LOGINAmelia stood outside the conference room, her palm flat against the cool wood. Her heart pounded hard enough that she could hear it in her ears, and her stomach churned with familiar nausea—the same kind she used to feel before every awkward dinner party with Ryan's colleagues.
Gregory stood beside her, patient and still. His silence felt like an anchor, something steady she could hold onto while the ground shifted beneath her feet.
"You don't have to prove anything today," he said. "Just be present. Listen. That's enough for now."
Amelia laughed, short and breathless. "That's easy for you to say."
"It is." He offered a small smile. "But I'll tell you something your grandfather told me before his first board meeting. He was terrified. Could barely keep his hands from shaking."
She turned to look at him. "My grandfather was nervous?"
"He was human. Just like you."
Something in her chest loosened. Her grandfather had always seemed larger than life. Hearing that he had once stood where she stood now, feeling the same fear, made him feel real.
Gregory pushed the doors open.
The conversations inside stopped immediately.
More than twenty people sat around a long mahogany table, their expensive suits and sharp expressions filling the room with energy that pressed against Amelia's skin. Every pair of eyes turned toward her at once, and for a moment, she forgot how to breathe.
She had spent years invisible—the wife in the background, the woman people nodded at but never truly saw. Now every person in this room was looking at her like she mattered.
Gregory gestured toward the empty chair at the head of the table. The one that had once belonged to her grandfather.
Amelia forced her legs to move. Each step felt like wading through water, but she kept going until she lowered herself into the seat. The leather was soft beneath her fingers. She gripped the armrests to steady herself.
A long silence stretched across the room. Then a woman with silver hair and kind eyes smiled at her.
"We've waited a long time to meet you," she said.
Amelia opened her mouth, but the words tangled in her throat. "Thank you," she finally managed. The answer felt small, inadequate. But it was all she had.
The meeting began, and at first, Amelia braced herself for the worst—complicated financial jargon, cold corporate speak, people who would talk over her head. Instead, the executives walked her through everything. They explained the companies, the investments, the charitable foundations. They told her about the hospitals her grandfather had funded, the schools he had built, the scholarship programs that had changed thousands of lives.
She listened, and as the hours passed, something inside her shifted.
This wasn't about money. Her grandfather hadn't just been wealthy. He had been generous. He had poured his resources into communities that larger companies ignored.
Pride stirred in her chest—not the hollow kind she had once felt trying to impress Ryan's friends, but something deeper. Something real.
By the time the meeting ended, Amelia understood something she hadn't known when she walked through those doors. Her grandfather hadn't left her an empire. He had left her a responsibility. And for the first time, she wanted to carry it.
Several executives approached her afterward, shaking her hand and offering their support. No one treated her like an outsider. No one looked at her as if she didn't belong. The contrast with her marriage was so sharp it almost hurt.
For years, she had fought for scraps of attention from a man who barely noticed her. Now strangers showed her more respect in one afternoon than Ryan had shown her in three years.
The thought lingered as she walked out of the building and into the afternoon sun. Her phone buzzed in her pocket—an unknown number. She usually ignored calls like that. But something made her answer this time.
"Hello?"
Silence stretched on the other end. Then a voice she knew too well spoke her name.
"Amelia."
Her heart stopped. Ryan. He had never called her just to talk during their marriage. He certainly hadn't called her after the divorce.
"What do you want?" The words came out colder than she'd intended.
A pause. Ryan wasn't used to hearing that tone from her. "I wanted to see how you're doing," he said.
She almost laughed. The irony was sharp enough to cut. Three years of marriage, and he had never once asked that question. Now, when she was finally starting to heal, he wanted to check in?
"Why?"
The question slipped out before she could stop it.
Another silence. "I don't know," he finally admitted.
For some reason, that honesty hurt more than any lie.
Amelia looked out at the busy street, watching people rush past. "I have somewhere to be," she said.
"Amelia—"
She closed her eyes. "Goodbye, Ryan."
She ended the call.
Her hand trembled as she lowered the phone. Not because she missed him. Not because she wanted him back. But hearing his voice reminded her of everything she was trying to forget the years she had wasted, the love she had given to someone who never gave anything back.
Across the city, Ryan stared at his phone. Less than two minutes. And somehow, it felt like a complete failure.
He wasn't sure why he had called. He had ended the marriage. He had no right to call her now.
Frustration settled heavily in his chest. Everything reminded him of Amelia lately. The coffee she used to leave on his desk. The messages asking if he had eaten lunch. The quiet support he had always taken for granted.
Back then, those things had felt ordinary. Now their absence was impossible to ignore.
A knock interrupted his thoughts. His assistant walked in, carrying another file.
"We found additional information," she said.
Ryan straightened. "About Amelia?"
"Yes." She placed the file on his desk.
He opened it quickly. A photograph showed Amelia entering Whitmore Global headquarters, surrounded by senior executives. One of them was Gregory Whitmore—a man who rarely appeared in public.
Ryan stared at the image. The people around his ex-wife weren't treating her like a visitor. They were treating her like someone important. Someone they answered to.
"There's more," his assistant said. "She attended a private executive meeting this afternoon. Only top-level executives were invited."
Ryan leaned back slowly. For the first time, he felt something close to unease. Not because Amelia had money now. But because he suddenly realized how little he had known about the woman he had spent three years married to.
Meanwhile, Amelia sat near the window in Lillian's apartment, watching the city lights stretch across Manhattan. Her phone rested beside her, Ryan's call still lingering in her mind.
Lillian entered, carrying two mugs of tea. "You look serious."
Amelia accepted the cup. "Ryan called."
Lillian nearly dropped her mug. "He what?"
"I honestly don't know what he wanted."
Lillian stared at her for a long moment before shaking her head. "Men."
That single word made Amelia smile, a real smile, the first one all day.
"You know what I think?" Lillian sat beside her. "I think your life is finally starting."
Amelia looked toward the city lights again. A week ago, she would have disagreed. Her entire future had seemed tied to Ryan Kingsley.
Now she wasn't so sure.
What Amelia didn't know was that the morning would bring another surprise. One that would place her directly in Ryan's path again. And neither of them would be ready for what happened next.
Three days after Victor Hale walked out of the Whitmore Global boardroom, Ryan sat in a meeting that should have been routine. A quarterly review. Numbers on a screen. Nothing that should have made his stomach turn.But the numbers were wrong, and the longer he stared at them, the less sense they made."I need you to walk me through this again," Ryan said, pressing his palms flat against the table until his knuckles went white. "Because what you're telling me is that two contracts we spent four months negotiating just disappeared in the span of two days, and nobody in this room can tell me why."His CFO, Daniel, shifted uncomfortably in his seat. "Both clients gave vague reasons. Internal restructuring, timing concerns, nothing concrete. But the pattern doesn't match anything we've seen before. Companies don't usually walk away this close to signing unless someone gets to them first.""Get to them how?""We're still trying to figure that out. But there's chatter. Whispers about Kingsl
Amelia stared at Ryan's message for a long time. The words glowed on her screen, simple and unexpected."I know about Victor. I want to help."She should have deleted it. She should have blocked his number and moved on with her life. Instead, she found herself typing a response before she could stop herself."Why?"His reply came quickly."Because I should have been there before. And I wasn't."The honesty in those words caught her off guard. For three years, she had begged for scraps of his attention. Now he was offering something real, and she didn't know what to do with it."I don't trust you," she typed."I know."She set her phone down and stared at the wall. Lillian watched her from across the room, her expression carefully neutral."What did he say?" Lillian asked."He wants to help." Amelia let out a hollow laugh. "After everything, he wants to help.""And what did you say?""I told him I don't trust him."Lillian nodded slowly. "Good. You shouldn't. But maybe that doesn't mea
Ryan barely heard the murmurs spreading through the conference room. His mind was still processing Victor's words, still struggling to understand what he had just witnessed.Ownership challenge.Legal claim.Questions regarding Amelia's inheritance.He looked at Amelia, searching her face for any sign of weakness. He found none. Her jaw was set, her back straight, her knuckles white where she gripped the table. But her eyes—those eyes that used to look at him with so much love—were blazing with quiet fury.Victor Hale continued speaking, his voice calm and measured, as if he were discussing quarterly earnings rather than dismantling someone's legacy. "I have compiled substantial evidence suggesting irregularities in the transfer of assets following Mr. Whitmore's passing. Questions that must be addressed before any further decisions are made."Gregory stepped forward, his voice sharp. "This is absurd. The transfer was legally executed and properly documented. You know that."Victor sm
Amelia followed Lucas through the crowded ballroom, her mind still spinning from her encounter with Ryan. She could feel his gaze on her back, heavy and persistent, but she refused to turn around.Lucas led her toward a private meeting room near the back of the venue. "The board members are waiting," he said, holding the door open for her.She stepped inside and immediately knew something was wrong.Gregory stood near the table, his expression unusually serious. Several other executives sat in silence, their faces tight with tension. The air in the room felt thick, heavy with unspoken words.Amelia stopped walking. "What happened?"Gregory exchanged a glance with the others before sliding a folder across the table. "We have a problem."She looked down at the folder. Her name was printed across the front in bold letters. Slowly, she opened it and began to read.The color drained from her face.Financial transfers. Secret agreements. Missing investments. False reports. Every document po
Ryan stood near the floor-to-ceiling windows of his office, staring at the Manhattan skyline without really seeing it. The report about Amelia lay open on his desk behind him, its pages filled with information that should have been familiar but felt completely foreign.He had lived with her for three years. Three years of shared mornings and separate nights. Three years of her waiting while he worked. Three years of her trying while he ignored.And yet, he knew nothing.The photograph on his desk caught his eye again. Amelia on their wedding day, smiling at the camera with an expression that had once made him feel invincible. He had been the reason for that smile. He had also been the reason it eventually faded.A knock at the door pulled him from his thoughts. His assistant stepped inside, her expression carefully neutral."Sir, your car is ready for the corporate event."Ryan nodded and reached for his jacket. Tonight's gathering was one of the biggest of the year. CEOs, investors,
Amelia stood outside the conference room, her palm flat against the cool wood. Her heart pounded hard enough that she could hear it in her ears, and her stomach churned with familiar nausea—the same kind she used to feel before every awkward dinner party with Ryan's colleagues.Gregory stood beside her, patient and still. His silence felt like an anchor, something steady she could hold onto while the ground shifted beneath her feet."You don't have to prove anything today," he said. "Just be present. Listen. That's enough for now."Amelia laughed, short and breathless. "That's easy for you to say.""It is." He offered a small smile. "But I'll tell you something your grandfather told me before his first board meeting. He was terrified. Could barely keep his hands from shaking."She turned to look at him. "My grandfather was nervous?""He was human. Just like you."Something in her chest loosened. Her grandfather had always seemed larger than life. Hearing that he had once stood where s







