Arminda POV
"I panicked," Coleton breathed, the admission ragged.
It was the first time I had ever heard him use that word. He stood at the foot of my hospital bed, his hands gripping the metal railing so tightly his knuckles turned the color of bone.
"The explosion... it triggered the memory of the car bomb. I just grabbed the nearest person and ran. It wasn't a choice, Arminda. It was a reflex."
"The nearest person," I repeated, my voice flat as I gestured to the heavy plaster cast encasing my leg. "I was on the floor, Coleton. Looking right at you. Charly was by the door."
"I didn't see you."
He looked me dead in the eyes and said it.
The lie hung in the sterile air between us, heavy and suffocating.
"I thought you were behind me," he added, doubling down.
I looked away, staring at the blank, white wall. It was easier than looking at the ghost of the man I thought I knew.
"It doesn't matter, Coleton. It clarifies things."
"It clarifies nothing!" he snapped, the guilt twisting into anger. "You're not going to Europe. Esther told me about the money. You think you can just buy your way out of this family?"
"Esther fired me," I said. "She paid me to leave."
"I am the Don!" His voice rose, cracking with a strange, frantic desperation. "Esther doesn't make personnel decisions. I do. And you are not dismissed."
Before I could answer, his phone buzzed against the bedside table. He snatched it up, and his face softened instantly—a transformation that cut deeper than the shrapnel.
"Charly? Yeah, I'm here. What? You can't breathe?"
He looked at me, then back at the device. "I'm coming. Stay on the line."
He hung up, already turning away. "She's having a panic attack about the fire. She needs me."
"I have a broken bone," I said quietly.
"You're a nurse," he threw over his shoulder, his hand on the doorknob. "You know how to heal. She doesn't."
He walked out.
And with him went the last shred of the girl who had loved him.
*
Three days of silence later, he sent a car for me.
Not to take me to the airport, but to the estate.
"Mandatory attendance," Isaias said as he helped me maneuver into the backseat of the limousine. His tone was professional, but he avoided my gaze. "Charity Auction for the Children's Hospital. It washes the money. Boss says you have to be there to show the family is united after the gallery attack."
I sat in the back, my cast propped up awkwardly on the leather.
The front passenger door opened, and Charly slid in. She wore a dress that likely cost more than my entire medical school tuition. She adjusted the rearview mirror, not to check traffic, but to admire her own lipstick, effectively blocking my view of the road.
"Cole implies we're a trio," Charly laughed, casting a glance at Coleton as he took the wheel. "But we all know who sits in the front."
Coleton didn't defend me.
He just drove.
The auction was a blur of fake smiles, clinking crystal, and the blinding flash of diamond jewelry. I sat at the Barron table in a wheelchair, feeling invisible in my black dress, like a shadow amidst their glitter.
Coleton was manic, bidding on everything, displaying his wealth with a feverish intensity to prove the Barrons weren't weakened by the bombing.
He bought Charly a diamond necklace for two hundred thousand dollars. He draped it around her neck while the room applauded. "To the most beautiful survivor," he toasted.
Then, the auctioneer unveiled the next item.
It was a painting. *Lavender Fields at Dusk*.
My breath hitched in my throat.
It was an oil painting of a field in Provence, rendered in deep purples and soft golds. During the long, agonizing nights when Coleton couldn't sleep from his chronic pain, I used to read to him about Provence. I told him it was my dream to open a small clinic there, surrounded by lavender. I told him the scent was the only thing that truly calmed my soul.
Coleton looked at the painting. He looked at me.
For a heartbeat, time suspended. I thought he remembered.
"Fifty thousand," Coleton called out.
"Sold!"
My heart fluttered, a traitorous bird in my chest. A peace offering? An apology?
The attendants brought the painting to our table. Coleton took it. He turned toward me, holding the frame.
"Arminda," he started.
I reached out a hand, my throat tight, tears pricking the corners of my eyes.
"Charly loves purple," he said, turning slightly and handing the painting to the woman beside him. "It matches your eyes, babe. A bonus for the necklace."
Charly squealed, clapping her hands. "Oh, Cole! It's boring, but the frame is antique. I love it."
My hand was still reached out.
I slowly curled my fingers into a fist and lowered it to my lap.
The humiliation was a physical blow, heavier than the water in the pool, hotter than the fire in the gallery. It was a precise, surgical strike to the heart.
A waiter glided by with champagne. Coleton grabbed a glass and held it out to me.
"Drink up, Arminda," he said, his eyes challenging me, daring me to make a scene. "Celebrate with us."
I looked at the bubbling glass. I looked at the painting in Charly's ungrateful hands.
"No," I said.
"Excuse me?" Coleton's smile dropped, his brow furrowing.
"I said no." I reached down and unlocked the brakes on my wheelchair with a sharp *click*.
"I don't drink with strangers."
I wheeled myself away from the table, leaving him standing there with the glass in his hand, looking confused for the first time all night.
Arminda POV
The silence in the elevator was heavy, thick enough to choke on.
Charly was humming, tracing the frame of the lavender painting she didn't even like, her finger moving in slow, mocking circles.
Coleton stared straight ahead, a muscle in his jaw jumping as he ground his teeth.
When the doors slid open, I wheeled myself out first, desperate for the sanctuary of my room.
"You embarrassed me tonight," Coleton said to my back.
"You embarrassed yourself," I replied, not stopping.
"Hey!"
Charly stepped in front of my wheelchair, blocking my path to the hallway. "Don't talk to him like that. You're just a glorified maid with a degree."
"Move, Charly," I said, exhausted.
"Or what?" She smirked, leaning down until her perfume clogged my senses. "You'll break another bone?"
She stood at the top of the three steps that led down into the sunken living room. She looked at Coleton, who was taking off his jacket, then looked back at me. A wicked idea sparked in her eyes.
"Oops," she whispered.
Then, she threw herself backward.
It was a clumsy, theatrical fall. She landed on the carpeted steps with a thud that wouldn't even bruise a peach, but she screamed like she'd been shot.
"Ow! My back! She pushed me!" Charly wailed, clutching her spine. "Cole! She rammed me with the chair!"
Coleton spun around.
He saw Charly on the ground. He saw me sitting right above her.
He didn't pause to ask what happened. He didn't check the security cameras.
He crossed the room in two strides.
He seized the handles of my wheelchair and yanked it backward, spinning me away from her with such force that my cast slammed into the doorframe.
"Enough!" he roared, his face inches from mine.
He shoved the wheelchair again, pinning me against the wall. "You touch her again, Arminda, and I will forget every debt I owe you."
"I didn't touch her," I said, my voice trembling. "She threw herself down."
"Liar!" Charly sobbed from the floor, her voice a practiced tremolo. "She's jealous! She's obsessed with you, Cole!"
Coleton looked at me with disgust. "You're pathetic."
He turned and scooped Charly up into his arms, carrying her bridal style toward the master bedroom—his bedroom. The sanctuary I had never entered, except to change his dressings.
I sat there, pinned against the wall, listening to them.
"I can't stay in the guest room, Cole," Charly whimpered. "I'm scared of her."
"You're not staying in the guest room," Coleton said, his voice carrying through the open door. "You're moving in here. With me. Where I can keep an eye on you."
I watched as Charly’s head rested on his shoulder. She looked back at me and winked.
I managed to wheel myself into my room. I closed the door and locked it, though a lock meant nothing to a man like Coleton Barron.
The next morning, I woke up to the sound of movers.
I opened my door to find boxes everywhere. Charly's clothes, Charly's shoes, Charly's gaudy art. They were filling every corner of the penthouse.
Coleton was standing by the kitchen island, drinking espresso. He looked at me as I maneuvered out on my crutches.
"Charly is moving in officially," he stated, as if discussing the weather. "For her protection."
He pointed a finger at me.
"Don't talk to her. Don't look at her. And don't you dare touch her," he warned. "You stay in your room until your contract is up. Then you get the hell out."
I looked at the man I had saved. I looked at the space that had been my home, now invaded by the woman who was poisoning him.
"You don't have to worry, Coleton," I said, feeling a strange, cold peace settle over me. The hope was gone. The anger was gone. There was only nothing. "I won't touch her. I won't touch anything that belongs to you ever again."
I turned back to my room.
"Where are you going?" he asked, irritated by my lack of a fight.
"To pack," I said softly. "Properly, this time."
I closed the door. I pulled my suitcase out from under the bed. I didn't cry. I was done crying. I was a ghost in this house now, just waiting for the moment to fade away completely.
Arminda POV
I had become a ghost in my own life, a silent specter haunting the hallways of a penthouse that was once my sanctuary.
For three days, I remained invisible.
I watched them.
I watched Charly run her hands over things she didn’t understand. I watched her drag the furniture across the floor, moving the heavy leather armchairs to face the window because "the lighting was better for selfies."
I watched Coleton let her.
He was unrecognizable. The paranoid, razor-sharp Don I knew had been replaced by a man desperate to please a woman who treated him like a shiny accessory. He was trying to buy back the years he had lost in that wheelchair, and Charly was the price tag.
I sat in the corner of the sunken living room, my cast propped up on a velvet pillow. I was attempting to read a medical journal, trying to drown out the grating sound of Charly’s voice.
"What is this old thing?" Charly asked.
I looked up. My stomach dropped.
She was standing by the mantle, holding the rosewood box. It was small, inlaid with mother-of-pearl. It wasn't expensive, but it was the only artifact Coleton had kept from his father. It held his father’s first rosary.
It was the anchor Coleton used to cling to when the phantom pains in his legs became unbearable.
"Put that down, Charly," I said. My voice was low, rough from lack of use.
Charly turned, a wicked glint in her eyes. She tossed the box from one hand to the other like a toy.
"Why?" she asked, smiling. "Is it cursed? Or is it just another piece of junk you're obsessed with?"
"It belonged to his father," I said, my tone hardening. "He doesn't let anyone touch it."
"I'm not just anyone," she snapped.
She walked toward me, holding the box out over the unforgiving marble floor.
"Cole!" she yelled.
Coleton walked in from the office, phone in hand. He looked tired. He looked at me, then at Charly.
"What?" he asked.
"Arminda yelled at me," Charly pouted, her lower lip trembling with practiced ease. "I was just dusting, and she screamed that I was going to break it."
She looked at me, her eyes dead cold.
"Oops," she whispered.
She opened her fingers.
The box hit the marble. The sound was like a gunshot in the quiet room. The wood splintered. The lid cracked in half. The old rosary spilled out, sliding across the floor until it hit Coleton’s shoe.
Silence.
I waited for the explosion. I waited for Coleton to rage, to mourn the one piece of his history he actually valued.
"You clumsy bitch!" Charly shrieked, pointing a manicured finger at me. "She threw a pillow at me! She made me drop it!"
I hadn't moved. The pillow was still under my leg. I was ten feet away from her.
"Check the cameras, Coleton," I said. My voice was steady. "Just check the cameras."
Charly’s face went pale. "The cameras? You think I'm lying? Cole, look at my hands! I'm shaking!"
Coleton looked down at the broken box. He looked at the rosary touching his shoe.
Then, he stepped over it.
He walked straight to Charly. He took her hands in his.
"Are you cut?" he asked.
I felt the air leave the room.
"I... I think so," Charly whimpered, squeezing out a tear. "I was just trying to make the place look nice for you."
"It's just a box, Charly," Coleton said. He didn't look at the floor. He didn't look at me. "We can buy another one."
"It was your father's," I whispered.
Coleton turned his head. His eyes were empty gray stones.
"My father is dead," he said. "And you are on thin ice. Stop terrorizing her, Arminda. Or you won't make it to the end of the week."
He put his arm around Charly and led her away from the mess.
"Leave it," he ordered over his shoulder. "The maid will clean it up."
I sat there for a long time. I looked at the broken wood.
I realized then that the box wasn't the only thing that had shattered. The man I loved was gone. He hadn't just forgotten the past; he had executed it.