Trapped By The Wrong Man, Stolen by a Secret Billionaire: Part 3 – Separation

Written by Amelia Rose | Updated on 23 March 2026

The cold air was a slap. It didn’t wake her up; it plunged her deeper into the nightmare.

Audrey stood on the top step of the museum, the sounds of her own implosion echoing behind her. Her emerald gown felt like a shroud. 

Her skin felt too tight. 

She ran. Her heels punished the pavement, a frantic, syncopated rhythm of escape. She didn’t know where she was going, only that she had to move. 

Taxis flew past her, blurs of yellow light. She ignored them.

She ran until her lungs burned and the thin straps of her shoes dug into her skin. She finally stopped under a streetlight a dozen blocks away, leaning against the cold metal pole to keep from collapsing.

She was a spectacle. A woman in a gala gown, crying on a random street corner.

Her phone. She needed help.

Not Kian. Not Cole. One name. Maya.

Her fingers, clumsy and shaking, found the contact. The phone rang once, twice.

“Audrey? It’s past midnight. Is everything okay?” Maya’s voice was warm, sensible. An anchor.

“No,” Audrey sobbed, the single word breaking apart. “Nothing is okay.” “Where are you?”

Maya’s tone shifted instantly. No more questions. Just action.

Audrey looked up, squinting at a street sign through her tears. “Corner of Lex and 79th.”

“Stay right there. Don’t move. I’m coming.” The line went dead.

Audrey slid down the pole to sit on the curb, wrapping her arms around her knees. She was a refugee from her own life.

Maya’s small, fourth-floor walk-up was a sanctuary.

It smelled of lavender and old books. It was messy and real and safe.

Maya handed her a pair of worn sweatpants and a faded college t-shirt. Audrey changed out of the emerald gown, leaving it in a silk puddle on the floor like a shed skin.

“I’m not asking what happened,” Maya said, pressing a steaming mug of tea into Audrey’s hands. “Not tonight. Just drink.”

Audrey did. The warmth seeped into her bones. She sat on the lumpy sofa, staring at the wall.

Her clutch buzzed on the coffee table. A relentless, angry vibration. She picked it up.

The screen was a galaxy of missed calls and notifications.

Twelve from Kian. Eight from Cole. Texts from both.

Audrey, please, it wasn’t me. I took care of the problem for you.

Cole’s words were a threat wrapped in a lie. It’s not what you think. Let me fix this. I love you.

Kian’s words were a poison she couldn’t afford to drink. With a deliberate, steady hand, Audrey opened Kian’s contact.

She pressed ‘Block’. A small pop-up asked if she was sure.

She was. She did the same for Cole.

Then for his sister, Jenna. Silence.

She had severed the arteries. She was bleeding out, but at least the poison had stopped pumping through her veins.

She put the phone down, face-down, and finally let the exhaustion claim her.

Kian sat in the back of his car, staring at the facade of Audrey’s apartment building. The light in her window was off.

She wasn’t there. He’d called her twenty times. Each call went straight to voicemail after the tenth ring.

Blocked.

The finality of it was a punch to the gut. He couldn’t fix this with words.

She wouldn’t hear them. He had to use actions. He made a call.

Not to his mother, not to his COO. He called a number saved under a single letter: X.

The man who answered was a ghost, a specialist in finding things that didn’t want to be found.

“I have a job for you,” Kian said, his voice flat and dead. “I need you to find the source of an anonymous complaint filed with the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art regarding a curator named Audrey Wells. I need proof. Digital fingerprints, IP addresses, everything. I need it yesterday.”

“It will be expensive,” the voice on the other end said.

“I don’t care,” Kian snapped. He had all the money in the world. It was worthless if he couldn’t protect her.

“And I need it delivered in a way that can’t be traced back to me. Understood?”

“Understood.” He hung up. That was step one. Undoing the damage.

Step two was harder. He had to explain the unexplainable.

The boy. Cassandra. His mother’s web of lies.

A text wouldn’t work. A call was impossible. It had to be a letter.

He told his driver to take him to his office. The real one. The glass tower that scraped the sky.

He walked into the penthouse suite, past the priceless art and the panoramic views of the city he owned, and felt nothing. He sat at a massive mahogany desk and took out a single sheet of heavy, cream-colored paper.

His company’s letterhead was embossed at the top.

STERLING MARITIME.

He stared at it, then crumpled it in his fist. This couldn’t come from the magnate. It had to come from the man.

He found a plain sheet of paper and a simple pen. And he began to write.

The next few days were a blur of sleep and silence. Audrey didn’t leave Maya’s apartment.

She called the museum and told them she had the flu, her voice a croak. They were surprisingly understanding.

Maya would leave for work in the morning and return in the evening with groceries and a determinedly cheerful attitude. She never pushed Audrey to talk.

She just existed, a quiet, solid presence that kept the walls from closing in. Audrey spent the hours with her hand resting on her still-flat stomach.

A baby. Her baby. Was it the child of a lying billionaire who had another family?

Or the child of a manipulative sociopath who had destroyed her career to control her?

There was no good answer. This tiny, secret life was the only thing that mattered now. She had to protect it.

She had to build a world for it, away from the wreckage of her own. On the third day, she felt a shift.

The crushing weight of despair was still there, but something else was growing beneath it. A hard, cold knot of anger. Of resolve.

They would not break her. That afternoon, a thick envelope arrived for Maya.

Her name was on the front, but the letter inside the first envelope was addressed to Audrey. A failsafe. He knew she wouldn’t accept anything with his name on it.

“It’s from a courier,” Maya said, handing it to her. “No return address.” Audrey took it.

The paper was heavy, expensive. She knew, with a certainty that made her stomach clench, who it was from.

His handwriting was on the front. Just her name. Audrey.

She stared at it, her thumb tracing the sharp, dark lines of the ink. Her first instinct was to tear it to shreds.

To burn it. To erase his words just as she had erased his number. But she didn’t.

She stood in the middle of Maya’s living room, holding the letter.

It felt warm in her hand. It felt dangerous.

A key to a door she had locked and barricaded. He was a liar. His words were his weapon.

But what if, for the first time, they were also the truth?

The question was a tiny crack in her fortress wall.

She held the unopened letter, her heart pounding a frantic, terrified, and traitorous rhythm against her ribs.

Chapter 27: The Campaign

The cold air was a slap. It didn’t wake her up; it plunged her deeper into the nightmare.

Audrey stood on the top step of the museum, the sounds of her own implosion echoing behind her. Her emerald gown felt like a shroud. Her skin felt too tight.

She ran.

Her heels punished the pavement, a frantic, syncopated rhythm of escape. She didn’t know where she was going, only that she had to move. Taxis flew past her, blurs of yellow light. She ignored them.

She ran until her lungs burned and the thin straps of her shoes dug into her skin.

She finally stopped under a streetlight a dozen blocks away, leaning against the cold metal pole to keep from collapsing. She was a spectacle. A woman in a gala gown, crying on a random street corner.

Her phone. She needed help.

Not Kian. Not Cole.

One name. Maya.

Her fingers, clumsy and shaking, found the contact. The phone rang once, twice.

“Audrey? It’s past midnight. Is everything okay?” Maya’s voice was warm, sensible. An anchor.

“No,” Audrey sobbed, the single word breaking apart. “Nothing is okay.”

“Where are you?” Maya’s tone shifted instantly. No more questions. Just action.

Audrey looked up, squinting at a street sign through her tears. “Corner of Lex and 79th.”

“Stay right there. Don’t move. I’m coming.”

The line went dead. Audrey slid down the pole to sit on the curb, wrapping her arms around her knees. She was a refugee from her own life.

Maya’s small, fourth-floor walk-up was a sanctuary. It smelled of lavender and old books. It was messy and real and safe.

Maya handed her a pair of worn sweatpants and a faded college t-shirt. Audrey changed out of the emerald gown, leaving it in a silk puddle on the floor like a shed skin.

“I’m not asking what happened,” Maya said, pressing a steaming mug of tea into Audrey’s hands. “Not tonight. Just drink.”

Audrey did. The warmth seeped into her bones. She sat on the lumpy sofa, staring at the wall. Her clutch buzzed on the coffee table. A relentless, angry vibration.

She picked it up.

The screen was a galaxy of missed calls and notifications. Twelve from Kian. Eight from Cole. Texts from both.

Audrey, please, it wasn’t me. I took care of the problem for you. Cole’s words were a threat wrapped in a lie.

It’s not what you think. Let me fix this. I love you. Kian’s words were a poison she couldn’t afford to drink.

With a deliberate, steady hand, Audrey opened Kian’s contact. She pressed ‘Block’. A small pop-up asked if she was sure.

She was.

She did the same for Cole. Then for his sister, Jenna.

Silence.

She had severed the arteries. She was bleeding out, but at least the poison had stopped pumping through her veins. She put the phone down, face-down, and finally let the exhaustion claim her.

Kian sat in the back of his car, staring at the facade of Audrey’s apartment building. The light in her window was off. She wasn’t there.

He’d called her twenty times. Each call went straight to voicemail after the tenth ring.

Blocked.

The finality of it was a punch to the gut. He couldn’t fix this with words. She wouldn’t hear them. He had to use actions.

He made a call. Not to his mother, not to his COO. He called a number saved under a single letter: X. The man who answered was a ghost, a specialist in finding things that didn’t want to be found.

“I have a job for you,” Kian said, his voice flat and dead. “I need you to find the source of an anonymous complaint filed with the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art regarding a curator named Audrey Wells. I need proof. Digital fingerprints, IP addresses, everything. I need it yesterday.”

“It will be expensive,” the voice on the other end said.

“I don’t care,” Kian snapped. He had all the money in the world. It was worthless if he couldn’t protect her. “And I need it delivered in a way that can’t be traced back to me. Understood?”

“Understood.”

He hung up. That was step one. Undoing the damage.

Step two was harder. He had to explain the unexplainable. The boy. Cassandra. His mother’s web of lies. A text wouldn’t work. A call was impossible.

It had to be a letter.

He told his driver to take him to his office. The real one. The glass tower that scraped the sky. He walked into the penthouse suite, past the priceless art and the panoramic views of the city he owned, and felt nothing.

He sat at a massive mahogany desk and took out a single sheet of heavy, cream-colored paper. His company’s letterhead was embossed at the top. STERLING MARITIME.

He stared at it, then crumpled it in his fist. This couldn’t come from the magnate. It had to come from the man.

He found a plain sheet of paper and a simple pen.

And he began to write.

The next few days were a blur of sleep and silence.

Audrey didn’t leave Maya’s apartment. She called the museum and told them she had the flu, her voice a croak. They were surprisingly understanding.

Maya would leave for work in the morning and return in the evening with groceries and a determinedly cheerful attitude. She never pushed Audrey to talk. She just existed, a quiet, solid presence that kept the walls from closing in.

Audrey spent the hours with her hand resting on her still-flat stomach.

A baby. Her baby.

Was it the child of a lying billionaire who had another family? Or the child of a manipulative sociopath who had destroyed her career to control her?

There was no good answer. This tiny, secret life was the only thing that mattered now. She had to protect it. She had to build a world for it, away from the wreckage of her own.

On the third day, she felt a shift. The crushing weight of despair was still there, but something else was growing beneath it. A hard, cold knot of anger. Of resolve.

They would not break her.

That afternoon, a thick envelope arrived for Maya. Her name was on the front, but the letter inside the first envelope was addressed to Audrey.

A failsafe. He knew she wouldn’t accept anything with his name on it.

“It’s from a courier,” Maya said, handing it to her. “No return address.”

Audrey took it. The paper was heavy, expensive. She knew, with a certainty that made her stomach clench, who it was from. His handwriting was on the front. Just her name.

Audrey.

She stared at it, her thumb tracing the sharp, dark lines of the ink. Her first instinct was to tear it to shreds. To burn it. To erase his words just as she had erased his number.

But she didn’t.

She stood in the middle of Maya’s living room, holding the letter. It felt warm in her hand. It felt dangerous. A key to a door she had locked and barricaded.

He was a liar. His words were his weapon.

But what if, for the first time, they were also the truth?

The question was a tiny crack in her fortress wall. She held the unopened letter, her heart pounding a frantic, terrified, and traitorous rhythm against her ribs.

Chapter 28: Building a Case

The cold air was a slap. It didn’t wake her up; it plunged her deeper into the nightmare.

Audrey stood on the top step of the museum, the sounds of her own implosion echoing behind her. Her emerald gown felt like a shroud. Her skin felt too tight.

She ran.

Her heels punished the pavement, a frantic, syncopated rhythm of escape. She didn’t know where she was going, only that she had to move. Taxis flew past her, blurs of yellow light. She ignored them.

She ran until her lungs burned and the thin straps of her shoes dug into her skin.

She finally stopped under a streetlight a dozen blocks away, leaning against the cold metal pole to keep from collapsing. She was a spectacle. A woman in a gala gown, crying on a random street corner.

Her phone. She needed help.

Not Kian. Not Cole.

One name. Maya.

Her fingers, clumsy and shaking, found the contact. The phone rang once, twice.

“Audrey? It’s past midnight. Is everything okay?” Maya’s voice was warm, sensible. An anchor.

“No,” Audrey sobbed, the single word breaking apart. “Nothing is okay.”

“Where are you?” Maya’s tone shifted instantly. No more questions. Just action.

Audrey looked up, squinting at a street sign through her tears. “Corner of Lex and 79th.”

“Stay right there. Don’t move. I’m coming.”

The line went dead. Audrey slid down the pole to sit on the curb, wrapping her arms around her knees. She was a refugee from her own life.

Maya’s small, fourth-floor walk-up was a sanctuary. It smelled of lavender and old books. It was messy and real and safe.

Maya handed her a pair of worn sweatpants and a faded college t-shirt. Audrey changed out of the emerald gown, leaving it in a silk puddle on the floor like a shed skin.

“I’m not asking what happened,” Maya said, pressing a steaming mug of tea into Audrey’s hands. “Not tonight. Just drink.”

Audrey did. The warmth seeped into her bones. She sat on the lumpy sofa, staring at the wall. Her clutch buzzed on the coffee table. A relentless, angry vibration.

She picked it up.

The screen was a galaxy of missed calls and notifications. Twelve from Kian. Eight from Cole. Texts from both.

Audrey, please, it wasn’t me. I took care of the problem for you. Cole’s words were a threat wrapped in a lie.

It’s not what you think. Let me fix this. I love you. Kian’s words were a poison she couldn’t afford to drink.

With a deliberate, steady hand, Audrey opened Kian’s contact. She pressed ‘Block’. A small pop-up asked if she was sure.

She was.

She did the same for Cole. Then for his sister, Jenna.

Silence.

She had severed the arteries. She was bleeding out, but at least the poison had stopped pumping through her veins. She put the phone down, face-down, and finally let the exhaustion claim her.

Kian sat in the back of his car, staring at the facade of Audrey’s apartment building. The light in her window was off. She wasn’t there.

He’d called her twenty times. Each call went straight to voicemail after the tenth ring.

Blocked.

The finality of it was a punch to the gut. He couldn’t fix this with words. She wouldn’t hear them. He had to use actions.

He made a call. Not to his mother, not to his COO. He called a number saved under a single letter: X. The man who answered was a ghost, a specialist in finding things that didn’t want to be found.

“I have a job for you,” Kian said, his voice flat and dead. “I need you to find the source of an anonymous complaint filed with the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art regarding a curator named Audrey Wells. I need proof. Digital fingerprints, IP addresses, everything. I need it yesterday.”

“It will be expensive,” the voice on the other end said.

“I don’t care,” Kian snapped. He had all the money in the world. It was worthless if he couldn’t protect her. “And I need it delivered in a way that can’t be traced back to me. Understood?”

“Understood.”

He hung up. That was step one. Undoing the damage.

Step two was harder. He had to explain the unexplainable. The boy. Cassandra. His mother’s web of lies. A text wouldn’t work. A call was impossible.

It had to be a letter.

He told his driver to take him to his office. The real one. The glass tower that scraped the sky. He walked into the penthouse suite, past the priceless art and the panoramic views of the city he owned, and felt nothing.

He sat at a massive mahogany desk and took out a single sheet of heavy, cream-colored paper. His company’s letterhead was embossed at the top. STERLING MARITIME.

He stared at it, then crumpled it in his fist. This couldn’t come from the magnate. It had to come from the man.

He found a plain sheet of paper and a simple pen.

And he began to write.

The next few days were a blur of sleep and silence.

Audrey didn’t leave Maya’s apartment. She called the museum and told them she had the flu, her voice a croak. They were surprisingly understanding.

Maya would leave for work in the morning and return in the evening with groceries and a determinedly cheerful attitude. She never pushed Audrey to talk. She just existed, a quiet, solid presence that kept the walls from closing in.

Audrey spent the hours with her hand resting on her still-flat stomach.

A baby. Her baby.

Was it the child of a lying billionaire who had another family? Or the child of a manipulative sociopath who had destroyed her career to control her?

There was no good answer. This tiny, secret life was the only thing that mattered now. She had to protect it. She had to build a world for it, away from the wreckage of her own.

On the third day, she felt a shift. The crushing weight of despair was still there, but something else was growing beneath it. A hard, cold knot of anger. Of resolve.

They would not break her.

That afternoon, a thick envelope arrived for Maya. Her name was on the front, but the letter inside the first envelope was addressed to Audrey.

A failsafe. He knew she wouldn’t accept anything with his name on it.

“It’s from a courier,” Maya said, handing it to her. “No return address.”

Audrey took it. The paper was heavy, expensive. She knew, with a certainty that made her stomach clench, who it was from. His handwriting was on the front. Just her name.

Audrey.

She stared at it, her thumb tracing the sharp, dark lines of the ink. Her first instinct was to tear it to shreds. To burn it. To erase his words just as she had erased his number.

But she didn’t.

She stood in the middle of Maya’s living room, holding the letter. It felt warm in her hand. It felt dangerous. A key to a door she had locked and barricaded.

He was a liar. His words were his weapon.

But what if, for the first time, they were also the truth?

The question was a tiny crack in her fortress wall. She held the unopened letter, her heart pounding a frantic, terrified, and traitorous rhythm against her ribs.

Chapter 29: Finding Keys

Her thumb stroked the thick, creamy paper of the envelope. It was a physical piece of him in her hands, a stark contrast to the digital ghosts she had just exorcised from her phone.

Tear it up. Throw it away.

Her mind screamed the command. But her hands wouldn’t obey.

He was a liar. But Cole was a liar, too. A different kind. Cole’s lies were designed to trap her, to make her smaller. Kian’s lies… what were they for?

Her hand, the one that so often rested on her belly, moved to the envelope. She was making a decision for two now. She needed answers. Not for him. Not even for herself. For the tiny, unknowable life she was carrying.

With a sharp, decisive rip, she tore it open.

The letter was several pages long, filled with the same dark, decisive handwriting as the name on the envelope.

Audrey,

There is no excuse for my lie. Not one. I want you to know that before you read another word. I lied about my name, my life, my family. And that lie shattered everything between us. I don’t expect you to forgive me. Maybe I don’t deserve it. But I am begging you to let me tell you the truth.

All of it.

Audrey’s breath hitched. She sank onto Maya’s lumpy sofa, the letter trembling in her hand.

My name is Kian Sterling. I own a shipping company. It’s a prison made of money and expectation, and for years, I’ve tried to escape it. The docks, The Crow’s Nest… that was my escape. It was the only place I could just be Kian. The man, not the name. Then I met you. You didn’t see a bank account or a headline. You saw me. You talked about history and art with a fire in your eyes that made me feel more real than I have in a decade. Lying to you started as a defense mechanism, a way to protect that one real thing from the poison of my world. By the time I realized I was in love with you, the lie was a cage I’d built around us both.

Love. The word was a hot brand on the page. She flinched, but kept reading.

Now for the part you need to know. The part I couldn’t explain on the street.

The boy in the picture is not my son.

Audrey’s heart stopped. She read the line again. And again.

His name is Leo. His mother, Cassandra Thorne, is an old acquaintance. Her family lost their fortune, and she became desperate. My mother, Beatrice, saw an opportunity. She is paying Cassandra to stage this entire drama. The accidental meetings, the tabloid photos, the sad story of an abandoned child. It’s all a performance, bought and paid for with Sterling money. It’s a weapon designed to destroy you, to paint me as a monster, and to drive you away.

I hesitated when you asked me on the street because the truth sounds like the ravings of a madman. How could I explain a conspiracy like that in thirty seconds? How could I ask you to believe that my own mother would orchestrate something so cruel? But she would. To her, you are a threat to the Sterling legacy. And she eliminates threats.

Audrey felt a chill crawl up her spine. Beatrice’s voice at the gala echoed in her head. Stay away from my son. It wasn’t a warning. It was a declaration of war.

I know you have no reason to believe me. A man who lies about his name will lie about anything. I know that. But I swear on my life, Audrey, every word of this is the truth. The only truth that mattered was what I felt for you. And that was real.

I am not Cole. I would never hurt you to control you. I would burn down my entire empire to protect you.

Don’t forgive me. Just let me prove it.

Yours, Kian.

She dropped the letter as if it were on fire. Her mind was a battlefield. One part of her, the part conditioned by Cole, screamed, It’s a trick. A more sophisticated lie.

But another part, a smaller, quieter part, whispered, What if it’s true?

The thought was terrifying. If he was telling the truth, then she was caught in the crossfire of a war she didn’t understand, waged by a woman with limitless resources.

The ringing of her phone cut through the silence. Not her cell. Maya’s landline. Maya had given the number to the museum for emergencies.

Her heart pounded. She picked it up. “Hello?”

“Audrey? It’s Harrison Abernathy.”

The head of the museum board. Her blood ran cold. He was calling to fire her. After the scene at the gala, it was inevitable.

“Mr. Abernathy,” she said, her voice barely a whisper.

“Audrey, my dear, I have the most peculiar, wonderful news.” He sounded flustered, almost giddy. “That anonymous complaint against you? We found the source.”

“You did?”

“Yes! Our IT department received an anonymous tip this morning. A data packet, whatever the devil that means. It traced the complaint to a burner email account, which was linked to a prepaid cell phone registered to a Jenna Anderson.”

Jenna. Cole’s sister. The enabler. The one who always looked at Audrey with a venomous sweetness.

“The board has dismissed the complaint entirely,” Harrison continued. “Your record is cleared. Consider the matter obliterated. We are so terribly sorry for the stress this must have caused.”

Audrey sank back against the sofa cushions, stunned. “I… I don’t know what to say.”

“No need to say anything! Just get well and come back to us. Your exhibit is a triumph!”

She hung up the phone, her mind reeling. An anonymous tip. A data packet. It was too clean, too professional. It was the work of a ghost. The kind of ghost a man like Kian Sterling could afford to hire.

Let me prove it.

His words. Was this it? Was this his proof? An act of protection from the shadows, without asking for credit?

She looked at the letter lying on the floor. It was no longer just the words of a liar. It was a piece of a puzzle that was starting to make a terrifying kind of sense.

A sharp buzz from the apartment’s intercom made her jump.

She pressed the button. “Hello?”

“Courier delivery,” a man’s voice crackled. “For Audrey Wells, care of Maya Lin.”

Her breath caught in her throat. “Just a minute.”

She buzzed him in and waited by the door, her heart hammering. The footsteps came up the stairs. A knock.

She opened the door to a young man in a helmet holding out a small, padded envelope. She signed for it and closed the door, her back pressed against the cool wood.

This envelope was identical to the first.

She tore it open.

There was no letter this time. Just a single, small, old-fashioned brass key. Tucked alongside it was a folded piece of paper.

She unfolded it. It was a newspaper clipping, yellowed with age. A short article from a local paper dated over twenty years ago.

The headline read: “Local Family Adopts Son of Deceased Friends.”

The article detailed how the Thorne family had tragically died in a car accident, leaving behind their two-year-old son, Leo. He had been adopted by Cassandra Thorne’s parents, who raised him as their own. Making him Cassandra’s adopted brother.

Not her son.

Audrey stared at the faded print, the words blurring. He wasn’t lying. The boy wasn’t Cassandra’s son. It was all a lie.

Her eyes fell back to the key in her palm. It wasn’t a key to a penthouse or a fancy car. It was a simple, worn thing. A key to the small apartment near the docks. The place where he was just Kian.

An offering. A choice. A silent plea to come back to the one place that had ever felt real.

Chapter 30: Proof in My Hands

The brass key was cold in her palm. The newspaper clipping was fragile between her fingers.

Proof.

It was a tangible thing. Not a whispered promise, not a desperate plea. It was a fact, printed in faded ink. Leo was Cassandra’s adopted brother, not her son.

Kian wasn’t a liar about that.

The realization didn’t bring relief. It brought a terrifying, nauseating wave of confusion. If he was telling the truth about this, was he telling the truth about everything else? About his mother’s war? About his reasons for hiding who he was?

Audrey sank onto the arm of Maya’s sofa, her legs too weak to hold her.

She looked from the clipping to the key. One was a key to the past, unlocking a lie. The other was a key to a door. To a place. To a man she didn’t know if she could ever trust again.

The Crow’s Nest. His small, simple apartment. The world he had built to escape the world he owned. An invitation back to the only place that had ever felt real between them.

Her hand closed around the key, the metal biting into her skin. It was a temptation. A dangerous, seductive whisper that said, Maybe it wasn’t all a lie.

No. She couldn’t. Not yet. It was too soon. The wound was too raw.

She spent the rest of the day in a haze. She read the letter again. And again. The words shifted with each reading. The first time, they were the excuses of a liar. The second, a desperate plea. Now, supported by the evidence of the clipping, they read like a confession. A map of his mistakes.

Maya came home that evening to find Audrey sitting in the dark, the letter and the clipping laid out on the coffee table like evidence in a trial.

“Another one?” Maya asked softly, nodding at the new envelope.

Audrey just nodded.

Maya didn’t press. She just went into the kitchen and started making dinner. The simple, domestic sounds of chopping and sizzling were a comfort.

“The museum board called,” Audrey said to the wall. “They cleared me. The complaint was traced to Jenna Anderson.”

Maya stopped chopping. “Cole’s sister?”

“An anonymous tip led them to her.” Audrey’s voice was flat. Lifeless.

Maya came into the living room, wiping her hands on a dishtowel. She looked at the letter, then at Audrey’s hollowed-out expression.

“It was him, wasn’t it?” Maya said. “The anonymous tip. It was Kian.”

“I think so.”

“He’s fighting for you, Audrey.”

“Or he’s manipulating me,” Audrey shot back, the old fear flaring up. “This is what powerful men do. They pull strings. They fix things. It’s another form of control.”

“Is it?” Maya asked gently. “Or is it the only way he knows how to show you he’s serious? Cole sabotaged you to make you dependent. This guy… he fixed the damage to set you free.”

The distinction was sharp. It was painful. Audrey didn’t want to see it. It made everything more complicated than simple, righteous anger.

The next morning, another courier arrived. Another padded envelope.

This time, Audrey’s hands were steady as she opened it.

Inside was a single USB drive. A small, black rectangle. Taped to it was a note in Kian’s handwriting.

You deserve to see this. You deserve to know everything.

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