Today marks our fourth wedding anniversary. My gaze lingered on the keys resting on the table — the red Ferrari I had arranged for Sebastian. He’d talked about owning one for years, and I wanted to surprise him. My other hand drifted to my stomach, a soft smile forming on my lips.
Soon, we would have a baby.
Life felt complete. It felt safe. Perfect, even.
That illusion shattered when Logan walked into my room without knocking. He had done that all my life, ever since we were children, but today something in his expression made my chest tighten.
“Isabella,” he said, voice strained and rough. “Sebastian already has a wife.”
For a second, I just stared at him. Then I let out a small laugh, because the claim sounded too absurd to take seriously.
“That’s your anniversary greeting?” I teased lightly, turning back to the mirror to fix my earrings. “You’re supposed to congratulate me, not start rumors. Is this about you thinking he’s not right for me again? We settled this when I chose to marry him. It’s been four years, Logan.”
“I’m serious,” he insisted, stepping closer. “He’s legally married — and it’s to his secretary, Candela. I checked everything. There are documents, registrations. He’s been lying about his identity from the start.”
My heart faltered, but I forced myself to stay calm.
“Enough,” I said quietly, meeting his eyes. “Not today. I don’t want to hear this.”
“I’m trying to protect you,” he replied, frustration slipping into his tone.
“And he saved my life once,” I countered. “He cares about me. Why would he lie? We’ve been together for years—”
“Exactly,” Logan cut in. “Four years, yet you don’t know anything about his family. Where he came from. His background. You handed him your company, let him handle your finances… and you don’t see the problem?”
“You’re saying this,” I murmured, “because you still haven’t gotten over me.”
His silence answered for him.
“Logan,” I softened, “please don’t ruin this. Don’t destroy something good just because you can’t move forward.”
“Isabella—”
“I don’t want to argue anymore.” I grabbed my coat, stepping past him, ignoring the slight shake in my hands.
He reached for me, but I pulled away before he could touch me.
The wind at the pier was chilly, brushing against my skin, yet I barely noticed. The yacht floated gently, adorned with delicate lights and scattered roses. It looked peaceful… romantic. I pushed Logan’s words aside. They couldn’t be true.
Clutching the small gift box, I stepped forward. “Happy anniversary,” I murmured softly.
Then suddenly—
A shove.
The world tilted, and icy water swallowed me.
I tried to kick upward, but my limbs felt heavy, unresponsive. Panic clawed at my chest. The memory of past trauma — the drowning I had barely survived years ago — resurfaced, dragging me deeper into fear. My lungs burned. The cold wrapped around me, pulling me into darkness.
My vision blurred. Everything faded.
Then I sensed movement above me. A splash. Someone had jumped in.
For a moment, it felt like history repeating itself. Four years ago, during a violent storm, someone had pulled me from the sea — a stranger who became my husband. I remembered the warmth of his grip, the reassurance in his voice, the comfort that made me fall for him.
Now, strong arms circled me again.
My fading consciousness clung to that thought.
If he was saving me… then Logan must be wrong. Sebastian cares about me.
Distant voices reached me, faint but clear enough.
“Candela, have you lost your mind? You could’ve killed her pushing her like that!”
Candela.
Logan’s warning echoed in my mind.
“I want her gone,” Candela snapped angrily. “Why won’t you just finish it? Four years of pretending is enough. I’m tired of waiting.”
My heart froze.
“I told you I can’t yet,” Sebastian replied, irritation lacing his voice. “I still need her company… her money. I have debts to clear. Once everything is under my name, I’ll return to my family. Then my father will take me back.”
Candela let out a bitter laugh. “Or is it because you’ve grown attached?”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” he shot back. “I’ve never loved her. You’re the one I care about. She’s just a means to an end. So stop acting recklessly until this is over.”
Candela sighed. “Fine.”
A door slammed.
Silence followed, and darkness claimed me completely.
The next thing I heard was a steady beeping sound. My eyes slowly opened, the blurry shapes forming into a hospital room.
Beside me sat Sebastian.
His face showed concern, worry etched perfectly — the image of a devoted husband. Anyone would’ve believed him.
But not me.
“Isabella,” he murmured, reaching for my hand. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have let you go ahead alone. Are you hurt?”
Something inside me fractured quietly, yet I kept my expression calm.
“We still have the investment signing tomorrow,” he continued carefully. “You’ll be able to attend, won’t you? It’s important.”
“It may need to be postponed,” I replied softly.
“That’s difficult,” he said quickly. “If you’re not well enough, I can sign for you. Just authorize me temporarily.”
“And why should I?” I asked evenly.
He blinked, surprised. “Because I’m your husband. Everything’s going to be shared ownership anyway.”
I forced a faint smile. “I’d like to rest first.”
He leaned down and kissed my forehead. “Of course. Don’t worry. I’ll take care of everything.”
Once he left and the door closed, my composure cracked. My fingers trembled as I grabbed my phone.
I dialed Logan’s number.
When he answered, my voice was quiet but steady.
“Logan… tell me everything you’ve found about Sebastian.”
Chapter 2Logan didn’t speak when he stepped into my hospital room. His face looked drained of color, his expression tight, like he was carrying something too heavy to say out loud.
Without a word, he placed a thick envelope on my lap.
“Go through it,” he murmured.
My hands shook as I opened it. Papers spilled out—photocopied files, scanned records, a passport copy, old news clippings, bank statements, photographs. There were too many. Every page I picked up felt like a blade cutting deeper than the last.
Logan let out a slow, shaky breath. “Isabella… Sebastian isn’t the man you think he is.”
My chest tightened painfully. “Logan… don’t.”
“He’s the son of a powerful industrialist from Asteria,” Logan continued quietly, his voice steady despite the cruelty of his words. “He left home because of gambling debts. Not small ones—massive, dangerous debts. The kind that involve organized crime. His father gave him one condition: clear everything, then he could return.”
A dull ringing filled my ears.
“He needed money,” Logan said. “A lot of it. And that’s when he chose you.”
I went still. “What do you mean… chose me?” My voice trembled. “Four years ago… when the yacht I was on sank… are you telling me that wasn’t accidental?”
Logan didn’t hesitate. “He arranged it. Paid someone to tamper with the yacht. He stayed nearby so he could jump in and ‘rescue’ you. He wanted you to trust him. He wanted you to fall in love with him. And when you married him—”
“No…” My breath caught. “Logan, that’s… that’s impossible—”
“—he began siphoning money from your company.” Logan slid another stack of documents toward me. “And this… Candela’s employment record. He told her to apply. You unknowingly hired his wife as your personal secretary.”
The room spun. My stomach lurched violently.
“Isabella—” Logan moved forward quickly.
But I was already off the bed, stumbling toward the bathroom. The nausea hit hard, and I barely made it before I started vomiting. My body shook as wave after wave tore through me until there was nothing left but dry heaves and tears.
I gripped the sink, trembling.
He planned everything. Every moment. Even the day I fell in love with him… it was all calculated.
Yet my mind dragged me back to memories I once cherished.
“I’ll always look after you,” he once whispered, brushing my hair aside while we sat on the beach. The moonlight softened his features, making him look gentle, sincere.
“From what?” I teased.
“From anything that tries to hurt you,” he replied, pressing a kiss to my forehead. “You’ll never face it alone.”
The mornings he woke early to cook breakfast. The nights he held me when sleep wouldn’t come. The quiet promises about building a family together.
Every memory felt poisoned now.
Because suddenly, things I ignored before made sense.
Candela’s perfume clinging to his coat—he said she cried and leaned on him.
The faint lipstick stain on his collar—he laughed it off, saying she tripped and he caught her.
Late-night calls—he told me business emergencies couldn’t wait.
And I believed him.
I thought those breakfasts were love.
I thought tucking me in meant care.
I thought when he said, “You’re my future,” he meant it.
But it was all a lie.
When I finally steadied myself, I looked at Logan, my chest hollow.
“There’s no need for a divorce… right?” My voice sounded distant. “Our marriage… it isn’t even valid.”
Logan nodded slowly. “That’s correct.”
I shut my eyes. My mother had barely passed when I married Sebastian. The company she built—her life’s work—was the last thing she entrusted to me. I handed it over to a stranger disguised as my savior. My father warned me, argued with me… then eventually cut ties with me for my decision.
“Then I just need to review the company,” I murmured. “See what damage has been done.”
Logan stayed silent. He didn’t need to say anything.
Two days later, I walked into the office expecting clarity.
Instead, I found ruin.
“Miss Isabella,” my finance manager stuttered as soon as I entered. “I… I’m sorry, but we’re bleeding money. Mr. Royce approved multiple transfers without authorization. And several investors he introduced… they’re not real.”
My knees gave out.
Logan caught me before I collapsed completely. My chest tightened, and breathing felt impossible.
The company my mother built with her youth and sacrifice… was being emptied from the inside.
By the man I loved.
No. The man I thought I loved.
“Call the board,” I managed, my voice unsteady.
When everyone gathered, I forced myself to stand tall.
“Effective immediately,” I announced, my tone cold, “Candela Marquez is terminated. All contracts, investments, and agreements handled by Sebastian are to be suspended until further review.”
Shock flickered across their faces.
Still, they followed my orders.
For the first time in years… I felt control returning.
Until the door slammed open with a violent crash.
“What is going on here?” Sebastian stormed inside, fury written all over his face, his usual calm gone. “Why was Candela fired? And why am I suddenly excluded from every meeting?”
Chapter 3“What exactly is going on here?!”
Sebastian’s voice sliced through the conference room, harsh and sudden, breaking the silence like glass shattering. He strode in without waiting for permission, Candela right behind him. She clung to his arm as if she were frightened, her eyes glossy with unshed tears, shoulders trembling like she’d been wronged.
I remained seated, unmoved.
“I’m talking to you,” he continued, slamming his palm onto the polished mahogany table. The sound echoed across the room. “Why was Candela dismissed? And why am I suddenly excluded from every meeting?”
I stood slowly, straightening my back, folding my hands calmly in front of me.
“I terminated her employment,” I replied evenly, “because she’s inefficient, unnecessary, and only joined this company because you pressured me to hire her. As for the meetings…” I tilted my head slightly. “I’ve decided I don’t want to hand over everything to you anymore.”
Sebastian froze for a brief second, surprise flashing across his face before anger quickly replaced it.
“So you’re making decisions like this without even consulting me?” he demanded.
“I don’t need to consult you,” I answered calmly. “This company belongs to me. I make the decisions.”
His jaw tightened, a muscle twitching visibly. “That doesn’t give you the right to—”
“You’ve already handled more than enough,” I cut in, stepping forward. “And you haven’t handled it well.”
Candela sniffled softly behind him. “Ma’am… if I made a mistake, please give me a chance to explain—”
“Don’t speak,” I snapped sharply.
She flinched, lips quivering.
Sebastian moved closer, his presence suddenly intimidating. “Isabella, you’re acting unreasonable. You can’t just fire someone because you’re upset.”
“Upset?” A cold laugh escaped me. “You think this is about emotions? After everything that’s happened?”
His expression darkened. “This is ridiculous. I’m your husband.”
My tone hardened. “What’s ridiculous is that you still believe being my husband means you get to control me.”
For a split second, something flickered in his eyes — unease. Because he realized I wasn’t backing down.
“You are not firing her,” he barked. “I won’t allow it!”
“I already did,” I replied coolly. “It’s effective immediately.”
His hand slammed against the wall beside my head, close enough that I felt the air shift.
“You’re testing my patience, Isabella,” he warned.
I held his gaze steadily. “Maybe I am.”
His breath faltered slightly. He saw it then — the change in me. Something he couldn’t manipulate anymore.
After a moment, he stepped back, forcing his expression to soften.
“Alright,” he muttered, running a hand through his hair. “If that’s what you want… we’ll go with your decision. For now.”
Candela lowered her head, wiping at imaginary tears. “Ma’am… I’ll pack my things. Thank you for the opportunity. I’m sorry if I did anything that upset you.”
I didn’t respond.
Sebastian gently placed his hand on my shoulder, his voice suddenly calm, almost coaxing. “Let’s not argue anymore. We’ll talk about this later, okay? For now… I accept your choice.”
But the way he agreed so quickly unsettled me more than his anger had.
An hour later, I stepped out of my office — only to stop when I heard voices coming from around the corner.
I moved quietly, staying out of sight.
Candela’s voice was sharp, no longer trembling. “So that’s it? I lost my job and you just let her have her way? Why didn’t you fight harder?”
Sebastian exhaled heavily. “Relax. I can’t push too hard when I still don’t have full control of the company. I need to stay on her good side. We’ll just go along with whatever she wants until everything is secured. You understand that.”
Candela sounded frustrated. “And how long do we keep pretending?”
“As long as it takes,” he replied, his tone turning cold and calculating. “She thinks firing you gives her control, so let her believe that. We’ll follow her lead for now.”
There was a brief pause.
“Because on her birthday,” he continued quietly, venom lacing his words, “we finish this. No more fake investors. No more acting. That night, her life ends… and everything she owns becomes ours.”
Chapter 4Candela sucked in a quiet breath. “Are you serious?”
“Especially now that you’re carrying our child,” Sebastian answered without hesitation. “I won’t let her threaten you… or the baby.”
My lungs locked. For a moment, it felt like I had stepped outside my own body, watching everything collapse from a distance, piece by piece.
He wasn’t just deceiving me.
He wasn’t only having an affair.
He was planning my death — on my birthday.
I stepped back silently, forcing down the scream rising in my throat. My hands trembled so badly I pressed them against my chest, trying to steady my breathing.
Not now.
Not here.
I need to survive. I need to pretend. I need to beat them at their own game.
That evening, when I returned to my suite, Sebastian was already there, seated on the couch. His expression softened the moment he saw me, almost warm, almost loving.
I nearly laughed at the performance.
“There you are,” he said, releasing a breath like he’d been waiting anxiously. He rose to his feet. “We should talk.”
I stayed where I was. “About what?”
He rubbed the back of his neck, looking hesitant. “About Candela… since you let her go, I was thinking.”
I braced myself.
Then he smiled — gentle, patient, supportive. The same smile that once made me fall for him.
The same smile he wore every time he lied to me.
“…we could hire her as a housemaid,” he suggested.
My heart stuttered.
“As… what?” I asked quietly.
“She needs a source of income,” he explained casually, like this was a harmless idea. “And since you don’t trust her as much anymore, at least if she works here, you’ll know what she’s doing. I can still help her too. It works out for everyone. You know she’s alone… no family to rely on. I can’t just leave her with nothing.”
Works out for everyone.
For him and his mistress.
“No,” I said immediately, my voice sharp. “I already dismissed her. She’s not coming back here.”
His expression faltered slightly. “Isabella—”
“I said no.” I turned away before my anger slipped into something more revealing. “I’m exhausted, Sebastian. I don’t want to discuss this.”
“Don’t be like that,” he called gently, following me toward the bedroom. “You don’t have to react so strongly—”
“Goodnight,” I cut him off, closing the door before my composure cracked… before he noticed how much I already knew.
I leaned back against the door, breathing unevenly.
They planned to kill me on my birthday… and now he wanted his lover inside my home.
Not happening.
The next morning, sunlight filtered through the curtains, pulling me slowly from sleep. But before I even opened my eyes, something felt off.
Someone else was in the room.
I sat up abruptly — and froze.
Candela was kneeling beside my dresser, wiping its surface with a cloth, humming softly as though she belonged there. She wore a plain apron, her hair tied neatly back.
She looked up, offering a timid smile. “Good morning, Ma’am.”
My stomach dropped. “What are you doing here?”
“Oh!” She quickly stood, lowering her head respectfully. “Sir Sebastian told me you changed your mind… that you agreed to let me stay as the maid.”
Ice spread through my veins. “That’s not true. I never agreed to anything.”
She twisted her hands together, eyes glistening with what looked like tears. “Ma’am, please… I really need this job. I can handle everything. Cooking, cleaning, laundry, ironing… even sewing. I don’t mind sleeping in the storage room if necessary. I just need somewhere to stay.”
I clenched my jaw. Every trembling word felt rehearsed.
“Leave,” I said coldly. “Before I lose my patience.”
She flinched. “Please… just give me one chance. I’ll prove myself.”
Before I could respond, she hurried forward, grabbing a spray bottle and cloth. “See? I’m very thorough. Look how clean I can make everything.”
She wiped the table too forcefully, movements rushed and desperate. Then she turned toward the shelf where my mother’s porcelain urn rested — a delicate piece, white with gold accents, the most precious thing I owned.
My chest tightened. “Don’t touch that—”
“I’ll clean everything properly,” she insisted, dusting around it. “I’m careful, Ma’am. I promise—”
Her elbow knocked against it.
The urn wobbled.
Time seemed to slow.
“Candela, stop—!”
Too late.
The urn tipped.
It fell.
Porcelain shattered against the marble floor.
Pieces scattered in every direction.
And my mother’s ashes… spread across the floor like drifting gray snow.