The Photographer's Deceptive Lens

The Photographer's Deceptive Lens

Leanora Tanouye

5.0
Comment(s)
3.8K
View
10
Chapters

My husband, Austen, was the handsome, stable anchor in my life as a fashion influencer. His one flaw? He was hilariously bad with a camera. Or so I thought, until a viral photo exposed him as Chiaroscuro, a legendary photographer who vanished years ago for his muse, Isolde. On our anniversary, while I was secretly pregnant, he abandoned me to save her comeback show. He called not to check on me, but to demand I ship him my $15,000 camera-a gift from him-for her use. "It's wasted on your little influencer shoots anyway," he said, his voice flat. His words hit me as I sat alone in a clinic, having just lost our baby. He hung up. The dial tone buzzed in the silent room. I wasn't just a placeholder; I was a tool. I looked down at my phone, where the number for my lawyer was already saved, and pressed call.

Protagonist

: Hailey Wall, Austen Bates and Isolde Roth

The Photographer's Deceptive Lens Chapter 1

My husband, Austen, was the handsome, stable anchor in my life as a fashion influencer. His one flaw? He was hilariously bad with a camera. Or so I thought, until a viral photo exposed him as Chiaroscuro, a legendary photographer who vanished years ago for his muse, Isolde.

On our anniversary, while I was secretly pregnant, he abandoned me to save her comeback show.

He called not to check on me, but to demand I ship him my $15,000 camera-a gift from him-for her use.

"It's wasted on your little influencer shoots anyway," he said, his voice flat.

His words hit me as I sat alone in a clinic, having just lost our baby.

He hung up. The dial tone buzzed in the silent room. I wasn't just a placeholder; I was a tool.

I looked down at my phone, where the number for my lawyer was already saved, and pressed call.

Chapter 1

Hailey Wall POV:

My life as a fashion influencer, with nearly a million followers, felt like a perfectly curated dream. I'd built it from scratch, every stitch, every pose, every late-night edit. My husband, Austen, was the stable, handsome anchor in that dream, even if he was hilariously, spectacularly bad with a camera. Or so I thought.

"Babe, my face is literally blurring into the background," I sighed, adjusting the silk scarf for the tenth time.

Austen peered through the viewfinder, his brow furrowed in a caricature of concentration. "It's... artistic? Like, a soft focus vibe."

I dropped the scarf, letting it pool around my shoulders. "It's blurry, Austen. It looks like I took this picture with my feet."

He lowered the camera, a sheepish grin spreading across his face. "Okay, maybe a little blurry. But your feet are very talented, baby."

I loved him. I really did. His corporate job, his steady presence, his apparent inability to capture anything other than abstract blobs when I needed a crisp shot for a brand deal. It was endearing, part of his charm. My pragmatic self had always appreciated his stable, non-glamorous life. It grounded me.

"Just stand still for one second, please," I pleaded, trying to angle my phone and capture the light myself. "We're losing the golden hour."

He shrugged, coming over to lean against me, his arm wrapping around my waist. "My job is to look handsome next to you, not to actually work the camera."

A wave of affection, mixed with a familiar frustration, washed over me. I' d learned to rely on my own team, my own skills. His clumsy attempts had become an inside joke, a testament to how different our worlds were.

Later that evening, after another long day of shooting with my actual photographer, I scrolled through my feed. A candid shot of Austen and me, taken by a fan at a charity gala, had gone viral. It was actually a decent photo, capturing a rare, unguarded moment of us laughing.

My finger hovered over the comments. Usually, they were sweet, or occasionally, a little snarky about my outfit. But tonight, something felt different.

"Hailey Wall and her hubby are cute, but seriously, that guy's got some intense eyes."

"Those eyes! He looks like he could stare into your soul and capture it on film."

"Wait a minute... does anyone else think he looks familiar? Like, really familiar?"

My stomach tightened. Familiar? Austen was a private person. He hated being in the spotlight.

Then, a comment that hit me like a physical blow: "Holy hell, that's CHIA-ROSCURO! The legendary indie photographer who disappeared five years ago! He retired at the peak of his game."

Chiaroscuro. The name sent a shiver down my spine. I knew that name. Everyone in the fashion world did. A phantom, a genius, an artist whose black-and-white portraits had defined an era, capturing raw emotion with haunting intensity. He was known for his elusive nature, his passionate artistry, and his muse, Isolde Roth.

More comments cascaded in, a torrent of revelations.

"Chiaroscuro?! No way! I remember his work. So intense. So much depth."

"He was obsessed with Isolde Roth, that supermodel. Every shot was a love letter to her."

"He just vanished after her big break. Said he couldn't photograph anyone else after her. Talk about dedication."

I gripped my phone, my knuckles white. My husband. The man who couldn't focus a lens to save his life. Chiaroscuro. It couldn't be. The two images simply did not compute.

But the comments kept coming, painting a picture of a man I didn't know. A man consumed by passion, by art, by another woman.

"I heard he gave up photography entirely because of her. Said his 'light' left when she did."

"He sacrificed everything for her career. Helped her get to the top, then walked away."

My head swam. This wasn't just about his secret talent. This was about a secret life, a secret heart. All the jokes about his incompetence, all the times he' d refused to photograph my crucial projects, saying he "just didn't have the eye." It was all a lie. A calculated, deliberate lie.

A memory flashed: a glossy magazine cover from years ago. Isolde Roth, her face a masterpiece of shadows and light, her eyes burning with an almost religious fervor. The photo credit had been "Chiaroscuro." I'd admired the artistry, never imagining the man behind the lens would one day be sleeping beside me.

I scrolled further, my fingers trembling. There were links now, old articles. Interviews with Isolde, gushing about her "soulmate," her "artist." Old forum posts dissecting Chiaroscuro's last exhibitions, each piece a testament to his adoration for Isolde. One picture in particular, a black-and-white portrait of Isolde, her hand reaching out, bathed in a soft, ethereal glow. It was called "My Guiding Star."

I remembered seeing that print once, a small, framed copy tucked away in a dusty box in Austen's old office. He'd dismissed it as "some old college work," a relic he couldn't quite bring himself to throw away. He'd even cried once, late at night, holding that very photo, mumbling about "lost chances." I'd foolishly thought he was mourning his own artistic career, a path he regretfully abandoned. I' d comforted him, told him he was talented, that he could pick it up again.

But he wasn't mourning his career. He was mourning her.

The comments were relentless, and now they were turning on me.

"Poor Hailey. She has no idea."

"Imagine being married to a legend and he won't even take a decent pic of you."

"Is she just a placeholder? A rebound?"

My vision blurred. Placeholder. The word echoed in my skull. I felt a profound sense of unfamiliarity, looking at the man in the viral photo, his intense gaze, his artist's hands. Was this really my husband? The man who made me dinner every night, who talked about corporate mergers, who feigned disinterest in my world?

Then I saw it. A picture of Isolde, taken by Chiaroscuro. She was wearing a loose, flowing white dress, her hair pulled back, a single pearl earring glinting. It was eerily similar to the outfit I'd worn last week for a test shoot, an outfit Austen had picked out for me, saying it "suited my natural elegance." My natural elegance, or Isolde's, refracted through his memory?

Just as I felt the first hot tears prick my eyes, Austen walked into the living room. "Hey, love, what's wrong? You look like you've seen a ghost." He reached for my hand, concern etched on his face.

I recoiled, pulling my hand away as if burned. "Austen," my voice was a shaky whisper. "Will you photograph me for the 'Empowered Women' campaign? It' s a huge opportunity."

He chuckled, rubbing the back of his neck. "Hailey, you know I can't. My shots are always terrible. You need a pro for that." His gaze was soft, apologetic. The same look he'd given me a hundred times before.

The phone in my hand vibrated. Isolde Roth. Her name flashed brightly on the screen.

Austen's eyes widened, then narrowed almost imperceptibly. He snatched his phone from the coffee table. "Excuse me for a second, love. Work call." He walked away, into the quiet of the hallway.

I listened, my heart pounding in my chest. "Isolde? Is everything okay?" His voice was low, laced with a concern I hadn't heard directed at me in weeks. "What? New York? A show? Your photographer bailed?" He paused, listening intently. "Of course. I'll be there."

He hung up, turning to face me, his face pale but resolute. "Hailey, I... I have to go. Isolde needs me. Her show is tomorrow, and her photographer dropped out."

My world tilted. Tomorrow. Our anniversary. And he was leaving for her.

"But... it's our anniversary, Austen," I managed, my voice barely audible.

He didn't even flinch. He just looked at me, a strange, distant expression in his eyes. "This is important, Hailey. She's in a bind. You understand, right?" He didn't wait for an answer. He just started packing.

The next morning, as I sat alone at the kitchen table, the anniversary breakfast I'd meticulously prepared growing cold, my phone rang. It was Austen. A jolt of hope, quickly extinguished by his tone.

"Hailey, listen," he said, his voice clipped and impatient. "I need you to do me a favor. My old camera got damaged, and Isolde... she needs a specific lens. You have that professional-grade camera, the one you use for your campaigns, right? The one with the custom settings?"

My mind reeled. The camera he'd bought me three years ago, a generous anniversary gift. "Austen, it's a $15,000 piece of equipment. And it's set up for my needs."

"Just ship it to me. Overnight it. Isolde's show is high-profile, and she really needs it." His voice was flat, devoid of any warmth. "And honestly, you're not even using it to its full potential anyway. It's wasted on your little influencer shoots."

The words sliced through me. Wasted on your little influencer shoots. My stomach churned, a different kind of sickness now. This wasn't just about a camera. This was about everything. About how he saw me. How he valued me. How he had never truly seen me.

I held the phone so tightly my fingers ached. "Austen," I said, my voice dangerously calm. "Do you even know what day it is?"

There was a pause, a beat of silence that stretched into an eternity. Then, a sigh. "Hailey, don't start. I'm busy. Just send the camera."

He hung up before I could respond. The dial tone buzzed, a harsh, mocking sound in the silent kitchen. My hand dropped, the phone clattering against the cold marble. My vision blurred, not from tears, but from the sudden, stark clarity. I wasn't just a placeholder. I was a tool.

I stood up, my hand instinctively going to my stomach. My period was late. Two weeks late. I had a doctor's appointment this afternoon, one I' d been so excited about. A surprise for Austen. A future.

Now, my future felt like a barren wasteland. I looked at the cold anniversary breakfast, then at my phone, where Isolde's name was still glowing from the missed call log.

My hand found the small, decorative vase on the counter, filled with the single white rose Austen had given me this morning, a last-minute gesture before he rushed out the door. I picked it up, feeling the sharp thorns.

"No," I whispered to the empty room, my voice cracking. "No, I don't understand." I pulled out my phone, unlocked it, and typed a number I' d saved weeks ago, a number for a clinic I'd researched discreetly. My fingers trembled, but my resolve was cold and hard, like ice. "I need an appointment," I said into the receiver. "As soon as possible."

Continue Reading

Other books by Leanora Tanouye

More
The Ninth Goodbye: My Husband's Cruel Bet

The Ninth Goodbye: My Husband's Cruel Bet

Modern

5.0

On the night of our fifth anniversary, my husband left me standing on the shoulder of the Montauk Highway in a blinding thunderstorm. His red taillights didn't even hesitate as they faded into the rain. He abandoned me there because his ex-girlfriend, Isabelle, called to say she heard a scary noise in her basement. I stood in my soaked silk dress, shivering not from the cold, but from the realization that this was the ninth time. He had missed my gallbladder surgery to support her at a polo match. He had missed my grandmother’s funeral to fix her flat tire. But the truth was far crueler than simple neglect. Weeks later, after I survived a terrifying elevator accident that left me with a permanent limp, I overheard them talking at a gala. "The bet was for nine goodbyes, Marcus," Isabelle laughed, clutching his arm. "I bet you that I could make you leave her nine times before she finally snapped. And look at that. I won." My marriage wasn't a tragedy; it was a game. A wager between lovers who used my pain as a scoreboard. I didn't cry. I didn't make a scene. I went back to our penthouse, packed my sketchbooks, and vanished into the night without a word. Five years later, Marcus found me in a small coastal town in Maine. I was no longer the waiting wife. I was a celebrated sculptor, and I was holding the hand of a man who treated me like a treasure, not a toy. Marcus stormed into my studio, demanding I come home. My new husband stepped between us, calm and unyielding. "You're trespassing," he said. "I'm talking to my wife!" Marcus yelled. I finally turned around, looking at the man who had destroyed me, and smiled. "Ex-wife," I corrected softly. "And you're late. About five years too late."

Second Chance At A Loveless Marriage

Second Chance At A Loveless Marriage

Romance

5.0

The antiseptic smell of my deathbed couldn't mask the stench of betrayal. My wife, Emily, played the grieving spouse, her tears a performance, her whispers to her lover, Daniel, charting my demise. "He's not going to make it through the night. I'll be free soon, my love." That name, Daniel Sterling, a family friend I admired, shattered my world faster than my failing heart. My final sight was Emily's beautiful, lying face, cold and irritated by my inconvenient death. Then, blinding light. I gasped, sucking in real air, not in a hospital, but my old bedroom, decades younger, strong, unblemished hands. It was real. I was back. Memories of my first life flooded me: the loveless marriage, the quiet sacrifices, the children who weren't mine. Then, the pivotal memory from this timeline, the one that started it all: a party, too much to drink, Emily crying, pregnant, my naive proposal driven by a sense of duty, a lie. She was already carrying Daniel's child, using me as a shield to protect his budding career. The bedroom door creaked open. "Ethan? Are you awake?" It was Emily, radiant and innocent, carrying breakfast, her hand reaching for my forehead with the same feigned care from my deathbed. I flinched from her touch. "Emily," I said, my voice cold, "We need to talk about the wedding." Her smile faltered as I flatly stated, "I don't think we should get married." Her crocodile tears flowed, "I love you, Ethan!" she whimpered. "Don't," I warned, her words now poison. She played her trump card, placing her hand on her stomach. "I'm... I'm pregnant, Ethan. It's your baby." I almost laughed, knowing the truth this time. "Emily has always been like a sister to me," I announced, loud enough for our families downstairs to hear. "I'll always care for her." Her face, pure unadulterated panic, confirmed it. The game had just begun, and this time, I was making the rules.

No Longer Just a Wife

No Longer Just a Wife

Billionaires

5.0

I was Ava, the unsung architect behind InnovateNext, the tech empire my husband Ethan now helmed. For eight years, I' d been his devoted wife, sacrificing my groundbreaking career and protecting his fragile ego by taking the blame for our infertility. Our Connecticut home was a picture of domestic bliss, a testament to our seemingly perfect life. Then came the ping. A casual link from a friend, unfurling a private Instagram story, shattered everything. There was Ethan, supposedly headlining a conference in San Francisco, but geotagged in SoHo, New York. He stood beaming in a luxury baby boutique, arm around Chloe, a young intern, her belly unmistakably round. The look on his face – pure, unadulterated joy – was a stranger to me. My frantic call to him went to voicemail, followed by his immediate lie: "In a keynote session. Can't talk." Within hours, I faced Chloe in a lavish SoHo loft, perfectly tailored to the desires Ethan had always denied me. She smugly revealed their three-year affair, flaunting how Ethan mirrored "my Pinterest boards" for her, not me. Her final, cruel blow: "He feels sorry for you... A man needs a woman who can give him a family. He needs a woman who is soft, not one who is... capable." The profound betrayal was a punch to the gut, erasing a decade of loyalty and self-sacrifice. My heart didn't break; it turned to ash. All my years shielding his insecurities had been for a man who saw me as merely "capable," not a woman worthy of love or a family. But from that ash, something sharp and cold ignited. Revenge. I wasn't just leaving him. I was going to dismantle every empire he built on my back. The war had just begun.

The Man Who Faked His Own Death for Freedom

The Man Who Faked His Own Death for Freedom

Romance

5.0

Ethan Miller, an architect adrift in the shadow of his formidable wife, Isabella Vance, found his fragile existence shattering around him. His public humiliation began when Isabella outbid him for his deceased father's cherished vintage watch, only to immediately gift it to her sleek young lover, Julian Thorne. This cruel public spectacle was merely a prelude to Isabella's escalating emotional warfare. She held his ailing sister, Sarah, hostage with the threat of cutting off her life-saving experimental treatment, using her as leverage to solidify Ethan's subservience and tolerate Julian's constant presence. Julian, an utter villain, brazenly destroyed Ethan's father's watch and framed Ethan for a violent attack, all while Isabella blindly defended her lover, even sanctioning Ethan's physical assault. The ultimate devastation came when Julian, with Isabella's unwitting complicity, orchestrated Sarah's tragic death during experimental surgery. In a final act of horrifying rage and injustice, Isabella, unaware of Ethan's long-held secret protecting her own infertility, summarily aborted their last, desperate chance at a child. Left with nothing but the unbearable grief for his sister, the incomprehensible loss of his unborn child, and the sting of profound betrayal, Ethan wrestled with the unfathomable depths of his wife's cruelty and blindness. How could the woman he'd once loved, who had once saved him, become such a monstrous architect of his destruction? But out of the ashes of his shattered life, a new resolve burned: Ethan meticulously gathered damning evidence against Julian, orchestrating his own 'death' to escape Isabella's suffocating control. He shed his old identity, transforming into Marcus Thorne, finding a new purpose and unexpected love, while Isabella, confronted by his evidence, embarked on her own path of chaotic revenge and desperate atonement.

You'll also like

Inferno Heiress: Freed From Hell To Reclaim My Empire

Inferno Heiress: Freed From Hell To Reclaim My Empire

Clara Voss
5.0

Hayley was betrayed by those who should have loved her most. To save their precious adopted daughter from a punishment she deserved, her own parents sent Hayley straight into a living hell—an infamous prison where survival demanded cruelty, and weakness meant death. Four years later, the girl who had entered those iron gates no longer existed. She emerged with a single, unbreakable rule carved into her soul: Every betrayal would be repaid tenfold. The day she walked free, the world trembled. A convoy of luxury cars lined the road. A legion of loyal followers awaited her triumphant return. Her father tried to buy her silence with money. But money had long lost its power over her. Her adopted sister hid behind sweet words and false kindness. But empty smiles no longer fooled her. Everything that had once been stolen would be reclaimed—piece by piece. When her parents attempted to tie themselves to the city's most feared man by offering their adopted daughter, Hayley's lips curved into a cold smirk. "Not on my watch." Backed by a legendary hacker, shadowy allies, and an entire prison willing to burn the world for her, Hayley dismantled her enemies with terrifying precision. Then the tyrant noticed her. "You're interesting," he said. "Be my woman, and the city is yours." Hayley raised an eyebrow, unimpressed. "You want to own me? Survive me first." High society became their battlefield. Power collided with desire. Ambition clashed with obsession. In this ruthless game of dominance and temptation, only one would kneel first. The girl once abandoned in hell rose from its ashes, crowned by fire and vengeance—And in the end, even the most feared ruler in the city would bow, offering his empire to the woman who had conquered both hell… and him.

The Discarded Heiress: Marrying My Lethal Husband

The Discarded Heiress: Marrying My Lethal Husband

Xiao Wang
5.0

The rain in Detroit was slick with grime when my family finally came to fetch me. They didn't want a reunion; they wanted a sacrificial lamb to marry into the Kaufman empire to save their failing business. I thought I was just being sold off, but the limo ride ended under a dark overpass where six hired thugs were waiting with chains. My own sister had ordered them to "break my spirit" so I’d be a shaking, pathetic mess by the time I reached the altar. They called me "Detroit trash" and sprayed air freshener when I sat on their leather seats. My stepmother wanted a video of me begging for my life, and my father was ready to trade me like a used car to a man everyone called a "vegetable." They expected a submissive country girl, unaware that I was a high-level "cleaner" who could snap a radius bone before they could even scream. When I finally reached the Kaufman estate, I found my fiancé, Barron, slumped in a wheelchair, drooling and silent. But as soon as the doors closed, the "invalid" grabbed my wrist with a grip of iron and whispered a command that changed everything. I didn't understand why my own blood was so desperate to see me destroyed. What had I ever done to deserve a hit squad and a forced marriage to a man they thought was a corpse? But Barron isn't a vegetable, and I'm not a victim. We just touched down at the Moon family gala in a matte-black helicopter, and as the doors slide open, the "broken" bride is about to show them exactly what happens when you throw away the wrong daughter. "If we're going to crash a party," Barron whispered, his eyes burning with lethal clarity, "we should make an entrance."

Broken Ring, Billionaire Secrets: Watch Me Shine

Broken Ring, Billionaire Secrets: Watch Me Shine

Cornelia
4.5

I sat on the edge of the examination table, the crinkle of the sanitary paper sounding like thunder in the sterile room. The doctor didn't even look at me as he confirmed the news: the pregnancy was over. My husband, Keyon, didn't answer my call. He just sent an automated text: "In a meeting." When I returned to our cold mansion, I found his iPad glowing with a message from his "muse," Katina. He was throwing her a secret gala tonight-on our third wedding anniversary. He told her he couldn't wait to escape the "boring" and "draining" atmosphere I created at home. Keyon didn't stumble in until 3 AM, smelling of Katina's perfume with a smear of red on his collar. When I handed him the divorce papers, he laughed in my face. He called me a "glorified housekeeper" with no skills and no future, promising I'd be back in three days begging for a subway ticket. He even bet his friends ten thousand dollars that I wouldn't survive a week without his name. He had his assistant cancel my credit cards and block my gate access before I even reached the end of the driveway. He wanted me to starve. He wanted me to crawl. He sat in his office, mocking the "desperate" woman who pawned her three-million-dollar wedding ring for scrap metal just to pay for a meal. I stood on the rainy curb, watching the man I had protected for three years treat my life like trash. He didn't know about the ultrasound I just threw in the bin. He didn't know that while he was calling me "dull," I was the one secretly writing the code that kept his billion-dollar empire from collapsing. As I slid into a cheap Uber, I opened a hidden, encrypted app on my phone. The screen refreshed to a dashboard for an account Keyon didn't know existed. The balance was ten figures long-the accumulated wealth of "Solaris," the world's most elusive tech genius. Keyon thinks he just evicted a parasite, but he's about to find out he just declared war on the only person who can hit "delete" on his entire life.

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

Xiao Xiaosu
4.5

I went to the City Clerk’s office for a routine copy of my marriage license to finalize a trust fund audit. I expected a simple piece of paper, but the clerk’s pitying look told me my entire life was a lie. "The license was never finalized, Ms. Oliver. In the eyes of the state, you are single." The three-hundred-guest wedding at the Plaza and the Vogue features meant nothing. My husband, Gray Cooley, had intentionally filed the documents with a "procedural defect" so he could discard me without a legal divorce. Moments later, an iCloud invite titled "Our Little Secret" popped up on my screen. It was a photo of my best friend, Brylee, holding a positive pregnancy test at our Hamptons estate. Gray’s text to her was the final blow: "Happy anniversary, babe. This baby is the best gift. Once the trust unlocks today, we’re done with the charade." I soon discovered they were even stealing my career, reassigning my architectural masterpiece to Brylee while preparing my eviction notice. Gray's mother called me a "barren mule" in a leaked recording, mocking the infertility I suffered after saving Gray’s life in a construction accident. I wasn't a wife; I was a three-year placeholder used to secure his inheritance. How could the man I bled for treat me like a disposable prop? How could my best friend carry his child while pretending to comfort me through my darkest moments? The betrayal burned until it turned into a cold, hard stone of fury. I didn't cry. Instead, I walked into the penthouse of the Barretts, the Cooleys' most powerful rivals. I signed a marriage contract with Kane Barrett, the man the tabloids called the "Beast of Wall Street." "I want a wedding," I told his father, my voice steady and lethal. "Bigger than the one I had with Gray." If they wanted me gone, they would have to watch me become the woman who owns their world.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
The Photographer's Deceptive Lens The Photographer's Deceptive Lens Leanora Tanouye Modern
“My husband, Austen, was the handsome, stable anchor in my life as a fashion influencer. His one flaw? He was hilariously bad with a camera. Or so I thought, until a viral photo exposed him as Chiaroscuro, a legendary photographer who vanished years ago for his muse, Isolde. On our anniversary, while I was secretly pregnant, he abandoned me to save her comeback show. He called not to check on me, but to demand I ship him my $15,000 camera-a gift from him-for her use. "It's wasted on your little influencer shoots anyway," he said, his voice flat. His words hit me as I sat alone in a clinic, having just lost our baby. He hung up. The dial tone buzzed in the silent room. I wasn't just a placeholder; I was a tool. I looked down at my phone, where the number for my lawyer was already saved, and pressed call.”
1

Chapter 1

19/12/2025

2

Chapter 2

19/12/2025

3

Chapter 3

19/12/2025

4

Chapter 4

19/12/2025

5

Chapter 5

19/12/2025

6

Chapter 6

19/12/2025

7

Chapter 7

19/12/2025

8

Chapter 8

19/12/2025

9

Chapter 9

19/12/2025

10

Chapter 10

19/12/2025