LOGIN~Four years, seven months later~
“Again!” my little boy demanded, breathless and grinning. I smiled despite myself, spreading out my arms. “One last time.” I'd just spun him around as compensation for winning him at a game of chess, and I was breathless and tired, but saying no to my baby was almost impossible. His grin widened, and he bounced excitedly in his spot. My life wasn't perfect, but in moments like these with my four-year-old son, I felt I was exactly where I needed to be. I wasn't, not even close. I hadn't even started half of the journey I spent almost five years training my mind and body for, yet. Victor stood nearby, hands clasped behind his back, watching us. His presence had never wavered over the years. When training me to be who I needed to be, he was rough. When I was sad, he was comforting. And when my son needed something like a father figure, he was there. He was everything I didn't know I needed. When I’d discovered I was pregnant—six months after the divorce, when I'd gone into labor—I hadn’t known what to feel. Shock had come first, then fear... then resolve. Victor had been my anchor through it all. I wouldn't have come this far if he hadn't been there for my son and me. I felt like I owed my whole life to him. My son rushed me again, and this time I caught him easily, lifting him into the air as he squealed with laughter. “Enough,” Victor said. “That’s good for today.” At Victor's voice, I lowered him to the ground. My son pouted. “But I didn’t win.” Victor’s lips twitched. “You will, eventually. When you're well trained, you will become unbeatable.” His eyes widened. “Will I be better than Mom?” “Sure, kiddo.” That seemed to satisfy him. In fact, it did more than satisfy him. He jumped, pumping his fist into the air. “Yes! I'll finally win Mom!" Even after a few minutes, when he was led away by his caretaker, he still kept chatting animatedly about how he was going to grow up and be better than me at chess. The funny thing was that I wasn't even good, not even fine, but he never witnessed the way Victor beat me whenever we played. “Should I be worried that my son's favorite fun activity is playing chess?” I asked, smiling. “The boy is smart, much like my grandson at that age. If he's anything like him, I bet his agemates' idea of fun would bore him.” I knew my four-year-old was smarter than most kids his age, and was willing to do anything to help him get even smarter—anything but let him beat me at a game I was barely good at. He was the only one who thought I could play well, and I wanted to keep it that way for a while. I chuckled. “I guess it would.” Victor turned, studying me the way he always did when something important was coming. “Tomorrow is the annual ball,” he said. My shoulders stiffened, and my smile felt like it was frozen in place. “I know.” “You’ll attend.” I turned to face him fully. “No.” The word came out sharper than I intended, but I didn’t take it back. “I’m not ready,” I continued instead. “I’ve stayed invisible for a reason. We’ve built everything quietly. Appearing now—” “—is exactly what you need to do,” Victor interrupted. I shook my head. “That room will be full of people who remember me as someone else. As his wife... As nothing.” I didn't mention that they were probably going think I didn't belong there, because I could already imagine Victor's reply. I knew he was going to be disappointed that the backbone he helped me grow in the past years was very brittle. It wasn't. It was just... I needed more time. Victor’s gaze was steady. “They will remember you as nothing only if you allow it. You can change their opinion. You will change their opinion.” I crossed my arms, suddenly cold. “I don’t want to be seen yet. We haven't even covered our entire plan. We—” “You won’t be alone,” he cut me off. I huffed out a humorless laugh. “I don't have a problem with being alone, Victor. I’ve been alone for four years. I can manage one more night.” Suddenly, I felt like I was going to cry, but I didn't let it happen. I hadn't cried in three years—not out of sadness, at least—and I wasn't going cry again over the last man who caused my tears. I took a deep breath. “It's just... I feel like I'm not ready.” “Ready,” he echoed. Then he took a few steps forward, toward a window. “Ready is not a feeling, Joan. If you keep waiting for when you feel so, it'll never happen. All my time and investment in you would be a waste," he glanced at me, "I don't make fruitless investments, Joan." I sighed, rubbing my arms. "I—" “Joan.” The way he said my name stopped me. “You’ve done everything right,” he went on. “You endured, you trained your mind and body. You learned how men like him think. You acquired leverage.” I didn't say anything, knowing he wasn't done. When Victor got into his lecture mode, it was best to just listen, unless it was clear he wanted you to speak. “You now own nearly twenty percent of his company without him realizing it,” Victor added calmly. “You didn't do all that just to end up crippled by fear. So, consider this a test,” he paused. I knew he was waiting for my input, no matter how little. "A test?" He smiled. "Yes. If you don't perform as I expect, then we will delay our plans until further notice." I felt a weight lift off my shoulders. "Will you be at the ball?" "No. But as I said, you won't be going alone." Before I could ask, Victor shifted, glancing toward the doorway. “Come in.” I turned just as footsteps entered the room. The man who stepped inside was tall and broad-shouldered, and his body filled out his black suit in a way that made me think he was a sportsman. He stopped a few feet away, eyes settling on me. And something in my chest stuttered. He looked… familiar. But I couldn't place where I'd seen him. Victor gestured lightly. “Joan. This is my grandson, Brandon. He will accompany you to the ball tomorrow.” He turned to Brandon. "This is Joan. You've heard enough about her from me already." My eyes flicked to him, and he was already looking at me. My cheeks flamed, and I looked away. In that short moment, I'd finally remembered where I'd seen him. Victor showed me some of his pictures, and I might've done a bit of stalking on his I*******m page, a little over two years ago. I was intrigued. Sue me. The man inclined his head slightly. “It’s a pleasure to finally meet you, Joan.” I noticed the faintest hint of an accent toward the end of his statement. British. Victor mentioned he'd stayed in Britain with his mom for a few years in his childhood. I found my voice with effort. “Likewise.” His blue eyes assessed me in a way that was too similar to Victor's. “I’ve heard a great deal about you.” I raised a brow. “Only good things, I hope.” A corner of his mouth lifted. “Only the important ones.” Victor's gaze shifted from me to his grandson. “I'd let you two get familiar, but Brandon and I have a few things to discuss." I nodded. “Of course. Don't let me stop you.” Victor just hummed lowly and then started toward the door, expecting his grandson to follow. “I believe I'll be seeing you soon, Joan,” Brandon said when Victor was gone. I smiled a little. “I believe you will.” As he turned to leave, my shoulders sagged in relief. At what? I didn't know. I did know that it had something to do with Brandon.The drive to Brandon’s house felt strangely peaceful.After Victor’s confession, none of us had really known what to say.Well, none of us except Kai.Kai had spent the next twenty minutes asking increasingly complicated questions that Victor had very clearly not wanted to answer.By the time we finally left, Victor looked like he regretted every life decision that had led him to that moment.Not that I felt particularly sorry for him.He had apparently been hiding enormous secrets from all of us.The fact that he now had to deal with an inquisitive almost five-year-old felt like a fitting punishment.“You’re smiling again.”Brandon’s voice pulled me from my thoughts.I looked over from the passenger seat.“What?”“Nothing.”The smile on his face said otherwise.“You’ve been smiling for the last ten minutes.”Heat immediately crept into my cheeks.“Maybe I’m happy.”His expression softened.“I know.”The simple answer made my heart flutter.God.I really was acting like a teenager.An
For several seconds after Victor’s confession, nobody spoke.The noise of the restaurant continued around us, but it felt distant somehow.Muted.Unimportant.Because all I could focus on were the words that had just come out of Victor’s mouth.I never had leukemia.I stared at him.Then blinked.Then stared some more.Across from me, Brandon looked equally stunned.Even Kai seemed to understand that something significant had happened.“What does that mean?” he asked.Victor sighed heavily.The sound carried the exhaustion of a man who knew he was about to have a very unpleasant conversation.“It means I wasn’t sick.”Kai frowned.“You lied?”The question was so direct that Brandon immediately covered his mouth to hide a laugh.Victor looked personally attacked.“Children are terrifying.”“That’s not an answer,” Kai informed him.I couldn’t help it.I laughed.After everything that had happened over the past few months, after all the tears and court battles and sleepless nights, the a
The walk back to the restaurant felt surreal.I couldn’t stop smiling.Every few seconds, I would remember what had just happened, and my stomach would immediately fill with butterflies all over again.It was ridiculous.Absolutely ridiculous.I was a grown woman.A mother.The CEO of a company.A woman who had survived a brutal divorce, a custody battle, and enough legal drama to fill several lifetimes.And yet somehow, walking beside Brandon with our hands intertwined made me feel exactly like a nervous teenager experiencing her first crush.The worst part was that I loved it.I loved every second of it.The feeling was so unfamiliar that it almost scared me.Dean and I had shared passion.At least I used to think we had.But this?This fluttering anticipation every time Brandon glanced at me?The warmth spreading through my chest whenever he smiled?The constant urge to grin like an idiot?I had never experienced any of that with Dean.Not once.The realization should have saddened
JoanAfter everything that had happened inside the courtroom, after weeks of fighting and crying and wondering whether I would ever get my son back, the evening felt almost unreal.I kept waiting for something to go wrong.For someone to call and tell me there had been a mistake.For another letter to arrive.For another battle to begin.But nothing happened.For once, the universe left me alone.Kai was sitting on Victor’s shoulders by the time we reached the park, happily chattering about something that had happened in one of his cartoons. Victor, to his credit, was listening as seriously as if Kai were presenting a business proposal worth millions.The sight made me smile.It wasn’t the strained smile I’d been wearing for weeks.It wasn’t the brave smile I’d forced myself to give Kai whenever I was hurting.It was real.Warm.Effortless.Victor must have noticed because he looked over at me.“You should go.”I blinked.“Go where?”He glanced toward Brandon.Then back at me.His exp
BrandonI didn’t realize how tightly I had been gripping the armrest until the judge finished speaking.The second the ruling was delivered, the tension that had been sitting in my chest for weeks finally loosened.Not completely.Just enough for me to breathe.Across the courtroom, Dean Armstrong looked like a man watching his entire world collapse around him.I should have felt satisfaction.After everything he’d put Joan through, after everything he’d done to Kai, after all the lies and manipulation, I should have enjoyed watching him lose.Instead, I found myself looking somewhere else entirely.At Joan.She hadn’t moved.She was still sitting in her chair, her eyes fixed ahead as though she hadn’t fully processed what had just happened.For a second, I wondered if she had heard the ruling at all.Then I saw her shoulders tremble.Just slightly.And I understood.The fight was finally over.At least this one.The judge was still speaking when Kai jumped out of his seat.The court
DeanThe moment the judge called for a recess, I was on my feet.I barely remembered standing.Barely remembered pushing my chair back.The only thing I knew was that I needed answers.My pulse pounded violently beneath my skin as people began filing out of the courtroom. Lawyers gathered documents. Reporters whispered among themselves. Court officials moved through the aisles.The entire room felt suffocating.Madeline.Everything came back to Madeline.The testimony.The photographs.The records.The documents.The betrayal.God, the betrayal.A week ago I would’ve sworn she was the last person who would publicly turn against me.Then again, a month ago I would’ve sworn my company was untouchable.Life had developed a habit of proving me wrong lately.My eyes immediately searched for Joan.I found her standing near her lawyer.Brandon stood beside her.Of course he did.The sight instantly irritated me.Joan looked calmer than she had any right to.Almost relaxed.As though she alre
I let out a quiet breath as I moved deeper into the boutique, my fingers trailing lightly over fabrics that felt far too delicate for everyday use. The racks were arranged with a kind of effortless precision, colors blending into each other in soft gradients that made it difficult to focus on just
By the time Kai finished eating, whatever quiet weight had lingered in the room was long gone—replaced by something lighter, something louder.Something that sounded a lot like chaos.“Ready?” I asked, pushing my chair back as I stood.He jumped down from his seat immediately, nearly tripping over
~~Brandon~~The moment Joan stepped out of the dining room, the space she left behind didn’t just empty—it shifted.I didn’t realize I was still looking at the doorway until Kai’s small voice broke through the quiet.“Uncle Brandon?”I blinked, dragging my gaze away from the hall and down to where
Sleep didn’t come.It hovered just out of reach, close enough that I could feel the pull of it, but far enough that every time I tried to sink into it, my mind dragged me back up again. Thoughts circled endlessly, refusing to settle—Victor’s silence, Brandon’s expression at the restaurant, the weig







