Orion

I stormed back to my study, slamming the door behind me. The fire that roared in the hearth felt pale in comparison to the flames of fury consuming me.

Ava wouldn’t get away with this. Every second of her absence, every moment she thought she could undermine me, only stoked the desire to regain control, to crush any illusion she held of independence.

But beneath the rage, a knot of uncertainty twisted inside me. Ava had always been different—calculating, strong, and maddeningly defiant. She wasn’t just another pawn to be moved across the board.

That defiance, the very thing that infuriated me, also drew me in like a moth to the flame. I hated her for that. I hated her for making me feel anything. Even hatred.

I poured a glass of whiskey, the liquid burning my throat as I swallowed it down, alone in the dim light of the study. Chloe was asleep upstairs, and the house was eerily quiet, the kind of silence that felt almost accusatory.

I couldn’t escape the echo of Ava’s words, the cold dismissal, the hard line of her jaw as she turned away from me. It wasn’t just rejection; it was a declaration of war.

I leaned forward, resting my forehead against my clenched fists. The rage had ebbed into something colder, sharper—something more dangerous.

Ava had humiliated me, challenged me in front of the very people I needed to control. And now, she thought she could slip away, vanish for days as if she could escape the consequences. Not a chance.

The door creaked open, and I tensed, but it was just one of the servants, timidly peeking in. “Sir?” she whispered. “Do you need anything?”

“Get out,” I snapped, harsher than I intended. She flinched and disappeared without another word, leaving me alone with my thoughts.

This wasn’t how it was supposed to go. Ava should have fallen in line. She should have understood what was at stake. Instead, she chose to provoke me, to make a mockery of everything I’d worked for.

I clenched my jaw, the image of her defiance flashing in my mind again. Fine. If she wanted a fight, I would give her one.

I stood abruptly, the sudden movement making the room spin for a moment. I needed air. Grabbing my coat, I slipped out of the study and made my way through the empty halls, past the servants’ quarters, and out into the cold night.

The stars were hidden behind thick clouds, and the wind bit at my skin, but I welcomed it. It matched the storm inside me.

I walked aimlessly, trying to burn off the restless energy. My feet took me to the grand foyer and I closed my eyes, taking in a deep calming breath.

“She thinks she can run,” I murmured to myself as though I was insane. “But she’s wrong.”

The words sounded hollow even to me. Ava wasn’t running; she was calculating. Every move she made was deliberate. She wanted me off-balance, unsure, questioning myself. I couldn’t let her win. Not like this.

Returning to the house, I moved quietly up the stairs. The thought of confronting Chloe, of seeing her expectant eyes and feeling nothing but emptiness, twisted my gut. She was loyal. Fierce. And I couldn't give her the life she deserves.

I failed her.

Pushing open the bedroom door, I found her still asleep, her black hair fanned across the pillow. For a moment, I stood there, watching her. This woman had pulled me from the brink more times than I could count. She’d fought for me when no one else would. But even she couldn’t touch the storm inside me now.

I undressed quietly and slipped into bed. Chloe stirred, mumbling something in her sleep, and instinctively reached for me. I let her hand rest on my chest, but I stared at the ceiling, wide awake. The weight of what had to be done pressed down on me.

Tomorrow, I will find Ava. She thought she could play games, but she’d underestimated just how far I was willing to go. I closed my eyes, not to sleep, but to plot. Every possibility, every outcome. I would tear down whatever she valued most until she had no choice but to kneel.

Chloe’s hand tightened around me, and I felt a pang of guilt. But guilt was a luxury I couldn’t afford. Not now.

***

I woke up to the faint murmur of a voice. At first, I thought I was dreaming—another one of those fractured images that sometimes invaded my sleep.

But the sound persisted, low and urgent, cutting through the veil of the night. I lay still, listening, every nerve on edge.

There was no mistaking it now: someone was speaking in hushed tones. Instinct had me reaching across the bed for Chloe, but my hand met only cool sheets. She wasn’t there.

My pulse quickened. I slipped silently out of bed, each step careful, deliberate. There was no telling what I might find. The servants were asleep in their quarters, and it should have been just Chloe and me. Unease settled deep in my chest.

As I moved closer, the words became clearer. It was Chloe’s voice, low but strained, as if trying to keep her emotions in check.

“Just do what you have to do. I don’t care,” she whispered, her tone sharp, almost brittle. There was a pause, and though I couldn’t hear the reply, whatever was said seemed to hit her hard. I stopped just short of the doorway, pressing myself against the wall, trying to slow my breathing.

Was this some kind of betrayal? A conspiracy? I thought of Ava and the lengths she’d go to get what she wanted. The idea that Chloe might be tangled up in something dangerous—and hiding it from me—twisted like a knife in my gut.

I took a step into the room. “Who are you talking to?” I asked, my voice cutting through the air.

She spun around so fast, she nearly lost her balance. Her eyes met mine—wide, shocked, guilty.

In that moment, the phone slipped from her fingers, as though the weight of being caught was too heavy to hold. It fell to the floor, landing with a soft thud that felt deafening in the silence.

The look on her face said it all: she’d been caught doing something wrong. Something terribly wrong.