The first email arrived at 7:13 AM.
"Disgusting whore. How dare you spread lies about Celeste?"
I stared at my phone, reading the message twice before deleting it. A glitch, I told myself. Some random troll who'd gotten hold of my work email.
By 7:30, I had seventeen more.
"Kill yourself."
"Everyone knows you're a pathetic gold-digger."
"Lawson deserves better than you."
My stomach twisted as I scrolled through the flood of hate spilling into my inbox. Each notification brought a fresh wave of vitriol, all somehow connected to Celeste's post. My fingers trembled slightly as I marked them as spam, but more kept coming.
When I arrived at the office, the receptionist avoided my eyes. The silence in the hallway felt deliberate, conversations dying as I passed. I'd worked here for three years before meeting Lawson—built a reputation on talent and hard work. Now, in the span of twelve hours, I'd become radioactive.
"Ms. Wood." Director Ferguson's voice cut through my thoughts. "My office. Now."
I followed him down the corridor, noting how he didn't hold the door for me. Inside, he didn't offer me a seat.
"I've been reviewing our upcoming projects," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Specifically, the Hawkins Media contract."
My pulse quickened. That contract would have secured my position for the next two years. "We were scheduled to sign the preliminary agreement today."
"Yes, well." He removed a document from his desk drawer—our agreement, already prepared for signatures. "I'm afraid we've had to reconsider."
"Reconsider? Why?"
Ferguson finally looked at me, his expression a mixture of discomfort and cold calculation. "Your public... instability... has become a liability. We can't risk associating our brand with someone generating this kind of negative attention."
"This is about Celeste's post," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
"Call it what you want. The fact is, certain investors have expressed concerns." He tapped the contract with one manicured finger. "And when Celeste Bryant personally calls to express those concerns, we listen."
Of course she had. I should have expected this.
"I'm sorry, Mara," he continued, though his tone suggested otherwise. "We're terminating the agreement."
With deliberate slowness, he tore the contract in half, then quarters, letting the pieces fall onto his desk between us.
---
"Where do you think you're going?"
Lawson's voice stopped me in the guest room doorway. I'd been methodically folding clothes into a suitcase, my movements mechanical after hours of shock.
I didn't look up. "I'm leaving."
"Leaving." He laughed, but there was no humor in it. He threw his tablet onto the bed beside me, the screen displaying a news article with my name in the headline. "'Media Executive Mara Wood Engulfed in Scandal'—is this what you wanted?"
"What I wanted," I said carefully, "was a husband who didn't pleasure himself to photos of his ex-girlfriend."
His jaw tightened. "This isn't about that. This is about damage control."
"Damage control," I repeated.
"The Hawkins family name is being dragged through the mud because of your little tantrum." He stepped closer, looming over me. "You're going to fix this."
"How?"
"Public apology. To Celeste. Admit you were jealous and vindictive." His voice dropped lower. "Be the dutiful wife you were supposed to be."
I finally met his eyes. "And if I refuse?"
Something dangerous flashed across his face. "Then I'll make sure you never work in this city again. Celeste has connections you can't imagine. One word from her, and you're finished."
I laughed then—a short, cold sound that seemed to surprise us both.
---
The apartment was small, sparse, and utterly silent when I closed the door behind me. No staff, no pretense, no husband waiting with excuses.
Just me and three suitcases.
I unpacked mechanically, hanging clothes in the empty closet, placing toiletries in the bathroom. Each item I removed from its packaging felt like shedding another piece of the life I'd thought I wanted.
When everything was unpacked, I sat on the edge of the bare mattress and finally allowed myself to feel.
The tears came slowly at first, then in a rush—hot and bitter and real. I pressed my palms against the cool windowpane, watching my reflection blur through the glass as I cried for the love I'd believed in, the future I'd imagined.
One hour. That's all I gave myself.
Then I wiped my face with the back of my hand and traced a pattern on the glass where my breath had fogged it—a circle with a single line through it.
Zero.
That's what they'd reduced me to.
But they'd made one critical mistake.
They thought they knew who I was.
They had no idea what I was capable of.
The coffee shop had always been my sanctuary—a place where I could disappear into the crowd, anonymous and safe. But today, that illusion shattered.
"Is that her?" The whisper cut through the morning chatter like a blade.
I kept my head down, focusing on my phone as I waited in line. Three days in my new apartment, and already I felt like a prisoner.
"The one who spread lies about Celeste," another voice said, louder this time.
The barista's eyes flickered to me with recognition, then away. My order took longer than usual.
When I finally reached for my coffee, a hand shot out and knocked the cup sideways. Hot liquid splashed across my blouse.
"Disgusting whore," a woman hissed, her face twisted with hatred. "You deserve worse than that."
I stumbled backward, coffee burning my skin through the fabric. The shop fell silent, all eyes on me.
"Security!" someone shouted, but not to protect me.
"You think you can hide?" The woman lunged forward, finger jabbing toward my face. "Your address is all over the internet. We know where you live!"
My blood turned to ice. They knew where I lived.
I fled the shop, pushing past gawkers and smartphones capturing my humiliation. Outside, I hailed a cab with shaking hands.
"Drive," I ordered, not giving a destination. "Just drive."
The driver glanced at me in the rearview mirror. "You okay, lady?"
"No," I admitted, my voice breaking. "I'm not."
---
Back in my apartment, I triple-checked the locks before collapsing against the door. My hands wouldn't stop trembling as I pulled out my laptop.
The doxxing was worse than I'd feared. My temporary address, phone number, even my parents' names were posted across multiple platforms. Comments below the posts urged "real-world consequences" for my "cyberbullying."
This wasn't just harassment anymore. This was dangerous.
I took a deep breath and opened my laptop. It was time.
The video call connected with a soft chime. My father's face appeared first, his expression carefully neutral as always. Then my brother joined, his jaw already clenched.
"Mara," my father said simply.
"I need your help," I replied, hating how small my voice sounded.
My brother leaned forward. "What happened?"
I didn't sugarcoat it. For twenty minutes, I laid out every detail—Lawson's betrayal, Celeste's orchestrated attack, the professional blacklisting, and now the physical danger.
"He threw a drink at me today," I finished. "They know where I live."
My father said nothing, his eyes fixed on the window behind his desk. The city skyline stretched behind him, a testament to the empire he'd built.
"Say something," my brother demanded.
My father turned back to the camera, his gaze hardening. "What do you need, Mara?"
The question hung between us. Not 'are you okay?' or 'let me handle this.' Just: what do you need?
"I want Hawkins Corporation," I said, my voice steadying. "And I want them to suffer."
A slow smile spread across my brother's face. He cracked his knuckles—a habit from childhood—and reached for a notepad.
"Hostile takeover," he said, already writing. "We'll need to move quickly. I'm thinking a three-pronged approach..."
---
The park was empty when I arrived, just as Asher had promised. Ancient oaks provided cover from prying eyes, their branches creating a canopy overhead.
"I wasn't sure you'd come," he said as I approached the bench where he sat.
"Neither was I," I admitted.
He stood as I neared—tall, composed, nothing like his cousin Lawson. "I've been watching," he said simply.
"Watching what?"
"Everything." He gestured to the bench. "May I?"
I nodded, keeping a careful distance as we sat.
"Lawson's been mismanaging the company for years," Asher continued. "The board's been covering it up, but I've documented everything."
"Why?"
"Because I believed in what Hawkins Corporation could be." His eyes met mine. "And because I've always known what Lawson was capable of."
I studied him carefully. "Why should I trust another Hawkins?"
Instead of answering, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a small USB drive. "Initial findings," he said, holding it out. "Financial irregularities. Board member conflicts of interest. Lawson's personal expenditures."
I didn't take it immediately. "What do you want in return?"
"Justice," he said quietly. "For you. For the company. For everyone he's hurt."
Something in his voice—a genuine anger on my behalf—made me reach for the drive.
"Thank you," he said as my fingers closed around it.
"Don't thank me yet," I replied. "I'm still deciding if I can trust you."
A small smile touched his lips. "Fair enough."
As I pocketed the drive, I couldn't help wondering what other secrets the Hawkins family was hiding—and whether Asher was truly an ally or just playing a longer game.