
His Starlight, Her Fiery Reckoning
I was the secret lover of my CEO, Kristofer Gordon. He called me his "Starlight," and I, a brilliant but naive software engineer, believed him.
Then he publicly chose his fragile childhood friend, Elenor, revealing I was nothing more than a disposable secret.
The cruelty didn't stop there. He bought my late mother's necklace for Elenor, who taunted me by putting it on a stray dog. When I snapped and attacked her, Kristofer had me arrested and beaten in jail.
Lying in a hospital bed, I learned the final truth from a gloating Elenor: Kristofer had secretly filmed every intimate moment we ever shared, holding the tapes as blackmail.
He wanted to break me. He wanted me to suffer.
But the woman he thought he destroyed died that day. I walked out, set his mansion on fire, and disappeared.
This time, I would be the one in control.
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Chapter 3
Kristofer didn't wait for an answer. He simply reached out and pulled me to my feet, his touch firm, almost possessive. Before I could protest, he guided me to his car, a sleek black luxury vehicle that seemed out of place on the quiet park street. The city lights blurred as we drove, my mind a chaotic mess of gratitude and resentment.
I was safe. For now. But the safety felt like a new cage, one forged by his conflicted emotions. Why was he here? Why did he care, after everything? My heart ached, caught between the fragile solace of his presence and the raw wound of his deception.
We arrived at his sprawling mansion, the same house where we' d shared so many stolen moments. It felt different now, tainted. I followed him inside, my steps heavy.
"You can stay here," he said, his voice flat, gesturing towards the grand staircase. "Take any room you like."
I knew he meant the master suite, our room. But I couldn't. Not anymore. "The guest room will be fine," I replied, my voice steady, betraying none of the turmoil within. I chose a room on the opposite wing, as far as possible from his. I needed distance, even if it was just physical.
He watched me, his dark eyes unreadable. "As you wish," he finally said, a hint of something I couldn't decipher in his tone. "Just... don't disappear again." His words were a command, not a request. He still saw me as something to control.
I nodded, not trusting myself to speak. My focus was on leaving, on escaping this gilded prison. The arranged marriage, once a distant threat, now felt like a desperate lifeline. I clung to the thought, a fragile hope in the face of utter despair.
The next morning, breakfast was a silent affair. Kristofer sat at the head of the long dining table, engrossed in his tablet. I picked at my food, the taste of betrayal still bitter in my mouth. I couldn't ignore the questions burning in my mind. Elenor. I needed answers.
"Elenor," I said, breaking the silence. My voice sounded foreign, sharp. "Who is she, really?"
He looked up, his expression unreadable. "Elenor Reynolds," he stated, as if reciting from a file. "My childhood friend. She saved my life once."
My fork clattered against the plate. "Saved your life? What do you mean?"
He paused, a flicker of something in his eyes-a memory, a pain I couldn't comprehend. "Years ago. A terrible accident. She shielded me. Took the brunt of the impact." His voice was low, a rare vulnerability in his tone. "She's had a heart condition ever since. Fragile. Needs constant care."
My mind reeled. A savior. A fragile, ill woman. It painted a picture different from the cunning manipulator I' d glimpsed. But still, the heart emoji, his tender touches… "And your connection? Is it just… gratitude?" I asked, a desperate hope clinging to my words.
His jaw tightened. "She's family, Adah. She always has been. She needs me." His gaze sharpened. "I suggest you don't antagonize her."
The warning was clear. He was protecting her. Always her. "Antagonize her?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping. "So, I' m the villain here? The one who needs to watch her step around your fragile hero?"
"She's been through a lot," he said, his voice firm. "More than you could possibly imagine. She needs peace, not drama."
My anger flared. "And what about me, Kristofer? What about what I've been through? What about the drama you' ve brought into my life?" My voice was rising, trembling with suppressed fury.
He slammed his hand on the table, making the cutlery jump. "Enough, Adah! Elenor is delicate. She relies on me. She relies on my protection. You, on the other hand, are strong. Resourceful. You can take care of yourself."
His words hit me like a physical blow. Strong. Resourceful. Capable of taking care of myself. He was justifying his neglect, his betrayal, by painting me as somehow less deserving of his care, his affection, because I wasn' t fragile.
I pushed away from the table, my appetite gone. "Right," I said, my voice dead. "Of course. The strong one. The one who doesn't need protection." I walked away, leaving him at the table, the image of his face, filled with concern for her, burning into my memory.
That night, I lay awake in the guest room, the vast emptiness around me mirroring the hollowness in my chest. I still craved him, his touch, his whispered 'Starlight.' My body ached for him, a physical longing that defied reason. But my heart, battered and bruised, finally recognized the truth. His 'love' was a lie, a calculated manipulation. His tenderness was reserved for Elenor.
He truly loved her. The thought was a dagger, twisting deep. He always had. I was just a temporary distraction, a convenient conquest. The realization was painful, but also strangely liberating. There was nothing left to fight for. Nothing left to hope for.
The next evening, Kristofer appeared at my door. "There's a party tonight," he said, his voice neutral. "You should come."
I stared at him, surprised. A party? After everything? "Why?"
He shrugged. "It's a company event. And you're staying here. It's expected."
Expected. Not wanted. Not because he wanted me by his side. But the thought of being alone in this house, haunted by ghosts of a love that never was, was unbearable. "Fine," I said, my voice flat. "I'll go."
The party was held in the grand ballroom of a downtown hotel, a lavish affair bursting with flashing lights, pounding music, and a sea of unfamiliar faces. The air buzzed with a strange mix of excitement and tension. Something felt off.
I trailed behind Kristofer, feeling like an outsider, a silent observer. Then I saw her. Elenor. She stood at the center of the room, looking breathtakingly beautiful in a shimmering gown, surrounded by a crowd of admirers. She spotted Kristofer, and her face lit up, a radiant smile that seemed too perfect.
"Kristofer, darling!" she exclaimed, rushing towards him, bypassing me completely. She threw her arms around his neck, pressing a soft kiss to his cheek. He held her, his arm tightening around her waist.
My stomach churned. The intimacy, the public display, it was a blatant disregard for my presence.
Elenor finally pulled back, her gaze flicking to me, a flash of triumph in her innocent eyes. "Adah!" she chirped, feigning surprise. "How wonderful to see you here! Are you feeling better after your little... incident?" Her euphemism for my eviction and public humiliation was a subtle jab.
I forced a smile, cold and brittle. "Never better, Elenor. I hear you're quite the guest of honor tonight."
She giggled, a childish sound. "Oh, you! Always so kind." She turned to Kristofer, her hand resting delicately on his chest. "Kristofer, you didn't tell me Adah was coming. I hope she won't be too bored. This party is really just a small welcome for me, you know. I' ve been so ill, and everyone wanted to celebrate my recovery."
A small welcome. For her. The realization hit me like a cold wave. This wasn't a company event. This was her party. And I was Kristofer's plus-one, an unwelcome guest. My blood ran cold, a sickening feeling of being used, of being humiliated, washing over me.
I wanted to run, to disappear, to scream. But my feet were rooted to the spot. Elenor, sensing my distress, tightened her grip on Kristofer's arm. "Adah, you look a little pale. Are you sure you're alright?" She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a theatrical whisper. "I heard about your uncle... being so upset... and you leaving home. It must be so difficult, being practically disowned."
The words, though whispered, carried far in the relative lull of conversation around us. Heads turned. Whispers started. My face burned with shame and fury. She was doing this on purpose. She wanted to expose me, to revel in my downfall.
"I'm perfectly fine, Elenor," I said, my voice dangerously low. "And my family matters are hardly your concern."
Elenor's eyes welled up, a single tear tracing a path down her cheek. "Oh, Adah, you're so cruel! I was just trying to be sympathetic." She turned to Kristofer, her voice trembling. "Kristofer, she's so mean to me!"
Kristofer immediately wrapped his arm around Elenor, pulling her close. "Adah," he said, his voice a low warning. "That's enough." He stroked Elenor's hair, murmuring soft reassurances. He didn't even look at me. His entire focus was on her, his fragile Elenor.
The pain was a physical entity, a crushing weight in my chest. My heart, which I thought was already dead, found new ways to break. I stared at them, a perfect picture of intimacy, of shared affection. And I was the unwanted outsider, the villain in their perfect story. The bitter taste of my own tears mixed with the champagne on my lips. I grabbed a glass from a passing waiter, emptying it in one gulp. I needed to numb this, to erase this moment from my memory. But the burning in my chest only grew hotter. This was a nightmare, and I was trapped in it with no escape.