Follow
Chapters
Share
Every Vow But One Novel Cover

Every Vow But One

Leo Vance builds things that last. Bridges. Buildings. A quiet, unspoken life with the woman he loves. What he has never been able to build is the courage to name what they are. On the morning of his wedding to botanical illustrator Elara Ashford, Leo stands in a chapel in a suit he cannot bring himself to fully button, and realizes something that stops him cold - he has already been married to her. Not in any courtroom or ceremony, but in every moment that actually counted. The night she held his hand at his mother's funeral and said nothing, because nothing was the right thing to say. The years they ate ramen so he could chase a dream she believed in before he did. The night she stood in the doorway during their worst fight and looked him in the eye and refused to let him run. He has said I do a thousand times in a thousand unspoken ways. So why does saying it out loud feel like the beginning of the end? What Leo doesn't know is that Elara has been sitting with her own impossible question for three weeks - ever since she found a note in his jacket pocket that made her wonder whether the man she is about to marry proposed because he chose her, or because someone told him he was about to lose her. What neither of them knows is that the woman he was secretly engaged to four years ago just walked into the venue. His best man is in love with his bride. His estranged father is standing outside in a rented suit, unable to go in. And the wedding videographer has been filming everything - with two cameras. By the time the officiant asks who gives this woman, nothing about this wedding will have gone according to the blueprint. But then again, the most important things Leo has ever built never did. Every Vow But One is a lux serialized romance about the terrifying distance between loving someone completely and choosing them on purpose and what it can cost when you finally close the gap.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

POV: Maya

Three Days Before

Maya Ashford had been reading her sister's face for twenty-eight years.

She was, without meaningful competition, the most qualified person alive to do it. Elara had a good face for most purposes. Open. Calm. The face of a woman who processed things privately and presented only the conclusions, which meant the gap between what she felt and what she showed was usually narrow.

But Maya knew the gap's address. She'd been dropping in unannounced since they were children.

She came through the door at six fifteen on Thursday evening with a rolling suitcase, a shoulder bag, and the particular bone-deep exhaustion of someone who had spent three and a half hours on a train after a full workday. She was absolutely not going to let that stop her from paying attention.

Leo opened the door.

He was in a t-shirt, and he had the look of a man running several trains of thought simultaneously, all of them neatly ranked by priority. Maya was not in his top three. She found that entirely appropriate.

"Hey, David Vance."

"It's Leo. David is-"

"I know who David is, Leo." She patted his arm on her way past. "Where's my sister?"

Elara came from the studio. She was wearing paint-stained linen trousers and a white shirt with a smudge of carbon pencil on the collar. She looked comfortable. She looked busy. She looked, at first glance, like herself.

Maya took four seconds.

That was all she needed.

Because underneath the comfort and the pencil smudge and the easy walk down the hallway, Elara looked like a woman carrying something specific. Something she had been carrying for a few days at least, judging by how practiced the management of it had become. Maya recognized the signs the way a doctor recognized symptoms. The careful quality of her movements. The slight, almost imperceptible tilt of her head that only appeared when Elara was choosing her words rather than simply saying what she felt.

They embraced. Maya held on a beat longer than Elara was expecting and felt her sister make the adjustment. A small softening. A breath released quietly into Maya's shoulder.

There it was.

"You look beautiful," Maya said when she pulled back.

"I look like I've been drawing for eleven hours."

"Same thing on you."

Elara almost smiled. Good enough for now.

Leo made dinner.

Maya filed that away without commentary. Leo Vance, who regularly worked sixty hour weeks and was getting married in three days, had made dinner. Not reheated something. Not ordered in. Made dinner. Specifically, he had made pasta with the slow-cooked tomato sauce that took four hours on the stove and required almost no attention past the first thirty minutes. A sauce that was, in every practical sense, a gesture designed to look effortless. He made it whenever Elara had a deadline. Maya had heard about it enough times to recognize it on sight.

Elara ate it without once remarking on it.

Maya watched that too. The not-noticing. The comfortable absence of acknowledgment that came from having long stopped registering a thing as extraordinary. That was either the deepest form of intimacy or a quiet form of blindness, and the honest answer was that it was probably both at once.

After dinner Leo pushed back from the table, apologized, and went down the hall to take a work call. His voice carried just faintly. Low, measured, professional. The closed door version of a man who kept his worlds in separate rooms.

Maya and Elara were alone at the counter with their wine.

"How are you," Maya said.

"Good." Elara turned her glass slowly. Then added: "Really."

"That's not what I asked."

Elara looked at her.

Maya knew that look. She had it catalogued, cross-referenced, filed under I know you know, and I am not ready yet. Tonight it had a particular quality of tiredness layered into it. Not the tiredness that came from being busy. The other kind. The kind that came from being very careful for several days in a row and not letting it show to anyone who wasn't looking closely enough.

"I'm sure about him," Elara said. "That's not the question."

"Okay." Maya kept her voice easy. "So what's the question?"

Elara was quiet. Down the hall, Leo's voice moved through a sentence, professional and even. Elara's gaze drifted briefly in that direction and then came back.

"It's fine," she said. "I'm fine. I just want to be sure I'm doing this for the right reasons. Not only the obvious ones."

"What are the obvious ones?"

"Don't." But she was smiling when she said it. The first real, unguarded smile Maya had seen from her since the door opened.

Maya let it land and moved on.

She was good at this. The tactical retreat that was not retreat at all but patience operating under a different name. She had three more days. She had the letter still sitting in her carry-on, sealed, their mother's handwriting on the front in the specific blue ink she had reserved for everything that mattered.

She let Elara change the subject.

She listened to her talk about the gallery show, about the hellebore installation, about a new piece she wanted to add before the opening if she could carve out the time. She watched her sister come back to herself gradually over the course of the next hour the way a room comes back to life when someone finally opens a window. Degree by degree. The tension releasing from her shoulders, the sentences getting looser, the laugh arriving more easily.

Maya did not ask about the wedding again that night.

Later, alone in the guest room, she set her carry-on on the chair by the window and looked at it. She unzipped the front pocket and checked that the letter was still there.

It was. Of course it was.

She had checked in the cab from the station. She had checked twice on the train. Six times in three days, the same way you check a structural element you're not entirely sure is still holding. Not because you expect it to have vanished. Because you need the reassurance of knowing it hasn't.

Their mother's handwriting. Blue ink and neat, deliberate letters that had always meant something serious was on the other side.

Three more days.

Maya zipped the pocket, turned off the light, and lay in the dark listening to the sounds of Elara's apartment settling around her.

She'd waited this long.

She could wait three more days.

You may also like

Age is just a number  Novel Cover
9.3
MATURE CONTENT!! FOR 18+ ONLY " What the fuck did you call that reason again?" he asked coldly, making me wonder where his gentleness had gone! " I... I'm five years older than you, Kelvin, and being in a relationship with you..." " Bullshit!" he snapped and suddenly grabbed my neck roughly. My eyes widened. " What are you doing, Kelvin! I'm your teacher..." " You didn't think about that when you let me kiss and finger your pussy huh? You even screamed my name like your lord" then he chuckled. "Look, you can't even free yourself from my grip." Then he effortlessly pulled me closer and leaned toward my ear. " I will make you beg for my love, Lisa. You will learn the hard way that the age gap you valued between us is just a number. You will have nowhere to go but my side, unless you travel off this planet, Lisa. I've already claimed you, leaving you with no choice... now get out," he said calmly, yet very dangerous. I quickly grabbed my bag and escaped from the room! How did I even get myself into this situation? I suddenly felt Kelvin was more dangerous than Timothy, my ex-husband!! Not only am I older than Kelvin! I'm also his homeroom teacher, for goodness sake!! His parents intentionally avoided young teachers and trusted me with their son because I'm older! Now look who is dating him!! ..... Ever since Lisa resigned from being his teacher, her life has turned upside down!
Claimed By The Biker Kings: Their Forbidden Queen Novel Cover
8.9
Elena’s life shatters when she is thrust into the crosshairs of the Kings of Chaos, a notorious motorcycle club. Caught between two powerful, rival brothers who rule the streets with iron fists, she becomes a pawn in a deadly game of obsession and betrayal. As the mafia’s influence tightens and old secrets surface, Elena must navigate a world of violence. Can she survive being the forbidden prize in a war for ultimate control?
Claimed By The Ruthless Lycan Warlord Novel Cover
9.6
Areli was the hardest-working medic in the Blackridge Clan, but her efforts only earned her the title of a useless burden. Her supposed lover, Eugene, and her senior mentor, Gloria, lured her to the edge of the deadly Blackwind Cliff and shoved her straight into the abyss. She miraculously survived the freefall, only to return and find Gloria standing before the entire clan, wearing a mask of fake sorrow. "Look! The traitor is back! She eloped with wild males!" Gloria shrieked. Eugene stepped up, looking heartbroken, and publicly accused her of betraying his love. The crowd erupted, raining hisses and boos upon her, completely ignoring the horrific, life-threatening bruises that covered her battered body. They blindly believed the lies, treating her like garbage while Gloria secretly plotted to poison her water and destroy her completely. Areli felt a chilling sense of betrayal. How could the man who claimed to love her watch her fall with such cold eyes? To make matters worse, her modern biochemist instincts revealed a terrifying truth: she was unexpectedly pregnant with the child of a savage Warlord she had encountered in the wild. In this brutal, primitive world, showing any weakness was an absolute death sentence. But she wasn't going to cower or run away. Refusing the Warlord's offer to simply rescue her, Areli calmly placed a highly toxic herb on her drying rack and left her tent flap open. The bait was set. Now, she just had to wait for the screams.
Contract With A Monster: The Heiress's Revenge Novel Cover
8.6
It was my birthday, but instead of celebrating, I was bleeding on the floor of my own bedroom. My sister Serena had just smashed a champagne bottle over my legs, her eyes filled with a dark madness because our father allowed me to wear the family diamonds. To escape her, I bolted into a pitch-black guest suite, only to be grabbed by a man who felt like a wall of solid muscle. He was drugged, unstable, and pinned me against the wall, his teeth sinking into my neck in a primal claim that left a permanent mark. I managed to flee, but the nightmare was just beginning. My father didn't care about my injuries; he only cared that I had "insulted" the man in that room—Delos French, the most powerful CEO in New York. He threatened to stop paying for my mother’s critical care facility unless I went to Delos and begged for his forgiveness. My brother Julian was even worse, intentionally pouring scalding coffee over my bandaged wounds just to see me flinch. They forced me into a revealing gold dress, treating me like a high-priced commodity to be sold to the highest bidder to save their failing company. I didn't understand how the people who were supposed to love me could be more predatory than the monster in the dark. I had spent my life fixing their scandals, yet they were ready to throw me to the wolves the moment I became useful as a pawn. But when I stood before Delos French at his gala, he didn't see a trophy. He recognized my scent, my touch, and the fire in my eyes. He trapped me in his private lounge, kneeling to clean the blood from my injured feet. "Marry me," he whispered, his voice a low, terrifying growl. "And I will give you the power to burn your family to the ground." I looked into the eyes of the man who had hunted me and realized he was the only one offering me a weapon to destroy the people who had broken me. "Okay," I whispered.
His Twisted Game, My Dangerous Love Novel Cover
8.8
Vesper's marriage to Julian Sterling was a gilded cage. One morning, she woke naked beside Damon Sterling, Julian's terrifying brother, then found a text: Julian's mistress was pregnant. Her world shattered, but the real nightmare had just begun. Julian's abuse escalated, gaslighting Vesper, funding his secret life. Damon, a germaphobic billionaire, became her unsettling anchor amidst his chaos. As "Iris," Vesper exposed Julian's mistress, Serena Sharp, sparking brutal war: poisoned drinks, a broken leg, and the horrifying truth-Julian murdered her parents, trapping Vesper in marriage. The man she married was a killer. Broken and betrayed, Vesper was caught between monstrous brothers, burning with injustice. Refusing victimhood, Vesper reclaimed her identity. Fueled by vengeance, she allied with Damon, who vowed to burn his empire for her. Julian faced justice, but matriarch Eleanor's counterattack forced Vesper's choice as a hitman aimed for her.
Mr. Mafia's Obsession: His Darkest Desire Novel Cover
9.1
Elena’s life shatters when she is forced into a dangerous arrangement with Dante, a ruthless and powerful mafia boss. Trapped in his shadow, she must navigate a world of violence and secrets while he becomes increasingly obsessed with her. As Dante’s dark desires consume him, Elena struggles to survive his possessive grip. Their volatile connection blurs the line between fear and passion, leading to a high-stakes game of loyalty and betrayal.