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Chapter 1 - Chapter One: The Fracture

"BUT FATHER, I LOVE HIM!"

Serena's voice tore through the house like breaking glass.

The grand chandelier above trembled slightly, its crystals chiming together in delicate protest, as though even it feared what would follow. Her chest heaved. Tears streamed down her face unchecked, falling in relentless drops onto the polished marble floor—tiny, helpless rebellions against the immovable will standing before her.

"I will never accept him into this home, Serena."

Her father's reply came not as a shout, but as something colder. Sharper. A voice trained by years of command, of wealth, of unquestioned authority. It was the tone of a man used to being obeyed long before he finished speaking.

"I don't care what fantasy you believe you're living," Mr. Richard continued, his gaze fixed on her with terrifying calm. "Just know this—you do not have my blessing."

Serena shook her head, stepping forward as if proximity alone could soften him. "You don't understand—"

"I understand perfectly."

His composure cracked then, rage rising like a storm finally breaking its leash.

"I gave you everything!" he thundered. "The best life anyone could dream of! The finest schools abroad! Opportunities people would sell their souls for! Your mother and I chose not to have another child so that you—you—could have our love undivided!"

The silence that followed was suffocating.

"And this," he said, pointing toward Nathan as though accusing him of a crime, "is how you repay us? By bringing this… this social climber into my house?"

Nathan stood still under the weight of that accusation. His hands, rough from years of honest labor, curled slightly at his sides. He wanted to speak. Wanted to defend himself. But every word felt like it would only make things worse.

Mr. Richard turned fully toward him now, his expression twisting with disgust.

"From the slums of the earth," he said, each syllable deliberate. "No future. No pedigree. Opportunistic parents waiting for someone else's success to drag them out of the poverty they created."

He stepped closer.

"Young man… do I look like a charity organization to you?"

Nathan swallowed. "No, sir."

"Then what gave you the audacity," Mr. Richard demanded, "to come into my home using my daughter as bait? Or are you here to steal something?"

Before anyone could react, he pulled a gold ring from his finger and flung it across the room.

It struck Nathan's chest and fell to the floor with a cold metallic sound.

"There," Mr. Richard sneered. "Something worth stealing. Pick it up. Don't make me repeat myself, you filthy pig."

"Enough!"

Serena kicked the ring away before Nathan could even look down.

"Don't humiliate him like this!" she cried. "He is not a thief!"

Her hand found Nathan's, gripping it tightly, as though anchoring herself to the only thing that still felt real.

"Let's go," she whispered. "It's obvious we're no longer welcome here."

They turned toward the massive double doors. For a moment—just a moment—Serena glanced back. Hope flickered in her eyes. A silent plea for her father to stop them.

He didn't.

"You are not going anywhere, young lady."

Two security men appeared instantly, summoned by a mere gesture.

"Take her to her room," Mr. Richard ordered. "I don't care if you have to drag her."

"Father, don't—!"

Nathan stepped forward instinctively, but the look Mr. Richard gave him froze him where he stood.

"And you," the older man said quietly, his voice more dangerous than before, "if you don't leave my sight right now, your entire family will pay for your stupidity."

A pause.

"You don't want to discover what I am capable of."

The threat didn't need repeating.

Nathan backed away. Then turned. Then ran.

Behind him, Serena's cries echoed through the house as she was carried upstairs, fighting against arms far stronger than her own. Their eyes met one last time before the staircase swallowed her from view.

And just like that—

Two worlds that had dared to touch were violently torn apart.

Later That Night

"You shouldn't have shouted so much," Mrs. Richard said gently, brushing her hair before the mirror. "You'll raise your blood pressure."

Mr. Richard sat at the edge of the bed, still rigid with anger.

"Serena is the one raising my blood pressure," he muttered. "With all her education, she should know better. She knows the kind of family she comes from. She knows what is expected of her."

He loosened his collar as though the entire evening had suffocated him.

"Is this why she stopped seeing Donald's son? What was his name… Diego?"

He scoffed.

"A well-groomed young man. Two doctorates by twenty-eight. Prestigious background. Respectful. A future worthy of her."

His jaw tightened.

"For a moment, I was proud of her."

Mrs. Richard walked over and sat beside him.

"Nathan isn't as bad as you think," she said softly.

Mr. Richard let out a humorless laugh.

"You saw what I saw."

"No," she replied. "I saw something you didn't."

That caught his attention.

She folded her hands in her lap. "I recognized him. Months ago, my car broke down on the road. Before Serena could have known him. He stopped. Fixed it. Refused to take money."

Mr. Richard frowned.

"He didn't know who I was. Didn't ask. He just helped."

Silence stretched between them.

"You shouldn't have spoken to him that way," she added quietly. "It was… demeaning."

Mr. Richard lay back against the pillows, staring at the ceiling.

"You're right," he said at last.

Mrs. Richard smiled faintly.

"Next time," he continued, "I'll have him arrested so I don't waste words."

Her smile vanished.

"You are impossibly stubborn," she sighed, lying beside him. "Serena got that from you."

He didn't answer.

But sleep did not come easily to either of them.

Across the City

Nathan didn't stop running until the streets changed.

The air changed.

The lights changed.

Gone were the manicured hedges and silent wealth of Serena's world. Here, life roared—vendors shouting, buses honking, children laughing, metal gates clanging shut for the night.

This was his world.

And for the first time in his life, it felt smaller.

He leaned against a wall, breathing hard, Mr. Richard's words still echoing in his head.

Two different worlds.

Maybe the man was right.

Maybe they were never meant to meet.

Nathan closed his eyes.

But Serena's tear-filled face refused to leave his memory.

And somewhere deep inside him, something hardened, If only he went ahead with his plan this wouldn't have happened. 

Nevertheless, If the world believed they didn't belong together,

Then perhaps the world itself needed to change.

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