Chapter 39

Night Storm

The salt-heavy night air clung to Lena’s skin as she stood barefoot at her window, the tile floor cool and smooth beneath her toes.

The texture anchored when her thoughts threatened to spiral into chaos.

Outside, the trees rustled in the breeze, their fronds whispering secrets in the moonlight—or maybe warnings.

Shadows moved among the leaves, slow and drowsy, like the island itself disregarded the danger.

Like it was sleeping through the threat invading its shores.

Her eyes locked on the spot between the trees where a path wound its way to the beach.

Moonlight painted it silver, deceptively peaceful.

It wasn’t where the security cam had caught him—Chester Dinkley, stepping out of her past like the punchline to a cruel joke she hadn’t seen coming—but it was just like it.

Same dense foliage. Same secluded darkness.

A hundred places to hide and watch and wait.

Her stomach twisted at the thought.

She wasn’t crying now. Her breath was controlled, measured.

But fire lived in her chest, hot and seething, boiling like something feral waited to be let loose.

Her jaw ached—she hadn’t realized she was clenching it until her teeth protested.

Anger beat like a pulse under her skin, thrumming in time with her heartbeat.

It flooded her veins, made her fingers twitch with the need to do something, anything, to stop feeling so damn powerless.

She’d relived those memories a thousand times over the past weeks, each viewing dulling the edges a little. But now—tonight—it surged back with such clarity it felt like she was there again. Like she’d never left. Like the months between then and now had dissolved into nothing.

The scent of cinnamon and coffee filled her nostrils, so vivid she could almost taste it.

The cozy pine-paneled walls that had once been the closest thing she had to a home materialized around her in her mind’s eye.

Natural wood, warm lighting, a rustic charm that made guests feel like they’d discovered something authentic.

That office used to be hers in all but title—a place built with loyalty and late nights and sweat-soaked dedication. The reservation system she’d streamlined, every guest complaint she’d turned into a five-star review, every vendor relationship she’d cultivated with care.

Until Chester took it over like a virus crawling in and spreading rot.

The memory sharpened, pulling her deeper.

She stood across from him, arms tucked tight over her chest—defensive, even then sensing what was coming.

He leaned back carelessly in the leather chair that still creaked in resentment, like it remembered the kind man who’d first sat there.

Her father had been fair, decent, someone who’d seen Lena’s potential and nurtured it.

Chester was none of those things.

He’d tried to look in control—executive, smug—but the mask slipped beneath watery eyes and a transparent veneer of confidence. His thin lips curved in what he probably thought was an authoritative smile. It looked more like a leer—hungry, entitled.

“Lena, we need to have a serious conversation about your place here,” he spoke with the pomp of a high school principal out of his depth. His voice had that tone men used when they wanted to sound important but only achieved condescending.

The hair on her nape lifted, instinct screaming warnings she couldn’t ignore.

“Great. I’d love to talk about why you canceled all the standing contracts with our vendors and gave your friend Bryce the catering account. He’s never run food service in his life.”

God, how calm she sounded. How professional, despite the fury already building in her chest like a thunderstorm gathering strength.

Chester didn’t blink. Just kept twirling his tacky gold pen between his fingers like it was a scepter, not the shiny plastic toy it was. The clicking sound it made against his rings set her teeth on edge.

“You’ve always been… passionate,” he drew out the word like it was something dirty. “But lately, I’m concerned that your tone doesn’t reflect the professionalism this place needs. Guests have noticed.”

Her mouth went dry, tongue sticking to the roof of her mouth. Equal parts disbelief and fury crawled up her throat, threatening to choke her. The accusation was so absurd, so transparently false, that for a moment she’d been speechless.

“No,” she’d finally spit, finding her voice. “You noticed. Because I didn’t laugh when you made that ‘room service’ joke in front of the Morgans.”

The memory of that moment made her skin crawl even now.

His slimy suggestion that she ‘deliver more than just towels’ if she wanted to ‘get ahead.’ The Morgans had gone silent, embarrassed for her.

She’d held her ground even as the heat of humiliation crawled up her neck.

Smiled tightly. Excused herself with dignity intact.

She should have reported him then, although there wasn’t anyone to report him to, as the son of the owners. They certainly wouldn’t side with her. But she could have told someone. Put it on record.

His mask cracked, the sleazy charm stretching thin like plastic wrap pulled too tight.

He leaned forward, elbows on the desk, eyes sharpening a fraction.

The pretense of professionalism fell away, revealing something uglier underneath.

“Don’t flatter yourself. I was just trying to be friendly.

But if you’re not interested in working…

under me, maybe this arrangement isn’t working at all. ”

The emphasis on those two words: under me. The implication had been so crude, so blatant, that even in memory it made her want to shower.

She could still feel the heat swelling in her cheeks, the taste of bile in her mouth, the bite of her nails in her palms—hard enough to leave crescents in her skin.

Her voice had been ice, because she wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of rage.

Wouldn’t let him see how much he was hurting her, destroying the life she’d painstakingly built, brick by brick.

“You’re firing me for refusing to sleep with you?”

He shrugged like it was a bad bet at the casino. Casual. Unbothered. Like her career, her livelihood, her entire world meant nothing. “It’s not personal. And… some irregularities in the books have come up. I’m sure it’s a misunderstanding.”

The floor dropped out from under her.

Lena stepped right up to the desk. Inches from him.

Close enough to see the pores on his nose, the coffee stain on his collar he thought hidden by his tie.

The stink of his cheap cologne, all spice and pretense, wrapped around her like secondhand smoke.

It made her eyes water, or maybe that was the tears she refused to let fall.

“You’re accusing me of stealing now?”

Her voice shook despite her best efforts. Because this wasn’t just a firing. This was complete destruction. This was making sure she’d never work in hospitality again. This was revenge for the crime of saying no.

“Let’s call it a suspicion,” he said, smile oily, eyes devoid of guilt. Devoid of anything human. “Until the investigation’s done. Pack your things.”

The words hit like a physical blow.

She remembered the way she’d turned and walked out, not fast, not embarrassed—just done. Her spine ramrod straight when everything inside her was crumbling. Her shoulders back, although she wanted to curl into herself and disappear. Her heart breaking, every beat an agony.

Because she’d given everything to that place.

Every long night covering someone else’s shift.

Every clever idea that had increased bookings.

Every patient conversation with difficult vendors and impossible guests.

Every holiday spent working instead of with the friends she seldom had time to see.

Every dream she’d poured into a future that had evaporated in minutes.

He’d tossed her aside like a worn-out beach towel. Discarded her like trash. And when she didn’t disappear quietly, he’d tried to ruin her.

Now, months later, standing in this suite, the betrayal felt fresh—an open wound that refused to heal.

Lena exhaled sharply and dragged a hand through her hair, the strands damp with sweat and memory and the humid night air. Her fingers trembled—from rage, not fear. She was done being afraid.

But this time? This time was different.

The realization enveloped her like armor.

She wasn’t standing alone with her world unraveling. She was no longer isolated. No longer easy prey. She had support here.

David—with his quiet strength and relentless mind, and the way he sometimes looked at her as if she were the axis of his world.

Zach—stoic, lethal, fiercely protective of the people he claimed as his own.

And Nick—solemn, loyal, with a strategic brilliance that saw threats gathering long before they struck.

They believed her. They supported her. They were fighting beside her.

The thought wrapped around her heart like a warm blanket, chasing away some of the chill.

David’s voice echoed through her mind like waves on the shore, gentle and relentless and impossible to ignore: ‘You don’t have to do it alone.’

She’d almost cried at that, the simple acknowledgment of her struggle meaning more than he could know.

For so long, she’d been alone. The system failed her. The investigation stalled. Her protests were dismissed. Her name dragged through the mud. Emma was too far away to help. She learned then that the only person she could rely on was herself.

But David was teaching her something different—that trust wasn’t weakness, accepting help wasn’t surrender. She could be strong and still lean on someone else.

She splayed her fingers against the glass, as if she might sense some trace of Chester out there in the trees—hiding, scheming, watching.

Her breath fogged the pane, condensation blooming beneath her palm, betraying the heat coiled in her chest. The glass stayed cool against her skin, indifferent to the storm inside her.

No. She wasn’t a victim anymore.

The realization settled, clean and absolute.

She was done hiding. Done running. Done letting him control her from a distance. He had come here to spook her—to remind her he could reach her anywhere.

But he had miscalculated.

Chester remembered the accommodating assistant manager who swallowed her pride and absorbed the damage. That woman no longer existed.

This one had survived false charges. Rebuilt from nothing. Faced down sabotage and corporate warfare and refused to break. She had carved out a life here—one built on competence, grit, and people who chose her back.

Her home. Her people. Her future.

And David.

This time, she wouldn’t be the one packing her things.

She pulled her hand from the window, leaving her print ghosted in the fog. Her reflection stared back—eyes bright, jaw set. Not fragile. Not flinching.

Chester had stepped into her world now, where she had allies and resources. Let him hide in the trees. Let him watch and scheme.

She wasn’t running. She was done being prey.

Tomorrow, she would talk strategy with David and his brothers. They would find his angle. They would turn the tables.

Tonight, the anger burned bright, consuming the last vestiges of fear and shame that Chester had planted in her heart.

When she finally drew the curtain closed against the dark, her steps were steady.

Chester came to intimidate a frightened woman, but he had walked into a storm.

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