
THE SECRET IN THE FRAME
I opened the wrong door.
That was my only crime.
I saw Roman Hale - the most powerful man alive - so vulnerable and broken, sitting on the floor of an empty room, crying over a photograph nobody was supposed to see.
I tried to vanish as someone who doesn't exist at all, praying he hadn't seen my face, but I was so wrong.
Three days later his car was outside my building, he didn't come for an apology or to silence me-he came to cage me.
He called it an opportunity.
I call it a random for a life that I'm barely holding together
What neither of us said out loud was the thing sitting between us every single day -the secret so large it had its own weight, its own breathing room, its own four-year-old face.
He's been searching for a son he doesn't know I gave birth to.
I've been searching for a child I don't know he's been funding a war to find.
We are looking for the same person.
And the man who took him from both of us is standing in this house.
Smiling.
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Chapter 6
Breakfast was a performance.
I had mastered it by now. Sit down. Pour coffee. Answer what he asked. Don't offer anything extra. Keep my face like a wall.
The problem was Roman had mastered reading walls.
He looked at me over his cup and said nothing for a full minute and then: "You've been crying."
Not a question.
I kept my eyes on my plate. "Allergies."
"We're indoors."
"Then it's probably Dust."
"The house has a filtration system."
I looked up. "Then I don't know what to tell you."
He looked at me the way he'd looked at me from the window last night. Like the distance between us was a problem he was calculating how to close.
"Did someone contact you?" he said.
I went very still.
"Why would someone contact me? and even if they did, it shouldn't bother you"
"Chloe."
"Roman."
His jaw tightened at his own name in my mouth. I had noticed that. Every time I used it something moved through him that he shut down immediately.
"If someone is pressuring you," he said. "I need to know."
I put my fork down. "You hired me to manage your schedule. Not to report my personal life, my personal business is not for strangers."
"That's not-"
"I'm fine." I picked my fork back up. "What time is the Voss call this morning?"
Silence.
"Ten," he said.
"I'll have the files ready at nine-thirty."
He said nothing else.
But he didn't eat for the rest of breakfast.
He just sat there with his coffee going cold, watching me chew, like I was a problem he hadn't accounted for.
Good.
Neither had I.
---
The Voss call lasted forty minutes.
I sat outside the study door the whole time because I needed to and because the corridor carried sound and because I was running out of time to be careful.
Most of it was legal language I had to mentally translate.
But one exchange stopped me cold.
Voss: "The investigator found a match in the secondary records. Female. Twenty-four at the time of placement. No paternal information listed on the original filing."
Roman: "Where is she?"
Voss: "That's the problem. The contact information is four years old. She's moved twice. The trail goes cold around eighteen months ago."
A pause.
Roman: "Find her immediately."
Voss: "Roman. If she doesn't know-"
Roman: "Find her. I'm not asking."
The call ended.
I stood up from the chair so fast it scraped the floor.
Walked to the window at the end of the corridor.
Stood there.
He was looking for me.
Not Chloe Banks the assistant.
The girl from four years ago.
The mother.
He was already looking.
And he had no idea she was sleeping forty feet from his bedroom.
---
I called Jade at lunch.
"Tell me you found something else."
"Hello to you too." Rustling. "Yes, actually. The fraud case on Vantage Placements - it was dropped. Quietly. About two years ago. No public record of why."
"Cases don't drop themselves."
"No," Jade said. "They get paid to drop."
I looked at the garden through the window.
"How much?" I said.
"The filing had a figure redacted but someone forgot to fully black it out on the scanned copy. Best I can read it - two point three million."
Two point three million dollars.
"Jade. Who paid it?"
Her pause was two seconds too long.
"The same entity as before?" I already knew.
"I'm sorry, Chloe."
I hung up.
Sat at the desk.
Put both hands flat on the surface.
Roman paid to drop the case.
Which meant Roman knew about the fraud.
Which meant the story he'd told me yesterday - I found out fourteen months ago, I had no idea, people made decisions without my knowledge - was either a lie.
Or there were two versions of Roman Hale.
The one who was searching for his son.
And the one who had paid to make the evidence disappear.
---
Dinner that night.
He was already seated when I came in.
He looked up.
Something in his face changed when he saw mine.
Not visibly. Just - a shift. The way a room shifts when a window opens somewhere.
"Sit," he said.
I sat.
We were served. The staff moved in and out silently. Roman watched me the whole time in that sideways way of his - not staring, just permanently aware. Like I was something in his peripheral vision he couldn't stop tracking.
"You found something out today," he said.
I picked up my fork. "Long day."
"You have a tell."
I looked up. "I have a what?"
"When you know something you're not saying, you put both hands flat on the surface in front of you." He tilted his head slightly. "You did it at breakfast. You did it again at your desk at one-fifteen. I saw you through the office window."
The back of my neck went hot.
"That's a specific thing to notice," I said.
"I notice specific things."
"About all your assistants?"
The question landed in the room and stayed there.
He didn't answer immediately.
When he did his voice was lower. "No."
I looked at him.
He looked at me.
The table between us felt suddenly very small.
"Vantage Placements," I said.
His fork stopped.
"The case was dropped," I said. "Two years ago. Two point three million dollars." I kept my voice flat and even. "That's not nothing, Roman."
He set his fork down.
The Roman from the Ashford was gone. This one was very still and very cold and the temperature of the room actually felt like it dropped.
"Where did you get that?" he said.
"Does it matter?"
"Yes."
"Why? Because you thought it was buried?"
"Because that information is dangerous." He leaned forward. "Not for me. For whoever has it."
I held his eyes. "Is that a warning?"
"It's a fact."
"Funny. So is two point three million dollars."
The silence between us was a living thing.
He stood up.
Walked to the window.
Stood with his back to me and I watched him pull himself together from the outside - shoulders, jaw, breath.
When he turned around he was sealed again.
"I paid to protect someone," he said.
"Your company."
"No." Sharp. Final. "Someone."
"Who?"
He looked at me for a long time.
"Sit down after dinner," he said. "I'll tell you what I can."
"What you can," I repeated.
"Yes."
"Why not everything?"
Something crossed his face that I didn't have a name for.
"Because some of it will hurt you," he said. "And I'm not ready for that yet."
---
I didn't go back to the dining room after dinner.
I went upstairs.
Locked my door.
Sat on the floor.
He'd said: some of it will hurt you.
Not - some of it is confidential. Not - some of it is legally sensitive.
Hurt you.
He knew.
He had to know.
Or he was close enough to knowing that the difference didn't matter anymore.
I opened the locked folder.
Looked at my son's photo.
Then I opened a new message to Jade.
"I need you to find out if Roman Hale has ever filed a paternity claim. Anywhere. Any court. Any country."
Sent.
I lay back on the floor and looked at the ceiling and thought about the look on his face when he said some of it will hurt you.
Not cold.
Not calculated.
Like it was costing him something to say it.
Like he already cared what happened to me.
My phone buzzed.
Jade: "Chloe. There's a sealed filing in the New York family court. Four years ago. Paternity claim - voluntarily withdrawn within thirty days of filing."
I stared at the screen.
Withdrawn.
He had filed.
And then someone made him take it back.
My phone buzzed again.
Jade: "There's a name attached to the withdrawal. Not Roman's lawyer. Different name. Chloe - this name is in the Hale Group board."
Another buzz.
A name.
I read it.
Read it again.
Put the phone down on my chest.
Lay there in the dark.
The man whose name Jade had just sent me - I had met him.
Six days ago.
He had come to the estate.
He had shaken my hand and smiled at me and said: "You must be the new girl."
And Roman had watched him say it with an expression I hadn't understood at the time.
I understood it now.
It was a warning he couldn't give me.
---
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9.6
I spent our third anniversary alone in our penthouse, adjusting a white rose and waiting for a man who didn't want to come home. When my fiancé, Chris Osborne, finally arrived, he didn't notice the 1982 Lafite or the dinner I’d prepared. He looked at me with disgust, calling my desire for a wedding date "pressure" before storming out to a private club.
I followed him, hiding behind a marble pillar at The Vault as I recorded his voice on my phone. He was laughing with his friends about a $20 million bet. He called me a "boring ice queen" and a "marble statue," explaining that he only needed to keep me around until the merger closed so he could steal my shares and "cut me loose." To make it worse, my own father was in on it, prioritizing his stock price over his daughter's life.
Broken and barefoot in a torrential Manhattan downpour, I sought refuge at the Four Seasons. I collapsed into the arms of a tall, dangerous-looking stranger and begged him to take me upstairs. I wanted to be erased, to forget the transaction my life had become. After a night of salt and desperation, I left my engagement ring on his nightstand as payment for services rendered and fled.
The next morning, I realized I had jumped from the frying pan into the furnace. My "stranger" wasn't a nobody. He was Gallagher Osborne—the ruthless patriarch of the family and my fiancé’s uncle. He tracked me to a private clinic, trapping me in a room while holding my medical file and the ring I’d discarded. He told me I was his now, and that he’d dismantle Chris piece by piece if I didn't comply.
I was a piece of currency to my father, a bet to my fiancé, and a prize to his uncle. I had no allies, no escape, and no mercy left. I realized that being the "perfect daughter" had only made me a target. If they wanted to play games with the "Ice Queen," I decided to give them a frostbite they would never forget.
I trashed my art gallery, backdated a diagnosis for a psychotic break, and sent a cryptic suicide note to Chris. As Gallagher watched from the shadows and Chris panicked over his investment, I began the process of scorching the earth. The merger was still happening, but I wasn't the bride anymore—I was the wrecking ball.

9.2
Druscilla Hayes thought heartbreak had a limit.
She was wrong.
On the night of her bachelorette party, she survives a shootout - and is rescued by a dangerously irresistible stranger with mismatched eyes and a criminal smile.
Ivanov Rodriguez is everything she shouldn't want.
Everything her perfect fiance is not.
But when Druscilla discovers her fiancé's betrayal, she runs straight into Ivanov's arms - only to learn too late that she was never more than a pawn in his revenge.
Years later, she's rebuilt her life, her heart, and her future.
Until fate drags her back into the orbit of the man who once ruined her.
This time, she has nothing left to lose.
Except the truth that could destroy them both
⚠️ WARNING:
This book contains immorality, forbidden desire, dangerous attraction, and morally questionable characters.
If you believe love should always be pure and choices should always be right...
This story is not for you.
Proceed only if you enjoy chaos, passion, and bad decisions.

8.4
I signed a prenuptial agreement with a cold-blooded Wall Street predator just to unlock my trust fund and fight my greedy stepmother.
We were nothing more than legal roommates bound by a strict three-year contract.
But to survive the corporate war at my family's company, I skipped my mandatory university finance class and paid a guy to answer the roll call for me.
The stand-in was immediately caught and kicked out by the notoriously ruthless new professor.
That night at dinner, I complained to my contract husband about the professor.
"He's an unreasonable, arrogant dictator who gets off on torturing his students," I complained bitterly.
My husband just calmly cut my steak and listened as I bragged about how I was going to fake-cry and manipulate the professor the next morning.
I even rushed to the faculty office the next day and performed a desperate, tearful apology to an elderly man I assumed was the tyrant.
I thought I had perfectly balanced my corporate war and my academic life. I thought I had fooled everyone.
But when I confidently sat in the front row of the massive lecture hall, the heavy wooden doors pushed open.
The terrifying new professor walked onto the podium and aggressively wrote his name on the chalkboard: Elliot Dillard.
It was my contract husband.
He looked down at me with cold, merciless authority, knowing every single lie I had told, and slowly called my name.

8.5
In a world grown dry with doubt and division, three weary souls set out on a journey that will awaken a miracle.
When Daniel, a humble preacher marked by loss, follows a whisper of faith into the desolate lands, he is joined by Isabella - steadfast, luminous, and unafraid to believe when all seems barren - and Elise, a seeker torn between light and shadow. Together, they carry the covenant of a living river - one that flows not only through the earth, but through the human heart.
From the rebirth of Willow Creek to the awakening of forgotten cities, The Everflow traces a breathtaking pilgrimage of renewal and redemption. But as the river spreads, so too does resistance - from powers that fear the tide of grace and the breaking of old chains. Through storms and silence, fire and flow, Daniel and his companions learn that the greatest battle is not against the desert without, but the drought within.
Told in luminous prose and steeped in spiritual symbolism, The Everflow is a sweeping saga of faith, unity, and the unyielding strength of divine love. It is a story for every heart that has ever felt dry - and for every soul still longing to remember that the river never truly stopped flowing.
When faith becomes a current, hope a journey, and love the water that carries us home - the Everflow begins.

8.4
Kenzie, the former leader of the Aegis Alliance, opened her eyes to find herself reincarnated as a freezing, abandoned infant in a wet cardboard box.
She was rescued from the rain by Devin Ayers, a ruthless billionaire, and rushed to a private hospital, but a deadly threat was already waiting for her.
The ER doctor, Desiree Dillon, approached her with a syringe. Through a sudden burst of telepathy, Kenzie read the doctor's dark thoughts. Desiree wasn't trying to cure her fever. She deliberately ignored the safe dosage, drawing a lethal amount of Diazepam to permanently silence the crying baby and disguise it as sudden infant death.
"This will make it all go away," Desiree smiled gently, the needle glinting as it moved inches from Kenzie's arm.
Trapped in a weak, paralyzed three-month-old body, Kenzie couldn't run, fight, or even speak. She could only watch the poison inch closer.
How could she survive death only to be assassinated in a hospital bed by a corrupt doctor? She used to command armies. The sheer injustice and terror of dying completely helpless in this tiny body ignited a blinding rage inside her.
Refusing to be a victim again, Kenzie pushed her newborn brain to its absolute limit and unleashed a desperate telepathic scream directly into the billionaire's mind.
"Poison! She's trying to kill me!"
Devin, who had been looking away, suddenly froze, his icy gray eyes locking onto the doctor's wrist.

8.8
I spent three years hating Damien Castillo, the ruthless mafia Don who kidnapped me from my engagement party and ruined my reputation.
But in the end, it was my perfect fiancé, Julian, and my sweet half-sister, Sophia, who slipped the deadly poison into my wine.
As the venom burned through my veins in that freezing cellar, I watched Julian smile. He and Sophia had orchestrated my brutal death. She had been sleeping in his bed all along, intentionally miscarrying his bastard child just to frame me as 'impure' and strip me of my family's protection. My own father used me as a political pawn, letting them throw me away like garbage.
And Damien? The monster I had fought and despised for years marched straight into a suicide ambush for me. He was riddled with bullets, turning his body into a human shield just to buy me a few more seconds of life.
"Touch her and you die."
I died in that blood-soaked basement, clutching his lifeless body, suffocating on my own blind trust. Why did I ever believe the golden boy who betrayed me? Why did I fight the only man who truly loved me?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of copper and mold was gone, replaced by the scent of Cuban cigars and black silk.
I was back in 1928, on the exact night Damien stormed my engagement party and locked me in his penthouse.
This time, when the ruthless Don approached me, I didn't scream or run back to my killers. I wrapped my arms around his neck and kissed him.