After running around for a while and frolicking in the water, Max and Clara finally agreed to return to the cabin. Max, who never seems to get tired, jumps up and down while holding Clara's hand, happy with his wet feet."Mommy! Daddy! Look, I can outrun you guys!" shouted Max, running ahead, with Clara chasing after him with joyful laughter.I just shook my head, smiling at their antics. I mean, how could a kid that little has so much energy? Sometimes, Max can run endlessly, as if his battery never runs out.Pascha walked beside me, silent, yet his presence felt so real with every step.We walked in Max and Clara's footsteps, but my pace slowed as I tried to restrain myself from feeling out of place. Something tickled in my stomach, a feeling I hadn't felt in a long time when I was close to him.Silently, Pascha stepped closer, his eyes occasionally glancing at me, but I tried to remain calm, staring ahead with focus. "Who called earlier?" his asked low yet precise enough in my ear
As the night wore on, the cold wind from the Alps blew gently through the slightly open window. The lights were dim, creating a warm atmosphere in the spacious wooden room.I leaned against the headboard, watching Pascha, who sat on the edge of the bed, holding Max, who was already half asleep. His body rested comfortably on his Daddy chest, his head resting on Pascha's shoulder, but his lips still moved as if his mind wasn't ready to rest."So, if Bumblebee could turn into a T-Rex, it would be cool..." Max mumbled, his voice starting to slow down, his eyes getting heavy, but he still forced himself to speak. "Just imagine, Daddy. Transformers... but dinosaurs..."Pascha chuckled softly, rubbing the Max's back gently. "Transformer dinosaurs, huh?" he asked in a low, soothing voice. "That's a good idea. Maybe you can become a robot engineer and make your own later."Max nodded slowly, his eyes almost completely closed. "Yeah... I'll build it... and I'll name it..." He was silent for a
The fragrant aroma from the kitchen filled the air as I flipped the omelet in the skillet while Chef Anton stood beside me, busily stirring the pancake batter."You seem to be used to the kitchen, ma'am," he said with a slight smile."Just call me Belva. I'm still not married." I chuckled, ignoring his surprise. I spooned the eggs onto the plate before moving on to the bacon that was starting to make delicious sizzling sounds. "Trust me, raising a perpetually hungry five-year-old made me a cooking expert in no time."Chef Anton laughed softly, then returned to his dough.Outside the kitchen window, I could see Max running around in the front garden, Transformers robots scattered all around him. The boy had been up since dawn, immediately excited to run outside before I could tell him to do something more sensible—like take a shower, for example.I snorted in annoyance. "Max, come in and take a shower now!" I called while still busy arranging the dishes on the table.Max, who was busy
Finally, after making sure Clara really didn't want to come along—she didn't even bother to take off her blanket when we said goodbye—the three of us climbed into Pascha's expensive car.We went to Oeschinensee, a clear blue lake high up in the Alps, surrounded by majestic towering mountains and green meadows. It's the perfect summer paradise with cool, refreshing water, lush pine forests, and leisurely hiking trails.Max shouted enthusiastically as soon as we arrived at the parking lot near the lake area. "WOW! Look, is that real water? Why is it so blue?"I stared at the lake, its crystal-like colour glistening in the sunlight. "That's because the water comes from glaciers, Max," I said.Max blinked. "What's a glacier?"A huge piece of ice on a high mountain. It melts and makes the lake water look blue like this." Pascha answered.Max looked up to his Dad, looking mesmerized. "Whoa... So it's like a giant ice water?""You could say that."We started walking down the path to the lake
"Mommy! Daddy! Look! I can see so far away! That mountain is so high!"I followed his pointer's direction and couldn't help but marvel. Mountain ranges rose majestically, some still having remnants of snow on their peaks. In the distance, I could see glaciers glistening under the sun.Max suddenly turned around, his eyes sparkling with plans. "Mommy, Daddy, what if we stay here forever?"I chuckled. "And what about your school?"Max shrugged casually. "I can go to school here! I can learn about glaciers and cows and how to pilot a cable car!"Pascha smiled a little, looking at his son with a warm expression. "That's an interesting idea, Max. But we don't have a house here yet."Max looked at his father seriously. "You will buy one."I choked. "What?"Pascha just chuckled, while Max seemed satisfied with his idea."I want a big wooden house with a fireplace and big windows like in the movies!" Max continued to babble. "Oh, and I want a big balcony! So I can see the stars at night!"I l
I reached for the glass of water, my fingers trembling slightly as I lifted it. I took a slow sip, letting the cool sensation flow down my throat, trying to calm something churning in my chest.Nothing happened. I was fine.I have to be okay.Footsteps approached, followed by Max's excited voice."I just saw a big eagle!" he exclaims, climbing into his seat and nearly knocking over my glass as he sits down.I’m placing my glass back on the table carefully. "Oh yeah? How big?"Max spread his arms as wide as he could. "This big! It has vast wings! Daddy says it's called a golden eagle. I saw it flying so high in the sky!"I glanced at Pascha, sitting in his chair again. "Golden eagle?" I asked, trying to take my mind off the notification on his phone earlier.Pascha nodded. "Many are around this area, especially in the summer."Max nodded, his hair slightly disheveled from the wind. "And then I also saw a little squirrel running around in the tree near the balcony! It was so fast, Mommy
There was a slight tap on my cheek.I groaned softly, but the taps were getting more frequent. Then, the sound of giggling could be heard.I opened my eyes, the light from the room lamp blinding me for a moment before I could see the figure in front of me.Max.With a smile full of mischief, he patted my cheek again, this time a little harder.Plop."Mommy..." he whispered, as if afraid to wake me up but clearly not trying very hard not to. "...Wake up... dinner time..."I blinked, then glanced at the window. The sky had darkened completely, and the lights outside the cabin were beginning to glow dimly.I rubbed my face. "What time is it?"Max grabbed my hand, pulling me. "I don’t know but it's dinner time! Hurry, Mommy!"I let out a sigh before giving in and letting Max pull me out of the covers. I sat on the edge of the bed, Max jumping right down."We are having a barbeque outside!"I was still trying to gather my wits. "Barbeque?"Max nodded. "Yes! There's steak, sausage, and gril
It's a quiet night in the Alps.I sat at a small table by the window, the light from my laptop screen. The cold air from outside sneaked in, but I remained silent, taking a sip of the coffee that had started to cool in my cup.My round glasses were perched on my nose as I focused on reading the latest report on the Lantum Mining project. It should be enough to take my mind off everything that happened today.But my mind is still spinning."Something that will destroy you."Christian's words echo in my head, mixed with the text I received one night ago."They're coming for you."I closed the report on the screen and opened the messaging app on my phone. My fingers trembled slightly as I scrolled back through the conversation. There was no sender, no identity, just one short message that appeared in the middle of the night, adding to the list of strange things that had happened since I arrived here.I frowned, then quickly switched to another program on my laptop. If there was one thing
I came down the stairs at seven a.m., my steps slow on the oak wood that felt too expensive—and far too quiet—for the storm inside my chest. The sound of waves drifted in from afar through a slightly cracked window, filling the air with sea salt and cool mist. Morning light slipped softly into the living room, brushing over thick rugs and cream velvet couches that looked like they belonged in an architecture magazine.The Romanov villa in Carmel… was too perfect.Too still.And for the first time since last night, I was thankful for that.No heavy footsteps on the floor.No clinking glasses.No low voice saying my name in that way that short-circuited my entire nervous system.No Pascha.I let out a quiet sigh—half relief, half disbelief. I wasn’t ready this morning. Not for his stare. Too honest. Too lit. Too full of history.I made my way to the kitchen. The interior looked like something out of another world—gray marble counters veined with white like paintings, dark wood cabinets
His embrace felt like the world I almost left behind—warm, stubborn, and heavy with the shadows of our past.But I couldn’t breathe.Not because he was holding me too tightly, but because my mind was too full. Too loud. Too much to process all at once.I pressed my hand gently against his chest. One small push. Then another, firmer.Pascha let go slowly, but his gray eyes stayed locked on me like he was afraid I’d vanish if he blinked.I took two steps back, holding in a breath that burned like embers in my chest.“I need some time alone,” I said softly.Pascha frowned but didn’t speak.“Another room. In this villa. I know this place is huge—too huge. You can sleep wherever you want. But I need space. I need… somewhere that isn’t you.”My voice nearly cracked, but I forced it to hold.He didn’t answer right away. He just looked at me, and I could see something stirring inside him. Not anger. Not guilt.But love—raw and unsure of what shape to take in a moment like this.Then he steppe
I fell silent.The only sound was the faucet still running, water hitting the metal sink like a downpour in the middle of silence.That sentence echoed in my head."You're my wife, Bee."I blinked.Once.Twice.Then the world started to spin.Not the usual kind of dizziness, not a migraine from lack of sleep or too much caffeine. This was... like my logic was twisted, crushed, and thrown off the highest cliff without warning.My heart started pounding—not from emotion, but because my brain couldn’t process something this big… this absurd… this Pascha.I took a step back.Then another.My hand reached for the cold edge of the kitchen counter, gripping it just to stay upright.“What... did you just say?” I whispered, even though I’d heard him. Too clearly.He just looked at me, eyes steady, shoulders still slightly leaning forward like a man who just dropped a bomb in the middle of a city and was waiting to see if there’d be an explosion.I laughed.It was dry. Empty. The laugh of someo
The cold air hit my skin like a slap of reality.I stared at my reflection in the villa’s bathroom mirror—cream marble walls too smooth to be real, warm lighting that made my swollen eyes look softer, and a wide sink with a bottle of liquid soap that probably cost more than my shoes.But my face... was still the same.Tired eyes. Cracked lips. Unsteady breath.I wiped my cheek with a white towel—clean, lavender-scented—then looked at myself again.“This is the end,” I said quietly.My own voice sounded unfamiliar. But steady.“It has to end. Tonight.”I ran my fingers through my hair, pulling the front pieces back and tying them at the back of my head with a small band I found in my bag. The rest of my short hair fell around my neck—light, out of the way. Practical. Sharp. Just like my intention for tonight.I looked down at my wrinkled sweater—sage green, a color I used to love, now feeling like a burden. My jeans itched too, dusty from the car ride and too much heat from earlier ang
“I hate you.”That was the first thing I said after the car crossed the gate and turned onto the main road. My voice cracked. My breathing was still uneven. One hand clutched the seatbelt, the other trembled in my lap.“You think this is funny? Bringing her into your house? Around Max?!”Pascha stayed silent. His left hand rested calmly on the wheel, the right on the gearshift. His eyes were locked on the road like there wasn’t a storm sitting right next to him.“You really don’t realize what a bastard you are, do you?”Still no response.“You’re insane. You’re.....you’re the most selfish person I’ve ever met! You showed up at my house bleeding, crawled into my bed. MY BED, and the next day you brought her to your house?!”Still nothing. The car kept rolling forward, eating up pavement in a steady rhythm.“And you let Max laugh with her? Sit next to her? What.....what’s next, he calls her ‘Mommy’? Is that it? That your plan? To replace me? Hand her the title?”No answer.I turned to h
The car hadn’t even come to a full stop in the carport when I opened the door."Bell—"I heard Kyara’s voice from behind me, but I didn’t look back. My steps were fast. Hot. Loud.Every heel strike against the stone path between my house and Pascha’s mansion felt like a tiny hammer, fueling my anger higher and higher. I knew he was there. I knew Max was there. And I knew that snake of a woman was there too, sitting pretty in the living room, playing a role so well even the devil would applaud her performance.Aurora was close behind me, her steps quick but cautious. I could feel her breath. Short and startled. But nothing could stop me now.The mansion door opened. Clara stood in the doorway, her expression confused and wary when she saw me. But I didn’t stop.“Where’s Max?” I asked flatly.“In the back room… playing with synthetic sand and Mischa,” Clara whispered.I didn’t say anything else. No need. I walked inside.And there she was.Her.Mikaela.Sitting on Pascha’s way-too-soft,
I tapped the green button on my phone and held it to my ear.Three rings.Four.No answer.I frowned, pulled the phone away, and stared at the name on the screen: Ben (my favorite idiot twin). I called again.Ringing.Still no answer. No message.He usually lets me know if there’s a change of plans. Even when he's stuck in a board meeting in L.A., he still manages to send me a photo of a whiteboard covered in scribbles with a caption like, “Does anyone understand this? 'Cause I don't.”But now?Silence.I sighed, slipped the phone into my bag, and pushed the office door open with my shoulder. My actual office—not Romanov International. I’d had enough of Russians playing dress-up as CEOs.This office lobby was nothing fancy. Modern, but human. No marble, no echoing high heels that felt like judgment. Just the smell of fresh coffee, soft lighting, and polite smiles from Ellie the receptionist who talked way too much about her cats.“Good morning, Ms. Belva,” Ellie greeted.I gave a quic
The digital clock beside the bed read 4:12 AM.I opened my eyes slowly, and for a moment, the world felt still.Moonlight filtered through the thin curtains, casting soft lines across the wooden floor and the white bedsheet I was lying on. The sheet Belva said she’d just washed yesterday.I turned my head slightly, feeling the dull throb in my left shoulder.And I just... smiled a little.Still fresh in my memory: her panicked voice, her trembling hands, her frustrated muttering while cleaning up my blood last night. Belva in her panic-anger mode was honestly one of the most beautiful things I’d ever seen.I reached for my phone on the nightstand. The screen lit up, too bright at first. I opened the messaging app and typed quickly to Jacob.Pascha: Clean my wound again later.Barely two seconds and it showed a blue check.Then I switched to another contact and hit call without hesitation.Ronan.The dial tone rang.Once. Twice.“I swear on my wife and my dog, if this isn’t an emergen
The pain came in lazy pulses.Not the kind that made you scream or tear up a pillow, but more like a harsh whisper gnawing at the edges of your consciousness.I sat on a black leather chair in the back room of the mansion, my shirt torn, blood dripping onto the kind of expensive floor that would probably make my company accountant faint if he knew how much the carpet cost.Jacob was kneeling beside me, face tight, gloved hands steady, eyes filled with his usual annoyance. Christian stood in the corner, holding a basin of water and a clean towel, looking like he’d just seen a zombie walk into the living room.“Holy shit…” Christian muttered in panic, eyes wide. “Boss, we have to go to a hospital! This is serious! This is insane! This is—”I lazily raised an eyebrow. “If you can’t shut up, Christian, I’ll have Jacob stitch your mouth closed before he does my shoulder.”Christian froze. Literally.Jacob snorted, lifting a shiny pair of tweezers into the air, inspecting them under the des