.
Mine.
A slow breath filled my lungs.
“Okay,” I said. “I’ll try.”
Becca grinned. “That’s all I needed to hear.”
I looked down at the papers on the table.
Final. Cold. But maybe… freeing.