LOGIN~~Brandon~~
I never attended events with partners. That rule was there for a reason, and has never been bent. Not for convenience, not for appearances, not for pressure. It kept expectations low and helped me avoid the whole female drama. You take one to an important gathering, and suddenly, you guys become inevitable. I would've known, I'd learned the hard—and uncomfortable—way. Plus, people speculated less when you gave them nothing to work with. Which was why I knew something was wrong the moment my grandfather summoned me privately. Victor poured two glasses of whiskey and handed me one. “You’ll escort her tomorrow,” he said as soon as I met him in his home office. He'd sprung up the information on me minutes ago, and he expected me to be fine with it so easily. Meanwhile, he knew my golden rule. Luckily, I knew how to let only the emotions I wanted to show on my face. As much as it annoyed me, it wasn't Joan's fault my grandad felt entitled enough to think he could control my actions. I didn’t take the glass. “No.” Victor didn’t react. “She’s capable of attending alone,” I continued evenly. “And she doesn’t need my presence to be taken seriously.” Victor finally looked at me then. “She does.” I exhaled through my mouth. “I don't want to be entangled in family drama.” Victor had told me enough of her backstory over the years, and I knew enough about her before we even met, though the information dump had served me no purpose. Victor snorted. "Your whole family is drama, boy." That was true. It was a good thing I followed Victor's step and stayed as far away from family as I could. He nodded at the glass. "It's rude to refuse a drink." “I’ve never brought anyone to the annual ball,” I said, taking the glass from the table, even though I wasn't planning to drink it. “You know that.” “Yes,” Victor replied calmly. “Which is why your attendance with her will be noticed.” It took a moment of silence, but it finally clicked, why he kept telling me things about her which I hadn't needed to know. I finally understood why he was insistent. I didn't know why it took me so long. I set the glass down untouched. “You’re forcing this. You want us together, don't you?” Victor met my gaze, unflinching. “Yes. Guiding, not forcing. I'm guiding it.” I almost smiled. Almost. My grandfather was a cunning, cunning old man. “Put it however you like,” I said. “This is coercion.” Victor's eyes gleamed in delight. “Do you remember the Zurich acquisition?” I stiffened. “You were outmaneuvered,” he continued. “Not because you lacked foresight, but because you underestimated desperation.” I didn’t respond. “I intervened.” My jaw tightened. “You promised that would never be leverage.” “And it wouldn’t be,” he said simply. “If you weren’t being deliberately obtuse.” There it was. Blackmail dressed as mentorship. Sometimes I wondered how he was with his business partners—enemies, in fact, if it was this bad with his own blood. “But that's beside the point,” Victor added, waving a hand aside. “Yes, I expect you to walk in with her, and I expect it to be the talk of the event. And yes—eventually—I expect marriage.” The word landed heavily between us. “I won’t marry on command, grandfather,” I said flatly. If I were a girl, I'd have rolled my eyes at him. I was seriously fighting the urge to. Victor nodded once. “You won’t.” That surprised me. “She will choose when she is ready.” He shrugged. I frowned. “And if she never is?” Victor’s mouth curved faintly. “She will be.” “She doesn’t know this,” I pointed out. "You're busy making plans for her future, and she doesn't know." “She knows enough, don't you think?" I looked away, irritation simmering beneath my control. I didn't like this. Not one bit. “You’re using her.” Victor’s gaze sharpened. “No. I’m protecting her.” I scoffed quietly. “By arranging her future?” “By ensuring she never needs to be at people's mercy again,” he corrected. Then, he sighed and walked to the only window in the room. It was large, running from one end of the wall to the other. "I'm an old man, son. I need great grandkids before I die." My eyebrows rose. Was this man being serious? "You have great grandkids." "Your siblings don't even remember I exist. You're basically the only grandson I have. Do you know how lonely I'd have been if you didn't care enough to call me once a week?" It was out of obligation, but I didn't point that out, choosing to stay silent. I knew that saying anything would make him believe the emotional blackmail was working. He was going to blackmail me with anything he could until he got me to budge. Silence stretched as we stared at each other, waiting for the other to yield. Finally, I sighed and broke eye contact. I had a long day, and arguing with Victor was the last thing I needed. I picked up the glass and took a measured sip. “I will escort her,” I mumbled. “But this ends there.” Victor smiled. “For now.”~~~
~~Joan~~
The car slowed as the venue came into view. Crystal lights spilled from the building, illuminating the long stretch of red carpet already buzzing with cameras and murmurs. Even from inside the car, I could feel the weight of eyes waiting to judge... though they technically didn't know who I was. Yet. I adjusted my grip on the small clutch in my lap. “You don’t have to tense,” Brandon muttered calmly beside me. “They sense fear.” I huffed softly. “That’s comforting.” A corner of his mouth lifted. “It’s honest.” The car came to a stop, but for a moment, neither of us moved. “Once we step out,” he said, “there will be no retreat.” I met his gaze. “I didn’t plan to run.” He studied me silently, eyes dancing around my face like he was trying to find something. “Good.” He reached a hand out. “Take my hand.” I hesitated only briefly before placing my palm in his. The door opened, and cameras instantly flashed in our faces. I was unprepared for them as they were almost blinding. But thankfully, Brandon used his body to shield mine, blocking out the flashes. He was more used to this than I was. When I was married to Dean, I'd only gone to a handful of these events, and it was only when a spouse's attendance was necessary. “Do you need a moment?” he asked. Yes. I shook my head. “No. I'm ready.” I took a deep breath. “Let's go.” He moved out before me, then assisted me out of the car. It took a while to pass through my nerves, but every lesson Victor drilled into me slowly settled into my bones. I lifted my chin, straightened my back, and plastered a demure smile on my face. The murmur rose the longer we stood, and I heard my ex-husband's name a few times, but I eventually shut them out. I didn't care about what they had to say about me. The murmurs grew even louder when it was obvious our hands were joined together. As we moved down the carpet into the building, I kept my eyes trained forward. I didn’t seek out Dean, as the old me would've. I didn’t need to. I knew that with our appearance, there were going to be rumors. And you know what they said about rumors. They traveled fast. But I must've underestimated how fast, because almost as soon as Brandon and I were seated on the long table designated for important members and their plus ones, the chairs opposite us became occupied. When I glanced up, my ex-husband was looking at us with furious eyes. Finally, I let myself have the satisfaction of a smile. It grew even wider when he asked, "What the hell are you doing here, Joan?"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 stood outside Joan’s apartment for longer than I should have after she whispered yes.The word kept replaying in my head even after the door shut softly in front of me. It hadn’t sounded firm. It hadn’t sounded certain either. If anything, it sounded like she’d forced herself to say it because sh
~~Brandon's POV~~The silence in the house felt wrong.I realized it the second I opened my eyes.For a few disoriented moments, I lay there staring at the ceiling, waiting for the familiar sounds that had somehow become part of my routine without me noticing. Kai’s small feet pounding through the
The house felt different after Joan got upset with me.I noticed it immediately.Not because she yelled or slammed doors or made some dramatic scene out of it. Honestly, I thought I would've preferred that. At least then I'd know where I stood with her. Instead, she became quiet in a way that unset
~~Joan~~By the time we got back to the house, it was well past midnight.The entire drive from the airport had passed in near silence, and even though Brandon never once pressured me to speak, I could still feel his eyes on me every now and then, like he was trying to make sure I hadn't disappeare







