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Chapter 1 - Chapter One

"Please… stop. I'll pay."

Ariana's voice broke, but she didn't move.

Her father lay on the ground, barely conscious. Blood spread across his shirt, dark and spreading. His breathing came slow and uneven.

One of the men kicked him hard again.

Ariana dropped instantly, shielding him with her body.

"Stop."

This time, the word didn't shake.

The men paused.

Not because she was strong.

But because she wasn't supposed to sound like that.

One stepped forward. He crouched in front of her. His eyes moved across her face with focus.

"How much does he owe?" he asked.

Ariana swallowed.

"Five million."

A small smile touched his lips.

"And you think you can pay that?"

"I will."

No hesitation.

Even if she had no idea how.

The man studied her for a moment longer.

Then he stood.

"You have one week."

Her breath caught.

"One week," he repeated. "Or next time, we wont be talking."

Ariana nodded once.

That was all she could manage.

The man gave a slight gesture.

The others stepped back.

And just like that—

they left.

•••

The silence they left behind felt louder than the violence.

"Dad…?"

No response.

Ariana's hands trembled as she touched his face.

"Stay with me. Please."

His breathing faltered.

Then, slower and weaker.

Ariana's chest tightened.

"Don't do this. Not now."

Nothing.

•••

"Deposit first."

Ariana stared at the nurse.

Then at her father on the stretcher. Unmoving.

Her throat tightened.

"I'll get it."

Ariana stood outside the ward for a long moment before she went back in.

The hallway smelled like antiseptic. It sat heavy in her chest. Nurses walked past her with steady steps. No one slowed down. Another patient. Another emergency.

But for her, everything had stopped.

She pushed the door open quietly.

Her father hadn't moved.

The machines beside him blinked steadily. Too steady. Too calm for someone who had almost died on the street.

Ariana stepped closer.

"Dad…"

No response.

Her fingers hovered for a second before finally resting against his hand. It felt colder than it should.

Her throat tightened.

"You always said you were strong," she whispered, her voice barely there. "So don't pick now to prove me wrong."

Nothing.

She let out a shaky breath and pulled a chair closer, sitting down beside him.

For a moment, she just watched him.

This man—

who used to carry her on his shoulders

who used to laugh too loudly at his own jokes

who always said "I've got you" like it was a promise the world couldn't break

Now lay still.

And fragile.

Because of money.

Ariana's jaw tightened.

"I will fix this," she said, quieter now. More certain. "No matter what it takes."

Her grip on his hand tightened.

"I will not let them touch you again."

The words settled into silence.

Not emotional.

Not desperate.

Something else.

Something harder.

A nurse walked in. She checked the monitor. Wrote something down.

"Are you family?" the nurse asked.

"Yes."

"He needs time to stabilize. After that, treatment starts. "But you should prepare yourself. The bills—"

" I will handle it."

The nurse looked at her for a moment.

Then gave a small nod and left.

Ariana leaned back in the chair. Her body felt heavy. Her shoulders ached.

She did not close her eyes.

They stayed on her father.

Watching.

Waiting.

Thinking.

•••

Ariana Cole learned the price of survival the night she begged a stranger not to kill her father.

She didn't know then that the next time she stood this close to a man like that—

She wouldn't be the one begging.

•••

"Are you stupid or just slow?"

Ariana didn't flinch.

Not anymore.

"I asked for sparkling," the woman continued, her voice sharp enough to cut. "Does that look like sparkling to you?"

Ariana glanced at the glass.

Still.

Wrong.

"I'll replace it, ma'am."

Her tone was calm. Smooth. Practiced.

The man across from the woman watched her. His gaze stayed a second too long.

Ariana ignored that too.

"I'd appreciate it if you were faster this time."

Ariana nodded once and walked away.

The moment she was out of sight, her expression dropped—not into anger, not into frustration.

Just… nothing.

By the end of her shift, exhaustion hit her like a second skin.

Her body ached.

Her mind was heavy.

But stopping wasn't an option.

It never was.

Her phone buzzed as she stepped outside.

"Ari…" Noah's voice came in low.

Her chest tightened so sharply it almost hurt.

"What happened?"

"You sound tired, Ari," Noah said softly. "When was the last time you slept?"

"I'm fine"

"They sent another notice."

Of course they did.

Her grip on the phone tightened.

"How much?"

"It's the final warning."

Final.

That word again.

"If it's not paid by next week…" he trailed off.

Ariana closed her eyes briefly.

"I'll handle it."

"You always say that."

"And I always do."

A pause.

Then softly: "…I know."

•••

The mansion was quiet when she arrived.

Too quiet.

The kind of quiet that didn't feel peaceful—just controlled.

Ariana stepped inside, her movements instinctively careful, like the house itself demanded it.

She got to work immediately. Dusting. Arranging. Wiping surfaces that didn't look like they had ever been touched.

She avoided the west wing. Everyone did. Not because they were told to. Because they understood.

But tonight, the cloth in her hand stilled as she heard it.

A sound. A voice.

Low. Sharp. Controlled.

Ariana paused.

Her eyes moved toward the hallway that led to the study.

She should not go there.

She knew that.

But the voice came again.

Clearer this time.

"I don't pay you to make mistakes."

Her breath caught.

There was no shouting.

No raised tone.

And somehow—

That made it worse.

Ariana moved before she could think better of it.

One step.

Then another.

Quiet.

Careful.

The study door wasn't fully closed.

Just slightly ajar.

She stopped.

Not inside.

Not fully outside.

Just… close enough.

And then she saw him.

Not his face. Never his face. Just his back. Tall. Still.

Perfectly composed in a way that didn't look natural. It looked controlled. Built. Intentional.

One hand rested in his pocket. The other held his phone to his ear.

"I gave you one job."

His voice was calm.

Too calm. A pause.

"No," he said quietly. "You don't get to explain."

Ariana's grip tightened on the cloth.

He shifted slightly. Light touched his jaw. Not enough to see his face.

"I do not tolerate incompetence."

Another pause.

Longer this time.

"If it happens again, I won't be the one you're answering to."

Silence.

Ariana felt it.

Even without hearing the other side.

The fear. His fingers tapped once against the phone. Slow. Measured.

"Fix it."

The call ended.

The silence grew heavier.

Ariana did not move.

Her breathing slowed. Her focus sharpened.

She didn't even realize how close she was standing to the door.

Because something about him.

Even without seeing his face.

Felt wrong. Not chaotic. 

Not chaotic. Controlled. Every outcome already decided.

He hadn't moved yet.

Still standing there.

Back turned.

Unaware.

Or maybe fully aware.

Ariana's fingers tightened slightly around the cloth.

A thought pushed forward 

Leave.

Now.

But she hesitated. Just for a second too long.

Because beneath the unease.

There was something else.

Curiosity. Dangerous. Unnecessary. Unavoidable.

And that was her mistake. As she shifted her weight, the floor made a soft sound.

 "Small. Almost nothing. But in the silence, it was enough."

He stilled. Not dramatically. Not suddenly. Just… completely.

And somehow, that was worse than if he had turned. Ariana's breath caught. A strange, sharp awareness settled deep in her chest.

He didn't turn back, neither did he speak or move.

But she knew he had heard her.

Ariana stepped back immediately.

Quiet. Careful. Like she was never there at all.

 She didn't wait. She couldn't risk another second.

She turned and walked away. She didn't stop until she left the hallway.

Out of reach. Out of that space.

Only then did she breath properly .

Her fingers shook.

 "She didn't understand why her hands were shaking."

She had not seen his face.

She had not spoken to him. 

She had not done anything wrong.

Still.

It felt like she had crossed a line .

One she would not be allowed to cross again.

Or worse.

One she already had.

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