Ella stood frozen in the doorway, her hand still gripping the frame, staring at the woman who had haunted her nightmares for years. Cleopatra. Her sister. The demon sheâd spent an entire lifetime trying to outrun, to forget, to erase from her own existence.
"Why the fuck was she here?"
The question burned through Ellaâs mind like acid. How did she even know where Ella lived? This wasnât public information. Ella had been careful about keeping her address private. Which meant someone had given it to her.
Kyle.
The thought hit her like ice water. If Cleopatra knew where she lived, it was because of Kyle. But the more she thought about it the more absurd if seemed, she scoffed at this thought and assumed it was probably since when she left the mansion after confirming she was in the will.
Ella didnât want to think the worst. She made a decisionâbrush past her. Donât engage. Get to rehearsal, deal with this later.
It wasnât like Cleopatra would use violence to subdue her if she came all the way here.
She stepped forward, deliberately moving to the side, attempting to walk past Cleopatra into the hallway beyond.
Cleopatra didnât say a single word. Didnât move. Didnât reach out or block Ellaâs path. She simply stood there, perfectly still, watching her younger sister with the patient amusement of someone who already knew exactly how this scene would play out.
Because she knew Ella. Knew her better than Ella probably knew herself. Knew that beneath all the rebellion, the fiery independence, the carefully constructed persona of someone who didnât give a fuckâthere was a woman with enough common sense to recognize when a door had been opened that couldnât simply be walked past.
Ella made it two steps before she stopped.
Her shoulders tensed. A frustrated breath escaped through her nose. She stood there for a long moment, jaw tight, feeling the weight of Cleopatraâs gaze on the back of her neck.
She turned around slowly, frustration written across every line of her face.
"What do you want?" The words came out flat. Cold.
Cleopatra sighedâa small, theatrical exhale. Then she moved, stepping past Ella and through the still-open apartment door with the quiet confidence of someone entering their own home.
"Even you are smart enough to know I wouldnât be here if I didnât need to be," Cleopatra said as she passed.
Ella hated that she was right.
She hated it with every fiber of her beingâhated that Cleopatra could still cut through her defenses with a single sentence, could still make her feel like the younger sister sheâd spent years trying to stop being. But it was true. Cleopatra never showed up without purpose. Every interaction had a calculation driving it forward.
Ella turned and followed her back inside, pulling the door shut behind her.
---
Jones stood at his window with a cup of coffee that had long gone cold as he took in the weather and his day off work.
Heâd seen everything.
The black car pulling up to the curbâsleek, expensive, the kind of car that didnât belong in this neighborhood. Then the men. Four of them, stepping out in coordinated silence, wearing dark suits that fit too perfectly to be off the rack. They moved with practiced efficiencyânot bodyguards from some private security firm, but something more dangerous. Men whoâd earned their positions through violence, not rĂ©sumĂ©s.
And then the woman.
She emerged from the car last, unhurried, her black suit immaculate, radiating authority that made even the air around her feel different. Jones had seen powerful women beforeâAiysha carried herself with quiet strength. But this woman was something else entirely. Power wielded for so long it had become indistinguishable from the person wielding it.
He watched her walk to Kyleâs door through his peephole, changing position, listened to the brief exchange, watched both women disappear inside.
Jones set down his coffee cup and pulled out his phone.
Kyleâs car hadnât been there since yesterday. That was unusual. Kyle was meticulousâalways home by a certain time, always parked in the same spot, always reachable. Jones had tried calling him that morning. No answer. Straight to voicemail.
And now this. A woman arriving with four armed escorts walking into Ellaâs apartment like she owned the place.
Jones knew his loyalty belonged to Kyle. Not to Ella, not to Jane, not to the women in his life. Kyle had done more for Jones and his family than anyone else ever hadâpaid for his daughterâs education, helped him when his marriage was falling apart, treated him like a friend when Jones had nothing to offer except honesty.
He snapped a photo of the convoyâthe car, the license plate, the men standing guardâand opened his messages. Found Kyleâs contact. Typed quickly:
[[Donât know if youâre seeing this. Woman just showed up at yout place. Came with 4 men in suits and this car. Your car hasnât been here since yesterday. Something feels off. Thought you should know.]]
He attached the photo and hit send.
Jones knew this might cause problems. But when Kyle disappeared without a trace and armed escorts with a woman started showing up at his door, that warranted a heads up. If it was nothing, Kyle would brush it off. If it was somethingâJones would rather err on the side of caution.
The double checkmarks appeared. Message sent.
Jones went back to his cold coffee and kept watching the men outside.
---
Inside the apartment, Cleopatra surveyed her surroundings with barely concealed disdain.
The living room was modestâcomfortable furniture, a decent television, bookshelves that were actually used. Clean, organized, lived-in. It had character, but it lacked the luxury she expected from someone in Kyleâs financial position. A man worth billions could provide considerably better.
Disappointing.
Cleopatra didnât wait for permission before settling into the sofa, crossing her legs with practiced elegance and making herself at home.
Ella opened her mouthâto demand she leave, to ask what the hell she was doing hereâ
"Kyleâs life is in danger."
The words landed like a slap. Ellaâs mouth closed. Her entire body went still, a jolt of cold running through her chest.
"What?" The word escaped before she could stop it.
Cleopatra tilted her head, studying Ellaâs reaction with clinical interest. "Thatâs the wrong question," she said, her voice smooth and unhurried. "The right questionâthe only question that matters right nowâis what you can do for him."
Ellaâs mind raced. How did Cleopatra know this? What did she know about Kyleâs connections, the world he operated in? But she didnât voice any of those questions. Because she knew her sister. Knew that pressing too hard would make Cleopatra retreat into her games, revealing information only when it served her purposes.
Cleopatra reached into her jacket and produced her phone, tapping the screen before turning it toward Ella.
The image filled the display. Kyleâunmistakable. Bound. Restrained. His face visible enough to confirm his identity, his body language projecting controlled tension that came from being at someone elseâs mercy. A surveillance capture, pulled from a camera he didnât know was watching.
Ellaâs heart dropped straight to her stomach.
She stared at the image, her throat tightening, something cold and unwelcome blooming in her chest. That was Kyle. Bound and at someoneâs mercy, and she had no idea where he was or who had him.
"That is Kyle," Cleopatra said, her tone casual as if commenting on the weather. "And Iâm afraid he might not see the next sunrise."
Ella wanted to confront her. Wanted to demand answers about how she had this photograph, how she knew where Kyle was. The surveillance image alone raised a hundred questionsâCleopatra had eyes on Kyle, had been watching him, had access to information that suggested she was far more involved in his world than Ella had ever imagined.
But before she could form the words, she noticed something in her sisterâs eyes. A flicker of amusement. A subtle shift telling Ella she was being analyzed in real time.
Cleopatra was studying how Ella reacted. Not her shockâthat was expected. But the way her hands had trembled. The way her eyes had gone glassy with something beyond concern for a boyfriend. The way she hadnât acted surprised, as if some part of her had already suspected he was involved in something dark.
A piece of a puzzle clicked into place behind Cleopatraâs eyes.
She smirked. Small, knowing, devastatingly precise.
"So it is true," Cleopatra said, her voice dripping with amusement. "You are fucking him."
Ella froze.
The blood drained from her face. Her lips parted but no sound came out. There was no wayâabsolutely no wayâCleopatra should know this. She hadnât told anyone. Kyle hadnât told anyone. It had been their secret, from the world, from everyone or at least this was what she assumed.
And yet Cleopatra knew. Of course she knew. She always knew.
Ella stared at her sister, exposed and stripped bare by a single sentence, and wonderedânot for the first timeâwhether there was any part of her life that Cleopatra hadnât already seen. But Kyleâs safety came first even though this was all a game to her sister.