Sitting in the ER at Mount Sinai Hospital, Silas Vance suddenly felt a visceral surge of panic.
For a man whose resting heart rate rarely spiked even during multimillion-dollar corporate acquisitions, this was an entirely alien sensation. It hit his chest like a physical blow.
A sudden, icy certainty washed over him: something vital, something irreplaceable, was slipping through his fingers.
It felt exactly like that moment at the Pierre Hotel gala, when he had scanned the crowded ballroom and seen Nina standing in the shadows. She had been so pale, her frame so fragile, looking as though a strong gust of wind could scatter her into powder across the Manhattan skyline.
A voice in his head had screamed at him then: Catch her. Don't let her walk away.
But she had walked away.
Now, sitting beside the hospital bed, watching the IV drip saline into Serena's arm, that suffocating dread returned, gripping him by the throat.
He had completely forgotten about the romantic anniversary dinner he had spent hours meticulously preparing.
He checked his Patek Philippe watch. An hour and a half had passed. He had to go home.
He stood up from the uncomfortable plastic chair and smoothed his trousers.
She'll be angry, he thought. She'll be jealous. She'll yell at me.
For the first time in his life, he actually wanted her to scream. He wanted her to smash things, to force him to explain.
But then he remembered the look on her face as she left. She hadn't screamed; instead, she had offered that gentle, submissive smile, telling him to drive safely.
The unease in his chest intensified.
"I have to go, Serena," Silas said stiffly. "The doctor said it's just a severe gastritis flare-up from the stress of moving. You're stable. I'll have my driver take you back to your hotel when you're discharged."
Serena shifted weakly against the stiff hospital pillows. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her makeup smudged, making her look like a tragic, pitiful woman.
She reached out, her fingers weakly catching his pristine cuff.
"Si..." she whispered, a tear slipping down her cheek. "Could you stay just a little longer? Just until the bag is empty? I'm so cold, and I don't know anyone in this city anymore. Please, don't leave me here alone."
Silas looked down at her hand. He wanted to pull away. He had promised Nina. On their anniversary, he had looked his wife in the eye and promised he would return.
But Serena looked so small, shivering under the thin hospital blanket.
It was late, the sky outside completely dark.
And Nina... Nina was strong. She was understanding. Nina's love for him was quiet and unwavering, something he had come to rely on as surely as gravity.
Nina would understand. She always forgave him.
The CEO of Vance Capital, known for his unshakeable decisiveness, hesitated.
And then, he sat back down.





