Naomi hadn't intended to come. She hated events like this-stale champagne, feigned interest, fake laughter. But her best friend, Marcie, had insisted. "You need to network," she'd said. "You're too talented to be invisible forever."
Invisible. That word lingered in Naomi's head like a bitter aftertaste.
So she'd put on her one good dress, borrowed a pair of heels, and slipped into the lion's den. She hadn't expected to draw his attention. She definitely hadn't expected what came after.
Now, five months later, Naomi sat alone in a penthouse suite that overlooked the glittering New York skyline, barefoot on a Persian rug worth more than her entire college debt. The taste of Julian's kiss still lingered on her lips, intoxicating and dangerous. She hated how easily he could disarm her. Her phone buzzed on the table. She picked it up without thinking.
Julian: Don't wait up. Emergency meeting with the board.
She stared at the message.
Emergency meeting? It was 10:48 p.m.
And he was lying.
She didn't need proof. She knew his habits. Julian was a man who scheduled even his affairs down to the minute. The "emergency meetings" usually came when he wanted distance- or when his wife was in town.
Naomi's chest tightened, but she said nothing. She never did. That was part of the unspoken contract between them. Don't ask about his wife. Don't call when he doesn't message. Don't fall in love.
She rose and padded to the window, arms crossed as the city pulsed below. Somewhere out there, in a sprawling brownstone guarded by stone lions and private security, she was waiting. The woman who wore his last name. The woman Naomi would never meet, yet somehow competed with every day.
Sophia Thorne.
Beautiful. Elegant. Perfect.
The only thing she wasn't, apparently, was enough.
Naomi let out a bitter laugh. What did that make her?
She touched her reflection in the glass, fingers ghosting over the face of a woman she no longer recognized. Her once-wild curls were now sleek and straight. Her thrift store wardrobe replaced by silk and cashmere. She lived in a world that didn't belong to her, with a man who would never be hers. Yet every time he touched her, she forgot that.
---
Julian Thorne didn't believe in love. Not the kind that lasted, anyway. Love, he'd once said, was just chemistry with a shelf life. What mattered was control-predictability, discipline, image. Love was chaos. And Julian hated chaos.
Naomi remembered the first time he kissed her. They'd been standing in the back garden of the Thorne estate after the gala, away from the crowd, hidden under moonlight and red maples. He'd looked at her with eyes that stripped her down to her soul, and said, "You feel like the only real thing in a room full of masks."
She should've walked away right then. But instead, she'd let him kiss her. And once she tasted him, she couldn't stop. She was his secret. His sin. And she was drowning in him.
---
The next morning, Naomi was awakened by the buzz of the intercom. She groggily pulled on her robe and pressed the screen.
"Yes?"
"Delivery for Miss Blake," a voice chirped.
She frowned. "From who?"
"He didn't say."
A few minutes later, she opened the door to find a sleek white box tied in black ribbon sitting on the mat. Inside was a dress-dark green velvet, strapless, breathtaking. Beneath it, a handwritten note:
Dinner. 8 PM. Wear this. -J
She crumpled the note between her fingers. No apology. No explanation. Just a command. And yet... she'd still show up. That night, Naomi walked into the private dining room of Aurelio's, one of the most exclusive restaurants in Manhattan. Julian was already seated, a glass of Bordeaux in his hand, the candlelight casting golden shadows across his angular features.
He stood as she approached, eyes raking over her in that signature way of his-possessive, like he owned every inch of her.
"You look beautiful," he said, pulling out her chair.
"You're late," she replied, sitting.
He gave a small, knowing smile. "Business."
Naomi's fingers curled around her wine glass. "Your wife in town?"
Julian's smile vanished.
"You know the rules," he said, voice quiet.
"Sometimes I forget," she said coolly. "Sometimes I like to remember that I'm not just some... conveniently placed secret."
He leaned in, eyes dark. "You're not."
"Then what am I?"
Julian stared at her, the air taut with unspoken tension.
"You're the only thing that makes me feel," he said finally.
And just like that, she broke again.
---
Naomi told herself she could leave any time. That she wasn't like other women who got trapped in love affairs with powerful, married men. That she had agency. That she could end it. But the truth was uglier. Every time she tried to walk, he pulled her back with a word, a look, a touch. And she let him. Because the loneliness of life without him felt worse than the guilt of loving him. Until the night everything changed.
It was a rainy Thursday when the headlines broke.
"Sophia Thorne Missing: Billionaire's Wife Disappears Without a Trace"
Naomi was in a cab when she saw it-Julian's name flashing across the news ticker, his photo plastered beside a smiling image of Sophia. Her stomach dropped. She called him. No answer. Called again. Voicemail. Her hands trembled as her phone buzzed in her lap. But it wasn't Julian. It was an unknown number. She hesitated before answering.
"Naomi Blake?" a voice asked.
"Yes."
"This is Detective Monroe, NYPD. We'd like to ask you a few questions regarding Mr. Julian Thorne."
"Why?"
There was a pause.
"Because you're listed as a frequent visitor to his secondary residence. And because his wife was last seen leaving that same building three nights ago."
Everything went silent. The floor of her world cracked.
"Miss Blake," the detective said, voice sharper now, "is there anything you'd like to tell us?"
Naomi swallowed.
"No," she whispered. "Not yet."
But she knew one thing for certain- Whatever secrets Julian had been keeping, she was now at the center of them.
Naomi's fingers trembled as she ended the call. The cab's interior suddenly felt too small, the walls pressing in. She rolled down the window, desperate for air, the cold wind biting at her skin. Outside, New York blurred past in streaks of rain and neon, oblivious to the storm rising inside her. Sophia Thorne was missing.
And Naomi was now linked to the one man the entire city would soon be watching under a microscope.
How the hell had her life come to this?
Five months ago, she was just a struggling designer taking on small gigs and holding two part-time jobs to make rent. Her biggest ambition was getting her portfolio into the hands of someone who mattered. That night at the gala, when Julian Thorne had singled her out in a sea of glittering socialites, it had felt like a miracle. Now, it felt like a curse.
The driver dropped her off in SoHo, and she rushed into her apartment building with her coat clutched tight, heels clicking against the marble floor. Her hands shook as she entered the elevator, replaying the detective's voice in her head.
Sophia was last seen leaving Julian's secondary residence...
Naomi had been at that apartment just four nights ago.
She hadn't seen anyone come or go. But then again, she hadn't been paying attention. She was usually too consumed by Julian-by his touch, by his words, by the illusion that she mattered.
Was Sophia really there? Was she trying to confront him?
The thought made her nauseous.
By the time she reached her apartment, Naomi was pacing, heart pounding in her chest like a drum. She grabbed her phone and called Marcie.
"Naomi?" her friend answered, clearly groggy.
"It's me. I need to talk to you. Now."
There was a pause, then rustling on the other end. "Okay, what's wrong?"
Naomi glanced at the television, where news anchors were already speculating about Julian's involvement in Sophia's disappearance. They showed clips of the couple at galas and charity balls, both of them picture-perfect, untouchable.
"I think I'm in trouble," Naomi said quietly. "I think I might know something about Julian Thorne's wife."
The line went dead silent.
---
Marcie arrived twenty minutes later, still in pajamas and a trench coat. Naomi had never been so relieved to see her.
"You have five seconds to explain," Marcie said, storming into the living room. "And it better not start with 'I didn't mean to get involved'."
Naomi didn't even try to defend herself. She collapsed onto the couch and covered her face with her hands.
"I didn't know what I was getting into," she muttered. "At first, it was just... attraction. Then it became something else. He told me it was over between them. He said they were separated."
Marcie crossed her arms, eyes narrowed. "Julian Thorne is still married, Naomi."
"I know."
"And now his wife is missing?"
Naomi nodded slowly. "And the police called me. They know I've been going to the penthouse."
Marcie sat beside her. "Okay. First things first-did you see Sophia? Ever? Even once?"
"No," Naomi replied, voice trembling. "Never. I don't even know what she smells like, let alone what she sounds like. I've never heard her voice. Julian said she lived in their main estate uptown. That she never came to the city anymore. That they hadn't spoken in months."
"And you believed him?"
Naomi looked down. "I wanted to."
Silence stretched between them, heavy and thick.
"What if something did happen to her, Marcie? What if I've been sleeping with a man capable of-" She stopped, unable to finish.
"You didn't do anything wrong," Marcie said gently. "You didn't make her disappear."
"No, but what if I'm next?" Naomi's voice cracked. "What if I know too much and don't even realize it?"
Marcie's face paled. "You need a lawyer."
"Already ahead of you," Naomi whispered, standing to pace again. "But there's more. That night, the last time I saw him-he was tense. Distant. I thought it was work stress, but now I think... something had already happened."
She went to the side drawer and pulled out a small flash drive.
"What's that?" Marcie asked.
Naomi swallowed. "Julian gave it to me. Said it was just old design drafts he wanted my opinion on. But I never opened it."
"You think it's connected?"
"I don't know. But if he really trusted me..." she paused, "...or if he was setting me up for something-I need to know what's on it."
---
An hour later, Naomi and Marcie sat in front of Naomi's laptop, staring at a folder titled: "Client Archive - Private"
Inside, there were documents. Spreadsheets. Bank transfers. Confidential NDAs. Names. Transactions.
And one video file.
Naomi hovered her finger over the trackpad, hand shaking.
"Are you sure you want to open this?" Marcie asked.
"No," Naomi replied. "But I have to."
She clicked.
The video opened with grainy security footage. It looked like a private hallway-high-end, lined with expensive wallpaper and a crystal chandelier hanging above.
Julian walked into the frame. He looked furious. Disheveled. He was pacing back and forth.
Then Sophia appeared.
Naomi's breath hitched.
Sophia was stunning-tall, graceful, dressed in a white coat and black heels. Her expression was icy, unreadable.
They argued, though the footage had no audio. Julian stepped forward, gesturing. Sophia threw something-maybe keys. Then she turned to walk away.
Julian grabbed her wrist.
She yanked it back. Shouted something.
Then he slammed his hand against the wall beside her head.
Naomi flinched.
Sophia didn't move. She just stared up at him. Cold. Defiant.
Then the feed cut out.
Naomi's chest ached.
"Do you see what I see?" she whispered.
Marcie's face was pale. "That was his building."
Naomi nodded. "Three nights ago."
The night Sophia disappeared.
"Julian lied to me," she murmured. "She was there."
---
Later that night, Naomi sat alone again, knees drawn to her chest as the city blinked beneath her window. The flash drive lay on the table like a ticking bomb.
Julian had always been careful. He'd never shown her anger. Never raised his voice. He had been patient, attentive, generous. But now she saw the cracks- the shadows behind his charm.
She thought she knew him. She didn't. And if she handed this footage to the police, she was putting herself in direct opposition to one of the most powerful men in New York. He had everything to lose. And she had no idea how far he'd go to keep it.
Her phone buzzed.
Julian: Need to see you. Tomorrow. Noon. No excuses.
She stared at the message. He was testing her loyalty. He knows the walls are closing in. Naomi turned off her phone and stood, her reflection once again staring back at her in the glass. But this time, she didn't see a broken woman. She saw someone who could fight back. If Julian thought she was just his secret, just a disposable mistress... he was about to find out how wrong he'd been.