It was supposed to be a love story, the kind whispered about in luxury pen houses and private jets crossing continents.

Instead, it became a carefully orchestrated descent into murder, wrapped in silk and sealed with obsession.

On the morning of August 12th, 2024, the body of Isabella Reyes was found floating face down in the infinity pool of the desert mageless villa.

45 kilometers outside Dubai.

She was 28 years old, wearing a white linen dress that billowed around her like a ghost in the crystal clearar water.

The sun was just beginning to rise over the dunes, painting the sky in shades of pink and gold, indifferent to the tragedy, it illuminated.

The official report would call it an accidental drowning, alcohol intoxication.

A young woman who’d had too much to drink and made a fatal mistake.

But the truth, as it always does, lay buried beneath layers of privilege, power, and a love so twisted it could only end in blood.

How does devotion become destruction? When does control cross the line into murder? Tonight, we unravel the deadly triangle between a billionaire chic, his Oxford educated wife, and the beautiful flight attendant caught between them.

This is a story about three people who wanted different things.

One wanted freedom, one wanted love, and one wanted absolute power.

Only one of them would get what they desired.

Shika Amira Al-Mazui was born on March 3rd, 1978 into one of the United Arab Emirates most distinguished families.

The Al-Mazuis had been there from the beginning.

Their names inscribed on the founding documents of the nation itself.

old money, real power, the kind of lineage that opened every door and commanded every room.

Her childhood was spent between palaces in the Emirates and boarding schools in Switzerland.

She learned five languages fluently, mastered classical piano by age 12, and graduated from Oxford University in 2000 with honors in philosophy and economics.

She was brilliant, beautiful, and trained from birth to be the perfect wife to an important man.

She met Shik Majid al- Naan at a charity gala in London in the autumn of 2001.

He was 25, freshly graduated from Cambridge with an MBA, already managing portions of his family’s vast oil and real estate empire.

She was 23, poised and elegant in a way that made other women seem unfinished by comparison.

Their courtship was brief and appropriate.

six months of supervised dinners, family introductions, negotiations between fathers about suitable arrangements.

They married in June 2002 in a ceremony that cost $8 million and was attended by dignitaries from 17 countries.

The wedding photos showed a stunning couple, both smiling with the careful perfection of people who understood that their marriage was as much about dynasty as it was about love.

And for a while, it worked.

Amamira gave Majid three sons in quick succession.

Rashid in 2003, Fisel in 2006, Zed in 2008.

Each birth was celebrated with elaborate parties and generous charitable donations.

She ran their household with military precision, managed social obligations flawlessly, and presented the image of modern Arabian royalty, educated and sophisticated, yet appropriately traditional.

But perfection, Amamira discovered, was exhausting.

More than that, it was lonely.

Majid was a good husband by most standards.

He was respectful, generous with money, and never publicly embarrassed her.

But he was also absent, traveling 200 days a year for business, and when he was home, there was a distance between them that no amount of proper behavior could bridge.

They were partners in an enterprise called family.

They were not in love.

The first affair happened in 2008, just months after Zed’s birth.

A Russian model Magid met in Monte Carlo.

Amira found out through a friend who’d seen them together at a restaurant.

The betrayal stung, not because she loved him passionately, but because it exposed her failure.

She confronted him quietly in private.

He apologized with appropriate remorse, promised it wouldn’t happen again, and bought her a diamond necklace worth $200,000.

It happened again in 2015.

A Lebanese actress this time.

Then again in 2019, a British socialite who posted their photo together on social media before Mag’s people had it scrubbed.

Each time Amamira responded with the same controlled grace.

Each time something inside her calcified a little more.

By 2023, Amamira had stopped feeling hurt by Magid’s infidelities.

She’d moved past anger into something colder and far more dangerous.

Strategic thinking.

She realized that these women had power over her husband not because they were more beautiful or charming, but because they represented escape.

They were uncomplicated, undemanding, and most importantly, temporary.

Magid would have his few months of excitement, then returned to the golden cage of his actual life.

But in October 2023, something changed.

Amamira was reviewing household accounts in her private office when she heard Maget on the phone in the adjacent study.

The door was slightly a jar and his voice carried clearly.

“I know it’s complicated,” he was saying, his tone softer than she’d heard in years, but this feels different.

“I think I’m falling in love this time.

Really in love?” Amira sat very still, her pen frozen above the ledger.

In all his previous affairs, Magid had never used that word.

Infatuation, yes.

Attraction, certainly, but love, love was dangerous.

Love made men divorce their wives.

Love made them rearrange their entire lives, and damn the consequences.

That night, while Maget slept, Amamira accessed his private phone records through their shared cloud account.

She discovered he’d been in contact with someone for the past 3 months.

The messages were careful, never explicitly sexual, but the emotional intimacy was unmistakable.

Someone who asked about his day, who made him laugh, who seemed to genuinely care about his thoughts and feelings.

Amira didn’t feel betrayed.

She felt something far more primal.

The certainty that her position, her son’s inheritance, and everything she’d built over 22 years was under threat.

Most wives would have confronted their husbands, filed for divorce, fought publicly for their dignity.

But Amamira Elma Rui had not been raised to be most wives.

She’d been educated in philosophy, trained in strategy, and equipped with the kind of intelligence that saw problems as puzzles to be solved.

If Magid was falling in love, she couldn’t stop it by demanding he stop.

Forbidden love only intensified the attraction.

No, she needed to control it.

shape it and ultimately destroy it in a way that would ensure Magid never risked his family again.

She began with research weeks of it.

She hired a private investigator not to gather evidence for divorce but to understand every detail of the woman Majid was seeing.

Name: Isabella Reyes.

Age 28.

Occupation private jet flight attendant with VIP aviation services.

Nationality: Filipino.

Family: Mother and younger brother in Manila.

Financial status, deeply in debt due to medical bills.

Amira studied the surveillance photos with the cool assessment of a scientist examining specimens.

Isabella was beautiful, yes, but not extraordinarily so.

What she had was warmth.

In every photo, she was smiling, laughing, her whole face open and genuine in a way that a mirror recognized she herself had never been.

Isabella looked like someone who hadn’t yet learned that life would disappoint you, that people would fail you, that the only person you could truly rely on was yourself.

She also looked like someone who could be controlled.

By November 2023, Amira had made her decision.

She wouldn’t try to end the affair.

She would engineer it, make it happen on her terms with her oversight under conditions she could manage completely.

She would give Maget his great love affair, let him believe he was experiencing genuine connection, and then she would destroy it so thoroughly that he would never dare to love anyone but her again.

The plan was elegant in its simplicity.

She would recruit Isabella herself, pay her to seduce Majid, monitor every moment of their relationship, and then eliminate her when it became inconvenient.

Majid would be devastated.

Yes, but he would also be implicated, trapped, forever bound to Amir by shared secrets and the knowledge that she was the only person who truly understood the depths of his weakness.

It wasn’t about winning him back.

It was about owning him completely.

Amamira pulled out a leatherbound notebook and wrote two words on the first page.

Project Isabella.

Then she began to plan a seduction that would end in murder.

Every perfect crime requires the perfect accomplice and Amira had hers.

Nadiraa Hassan, 54 years old, who had been by her side for 28 years.

Nadira’s story was a familiar one in the Gulf States.

Orphaned young in Cairo, she’d been brought to the Emirates by Amira’s family when she was 26 to serve as a lady in waiting.

She’d never married, had no family of her own, and had devoted her entire adult life to serving Amira with a loyalty that bordered on worship.

To Nadira, Amamira wasn’t just an employer.

She was savior, mother, and the center of her entire world.

I need you to make a new friend, Amamira told Nadira in early December 2023, sliding Isabella’s photograph across her private sitting room table.

They were alone as they always were for conversations like this.

Her name is Isabella Reyes.

She works for VIP Aviation, attends the Filipino Catholic Church in Kerala every Sunday morning.

I need you to get close to her.

Nadiraa studied the photo with the careful attention she gave to all of Amamira’s requests.

What do you need to know? Everything.

Her debts, her dreams, her vulnerabilities.

What she’s afraid of.

What she wants most in the world.

But slowly, naturally, she can never suspect this is anything but genuine friendship.

How long do I have? As long as it takes.

Months if necessary.

I need her to trust you completely.

Nadiraa nodded once.

She never asked why.

In nearly three decades of service, she’d learned that Amamira’s reasons were her own, and questioning them was both unnecessary and unwelcome.

The friendship began on December 10th, 2023 at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church in Kama, a modest building that served Dubai’s substantial Filipino community.

Nadiraa attended the 10:00 mass, dressed simply in a conservative dress that wouldn’t draw attention.

She positioned herself in the pew directly behind Isabella who sat alone.

Her head bowed in prayer with the intensity of someone who genuinely believed God was listening.

After the service, Nadiraa approached her in the courtyard where congregants gathered for coffee and pastries.

Excuse me, I’m new to this parish.

Everyone seems to know each other and I’m feeling a bit lost.

Isabella turned and her smile was immediate and genuine.

Oh, don’t worry.

Everyone’s very welcoming here.

I’m Isabella.

Have you been in Dubai long? 5 years.

Nadiraa lied smoothly.

I work for a family in Emirates Hills.

And you? 3 years.

I’m with VIP Aviation, Private Jet Services.

There was pride in her voice, the kind that came from having worked hard for a good position.

It’s demanding, but I love it.

They talked for 20 minutes about nothing important.

The kind of small talk that builds the foundation of friendship.

Nadiraa mentioned she was Egyptian, widowed, missed having women friends her own age to talk to.

Isabella sympathized, mentioned her own mother back in Manila, how hard it was being so far from family.

Would you like to have coffee sometime? Nadira asked as they were leaving.

It would be nice to have someone to talk to who understands what it’s like to be away from home.

I’d love that,” Isabella said, and meant it.

Over the next three months, their friendship deepened with the careful patience of a spider spinning a web.

Coffee every week after church, shopping trips to the souks, where Nadira taught Isabella how to bargain in Arabic, long conversations about family, faith, the peculiar loneliness of immigrant life in a city of impossible wealth.

Nadiraa was a master at this.

She listened far more than she talked, asked gentle questions, and gave Isabella space to reveal herself.

And reveal herself, Isabella did because she was lonely, and Nadiraa seemed genuinely interested in her life in a way few people ever had been.

By late February, Nadira knew everything Amira needed to know.

Isabella’s mother, LSE, had survived breast cancer, but the medical bills had been crushing.

$47,000 in debt, most of it on credit cards with interest rates that meant she’d never be able to pay it off on her salary.

Her younger brother Miguel had been accepted to university, but couldn’t afford the tuition.

Isabella sent home every spare dollar she made, living in a shared apartment with two other flight attendants, eating instant noodles for dinner, denying herself every luxury so her family could survive.

She also learned that Isabella was devoutly Catholic, that she’d never had a serious boyfriend because she was waiting for someone special, that she dreamed of opening a small cafe in Tagete someday where she could be close to her mother and brother.

Simple dreams, decent dreams, the kind that made what Amamira was planning feel even more cruel.

On March 15th, 2024, Nadiraa invited Isabella for coffee at a quiet cafe near Dubai Marina, far from Cara, where they might be seen by anyone from church.

The meeting had been planned carefully.

Amamira had transferred $10,000 into an account that morning, ready to be deployed the moment Isabella showed the slightest interest.

I need to talk to you about something, Nadira began once they were settled at a corner table.

and I want you to listen before you say anything.

” Isabella’s face showed concern.

“Is everything okay? Are you sick?” “No, nothing like that.

This is about an opportunity.

The family I work for, the Shikica, she’s noticed you.

Noticed me.

How she doesn’t even know me.

She knows about your work ethic, your dedication.

She knows you’re struggling financially to support your family.

” Nadira paused, letting that sink in.

She wants to help you.

Isabella’s expression shifted from confusion to suspicion.

Help me how? I don’t understand.

This was the critical moment.

And Nadira delivered it with perfect calibration.

The Shika’s husband, Shik Majid.

He’s a good man, but a lonely one.

Their marriage is complicated.

She knows he has affairs and she’s made peace with that.

But she prefers to have some control over the situation to ensure the women involved are decent people who won’t cause scandals or make demands.

Isabella’s eyes widened.

You’re asking me to? No.

Absolutely not.

I’m not that kind of person.

I’m not asking you to be listen to me.

All you would need to do is be kind to him.

Let him notice you when he pursues you and he will allow it to develop naturally.

Be discreet.

Be respectful.

And after 6 months or so, end things gracefully.

That’s all.

That’s all.

Isabella’s voice rose slightly.

You’re asking me to seduce a married man for money.

How is that different from from what? Prostitution.

Nadira’s tone was gentle, not judgmental.

It’s different because you’re not selling your body.

You’re allowing a relationship to develop that would develop anyway.

Chic Magid will have affairs regardless.

The question is whether there with opportunists who will try to trap him or with someone good and honest who will handle the situation with dignity.

Isabella stood up.

I need to leave.

Your mother needs surgery.

Nadiraa said quietly.

Not the cancer again.

I know, but her heart.

The doctors told her last week.

60,000 durams for the procedure.

She hasn’t told you yet because she doesn’t want you to worry.

Isabella froze, her hand on her purse.

How do you know that? Because I made it my business to know.

Sit down, Isabella.

Please.

Slowly, Isabella sat her face pale.

My mother’s heart mitral valve replacement.

They’ve scheduled it for 6 weeks from now, but she doesn’t have the money for the deposit.

She’s been praying for a miracle.

Nadira reached across the table, touching Isabella’s hand.

You could be that miracle by becoming a mistress.

By accepting that you live in a world where good people sometimes have to make complicated choices.

You’d receive $10,000 immediately, enough for your mother’s surgery deposit.

$5,000 a month during the arrangement, and when it ends, $100,000.

Enough to pay off all your debts, fund your brother’s education, and start your cafe.

The numbers hung in the air between them.

They were obscene amounts to someone who made $3,000 a month and sent 2,000 of it home.

They represented freedom from the crushing weight of debt that had defined Isabella’s entire adult life.

“I can’t,” Isabella whispered.

But her voice lacked conviction.

“Your mother has 6 weeks,” Nadira said, and there was genuine sympathy in her tone.

She liked Isabella, which made this harder.

“Can you afford to be proud?” Isabella closed her eyes.

Nadiraa could see her lips moving in silent prayer, asking God for guidance, for forgiveness, for some other option that didn’t exist.

When Isabella opened her eyes again, they were wet with tears.

If I agreed, and I’m not saying I am, what exactly would I have to do? Nadira explained it all.

She would be scheduled on Chic Magid’s private flights, always the long haul routes when he was tired and more open to connection.

She would wear a specific perfume, discuss topics he found interesting, and allow a friendship to develop naturally.

When he showed romantic interest, she wouldn’t refuse it.

She would be discreet, kind, and understanding of his position.

After 6 months, she would end things gently, claiming she’d met someone else or needed to return to the Philippines for family reasons.

“You’re not stealing him from anyone,” Nadiraa assured her.

Their marriage will continue.

exactly as it always has.

You’re just keeping him occupied for a while and you’ll be compensated generously for your discretion.

I need to think about it,” Isabella said.

“Of course, but the surgery deposit is due in 4 days.

” That night, Isabella called her mother in Manila just to hear her voice.

L sounded tired, mentioning casually that she’d been having some chest pains, but it was probably nothing.

Don’t worry.

How are you doing, Mihijaha? The lie confirmed what Nadiraa had said.

Her mother was sick and hiding it to protect her daughter from worrying.

Isabella looked at her apartment, the cramped room she shared with two other women, the instant noodles in the cupboard that would be her dinner for the third night in a row.

She thought about her brother Miguel, so smart, so deserving of an education he couldn’t afford.

She thought about the cafe she dreamed of, the life she wanted, the future that seemed forever out of reach, and she thought about her mother dying because she didn’t have 60,000 durams.

On March 18th, 2024, Isabella met Nadira again.

I’ll do it, she said, her voice steady despite the tears on her face.

God forgive me.

I’ll do it.

The contract was disguised as cultural liaison services, vague enough to be meaningless, specific enough to be legally binding.

Isabella signed it with shaking hands.

The $10,000 appeared in her bank account within an hour.

She sent it to her mother that same day with a message for your heart surgery.

Don’t ask where it came from.

Just get well.

Then she went into her bathroom and vomited, knowing she just sold something that could never be bought back.

Nadira reported to Amamira that evening.

It’s done.

She’s agreed.

Amamira smiled, reviewing the signed contract on her tablet.

Excellent work.

Now we prepare her for the performance of her life.

But neither of them knew that Isabella Reyes had one quality that would complicate everything.

Despite her desperation, despite the money, despite the careful calculation of Amira’s plan, Isabella still believed in love.

and that belief would destroy them all.

The transformation of Isabella Reyes began in Amamira’s private study on March 20th, 2024.

Though Isabella herself would never know the puppet master behind her preparation, as far as she understood, Nadira was simply helping her prepare for what she’d agreed to do, teaching her how to navigate the treacherous waters of an affair with one of the wealthiest men in the Emirates.

What Isabella didn’t know was that every detail had been researched, calculated, and designed by Shika Amira herself with the precision of a military operation.

First, the perfume, Nadira said, presenting Isabella with an elegant crystal bottle, the label redude and rose, a custom blend that had cost $800.

Wear this and nothing else.

No other fragrance, no scented lotions, nothing that will interfere with this specific scent.

Isabella accepted the bottle carefully unscrewing the cap and inhaling.

The fragrance was exquisite, rich, and complex.

Layers of rose absolute over a base of age dude would with hints of amber and saffron.

It’s beautiful, but why this specific one? Trust me, Nadira said and smiled in a way that suggested the conversation was over.

What Isabella didn’t know, what she could never have known was that this particular combination of oud and rose had been the signature scent of Yasmin Alcasm, Shik Majid’s first love from his university days at Cambridge.

Amamira had discovered this detail buried in Majid’s old journals, kept in a locked drawer in his private study.

Yasmin had been everything Amamira was not.

Spontaneous, artistic, emotionally available.

The relationship had ended when Yasmin’s family arranged her marriage to a cousin in Qatar, and Magid had been devastated for nearly a year.

He’d never spoken of Yasmin to Amira.

But she’d read every word he’d written about her during their courtship.

The perfume detail had been mentioned three times.

The way she smelled oud and rose like walking through a garden in the desert.

Amamira had spent weeks tracking down a perfumer who could recreate that specific combination.

Now 23 years later, Isabella would wear it like a key designed to unlock Magid’s most vulnerable memories.

Over the next week, Nadiraa coached Isabella on everything she needed to know.

Chic Magid’s interests were mapped out in careful detail.

his passion for falconry, particularly the hunting traditions of the Bedawin.

His love of classical Arabic poetry, especially the works of Mimmu Darwish and Nazar Kabani, his fascination with vintage automobiles, particularly the engineering rather than the status they represented, his preference for documentaries over fiction films.

How do you know all this? Isabella asked during one of their sessions.

The Shika pays attention to her husband even if their relationship is complicated.

Nadiraa replied smoothly.

She wants this to be as painless as possible for everyone involved.

That means you need to be someone he actually wants to spend time with, not just a beautiful face.

Isabella absorbed it all with the diligence she’d once applied to her hospitality management studies.

She watched documentaries about falconry, learned the difference between sacre falcons and paragrins.

She read Mimmude Darwish’s The Butterflies Burden and Nazar Kabani’s love poems.

Trying to understand the romanticism and melancholy that ran through Arabic poetry like a river.

She researched vintage cars, memorizing details about pre-war Bugattis and 1950s Ferraris.

But Nadira’s most important instruction was about behavior.

Never appear impressed by his wealth.

She emphasized.

Men like Chic Magid are surrounded by people who treat them like walking bank accounts.

What captures their attention is someone who seems genuinely uninterested in what they can provide and genuinely interested in who they are.

But I am interested in what he can provide.

Isabella said quietly.

That’s why I’m doing this.

I know, but he can never know that.

You have to make him believe that you’d be just as interested in him if he were a taxi driver.

That’s the performance.

Can you do it? Isabella nodded, though inside she felt sick.

Every instruction, every detail, every carefully crafted aspect of this deception made her feel further away from the person she’d always believed herself to be.

But the $10,000 was already in Manila, already paying for her mother’s surgery deposit.

There was no going back now.

On March 25th, 2024, Isabella reported for her first assignment on Chic Magid’s private Boeing 777.

The aircraft was spectacular.

A flying palace with bedroom suites, a conference room, and a lounge that looked like it belonged in a five-star hotel rather than 40,000 ft in the air.

But Isabella had been trained not to show awe, so she maintained her professional composure as she went through the pre-flight checklist with the chief steward.

You’ll be primary attendant for the main cabin, he told her.

Chic Magid prefers minimal interruption during flights, so don’t hover.

Wait to be called unless you’re serving meals or refreshments.

The flight was scheduled for 8 hours Dubai to London, departing at 11 in the evening.

Mag boarded at 10:45, accompanied by two business associates who settled into the conference room for what appeared to be intensive negotiations.

He barely glanced at the crew as he passed.

His attention already on the documents in his hand.

Isabella felt an unexpected relief.

Maybe he wouldn’t even notice her.

Maybe this whole arrangement would collapse before it began and she could return the money and go back to her normal life.

But Amamira had planned for every contingency, including Majid’s tendency to ignore his surroundings when focused on work.

At 35,000 ft somewhere over Iranian airspace, the plane hit turbulence.

Not dangerous, but rough enough to require passengers to remain seated.

The pilot’s voice came over the intercom with practice calm.

We’re passing through some unstable air.

Please remain seated with seat belts fastened.

What the pilot didn’t mention was that Amira had paid him $50,000 to route the flight through a specific corridor known for rough air at this time of year.

and to make the turbulence seem worse than it was with some aggressive maneuvering.

The pilot, who’d been flying for the Almeon family for 12 years, didn’t ask questions.

Wealthy clients made strange requests sometimes.

His job was to comply safely.

The turbulence hit hard.

Isabella was bringing champagne to the conference room when the plane dropped suddenly.

The tray flew from her hands, crystal glasses shattering against the bulkhead.

Expensive champagne spraying everywhere.

She stumbled backward, trying to catch her balance and crashed directly into Chic Magid, who’d been walking back to the main cabin at precisely that moment.

His arms came up instinctively to steady her, catching her around the waist.

For a few seconds, they were pressed together, her back against his chest, his hands firm on her hips.

both of them frozen in the awkward intimacy of the moment.

“I’m so sorry, your highness,” Isabella gasped, pulling away as soon as the plane stabilized.

Her face was flushed with genuine embarrassment.

“I wasn’t expecting.

” “It’s fine,” Maget said, but he was looking at her with sudden attention, really seeing her for the first time, and then he went very still.

“Your perfume? What is it?” Isabella’s heart hammered.

This was the moment Nadiraa had prepared her for though she didn’t understand why it mattered.

Oud and rose is a custom blend.

Do you like it? Majid’s expression was strange, distant, and present at the same time, as if he were seeing something beyond her.

I knew someone once who wore something similar a long time ago.

I hope it’s not unpleasant, Isabella said genuinely concerned.

I can change if No.

His voice was sharp, then softer.

No, it’s it’s lovely.

It just surprised me.

He stood there for another moment, studying her face as if trying to place her in some context that made sense.

Isabella felt exposed under his gaze, wondering what he saw, whether he could tell she was playing a role.

I should clean this up, she said finally, gesturing at the champagne soaked carpet.

Leave it.

The crew will handle it.

Magid paused.

What’s your name? Isabella, your highness.

Isabella Reyes.

You’re new on my regular crew.

Yes, sir.

This is my first flight with you.

Something in his expression shifted.

Became warmer.

Well, Isabella Reyes, welcome aboard.

Try not to spill anything else on me.

He smiled when he said it, transforming his entire face from severe businessman to something almost boyish.

Isabella smiled back, and for a moment, it wasn’t performance.

He seemed genuinely kind, not at all like the predatory wealthy man she’d been expecting.

I’ll do my best, your highness.

In her palace study 7 hours away, Amamira watched the entire interaction on a hidden camera installed in the cabin ceiling.

The smile that crossed her face was cold and satisfied.

The pieces were moving exactly as she’d arranged them.

The rest of the flight followed Nadiraa’s script almost perfectly.

Magid returned to his business meeting, but Isabella noticed him glancing toward the main cabin several times.

When she served dinner 2 hours later, he asked her to stay while he ate, claiming he wanted company since his business associates had fallen asleep.

They talked about nothing important.

Isabella asked about London, mentioned she’d never been.

Majid seemed surprised then thoughtful.

It’s a remarkable city, very different from Dubai.

Older, more complicated.

I’d like to see it someday, Isabella said and meant it.

Maybe you will, Majid replied.

And something in his tone suggested he was already thinking about how to make that happen.

When she mentioned reading Mimmud Darwish recently, Majid’s entire demeanor changed.

He leaned forward, genuinely engaged.

“You read Arabic poetry? That’s unusual for someone in your profession.

I studied hospitality management at university.

” Isabella explained, “One of my professors said that to serve people from different cultures, you need to understand what moves them.

Poetry seemed like a good window into the Arab soul.

” She paused.

That probably sounds pretentious.

Not at all.

It sounds thoughtful.

Magid quoted a line in Arabic, then translated, “We have on this earth what makes life worth living.

April’s hesitation, the aroma of bread at dawn, a woman’s point of view about men, the works of Escilis, the beginning of love, grass on a stone, mothers living on a flute sigh, and the invader’s fear of memories.

” Isabella felt something catch in her chest.

The words were beautiful, but more than that, the way he spoke them carried genuine feeling.

This wasn’t a wealthy man showing off his education.

This was someone sharing something that mattered to him.

That’s beautiful, she said quietly.

What’s it from? We have on this earth by Darwish.

It’s about finding meaning in small perfect moments rather than grand ambitions.

Mag smiled slightly embarrassed.

Sorry, I don’t usually quote poetry at flight attendance.

I don’t mind.

Actually, I like it.

They talked for another hour, long after Isabella should have returned to crew quarters.

She learned that Magid felt trapped by his position, that he’d wanted to be an engineer, but family obligation had steered him into business.

That he loved falconry not for the sport, but for the partnership between Bird and Handler, the trust required.

that he found most of his social obligations exhausting and preferred quiet evenings with books.

And Isabella, despite knowing this was supposed to be performance, found herself genuinely interested.

He wasn’t what she’d expected.

There was a loneliness to him, a sense of someone going through motions rather than living deliberately.

She recognized it because she’d felt the same way since coming to Dubai, working hard, sending money home, but never really building a life of her own.

When they landed in London at 6:00 in the morning, Majid thanked her personally before deplaning.

I hope you’ll be on my return flight.

He said, “I’m scheduled for it, your highness.

” Good.

And Isabella, call me Magid when we’re alone.

Your Highness makes me feel ancient.

She smiled.

I’ll try your magid.

He smiled back and she noticed for the first time that he had kind eyes, the kind that crinkled at the corners when he was genuinely happy.

Nadira was waiting for her report when Isabella returned to Dubai.

They met at their usual cafe and Isabella described the flight in careful detail, the turbulence, the champagne incident, the conversation about poetry.

Perfect.

Nadiraa said, “You did exactly right.

How did it feel?” Isabella was quiet for a long moment.

He’s not what I expected.

He’s nice.

Actually, nice, not performatively nice.

I feel terrible about this.

He’s a married man who has affairs regularly.

Nadiraa reminded her gently.

You’re not corrupting and innocent.

You’re just the latest in a long line.

But that didn’t make Isabella feel better because the latest in a long line suggested she was forgettable interchangeable.

And the way Maget had looked at her really looked at her like she mattered didn’t feel forgettable at all.

Over the next 6 weeks, Isabella was scheduled on eight of Maget’s flights.

Their conversations deepened with each journey.

He told her about his sister who died young, how it had made him overly protective of the people he cared about.

She told him about her mother’s illness, her brother’s dreams of becoming an engineer, her own hopes of opening a cafe someday.

Why a cafe? Mag asked during a flight to Singapore in late April.

Because it’s small and manageable and mine, Isabella said, I’ve spent my whole life serving other people’s dreams.

I’d like to have one small thing that’s just for me.

That’s not a small dream, Mag said.

Seriously.

That’s the most important kind of dream there is.

By May, the affair had moved beyond the airplane.

Magid invited Isabella to dinner at the Palazzo Versace Dubai.

Booking a private suite so they wouldn’t be seen.

She accepted knowing she was supposed to, but feeling a knot of dread in her stomach.

That first evening together outside the safety of the aircraft changed everything.

They had dinner on the terrace overlooking the creek.

The Dubai skyline glittering in the distance.

Majid had arranged for privacy.

No staff hovering, no interruptions.

It should have felt romantic.

Instead, Isabella felt like she was standing on the edge of a cliff.

“Are you nervous?” Majid asked, noticing her tension.

“Yes,” she admitted.

“We don’t have to do anything you’re not comfortable with,” he said, and seemed to mean it.

I’m not expecting.

I don’t want you to feel pressured.

That kindness made it worse because she was there under false pretenses, being paid to seduce him, and he was treating her with respect she didn’t deserve.

They talked for hours instead about everything and nothing.

As the evening wore on, Isabella felt the walls she’d built around this arrangement beginning to crumble.

Majid wasn’t a target.

He was a man, lonely, and trapped in his own life, reaching for something real in the only way he knew how.

When he finally kissed her, it was gentle, almost tentative, asking permission rather than taking it.

And Isabella, God help her, kissed him back with genuine feeling.

They spent the night together, and afterward, Isabella cried in the bathroom while Magid slept.

Not because she regretted it, but because she hadn’t.

Because it had felt real and right.

And that meant she’d crossed a line from which there was no return.

In her palace, Amamira watched the hidden camera footage with cold satisfaction.

347 hours of video now, documenting every interaction, every tender moment, every private conversation.

Her husband was falling in love exactly as she’d planned.

But Amamira noticed something else, too.

Something that made her blood run cold.

Isabella wasn’t performing anymore.

The careful distance Nadiraa had coached her to maintain had dissolved.

The way she looked at Magid, the way her face softened when he spoke, the way she touched his hand.

These weren’t the actions of a woman playing a role.

Isabella was falling in love, too.

And that Amira realized with dawning horror was not part of the plan at all.

By late June 2024, the arrangement that was supposed to be temporary and controlled had evolved into something far more dangerous.

an actual relationship.

Isabella and Magid were seeing each other three or four times a week.

Not just on scheduled flights, but at private villas, secluded restaurants, once even at a desert camp where Magid taught her about falconry with his favorite saker falcon perched on her leather gloved arm.

She likes you, Magid said, watching the bird settle calmly on Isabella’s wrist.

Sakers are particular about who they trust.

It took me 6 months to earn her respect.

Maybe she senses I’m terrified and is taking pity on me,” Isabella replied.

But she was smiling, genuinely delighted by the bird’s fierce grace.

“Fear and respect aren’t the same thing,” Maget said.

“She respects you.

That’s rare.

” “These were the moments that destroyed Isabella’s resolve to maintain emotional distance.

” “Mag in the desert, patient and knowledgeable, teaching her about traditions that went back centuries.

Majid reciting poetry in Arabic and then translating it for her with genuine care.

Majid asking about her mother’s recovery from surgery, remembering details from conversations weeks earlier.

She’d stopped reporting everything to Nadira by midJune.

The daily debriefs had become uncomfortable then unbearable.

Nadiraa noticed the change immediately.

“You’re pulling away,” Nadiraa said during their meeting on June 18th.

Why? Because this doesn’t feel like an arrangement anymore.

Isabella admitted.

It feels real, and I hate lying to him.

You’re being paid to make it feel real, Nadira reminded her.

But there was concern in her voice.

That’s the entire point.

But you can’t forget what this actually is.

What if I want it to be more than that? Nadira’s expression hardened.

Don’t be foolish.

He’s a married man from one of the most powerful families in the Emirates.

You’re a flight attendant from Manila.

This can only end one way, and it’s not with you becoming his wife.

Maybe not his wife, Isabella said quietly.

But maybe something.

He’s unhappy in his marriage.

He’s told me so.

What if? Stop.

Nadira’s voice was sharp.

You’re thinking like a woman in love instead of a woman in business.

That’s dangerous for everyone.

especially you.

But Isabella couldn’t stop because she was in love desperately and completely with a man who seemed to love her back.

Majid had started talking about the future in careful hypothetical terms.

What if things were different? What if circumstances changed? What would you want then? And Isabella, abandoning all pretense, told him the truth.

I’d want you, just you.

I don’t care about anything else.

On July 15th, Majid took her to a private villa in the Arabian Ranches.

A sprawling estate with gardens and fountains and the kind of luxury that should have felt alien, but somehow felt like home when he was there.

They were having dinner on the terrace when he reached across the table and took her hand.

I need to tell you something, he said.

And I need you to be honest with me when I ask you a question.

Isabella’s heart hammered.

Had he discovered the arrangement? Did he know about the money, the contract, Amamira’s involvement? What is it? I’m falling in love with you.

Maget said, “Actually, I’ve already fallen.

I’m in love with you in a way I haven’t been with anyone in 20 years.

And I need to know if you feel the same way or if this is just he trailed off vulnerable in a way she’d never seen him.

” Isabella should have lied, should have followed the script, maintained the performance, protected herself.

Instead, she told him the truth.

“I’m in love with you, too,” she whispered completely, terrifyingly.

“I know this is complicated, and I know we can’t.

” He kissed her, cutting off her words.

“We’ll find a way.

I don’t know how yet, but we will.

I’m tired of living a half-life.

You make me feel like myself again.

” They made love that night with an intensity born of genuine emotion rather than scripted seduction.

And Isabella fell asleep in his arms, thinking that maybe somehow this could actually work.

Maybe love was enough to overcome the obstacles of wealth and status and complicated families.

She woke at 3:00 in the morning feeling nauseous.

At first, she thought it was something she’d eaten.

But as she sat in the marble bathroom with her head between her knees, another possibility occurred to her.

When was her last period? The realization hit like ice water.

She was late, nearly 3 weeks late, Isabella sat on the bathroom floor of a villa worth millions of dollars.

Wearing one of Magid’s shirts and calculated dates in her head.

They’d been careful most of the time, but not always.

There had been that weekend in May when passion had overridden caution.

And once in early June when Magid had whispered that he wanted all of her.

No barriers, just them.

She’d said yes because she loved him.

Because in those moments, consequences seemed distant and theoretical.

Now consequences were potentially growing inside her.

She didn’t tell Magid immediately.

She needed to be sure first.

The next day, while he was at business meetings, she went to a pharmacy in a neighborhood where no one would recognize her and bought three pregnancy tests from three different brands.

All three came back positive.

Isabella sat on the floor of her cramped shared apartment, staring at three plastic sticks that had just changed her entire life.

She was pregnant with the child of a married billionaire.

A child conceived during an affair she’d been paid to orchestrate.

A child that would complicate everything in ways she couldn’t begin to calculate.

Her first instinct was terror.

Her second was something she didn’t expect.

Joy.

She loved magic.

He loved her.

They’d talked about a future together.

A baby would make that future more complicated, yes, but also more real, more urgent.

It would force decisions that had been theoretical into stark reality.

And despite everything, the money, the lies, the impossible circumstances, she wanted this baby.

Wanted it with a fierce protectiveness that surprised her.

On July 28th, she told Magid.

They were at the Arabian Ranch’s villa again, having dinner at sunset.

Isabella had barely touched her food, her stomach churning with nerves.

“You’re quiet tonight,” Maget observed.

“Is everything all right? I need to tell you something,” Isabella said and heard her voice shake.

“And I don’t know how you’re going to react.

” Majid set down his fork, giving her his complete attention.

“Whatever it is, we’ll handle it together.

I’m pregnant,” she said simply.

About 6 weeks, the silence that followed felt eternal.

Majid’s face went through a series of expressions.

Shock, confusion, and then something that looked like wonder.

“You’re certain.

” Three tests and I’m never late.

I’m very regular and I’m three weeks overdue.

More silence.

Isabella felt her heartbreaking.

He was going to tell her this was impossible, that she needed to handle it, that he couldn’t.

A baby, Magid whispered, and there were tears in his eyes.

Our baby, you’re not angry.

Angry? He stood up so quickly his chair toppled backward.

He came around the table and pulled her into his arms.

Isabella, I’m 50 years old.

My sons are adults.

I thought I’d never have another child.

and now you’re telling me that we created a life together.

He pulled back to look at her face.

This is terrifying and wonderful and the most real thing that’s ever happened to me.

Isabella burst into tears, relief and fear tangling together.

What are we going to do? We’re going to make this work, Maget said firmly.

I’m going to leave Amira properly this time, not just talking about it.

I’ll divorce her or I’ll take a second wife or whatever needs to happen legally.

But I’m not letting you go through this alone.

I’m not abandoning our child.

Your family will have to accept it.

I spent my entire life doing what’s expected.

This is my chance to do something real, to build something that matters.

He placed his hand on her still flat stomach.

This baby, you, this is what matters.

They sat on the terrace for hours making plans that felt both impossible and inevitable.

Magid would consult with lawyers about the cleanest way to proceed.

Isabella would move to a better apartment, somewhere safe and comfortable.

They would tell people when the time was right.

There’s something I need to tell you first, Isabella said as the night deepened.

Before we go any further, about how we met.

What about it? Mag, when I was first assigned to your flights, it wasn’t random.

Someone arranged it.

Someone paid me to to what? His voice had gone very quiet.

Isabella took a breath, ready to confess everything.

Nadira, Amamira, the contract, the money, ready to destroy the lies and face whatever consequences came.

But Magid cut her off, pulling her close.

Nothing before this moment matters, he said.

Whatever brought us together, whoever engineered it, none of that changes how I feel.

We’re starting fresh today, right now.

This is our beginning.

Isabella wanted to insist.

Wanted to tell him the truth so there would be no secrets between them.

But he was kissing her and his hand was on her stomach where their child was growing.

And the confession died in her throat.

She would tell him just not tonight.

Tonight she would let herself believe in the future they were planning.

In her palace study, Amamira sat frozen in front of the video monitor, having heard every word of the conversation.

The wine glass in her hand had cracked, red wine dripping onto her white dress, but she didn’t notice.

Pregnant.

Isabella was pregnant with Magid’s child.

This wasn’t in the plan.

This was never supposed to happen.

Isabella was supposed to be a temporary distraction, easily discarded when Amamira decided the affair was supposed to run its course in 6 months and then Isabella would disappear with her payout, leaving Magid slightly heartbroken but ultimately unchanged.

But a child changed everything.

A child was permanent.

A child gave Isabella legal claims, inheritance rights, a connection to the Alna family that could never be fully severed.

If Magid divorced Amira or took Isabella as a second wife, the family fortune would be divided.

Her son’s inheritance would be diluted.

The pristine reputation she’d maintained for 22 years would be shattered.

Worse, Magid was talking about leaving her.

not just having an affair, but actually choosing Isabella.

Choosing this Filipino flight attendant over the woman who’d given him three sons, who’d maintained his household, who’d stood beside him for more than two decades.

Amira stood up, wine stained dress clinging to her legs, and walked to her private safe.

Inside was the contract Isabella had signed, the documented proof of the arrangement, the evidence that would destroy the girl’s credibility if deployed correctly.

But evidence wouldn’t matter if Magid was truly in love.

He’d forgive the deception.

He’d convince himself it was fate.

He’d frame Isabella as a victim of circumstance rather than a participant in manipulation.

No evidence wasn’t the solution anymore.

Amamira’s hand hovered over another item in the safe.

A small vial of clear liquid, something she’d acquired years ago from a contact in pharmaceutical circles.

GHB, gamma hydroxybuteric acid.

A sedative that was colorless, nearly tasteless, and very effective.

She’d kept it for years without really knowing why.

Some instinct for preparation against unknown future needs.

Now she knew why.

Isabella couldn’t be blackmailed into leaving.

She was too in love, too committed to this fantasy of a future with Magid.

The pregnancy had given her hope, made her believe she could actually win.

But Isabella could be eliminated quietly, permanently, in a way that looked like tragic accident rather than calculated murder.

Amamira closed the safe and called Nadira to her study.

We have a problem, she said when her lady in waiting arrived.

Isabella is pregnant with Magid’s child.

They’re planning a future together.

Nadiraa’s face pald.

That wasn’t supposed to happen.

She was supposed to.

I know what she was supposed to do.

But she fell in love and now she’s carrying the heir to a fortune that should belong to my sons.

Amira’s voice was ice.

We need to fix this.

How? Amamira looked at her oldest friend, her most loyal servant.

The woman who would do anything she asked without question.

How permanently can you fix a problem, Nadiraa? Understanding dawned in Nadiraa’s eyes, followed by fear.

Shikica, if you’re suggesting, I’m not suggesting anything.

I’m telling you that Isabella Reyes has become a threat to everything I’ve built, to my marriage, my family, my son’s future, and threats need to be eliminated.

Murder.

Nadira whispered the word like a curse.

Accident, Amamira corrected.

Tragic, unavoidable accident.

Pregnant woman probably drinking despite the pregnancy.

Foolish decision to swim alone at night.

Terrible drowning.

It happens.

I can’t.

You can.

You will.

Because you owe me everything you have.

And this is what I’m asking for in return.

Nadiraa stood silent for a long moment.

Decades of loyalty waring with basic human decency.

Finally, she nodded once.

What do you need me to do? and Amamira began to explain exactly how they would murder Isabella Reyes and make it look like an accident that no one would ever question.

August 10th, 2024 began like any other day in Isabella Reyes’s transformed life.

She woke in her new apartment in Dubai Marina, paid for by magid sunlight streaming through floor toseiling windows overlooking the water.

At eight weeks pregnant, the morning sickness had mostly passed, replaced by a constant low-grade nausea and a bone deep fatigue that made even simple tasks feel monumental.

She placed her hand on her still flat stomach, marveling at the secret growing there.

In 2 days, she had an appointment at the American Hospital for her first ultrasound.

Majid had insisted on coming with her despite the risk of being seen together.

I’m not missing this, he’d said firmly.

I don’t care who sees us.

This is my child, too.

His lawyers were drawing up divorce papers.

The process would be complicated, expensive, and public.

But Magid seemed determined.

I’ve lived according to other people’s expectations for 50 years.

He told her last week, “It’s time I lived for myself, for us, for our family.

” Isabella wanted to believe it was possible, that love could overcome the massive obstacles in their path, that she could actually have the future she’d started to imagine.

A home with magid, their baby, maybe eventually her mother and brother close by, a real family built on genuine feeling rather than duty or arrangement.

The guilt about how they’d started still noded at her.

She tried three more times to tell Magid the truth about Nadiraa and the arrangement, but each time he deflected.

The past doesn’t matter, he’d say.

Only the future we’re building.

Part of her wondered if he suspected something and simply didn’t want to know.

As long as they never spoke the truth aloud, it couldn’t hurt them.

Her phone buzzed at 2 in the afternoon.

A message from a number she didn’t recognize.

Isabella, this is Magic.

My regular phone died and I’m using a colleagues.

Can you meet me at Desert Matchless Villa tonight at 700 p.

m.

? I have a surprise for you.

Don’t tell anyone.

I want this to be our secret moment.

K.

Isabella’s heart lifted.

The desert matchless villa was where Magid had first told her he loved her.

Where they’d spent long weekends planning their impossible future.

A surprise there could only mean something wonderful.

Maybe he’d finalized the divorce paperwork.

Maybe he’d bought her a gift for the baby.

Maybe he just wanted a romantic evening away from the world.

She texted back, “I’ll be there.

Should I bring anything?” The response came quickly.

Just yourself.

Everything else is taken care of.

What Isabella didn’t know was that the message hadn’t come from Magid at all.

It had been sent from a burner phone purchased with cash at electronics shop in Sharah by Nadira Hassan following Amira’s precise instructions.

What Isabella didn’t know was that Majid was in Abu Dhabi at a business conference.

His phone very much alive and in his possession, completely unaware that his name was being used to lure the woman he loved into a trap.

What Isabella didn’t know was that at that very moment, Amamira was at the Desert Melus Villa, personally overseeing the preparations for murder.

The villa was magnificent, a modern interpretation of traditional Arabian architecture, sitting on 5 acres of private desert property 45 km outside Dubai.

Majid had purchased it 3 years ago as a personal retreat, somewhere he could escape the demands of public life.

The property had a main house, guest quarters, staff housing, and an infinity pool that seemed to pour directly into the desert beyond.

Amamira walked through the empty villa with the careful attention of a stage director preparing for opening night.

She dismissed the staff at noon, telling them the villa needed to be closed for deep cleaning and maintenance.

The housekeeper had been surprised.

The villa was immaculate, but a generous bonus had smoothed over any questions.

Now Amamira was alone and she had work to do.

First, the security system.

The villa had cameras covering every entrance, the pool area, and the main living spaces.

Amamira couldn’t disable them entirely.

That would look suspicious in retrospect.

Instead, she accessed the system through Magid’s master account and programmed a specific window of malfunction.

6:00 p.

m.

to 9:00 p.

m.

cameras would record nothing but static, a plausible technical glitch that wouldn’t raise immediate suspicion.

Second, the staging.

She placed three bottles of expensive red wine on the table by the pool, opening one and pouring a glass that she’d splash around later.

Isabella didn’t drink.

Amira knew this from months of surveillance.

But dead women couldn’t contradict the narrative written for them.

Pregnant woman stressed about her situation makes poor decision to drink gets disoriented.

Tragic accident.

It was believable enough.

Third, the drug from her purse.

Amira withdrew a small vial of clear liquid.

GHB acquired through a contact in the pharmaceutical supply chain cost her $10,000 and several carefully worded lies about research purposes.

The dosage had been calculated precisely enough to cause disorientation and muscle paralysis within 20 minutes, but not enough to show up as immediately suspicious in a standard toxicology screen.

Combined with the wine staging and the pool, it would look like alcohol intoxication.

Amamira had researched this exhaustively.

She’d read medical journals about drowning pathology, police reports about accidental deaths, forensic analyses of pool drownings.

She knew that water in the lungs would be the primary finding, that the GHB would be noted, but could be explained as recreational drug use, that the pregnancy would actually support the narrative of a distraught woman making desperate choices.

She’d thought of everything.

At 6:00 p.

m.

, Amamira poured the GHB into a glass of fresh mango juice.

Isabella’s favorite, something Nadira had mentioned months ago during their intelligence gathering.

The drug was tasteless and odorless, completely undetectable in the sweet juice.

She placed the glass on a tray with fresh fruit, arranging it to look like a welcoming gesture.

Then she waited.

Isabella arrived at 7:03 p.

m.

in a taxi, having told the driver to wait at the gate while she checked if anyone was home.

The villa looked quiet, most lights off, but the pool area was lit with soft landscape lighting that made the water glow turquoise against the darkening desert sky.

She walked through the open front door.

Amira had left it unlocked, calling out, “Magid, are you here?” No answer.

The villa felt empty but welcoming.

Isabella noticed the table by the pool, the wine bottles, the note in what looked like Magid’s handwriting.

in the shower.

Make yourself comfortable.

We’ll be out soon.

K.

The handwriting was perfect because Amamira had spent two hours practicing it, studying samples from Majid’s personal correspondence until she could replicate his distinctive slanted script.

Exactly.

Isabella smiled, setting down her small purse and the gift she brought, a vintage book of Arabic poetry she’d found at a rare bookshop in Carama, something she thought Magid would love.

She walked to the pool edge, looking out at the desert beyond.

It was beautiful here, peaceful in a way Dubai’s frantic energy never achieved.

She was so absorbed in the view that she didn’t hear a mirror approach from inside the villa.

Hello, Isabella.

Isabella spun around, her heart jumping.

Shikica, I didn’t expect.

I thought Magid was here.

Amamira stood in the doorway wearing simple black clothing.

Her face composed but her eyes cold.

Magid isn’t coming.

I sent that message.

Using his name to get you here.

The world seemed to tilt.

Isabella’s hand instinctively went to her stomach.

Protective.

Why? What do you want to talk to resolve this situation like adults? Amamira gestured to the table.

Please sit.

Have some juice.

Let’s discuss this rationally.

Every instinct screamed at Isabella to run, but Amamira was blocking the main exit, and Isabella’s phone was in her purse on the table.

Besides, they were alone in the desert.

Where would she go? I’d rather stand, Isabella said, trying to keep her voice steady.

I’d rather you sit.

Amira’s tone was pleasant, but firm.

You’re carrying my husband’s child.

That makes this conversation important for both of us.

Slowly, Isabella sat at the table, keeping distance between herself and Amira.

The Shikica sat across from her, perfectly composed, and pushed the glass of mango juice closer.

You must be thirsty after the drive.

Please drink.

I’m not thirsty.

I insist.

It’s fresh mango juice.

I know it’s your favorite.

The fact that Amamira knew her favorite drink felt like a violation.

“How long had she been watching?” “How much did she know?” “How did you know where to find me?” Isabella asked.

“I’ve known everything from the beginning,” Amamira said simply.

“Every flight, every dinner, every private moment you thought was secret.

I have cameras in Majid’s jet, in his villas, in his cars.

I’ve watched your entire relationship unfold.

” Isabella felt sick.

You’ve been spying on us.

I’ve been protecting my interests.

There’s a difference.

Amamira leaned forward.

Did you really think I wouldn’t notice my husband falling in love? Did you imagine I just accept some flight attendant stealing him away? I didn’t steal anything.

Magid chose.

Majid chose the fantasy you were paid to provide.

Amira’s smile was razor sharp.

Yes, Isabella.

I know about the arrangement with Nadira.

the money, the contract, the careful seduction because I’m the one who orchestrated all of it.

The words hit like physical blows.

Isabella’s mind raced backward, re-examining everything.

Nadiraa’s friendship, the offer, the specific instructions about perfume and poetry and how to behave.

You, you set this up, every detail.

I recruited you through Nadiraa.

I researched what would appeal to magic.

I scripted your seduction down to the turbulence that threw you into his arms.

Amamira’s voice was matter of fact, as if discussing a business transaction.

You were supposed to be a six-month distraction, a lesson for my husband about the consequences of his wandering attention.

Then you were supposed to disappear, but I fell in love with him.

Isabella’s voice broke.

And he loves me.

You can’t control that, can’t I? Amamira pulled out her phone, showing Isabella footage of their most intimate moments, conversations in the airplane, dinners at private restaurants, the night they’d conceived their child.

I have hundreds of hours of evidence.

I can make you look like a calculating gold digger who planned this pregnancy to trap a billionaire.

I can destroy you so completely that Magid won’t even remember why he thought he loved you.

He’ll never believe that, won’t he? Men believe what they want to believe.

And when faced with evidence that his great love was a paid arrangement, he’ll choose to believe the worst.

It’s easier than accepting he was manipulated.

Isabella stood up, the chair scraping against stone.

I’m leaving and I’m telling Magid everything.

Sit down.

Amira’s voice cracked like a whip.

We’re not finished.

Yes, we are.

You can threaten me all you want, but I love him and he loves me and our baby.

Your baby will never be born.

The words hung in the air, their meaning clear and terrible.

Isabella backed toward the pool, looking for escape routes.

You’re insane.

I’m practical.

You’ve become a problem, Isabella.

A threat to my marriage, my family, my son’s inheritance, and I eliminate problems.

Amamira stood moving with predatory grace.

I was willing to offer you money to disappear.

$500,000 for an abortion and a permanent exit.

But you’re too in love to be rational.

Too naive to understand that you can’t win against someone like me.

Magid will know.

If anything happens to me, he’ll know you did it.

Will he? A pregnant flight attendant stressed about her uncertain future.

Invited to a remote villa, drinks too much despite the pregnancy, decides to swim alone, tragically drowns.

Amir gestured at the wine bottles.

The security cameras will show you arriving alone.

They’ll malfunction during the critical hours.

Technical glitch.

You’ll be found tomorrow morning by staff and it will be ruled an accident.

Isabella’s heart hammered.

She was alone with a woman planning to murder her.

45 km from help with no phone and no escape.

“Please,” she whispered, hand on her stomach.

“Please don’t do this.

I’ll leave.

I’ll go back to the Philippines.

I’ll never contact Magid again.

I don’t believe you.

You love him too much.

You’ll always be out there waiting, hoping, and someday he’ll be weak, and he’ll go back to you, and this will all start again.

” Amira shook her head.

No, this ends tonight permanently.

The juice, Isabella said, understanding flooding through her.

You put something in the juice.

GHB, a seditive.

If you drunk it, this would be easier for both of us.

You just fall asleep by the pool.

And then Amirad, pushing something into water.

Isabella ran.

Pure instinct, no plan, just desperate flight toward the house, toward possible help, toward anywhere that wasn’t this woman and her cold calculation of murder.

But Amamira was faster, and she’d planned for this possibility.

She caught Isabella’s arm, yanking her backward with surprising strength.

Isabella stumbled, falling hard onto the stone patio, her head cracking against the edge of the pool coping.

Pain exploded through her skull.

Her vision blurred.

She tasted blood.

Amira stood over her, breathing hard, but still composed.

I really hoped you’d drink the juice.

This is Messier than I wanted.

Isabella tried to crawl away, but her body wouldn’t cooperate.

The blow to her head had disoriented her completely.

She felt Amira’s hands on her shoulders, dragging her toward the pool edge.

“No,” Isabella managed.

The words slurred.

Please, baby.

I know, Amamira said, and there was something almost like regret in her voice.

If it helps, I don’t enjoy this.

You’re not a bad person, Isabella.

You’re just in my way.

The water was cold when Isabella hit it, shocking her back to partial awareness.

She tried to swim, but her arms wouldn’t coordinate.

The head injury had stolen her ability to move properly.

She managed to surface once, gasping, seeing Amira standing at the pool edge, watching her with clinical detachment.

Help! Isabella choked out water filling her mouth.

“Please!” Amamira didn’t move, just watched as Isabella went under again, struggling weakly, her body refusing to obey the desperate commands of her brain.

The last thing Isabella Reyes thought before the water filled her lungs was of her baby.

The child who would never be born, who would never know that its mother had loved it fiercely in the brief weeks of its existence.

It took 4 minutes for her to stop moving.

Amira waited another five, making sure before she pulled on disposable gloves and dragged Isabella’s body to the deep end of the pool, arranging it to look natural.

She placed the wine glass in Isabella’s hand briefly, pressing her fingers against it to leave Prince, then let it drop and sink.

She scattered Isabella’s belongings, phone, purse, the poetry book around the pool deck as if carelessly dropped.

She opened the other two wine bottles and poured them out, creating evidence of a drinking binge.

At 8:15 p.

m.

, she left the villa, careful to touch nothing else.

She drove back to Dubai in her personal car, stopping at her favorite charity foundation where she was photographed arriving at 8:40 for a fundraising committee meeting.

20 women saw her there, perfectly composed, discussing auction items and donor cultivation.

The perfect alibi.

At 10 p.

m.

, she returned home to the palace, took a long shower, and burned the clothes she’d worn in the villa’s fireplace.

Then she went to sleep, dreamless and undisturbed.

The next morning, when the housekeeper discovered Isabella’s body floating in the pool and called the police, Amamira would perform shock and sadness perfectly, she would comfort Majid in his grief.

She would manage the investigation with helpful cooperation, and she would win because she’d planned every detail perfectly, or so she believed.

The call came at 6:45 a.

m.

on August 12th.

Majid was in his private gym at the palace running on the treadmill when his head of security appeared in the doorway with an expression that made Magid’s stomach drop.

Your highness, there’s been an incident at the desert Melless Villa.

The police are requesting your presence immediately.

What kind of incident? The security chief’s face was grave.

A body was found in the pool.

Female.

The housekeeper called it in 20 minutes ago.

Magid knew before the words were spoken.

Some part of him had been waiting for disaster since the moment he’d allowed himself to hope for happiness.

Isabella, he whispered, “I’m sorry, your highness.

” Yes.

The drive to the villa took 35 minutes, but Majid had no memory of it afterward.

He remembered arriving to find police vehicles, an ambulance, Detective Captain Hassan Elmensuri directing the scene with quiet efficiency.

He remembered the body bag being loaded into the coroner’s van, the terrible finality of that black zipper.

Your highness.

Detective Almansuri approached with cautious respect.

I’m very sorry for your loss.

We need to ask you some questions about Ms.

Reyes.

How did she die? Majid’s voice sounded distant to his own ears.

It appears to be a drowning.

We found wine bottles, evidence she’d been drinking.

The working theory is accidental death due to intoxication, but we’re conducting a full investigation.

Isabella didn’t drink.

She was Catholic, devout, and she was pregnant.

The words came out flat.

Factual.

She would never drink while pregnant.

The detective’s expression shifted slightly.

Pregnant? How far along? 8 weeks.

We had an ultrasound scheduled for tomorrow.

I see.

Almansuri made notes.

When did you last see Ms.

Reyes? 3 days ago.

We had dinner at the Arabian Ranch’s villa.

She was happy, healthy, planning for the baby.

Majid looked at the villa, the pool where the woman he loved had died alone.

Why was she even here? I didn’t invite her.

We found a message on her phone sent yesterday afternoon from a number registered to you asking her to meet you here at 700 p.

m.

I was in Abu Dhabi yesterday at the Eddihad Towers Conference Center from 2:00 p.

m.

until midnight.

I never sent any message.

The detectives pen stopped moving.

You’re certain completely.

Check my phone records.

Check the conference security footage.

I wasn’t even in Dubai.

This was the first crack in Amamira’s perfect plan, though she didn’t know it yet.

She’d assumed Majid would have no solid alibi for the evening, that his schedule would be vague enough to create confusion.

She hadn’t known about the Abu Dhabi conference, the timestamp security footage, the witness statements from dozens of attendees.

“We’ll need your phone for analysis,” Al-Mansuri said carefully.

“And we’ll need a formal statement about your relationship with Ms.

Reyes.

” Magid handed over his phone without hesitation.

She was the love of my life.

We were planning a future together.

Someone set this up.

Someone lured her here using my name and she died.

That’s not an accident, detective.

That’s murder.

The investigation that followed was meticulous.

Almansuri was a 20-year veteran of Dubai police, experienced in handling cases involving wealthy families and political sensitivities.

He knew when something didn’t fit the obvious narrative.

The toxicology report came back on August 15th.

Isabella’s blood showed no alcohol, contradicting the wine bottle staging, but it did show traces of GHB at levels suggesting administration shortly before death.

The medical examiner noted that drowning was the cause of death, but the GHB raised questions about capacity to swim.

The head injury was noted.

A contusion on the back of Isabella’s skull consistent with striking the pool coping could have happened during a fall could also have happened during a struggle.

Her phone records showed the mysterious message sent from a burner phone purchased with cash in charger.

The number had been used only once for that single message, then never again.

Sophisticated planning, not accidental drowning.

Security footage from the villa showed Isabella arriving at 7:03 p.

m.

exactly as Amamira had seen, but it also showed the convenient camera malfunction from 6:00 to 9:00 p.

m.

Too convenient.

Al-Mansuri had the system analyzed by forensics who determined the malfunction had been programmed remotely through the master account.

Majid’s master account except Majid had been in Abu Dhabi witnessed by security cameras and 63 conference attendees.

Someone else had accessed his account.

On August 20th, Al-Mansuri interviewed Chica Amira at the palace.

A courtesy visit that was carefully choreographed for the security of everyone involved.

Amamira performed grief perfectly.

Isabella was a lovely young woman.

I knew she and my husband were close.

It’s a terrible tragedy.

You knew about their relationship.

Of course, Magid and I have an understanding.

Our marriage is complicated, but we’re honest with each other.

The lie came smoothly.

I’d actually spoken with Isabella a few times.

I wanted to ensure she understood the situation, that she wasn’t being taken advantage of.

When did you last speak with her? Perhaps 2 weeks ago, a brief phone call.

I wanted to make sure she was all right.

And where were you on the evening of August 11th? I had a charity committee meeting at the Al Jalila Foundation from 8:30 until almost 11:00.

20 women can verify I was there the entire time.

Perfect alibi, perfectly delivered, but Al-Mansuri was thinking about timelines.

Isabella had arrived at the villa at 7:03.

The cameras malfunctioned at 6:00 p.

m.

Amamira’s alibi started at 8:30.

That left two and a half hours unaccounted for.

and before the meeting at home preparing for the meeting, making phone calls, managing household matters.

Can anyone verify that? My household staff.

I’m rarely alone.

Elmansuri made notes, watching Amira’s face carefully.

She was too composed.

Most people, even innocent ones, showed some nervousness when questioned by police.

Amamira showed nothing but calm cooperation.

One more question, your highness.

How well do you know Nadira Hassan? The tiniest flicker crossed Amira’s face.

Nadira has been with my family for nearly 30 years.

She’s completely trustworthy.

And did she know Ms.

Reyes? I have no idea.

You’d have to ask Nadira.

But when Elmansuri interviewed Nadira on August 22nd, her story began to crack under pressure.

Yes, I knew Isabella.

We attended the same church.

How well did you know her? We were friends.

I tried to help her when I could.

Help her how? Nadira hesitated just for a moment.

She was struggling financially.

I gave her advice, helped her find opportunities.

What kind of opportunities? Just work opportunities, better flights, better clients.

Elmansuri let the silence stretch.

He’d learned over two decades that silence made guilty people talk.

There was an arrangement, Nadira finally said, her voice barely above a whisper.

But it wasn’t my idea.

I was just following orders.

Whose orders? I can’t say.

I’ll lose everything.

A woman is dead.

Miss Hassan, Isabella Reyes, and her unborn child.

If you know something about how she died, you need to tell me.

Nadira broke then, tears streaming down her face.

Shikica Amamira.

She arranged everything.

She wanted Isabella to seduce Shik Majid to have an affair that Amamira could control, but it went wrong.

Isabella fell in love.

Got pregnant.

Amamira said she was a threat that needed to be eliminated.

Eliminated? How? I don’t know.

I swear I don’t know.

Amamira told me to stay away from Isabella after the pregnancy.

She said she would handle it herself.

The confession was explosive but legally problematic.

Nadira had no direct evidence of murder, just knowledge of the arrangement and Amamira’s stated intentions.

It wouldn’t be enough for an arrest, but it was enough to shift the investigation’s focus.

On August 25th, forensic analysts delivered a critical finding.

The wine bottles at the scene had been wiped clean of Prince and then handled briefly by Isabella, suggesting they’d been staged after her death.

More damning analysis of the pool filtration system showed fabric fibers consistent with expensive black silk, the kind Amira preferred in the skimmer basket.

Amamira had been at the villa recently.

Despite her denials, Al-Mansuri knew he was close to proving murder, but he needed something stronger.

He needed evidence that would hold up against the legal firepower a woman like Amira could deploy.

And then on September 3rd, it arrived.

A package from Manila addressed to Shik Majid al- Naan sent by overnight courier with signature required.

Majid opened it alone in his study.

The study where he’d spent the last 3 weeks drinking and mourning and trying to understand how the world could be so cruel.

Inside was a letter written in Isabella’s careful handwriting dated July 30th, 2024.

My dearest Magid, it began.

If you’re reading this, something has happened to me.

I’m writing this as insurance because I’ve started to feel afraid.

Though I can’t quite articulate why.

There are things you need to know.

Things I should have told you weeks ago, but was too afraid to say.

The letter detailed everything.

the arrangement with Nadira, the money paid to seduce him, Amamira’s orchestration of their entire relationship, but also Isabella’s genuine love, her regret for the deception, her hope that despite how it started, what they built together was real.

I was going to tell you everything, she wrote.

I tried several times, but you kept saying the past didn’t matter, but it does matter, Magid.

You deserve to know the truth.

I was paid to make you fall in love with me, but I fell in love with you for real.

Our baby is real.

My feelings are real.

Everything else is a lie built on Amira’s manipulation.

If something happens to me, please know it wasn’t an accident.

Amira told me last week that I was a threat that needed to be eliminated.

I thought she meant through blackmail or deportation.

Now I’m not so sure she’s capable of anything to protect her position.

I’ve included copies of the contract I signed, recordings of conversations with Nadira, bank statements showing the payments.

This is the truth.

I’m so sorry I didn’t tell you sooner.

I love you.

I love our baby.

And if I’m gone, please don’t let her get away with it.

Forever yours, Isabella.

Attached were copies of everything she described.

documentary evidence of the arrangement, the conspiracy, and most importantly, Amamira’s stated intention to eliminate the problem.

Majid sat in his study for three hours, reading and rereading the letter, looking at the evidence, understanding finally the full scope of his wife’s manipulation.

She hadn’t just tolerated his affair with Isabella.

She’d created it, scripted it, and when it became real, when genuine love complicated her control, she’d murdered the woman carrying his child.

At midnight, Magid called Detective Almansuri and handed over everything.

The arrest came at dawn on September 5th.

Amamira was taken from the palace in handcuffs, her perfect composure finally cracking as she realized the evidence against her was overwhelming.

Nadira was arrested as an accessory.

Both were denied bail, deemed flight risks with resources to disappear.

The trial became an international sensation.

Billionaire Shik’s wife murders pregnant mistress.

The evidence was circumstantial but compelling.

The arranged affair, the stated threats, the staged crime scene, the forensic evidence placing Amira at the villa, and most damning, Isabella’s letter from beyond the grave.

Amamira’s defense argued that Isabella had been a manipulative gold digger who’d staged her own death to frame Amira, that the evidence was fabricated, that a woman of Amira’s stature would never risk everything for murder.

But the prosecution painted a different picture.

A woman so obsessed with control that she’d orchestrated an affair to trap her husband, then committed murder when that control slipped away.

On December 18th, 2024, after six weeks of testimony, the jury deliberated for 11 hours before returning a verdict guilty of premeditated murder.

Shikica Amamira Elmez Rui was sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole.

In the UAE, she could have faced execution, but the judge cited the circumstantial nature of some evidence and her lack of prior criminal history as mitigating factors.

Nadira Hassan received 15 years for conspiracy and accessory to murder.

Majid sat in the courtroom gallery every day of the trial, watching the woman he’d been married to for 22 years revealed as a murderer.

When the verdict was read, he felt nothing.

All his emotion had died in that pool with Isabella and their unborn child.

6 months later, Magid sat alone in his study, holding the ultrasound photo Isabella had never gotten to take.

He’d had it created by the medical examiner based on the fetus’s development, a small mercy that felt like cruelty.

He’d divorced Amira while she awaited trial.

Their three sons had cut contact with their mother.

Unable to reconcile the woman who’ raised them with the monster who’d committed murder.

The palace felt like a moselum.

Majid had moved most of his operations to London, unable to bear living in the place where he’d been so thoroughly deceived.

On his desk sat two items.

Isabella’s letter and a small wooden box containing her ashes.

Her family had allowed him to keep half.

A generosity he didn’t deserve.

The other half was buried in Manila.

Next to the plot reserved for her mother.

Everyday Majid read the letter again.

I fell in love with you for real.

Our baby is real.

My feelings are real.

He believed her.

But belief didn’t bring her back.

It didn’t resurrect their child.

It didn’t undo the fact that his wife’s obsession had destroyed everything good in his life.

Amamira in her prison cell received regular updates on Magid’s life through her lawyer.

She learned that he’d established the Isabella Reyes Foundation, providing scholarships for Filipino women in hospitality careers, that he’d paid off LS Reyes’s medical debts and funded Miguel’s engineering education.

that he visited Isabella’s grave in Manila once a month.

She learned that he’d never remarried, never dated, never moved on.

And in the twisted logic of her obsession, Amamira considered this a victory.

She hadn’t kept Magic through love, but she kept him through trauma.

He would never belong to anyone else again.

His grief was her final claim on him.

From her cell, she wrote him a letter.

The guards delivered it.

Though they advised him not to read it, he read it anyway.

My dearest Magid, it began.

People will call what I did insane.

They’ll say obsession destroyed us.

But I see it differently.

I loved you so completely that I was willing to do anything to keep you.

That’s not weakness.

That’s devotion in its purest form.

You’ll spend the rest of your life mourning Isabella.

You’ll convince yourself she was your great love.

your missed chance at happiness.

But here’s what you’ll never admit.

You loved her because I created her for you.

Every word she spoke that moved you.

Every gesture that touched you.

Every moment that made you fall.

I designed all of it.

I didn’t lose you to her.

I lost you to your own need for something I could never be.

Available, simple, uncomplicated by history and duty.

But in losing you, I’ve ensured no one else will ever have you either.

That’s not defeat, my love.

That’s eternal victory.

You’ll never escape me.

Every time you think of Isabella, you’ll remember I created her.

Every time you mourn your child, you’ll remember I took it.

I’m woven into every corner of your grief.

I don’t expect forgiveness.

I don’t want it.

What I want is for you to understand that everything I did, I did because loving you was the only thing that ever made me feel alive.

Was it worth it? Yes.

A thousand times.

Yes, I do it all again.

Forever yours.

Whether you want me or not, Amira.

Mag burned the letter in his fireplace.

But the words stayed with him.

She was right about one thing.

He’d never escape her.

Every happy memory was poisoned by knowing she’d orchestrated it.

Every moment of love with Isabella was tainted by understanding it began as manipulation.

Amamira had won in the most terrible way possible.

She destroyed his capacity for happiness, murdered the woman he loved, and ensured he’d spend the rest of his life trapped in the prison of their shared history.

Three lives destroyed, one obsession fulfilled.

And in the end, the question remained, what’s more dangerous than hate? Love without limits, devotion without conscience, obsession that sees murder as proof of commitment.

Shika Amamira Elma had loved her husband so completely that she’d killed for him.

And in doing so, she’d killed him, too.

Not his body, but everything that made life worth living.

She’d wanted to own him forever.

She did, just not the way she’d imagined.