I slept restlessly that night. Every time I drifted off, I jolted awake again, my thoughts circling the same image-Evelyn looking over her shoulder in a dark Brooklyn street. It played on repeat in my mind, blurry but haunting. She wasn't panicked. She wasn't crying. She looked... alert. Aware. Almost like she expected someone to find her.
When I finally gave up on sleep, pale sunlight was creeping through the tall windows. The penthouse was still and silent, too large for one person to wake up in. I wrapped my arms around myself, bracing against a sense of loneliness I didn't want to admit.
As I stepped into the hallway, I nearly collided with someone.
Adrian.
He was coming out of his home office, sleeves rolled up, tie loose, the faint beginning of stubble along his jaw. He looked like he hadn't slept either. His eyes flicked over me quickly, sweeping from my expression to my posture.
"You didn't sleep," he said.
It wasn't a question.
"Neither did you," I replied.
His jaw tightened slightly, but he didn't deny it. He walked past me, heading toward the kitchen, and I followed without meaning to. His presence pulled me along like gravity itself.
He poured coffee into two cups before pausing, as if realizing what he was doing. For a moment, he looked at the second cup like it surprised him. Like the thought of including me was instinctive rather than deliberate.
He pushed it toward me.
"Drink."
I accepted it carefully, watching him over the rim.
Adrian leaned against the counter, arms crossed, studying me with that unreadable intensity he wore like armor.
"You're thinking about the photo," he said.
"I'm thinking about Evelyn," I answered softly. "None of this makes sense."
He didn't respond immediately. He took a slow sip of coffee, eyes fixed on the floor for a brief, rare moment of distraction. When he finally spoke, his voice was quieter than before.
"She always ran from responsibility," Adrian said. "But she never ran blindly. If she's hiding, she has a reason. A serious one."
I hesitated before asking, "Do you blame her for leaving?"
His eyes lifted to mine, sharper now. "What do you think?"
I swallowed. "I think you're angry. But not only because she abandoned you."
A muscle in his jaw flexed.
Adrian Blackwell did not enjoy being seen.
Before he could respond, the penthouse door opened and Marcus stepped inside, carrying a folder in one hand and a phone in the other.
"Morning," Marcus said. Then, noticing the tension in the room, added, "Or whatever we're calling this."
He handed the folder to Adrian. "I checked city traffic cameras. Evelyn's sighting is real. She was in Brooklyn two nights ago, then got into a black car. No plates. Driver was careful. Practiced."
Adrian flipped the file open, scanning the images. "Someone picked her up?"
"Yes," Marcus said. "Voluntarily."
The word hit me like a slap.
"Voluntarily?" I repeated.
Marcus nodded. "I zoomed in. She wasn't forced. No struggle. She walked straight to the car."
My stomach twisted.
She wasn't running from someone chasing her.
She was meeting someone.
Adrian closed the file slowly, as if fighting the instinct to slam it shut.
"Who was the driver?" he asked.
"No match in our system," Marcus said. "But I can tell you something else-your father is definitely involved. His assistant requested sealed court records last night."
"Sealed records?" Adrian's voice dropped. "Of what?"
Marcus sighed. "Marriage contracts."
The room went silent.
Marriage contracts.
The arranged marriage.
Our marriage.
My heart hammered painfully.
Adrian straightened, the shift in his presence immediate and chilling.
"He's trying to find proof the bride was switched," Adrian said.
And suddenly everything inside me froze.
Marcus nodded. "And knowing Victor, he won't stop until he gets it."
I felt lightheaded. "If he finds out... what happens?"
Adrian looked at me, really looked at me, and for a moment his walls slipped-not enough for me to see everything, but enough to reveal tension sharp enough to cut.
"If my father proves this marriage is invalid," Adrian said, "he'll have it annulled."
Annulled.
The word rooted itself in my chest like a stone.
"You'd lose the Blackwell alliance," Marcus said. "And Lila-"
"-would be out," Adrian finished.
The implication hit me slowly, painfully.
"I'd be sent back to my family."
The family that only wanted me when Evelyn ran.
Adrian's expression remained unreadable. "You'd lose everything this marriage protects you from."
Everything.
The debts.
The public shame.
The humiliation.
The questions about Evelyn's disappearance.
The life I had been pushed into had somehow become the only shield I had.
Marcus cleared his throat. "We have two options."
Adrian didn't move. "Say them."
"Option one: We find Evelyn before Victor's investigator does."
"And option two?"
Marcus hesitated. His eyes flicked toward me, then back to Adrian.
"Option two... is to strengthen the appearance of the marriage."
The silence was immediate and suffocating.
I felt Adrian tense beside me.
Marcus continued carefully. "Victor loses power if he can't argue the marriage is fake. Public events. Family dinners. Appearances. Anything that shows Lila is your wife-and not just on paper."
My cheeks burned.
My heart raced.
Adrian's expression hardened instantly.
"That's out of the question."
Marcus shrugged. "So is letting your father win. Unless you want him controlling your household for the next decade."
Adrian didn't respond.
For the first time, he seemed... conflicted.
Marcus sighed. "Then we stick with option one. Find Evelyn."
He stepped toward the door, pausing only once.
"Oh," Marcus added casually, "and Victoria is on her way here."
"What?" Adrian snapped. "Why?"
Marcus smirked lightly. "She said she wants to 'welcome the new Mrs. Blackwell properly.'"
My blood went cold.
Victoria Blackwell.
His mother.
The woman who saw weakness as a flaw and love as a disease.
I felt Adrian move closer to me without realizing he had stepped forward. His voice dropped low, steady, and deliberate.
"Lila."
"Yes?"
"Whatever happens," he said, "you do not let my mother see fear."
My breath hitched.
"And why not?" I whispered.
His eyes held mine-dark, intense, uncomfortably sincere.
"Because she destroys anything that looks afraid."
The knock on the penthouse door echoed sharply through the room.
Marcus exhaled. "Showtime."
And Adrian glanced at the door with the expression of a man preparing to go to war.
Victoria Blackwell did not enter the penthouse like a guest. She entered like she owned the air inside it.
The door opened sharply, and she stepped in with the grace of someone who had spent her entire life being watched, admired, and feared. Her heels clicked against the marble floor with a rhythm that made my stomach tighten, each step precise and deliberate. She wore a fitted charcoal coat, diamond earrings that caught the light, and a faint perfume that smelled expensive enough to make me feel underdressed just standing in the same room.
Her gaze swept across the space, then stopped on me.
It was the kind of look that wasn't meant to see you.
It was meant to measure you.
"Lila," she said, her voice smooth and cold. "So we finally meet."
I forced a polite smile. "Mrs. Blackwell."
"Victoria," she corrected. "Use my name. 'Mrs. Blackwell' makes me sound older than I am."
She removed her gloves slowly, one finger at a time, never breaking eye contact. I stood straighter without realizing it, feeling suddenly too small in my own skin.
Adrian placed himself slightly in front of me-not obviously, but enough that Victoria's eyes narrowed at the gesture.
"You're early," he said.
She raised a brow. "I don't believe in being late. And I wanted to speak to your wife before we all become too busy."
His jaw tightened. "About what?"
Victoria smiled, a thin, elegant curve. "Marriage. Family expectations. Public image." Her gaze slid back to me, cool and assessing. "She is new to this world, Adrian. I assumed you would want her prepared."
Prepared.
As if I were a project.
A problem.
A weakness.
Adrian didn't respond, which only made Victoria more confident. She stepped toward me, her eyes studying my face, my hair, the way I held myself.
"You're very... quiet," she said.
"I don't see that as a flaw," I replied gently.
Victoria smiled again, but it didn't reach her eyes.
"In this family, silence is either a shield... or a confession."
The room felt colder.
Marcus, leaning casually against the far wall, muttered under his breath, "Here we go."
Victoria ignored him.
She moved around me slowly, like she was examining a painting she wasn't sure she approved of.
"Evelyn was more polished," she said. "More prepared for a role of this magnitude. People noticed her when she entered a room."
"And people don't notice me?" I asked softly.
Her lips curved. "Not yet."
Adrian stepped forward. "Mother-"
"I'm only stating the truth, darling," Victoria said. "A truth that matters if she is going to stand at your side."
Her words stung, not because they were cruel, but because they were delivered with the confidence of someone who believed she was doing the world a favor by pointing out its shortcomings.
"I'm not trying to replace Evelyn," I said quietly.
Victoria's eyes sharpened with interest. "A wise thing to say out loud. Though some replacements happen whether we intend them or not."
My pulse quickened.
Did she know?
Had she figured it out?
She tilted her head. "Tell me something, Lila. Are you prepared for the responsibility of being a Blackwell?"
"I'm trying," I answered truthfully.
"Trying." Victoria repeated the word like it tasted sour. "In this family, trying is what people do before they fail."
I felt the insult like a blow, but Adrian stepped closer to me, his voice low and dangerously calm.
"That's enough."
Victoria didn't flinch. "I'm helping her."
"You're testing her," he corrected.
"And why shouldn't I?" she asked softly. "We both know the stakes."
Adrian didn't answer. The silence that followed was thick, crackling with tension.
Victoria's expression softened by only a fraction. "Fine. I'll save the rest of my concerns for another day."
Then she stepped closer to me-close enough that I caught the faint scent of her perfume.
"I will give you one piece of advice," she said. "In this family, appearances are survival. If you want the world to believe you belong here, then show them. Stand tall. Speak clearly. And never-ever-look unsure."
Her eyes held mine with icy precision.
"The moment you seem afraid," she finished, "the world will tear you apart."
She turned to leave. Adrian moved to open the door for her, but she paused beside him.
"And Adrian," she added softly, "for your sake, I hope this marriage is exactly what it needs to be."
She left without waiting for an answer.
The door clicked shut behind her, and the penthouse felt too warm, too quiet, too full of the words she didn't say-and the ones she had.
Marcus let out a low whistle. "Well. That went better than expected."
Adrian didn't respond. He walked to the window, staring out at the city, shoulders tense.
I took a careful step toward him. "She doesn't like me."
"That's not what matters," he said.
"Then what does?"
He turned slowly, his expression unreadable but intense.
"What matters," Adrian said, "is that she doesn't suspect anything."
My breath caught.
She didn't know.
At least not yet.
"She will test you," he continued. "She will push you. She will watch everything you do." His eyes lowered to mine. "But she can't know the truth. Not now. Not ever."
My heart pounded. "I understand."
Adrian exhaled slowly, as if relieved-but not completely.
"Come here," he said quietly.
I stepped closer. He reached out and took my chin gently, angling my face upward. His touch wasn't soft, but it wasn't cold either. It was... deliberate. Intense.
"Don't let her see you break," he said. "Not even once."
"I won't," I whispered.
For a moment, neither of us moved. The distance between us felt sharp, electric, dangerous.
Then Adrian released me and stepped back.
Marcus cleared his throat loudly. "Well, that was intimate."
Adrian shot him a look that could have frozen lava.
Marcus smirked. "Relax. I'm only saying what everyone's thinking."
But Adrian wasn't listening. His gaze was still on me, something unreadable flickering behind his eyes.
Something new.
Something he didn't want to name.
Something he couldn't hide much longer.