I built Aegis from the ground up, starting in a damp garage that smelled perpetually of mildew and burnt copper wire. I knew every line of code, every algorithmic shift, and, most importantly, every single crack in the company’s financial foundation. Santiago, whom I had appointed to an advisory board position to satisfy his ego,…
My husband, Logan Carter, was sprawled aggressively across the sectional sofa. The game controller was practically fused to his hands, his eyes glued with manic intensity to the glowing flat screen. Beside him, occupying the wingback chair like a judge presiding from her personal throne, sat his mother, Helen Carter. She was scrolling methodically on her tablet,…
I stood barely three feet away. Nobody offered me a word of comfort, except one person: Patricia Callahan—Aunt Patty—my mother’s fierce best friend. She crouched down, enveloped my freezing hands in hers, and looked me dead in the eyes. “I promised your mother I’d always have your back,” she whispered fiercely. “Remember that.” I nodded…
Ever since I had stood in that very dining room eight months prior and confessed I was pregnant, my family had treated me less like a daughter and more like a public relations disaster to be managed. They never once asked about Lily’s father. Michael had evaporated into thin air the second the drugstore test showed two…
“Do not embarrass me,” he hissed at her. His tone was a masterful, terrifying whisper. It was pitched just low enough that the surrounding guests could comfortably pretend they hadn’t heard a thing, but precisely high enough that it struck my ears like a physical blow. My mother’s eyes found mine across the polished marble floor….
He looked across the table at me. I was wearing a plain, oversized cashmere sweater and soft leggings, my hair pulled up in a messy bun. I worked from home, running a boutique intellectual property strategy consulting firm. To Ethan, because I didn’t wear designer heels or carry a Birkin bag to a glass-corner office,…
My phone buzzed against the mahogany desk. It was the vice president of our local branch in Bethesda, Maryland. He congratulated me with a tone of unearned familiarity, his voice dripping with the kind of forced cheer usually reserved for lottery winners, not spouses bailing out their sinking partners. I offered a polite, noncommittal hum, disconnected…
“You humiliated me, Elena!” Julian’s voice boomed, echoing off the white tiles. He cornered me against the reception desk, his shadow looming over me. “Julian, please,” I whispered, my hand instinctively moving to shield my belly. “Keep your voice down. There are patients. We can talk about this at home.” “At home? So you can…
The next moment, gravity betrayed me. My back struck the sharp, unyielding edge of a marble step, and the world fractured into an explosion of blinding, white-hot agony. I remember the glacial, polished surface of the stone against my cheek. I remember the sudden, terrifying taste of copper flooding my mouth. And above all, I…
Daniel was a brilliant mind, working as a senior financial analyst at Lowell Equity, an aggressively powerful investment firm owned by the notoriously ruthless billionaire, Richard Lowell. My husband was exceptionally talented, fiercely ethical in an industry that often rewarded the opposite, and rapidly becoming the most indispensable asset on Lowell’s payroll. But more importantly to me,…