Chapter 1
I knew the moment the gates opened that something was wrong.
Not because of how big they were or how expensive everything looked, but because of the way it felt.
Like I was not entering a home.
Like I was stepping into something I would not be able to walk out of.
The car rolled forward slowly, the black iron gates closing behind us with a quiet finality that made my chest tighten. I stared out the window, watching the cameras follow the car like we were being tracked.
Like we mattered too much.
Or maybe… like we were not supposed to leave.
My hands rested in my lap, fingers pressed tightly together. I did not realize how tense I was until my mother reached over and squeezed my hand.
“You’re going to love it here,” she said, smiling brightly. “It’s a fresh start.”
I nodded.
“Yeah… a fresh start.”
But it did not feel like one.
The mansion came into view, and my breath caught slightly.
It was too big.
Too perfect.
Too quiet.
“This isn’t real,” I whispered under my breath.
“What was that?” my mother asked.
“Nothing.”
The car stopped, and a man in a suit opened the door.
“Miss Carter.”
I stepped out slowly, my sneakers touching the polished ground. Everything felt controlled. Even the air.
We walked inside.
The moment I stepped through the doors, I froze.
Marble floors. High ceilings. A chandelier that looked like it cost more than our entire life back home.
It felt cold.
Not physically.
Emotionally.
Like no one actually lived here.
“Luna,” a voice said.
I looked up.
Richard Cole stood in front of me, calm, composed, perfect.
Too perfect.
“It’s good to finally have you here,” he said.
His eyes settled on me.
And stayed there.
Too long.
I forced a polite smile. “Thank you.”
“You don’t have to be so formal,” he said.
But the way he was looking at me made it impossible not to be.
Something about it felt wrong.
I shifted slightly, suddenly aware of everything.
My clothes. My posture. My breathing.
Uncomfortable.
“Your room is ready,” he continued. “I made sure everything was perfect.”
“Thank you.”
His smile did not change.
But something about it did not feel right.
“Where’s Hamilton?” my mother asked.
Something flickered across his face.
Then disappeared.
“You’ll see him soon.”
My room was bigger than my entire old apartment.
I stood there, turning slowly, trying to take it all in.
“This is insane,” I whispered.
But it did not feel exciting.
It felt like too much.
Like I did not belong here.
I needed air.
The hallway stretched endlessly as I walked, everything looking the same. Clean. Expensive. Quiet.
Too quiet.
I turned a corner.
And stopped.
Someone was there.
Leaning against the wall like he had been waiting.
Hamilton Cole.
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
His eyes were already on me.
Sharp.
Focused.
“So,” he said. “You’re here.”
I crossed my arms slightly.
“Looks like it.”
His gaze moved over me quickly, then back to my face.
“You don’t look impressed.”
“I’m not.”
Something flickered in his expression.
“Good.”
That caught me off guard.
“What?”
“Most people are.”
There was something in his tone.
Like he did not like this place either.
“I’m not most people,” I said.
Our eyes met again.
And this time, the silence felt different.
“You should stay out of my way,” he said.
Cold.
Direct.
“I wasn’t planning on being in it.”
His lips twitched slightly.
“Good.”
He walked past me.
But as he did, something shifted.
A strange pull.
Something I did not understand.
I turned slightly, watching him leave.
And for the first time since arriving…
I felt something other than discomfort.
Confusion.
Because somehow…
He felt more real than everything else in this house.
And that scared me.
Because if he was the real thing here…
Then what exactly was everyone else pretending to be?