episode 1
đ OWNED BY A COLD HEART đ§âď¸
đ
đ Episode One â Mornings and Moods
âLiana!â
The voice tore through the tiny apartment like a siren. Not the sweet kind. The âyour-motherâs-about-to-rip-the-door-off-its-hingesâ kind.
âLiana Rose, if you donât get out of that bed in the next ten seconds, I swear Iâm throwing water on you!â
Liana groaned, dragging a pillow over her face like it could shield her from life itself.
It was 6:47 a.m.
Her alarm had gone off twenty minutes agoâtwice.
The sun hadnât even properly committed to rising yet. And already, her mom was on full-volume energy like it was a live TV show.
âIâm up,â Liana muttered.
She wasnât.
Her bed was warm. The blankets smelled like jasmine and sleep. Her dreams had been halfway peaceful for onceâfloating somewhere between mystery and maybe kisses sheâd never admit to. But then again, this was her life. Peace didnât last long here.
The door burst open.
There stood her mother, hands on hips, wrapped in a bright yellow headscarf and an oversized hoodie that read âCoffee First, Questions Later.â She didnât wait for either.
âOh, youâre up, are you? Then why does your face look like it's still downloading?â
Liana cracked one eye open. âBecause Iâm still buffering.â
Her mother rolled her eyes. âGirl, donât test me this morning. Your bus leaves in thirty minutes, and the last time you tried to straighten your hair, the whole kitchen smelled like barbecue.â
Liana groaned again, dragging herself upright. Her curls were a wild mess, her t-shirt hung off one shoulder, and her voice was full of sleep and sass.
âRemind me again why Iâm not homeschooled?â
âBecause I love you, but not that much.â
Her mom tossed a sock at her head and left the room, mumbling something about teenagers and selective hearing.
Liana sat on the edge of the bed for a second, staring at her small, crowded roomâthe posters, the string lights, the cracked mirror that made her look taller than she was.
This wasnât luxury.
It wasnât quiet.
But it was home.
And sometimes, it felt like the only place in the world that hadnât given up on her.
She finally dragged herself into the bathroom, splashing cold water on her face like it might wake up more than just her skin. Her reflection stared back at herâbrown eyes still heavy with sleep, curls refusing to cooperate, and a little frown that lived there more often than not.
She didn't hate her life.
But she didn't love it either.
She just⌠existed in it.
At the breakfast table, her mom was dancing around to old-school R&B while flipping eggs with the kind of flair only single mothers and survivors had. The kitchen smelled like cinnamon toast and roasted ambition.
Liana sat down slowly. âYou trying to be extra this morning?â
Her mom grinned. âBaby girl, this is called âfake it till you make it.â Now eat.â
Liana poked at her toast. âYou know, it wouldnât kill you to let me skip school just once.â
Her mom raised a brow. âIt might not kill me, but it would definitely kill your GPA.â
Before Liana could argue further, her phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
No message. Just the number sitting there, unreadable. She frowned.
Weird.
She ignored it.
.
.
Liana grabbed her backpack, still chewing the last bite of toast.
âLove you, Ma,â she said over her shoulder.
Her mom pointed a spatula at her. âPass your exams and make me rich one day!â
Liana smiled faintly, pulled on her hoodie, and stepped into the morning light.
No surprises.
No strange texts.
No premonitions.
Just another day.
At least⌠for her.
---
đ¤ Damian's Mansion đ¤
The mansion stood like a fortress carved from stone and silence.
Sixteen thousand square feet of marble, black glass, and secrets.
Guards out front. Staff trained not to speak unless spoken to.
Nothing soft ever made it past the gate.
Inside, the air was coldâeven warmer rooms carried a chill, as if the house mirrored the man who owned it.
Damian.
He sat alone at the long end of a dining table that could seat thirty, but never had. A steaming cup of black coffee sat untouched beside him. He wasnât looking at his phone. He wasnât reading the paper. He was simply⌠staring.
Eyes sharp. Jaw locked.
A man always calculating.
He wore a dark gray suitâflawless, like the rest of him. Crisp white shirt. No tie. He didnât need one. Authority clung to him like a second skin. His hair was still wet from an early-morning swim. No one dared ask why he swam in freezing water before the sun rose. The staff knew better than to question his rituals.
He didnât like noise.
He didnât like delays.
And he didnât like people.
âSir,â his assistant murmured from the doorway, holding a folder. âThe Milan deal is finalized. Theyâve signed under your conditions.â
Damian didnât blink. âOf course they did.â
The assistant nodded and left in silence.
Damian turned back toward the window, where thick gray clouds were gathering across the sky.
He hated storms.
But sometimes⌠he was one.
--
đŤAt School đ
Liana stepped off the bus and into the blur of Monday morning.
Students buzzed around like bees in oversized hoodies and tangled earbuds, laughter echoing down graffiti-tagged hallways, backpacks swinging, secrets passed in whispers and glances.
đ Ridgepoint Public High.
The kind of school that didnât make the news unless something broke or burned.
Liana weaved through the crowd like someone trying not to be seen. Hoodie up, headphones in. Her playlist was loud â the kind that made the world feel slower, softer, farther away.
But her life didnât come with slow motion.
âLIANAAA!â
Too late.
A body slammed into her from the side â all perfume, curly hair, and chaos.
âGirl, I thought you died or something! Why didnât you text me back?â
It was Jayda, her best friend since seventh grade. The only one who stuck around after Lianaâs dad left. The kind of girl who wore neon eyeliner and talked like her life was a reality show.
Liana grunted, recovering her balance. âYou texted me at 2 a.m. to ask if you should dye your hair blue.â
Jayda blinked. âExactly! That was a crisis!â
They walked together toward their lockers.
âSeriously though,â Jayda continued. âYou look like death warmed over. No offense.â
âNone taken,â Liana mumbled. âMom had me up at dawn. She thinks sheâs BeyoncĂŠ before caffeine.â
Jayda snorted. âI love your mom.â
âYou can have her.â
Their first class was English Literature â cold room, squeaky chairs, the smell of dust and dry books.
Liana sank into her seat by the window and opened her worn-out notebook. Her pen doodled in the margin like it always did when her brain didnât want to engage.
She tried to focus.
But today feltâŚoff.
Not wrong. Not dramatic. Just⌠like the air was holding its breath.
âMiss Rose,â the teacher snapped. âSince youâre so artistically inclined this morning, would you care to explain the theme of isolation in The Catcher in the Rye?â
Liana blinked. Her class chuckled.
She sighed. âHolden felt invisible, so he pushed people away before they could confirm it.â
The teacher paused, raised a brow â then nodded slowly.
âWell said.â
Jayda whispered from beside her, âDeep and dangerous. You should teach.â
Liana just stared out the window.
Her world wasnât falling apart.
It wasnât exploding.
It was just⌠ordinary.
Same halls. Same faces. Same jokes.
.
TBC.
.
.