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Ch: 6 The Morning After She Left .

Author: Quill-Shadow
last update publish date: 2026-06-30 18:13:07

Nerissa's POV

The private airfield was cold and quiet at that hour, wrapped in a thin gray mist that clung to the tarmac and muffled the sound of the idling engines. I stood at the top of the boarding steps with my coat pulled tight around my shoulders, not because I was cold, but because some part of me still needed to hold myself together by force.

I didn't look back at the city skyline.

There was nothing behind me worth mourning anymore, or at least that was what I was determined to believe as I ducked my head and stepped into the cabin of the Vane family's private jet.

"Miss Vane," said the head flight attendant, a composed woman named Celeste who had known my family for years. She didn't call me Mrs. Blackwood. She never had. She pressed her hand briefly to mine as I passed, and the small, quiet acknowledgment of who I really was made something crack open in my chest that I quickly sealed shut again.

"How long is the flight?" I asked, settling into the wide leather seat nearest the window.

"Eight hours and forty minutes to Geneva, Miss Vane. Your grandfather's physician will be waiting at the estate when you arrive."

I nodded and turned to face the oval window, watching the ground crew finish their checks below while my mind drifted back to the mansion I had just left. I kept seeing Lysander's study in the dim early morning light, the leather chair, the polished mahogany desk, and the way the ultrasound photo looked sitting on top of the divorce papers. Cold. Final. Like a punctuation mark on five years of silence.

I pressed my fingers to my lips and breathed slowly through my nose until the pressure behind my eyes faded.

"You made the right call," I told myself, but the words felt hollow against the hum of the engines as the jet began to taxi down the runway.

I had made a hundred right calls in five years. I had swallowed a hundred humiliations with my head high and my spine straight. I had signed off on bailouts and shielded his ego and taken his pills and smiled at his charity galas while Seraphina stood in corners watching me like I was a staff member who had wandered into the wrong party. Every single one of those decisions had been the right call, and not one of them had made Lysander Blackwood look at me like I was worth the air I breathed.

So yes. I had made the right call.

I just wished the right call didn't feel so much like grief.

The jet lifted off the tarmac and the city fell away beneath me, the lights dissolving into the pre-dawn haze until there was nothing left but open sky. I exhaled slowly and reached into my handbag, pulling out the small ultrasound photo I had kept back from the desk.

I had left one copy on top of the ring for Lysander to find.

This one was mine.

I looked at the tiny grainy shape for a long moment, the fragile curve of a life that had somehow survived a yacht explosion, a bleeding cold deck, and a husband who hadn't bothered to check if I was still breathing. My free hand drifted to my stomach without thinking, and I pressed my palm flat against the fabric of my dress.

"We're going home," I whispered, and I meant it for both of us.

I slept for the first four hours of the flight without dreaming, which was the deepest sleep I had managed in weeks. When I woke, Celeste had left a light breakfast on the tray beside me and the cabin was quiet except for the low murmur of the co-pilot's voice from the cockpit. I ate slowly, watching the pale Alps emerge through the clouds below, their peaks draped in early snow.

Geneva looked the same as it always had from the air. Precise. Polished. Impossibly calm. The Vane family had maintained a principal estate on the northern shore of the lake for three generations, and as the car wound up the familiar stone driveway through a corridor of old pine trees, I felt the city version of myself begin to unpeel like old paint.

By the time I stepped out of the car and smelled the cold lake air and the faint wood-smoke from the chimneys, I was no longer Nerissa Blackwood.

I was just Nerissa Vane. And she was furious and exhausted and desperately relieved to be home.

"Miss Nerissa." Henri, the estate's head of staff, was waiting at the entrance with an umbrella he didn't need because the morning was dry. It was simply what he did. He had held an umbrella at the door every morning of my childhood, rain or shine, as if he personally intended to shield me from any weather the world might attempt.

"Henri," I said, and my voice cracked slightly on the single syllable.

He didn't comment on it. He simply stepped aside and gestured me in, and I walked through the carved oak doors of my family home for the first time in five years.

The interior smelled of old books and beeswax polish and the faint trace of my grandfather's pipe tobacco, even though he hadn't smoked in a decade. I stopped in the center of the entrance hall and looked up at the soaring ceiling, the familiar oil portraits lining the staircase wall, the heavy brass chandelier my great-grandmother had brought over from Lyon. Everything was exactly as I had left it.

I had expected to feel relief.

Instead I felt the strange dislocation of someone who had been gone so long that they no longer quite fit the shape of the place they came from.

"Your grandfather is resting, but he is awake and asking for you," Henri said carefully. "The physician has asked that you keep the visit brief for today."

"Of course." I straightened my coat and followed him up the stairs.

My grandfather, Edouard Vane, was sitting upright in the center of an enormous bed when I pushed the door open, his silver hair combed back neatly and his reading glasses perched on the end of his nose. He looked smaller than I remembered. Sharper in the angles, the way old men sometimes became when illness trimmed the softness away. But his eyes, when they found mine across the room, were exactly the same as they had always been. Dark, direct, and absolutely undeceived.

"You look terrible," he said by way of greeting.

"Good morning to you too, Grandfather."

"Sit down before you fall down." He waved one thin hand at the chair beside the bed. "And stop trying to look composed. I've known you since before you had teeth, Nerissa. I know what your composed face looks like and that is not it."

I sat down and folded my hands in my lap and looked at the man who had spent forty years building the Vane empire into one of the most quietly powerful forces in global finance, and I felt the last five years press against the backs of my eyes all at once.

"I left him," I said.

"I know." He reached over and patted my hand once, twice, the way he used to when I was small and frightened of thunderstorms.

"I also withdrew the Blackwood overseas expansion contracts. All of them."

"Also expected." He studied me for a moment. "And the child?"

I met his gaze steadily. "Mine."

He was quiet for a long moment, and then he nodded, slowly and once, with the particular gravity of a man agreeing to something that would cost him considerably. "Then we will need to move quickly. If the Blackwood boy discovers your identity before we've restructured the Vane Holdings board, he will use the child as leverage before you've had time to establish your position."

"I know."

"You'll need to take the acting CEO seat formally, not provisionally. The board will resist. Fouchard and Lemont in particular have been circling since my illness was announced."

"I know that too." I leaned forward slightly. "Grandfather. I didn't come home to hide. I came home to rebuild."

He looked at me for a long moment, and then the corner of his mouth lifted. It wasn't quite a smile. It was something older and quieter than a smile. It was the expression of a man recognizing his own blood doing exactly what they were bred to do.

"Good," he said simply.

I left his room twenty minutes later and walked down the long corridor toward the east wing, where my old suite had been kept in perfect readiness as if time had simply agreed to wait for me. I pushed the door open, kicked off my shoes, and sat on the edge of the bed.

I reached for my phone and stared at the screen.

Eleven missed calls from Lysander Blackwood.

I turned the phone face-down on the duvet and lay back against the pillows, staring up at the ceiling with my arm across my forehead. The missed calls meant he had found the desk. He had found the ring and the papers and the ultrasound, and he was calling the way a man called when he had finally realized the house was on fire and couldn't find the door.

Good, I thought, without any satisfaction at all.

Let him call. Let him search every room and find nothing but the echo of five years he spent making me feel invisible. Let him sit in that empty mansion and understand, just for one night, what it felt like to reach for someone and find only silence.

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