LOGINI blinked innocently at him. "Mr. Armstrong. Surprised seeing you here."
"You're surprised? You aren't even supposed to be here," he growled. "I'd have thought you'd have moved on after divorcing me and disappearing for five years. But no. You came back and found a way to get close to me, as you did before." I just smiled at that. I was almost certain I was starting to look crazy by then. I had to admit, I was expecting him to confront me, but I hadn't expected it so soon, and definitely not on a table that was slowly getting occupied by most of the richest men and women in Chicago. I expected more... class. But I guess not. I smoothed a hand over my dress and sat straighter. "I don't eat leftovers, Mr. Armstrong." Not anymore, at least. "Correct me if I'm wrong, but," I tilted my head, "I believe I passed your seat on my way here. You came all the way here just to talk to me." His jaw clenched, and his expression grew more furious. Behind him, I noticed a powerful-looking man approaching the table with his beautiful wife by his side. Dean opened his mouth to speak, but I was quicker. "Save yourself the embarrassment and find your place before Mr. Gilbert and his wife get here." I didn't know why I even bothered, because of course, he didn't listen to me. How could he? He scoffed. "So now you think you suddenly belong because you found a way to sneak in here? You're a nobody, Joan. You're—" "I believe I see my name on the seat," a voice interrupted. I watched with sheer satisfaction the way his mouth hung open before he turned back. "O—oh, Mr. Gilbert. I—I," he stood quickly, "I'm sorry. I just came to say hello to an old friend." Gilbert's eyes flicked to me. I smiled and waved a little. We knew each other from a few times I'd accompanied Victor on one of his not-so-famous old man self-maintenance dates at the elderly gentlemen's club. He barely even looked at my pathetic ex-husband before pulling out a chair for his wife. "Know your place." "Of course," Dean muttered. And I could've sworn I saw him curtsey a little before walking off to his seat down the table. Once he was gone, I let my shoulders fall. I knew that was going to be the last I saw of him, but I was taking as much relief as I could get per time. "You did good," Brandon whispered in my ear. I let out a quiet gasp. I'd forgotten he was next to me. My face flushed when I looked over at him. "I was nervous." "Doesn't change the fact that you did well. Acknowledge it." I swallowed, but didn't say anything. It was almost scary to me how nervous he made me feel. I hadn't felt so nervous around a man in years, and the last time I felt that way, I ended up with a man who made me feel worthless in every possible way. Inside me, I made a plan to avoid unnecessary future meetings with him after this. The early parts of the ball went in a blur, without any more disturbances from my ex-husband. I was sure he was sure he was itching to find a way to embarrass me, but too bad for him because I wasn't that woman anymore. I sat quietly in my seat, barely saying anything except when a question was directed at me. I preferred to listen, to observe and take notes. Seated around us were some of the most powerful businessmen in the state, and this was my first interaction with them. I needed to learn as much as I could because as soon as I was introduced—which was happening in a short time—I was no longer going to be seen as Dean's ex-wife and Brandon's date. They were going to see me as an equal... a partner, but to some, a competition, and they were going to let their guards up. This was my chance to catch each of their slip-ups and determine their characters from a good vantage point. I felt a familiar, uncomfortable pang in my abdomen, and a wave of annoyance hit me. Of all days for my period to arrive, it just had to be today. I stood to go use the bathroom when a hand grabbed my wrist softly. I looked down to see Brandon staring with questions in his eyes. "I have to use the restroom," I told him. He let go as he glanced behind me. "Do you need me to come with you?" I almost chuckled at the question. "I'll be fine." He nodded and then turned back to the table, excusing me. I exited the ballroom toward one of the corridors by the side. The women's room was just a few steps to my right, and I went in to check myself. Thankfully, it wasn't what I thought it was, but I was sure it was coming any day soon. As I washed my hands under the tap, the door opened, and someone walked in. I turned, and when my eyes made contact with hers, I froze, recognition hitting me instantly. She didn't recognize me immediately, though. I noticed the moment she did. "Jo... Joan?" She did a double-take. "Is that really you?" I shrugged without saying anything, keeping my hands under the dryer. I felt it when she stepped closer. "You look... You look different." I cracked a small smile at that, then turned to her. Something about her blue dress caught my attention, and my smile froze—it wasn't the fact that I recognized it as mine, but that the stomach area was... protruding. She was pregnant. I'd done occasional checks on them, but I never knew she was pregnant. How had I missed that? I masked my surprise. "So do you. Congratulations on the baby." Her face glowed with the praise. "Thank you. Dean and I had been trying for years. He was really desperate for a child, and I'm so glad I could give him one." My mind instantly pictured what was going to happen if he ever found out I had a child for him, but I shook the thoughts aside. He was never going to find out. "Congrats, again." I forced a smile and made my way to the door. But as I passed by her, she grabbed my arm. "Joan, wait." I stopped, my eyes trained on the door. "There's no bad blood between us... right?" That made me look back at her. Her smile faltered. "I mean, Dean left you for me, and I know you took it quite badly. I promise I wasn't trying to ruin your marriage when I started working for him. We just fell in love and..." "It's fine," I cut her off stiffly. "You aren't the first secretary Dean's been with. I can't blame you for his..." My eyes darted around her face. She looked very similar to how I looked when I was still married to him. It was well hidden behind all the makeup, but I could identify the misery from a mile away. I hoped, for her baby's sake, that she found the courage to leave before he decided he was done with her. My lips tilted, "...kink." Something in her expression shifted, and it didn't take much to tell she understood what I meant. I was once her, after all. She let go of my arm, chuckling. "Well, at least that's settled. Enjoy the ball, Joan." I turned and walked out without a glance back at her. Physically, I put on an act like I hadn't cared, but deep down, I was unnerved by how much I didn't know. Something had changed in the lives I was back to ruin, and I had to find out what.JoanBy the time the workday ended, my head felt like it had been stuffed with cotton.The last few weeks had been a constant cycle of meetings, lawyers, evidence, court documents, company matters, and enough stress to last several lifetimes. Even now, with the shares officially transferred and the second hearing approaching, I couldn’t bring myself to relax.Every time I thought I was finally getting somewhere, something else happened.Another document.Another phone call.Another decision.Another reminder that my life had become one long battle.I was reviewing a report for what felt like the hundredth time when my office door opened.Rachel stepped inside.For once, she was smiling.A genuine smile.Not the strained one she used whenever lawyers or Dean showed up.A real one.“You have visitors.”I frowned.“Who?”Her smile widened.“See for yourself.”Before I could ask what she meant, she stepped aside.And suddenly my entire world stopped.“Mommy!”The chair nearly tipped over
DeanIf somebody had told me six months ago that I would one day sit in Joan Lancaster’s office while she discussed my future employment with the same casual authority I’d once used on her, I would’ve laughed in their face.Not a polite laugh.A genuine one.The kind reserved for ridiculous things.Yet there I was.Sitting across from the woman I’d spent years underestimating.Listening to her discuss Human Resources.Human Resources.The words continued echoing inside my head long after she stopped speaking.I wasn’t sure which part insulted me more.The fact that she expected me to work for her.Or the fact that she’d delivered the suggestion with such effortless confidence.As though she’d already accepted that I’d agree.As though she knew I had no other choice.The worst part was that she was right.I hated that.God, I hated it.Every instinct I possessed wanted to tell her exactly what she could do with her job offer.I wanted to stand.Walk out.Remind her who I was.Remind he
For a moment after I told him yes, neither of us spoke.The silence felt different now.Less hostile.Not friendly.Never that.Just exhausted.Like we’d both reached the point where there wasn’t enough energy left for another war.Dean remained seated across from me, staring at the folder that now officially belonged to me.Or would belong to me once the transfer was finalized.The realization still felt surreal.Years ago, if someone had told me I’d one day own a controlling interest in Dean Armstrong’s company, I would’ve laughed in their face.Back then, Dean had seemed untouchable.Larger than life.A man who always got what he wanted.A man who always won.Funny how life worked.Sometimes the very thing you used to control people became the thing that destroyed you.Dean eventually shifted in his chair.The movement pulled me from my thoughts.His eyes met mine.For the first time since he’d entered my office, I noticed something almost hopeful in his expression.It lasted barel
JoanBefore I even saw him, I knew something was wrong.Not wrong in the way things had been wrong lately.Not another scandal.Not another anonymous article.Not another legal notice.Something different.Rachel had called my office ten minutes earlier to tell me Dean Armstrong was downstairs again.Her voice had carried the same nervous hesitation it always did whenever he appeared in the building.The difference was that this time she sounded confused too.“He said he has documents for you.”Documents.The word had immediately made me suspicious.Dean wasn’t a man who handed over anything willingly.Certainly not after yesterday.Certainly not after storming out of my office looking ready to kill someone.And definitely not after I’d asked for the remaining shares in his company.I spent the next ten minutes trying to figure out what game he was playing.By the time Rachel escorted him upstairs, I’d convinced myself there was some sort of catch.A loophole.A trap.A condition hidd
DeanI didn’t remember leaving Joan’s office.One moment I was sitting across from her, listening to her calmly ask for the remaining shares in my company as though she were discussing the weather.The next, I was in an elevator.Then a parking garage.Then my car.The details in between were a blur of anger.Pure, unfiltered anger.The kind that made your hands shake.The kind that made every thought feel sharp enough to draw blood.I gripped the steering wheel and stared through the windshield.My pulse hammered against my ribs.My jaw hurt from how hard I was clenching it.She wanted my company.After everything she’d already taken.After the investors.After the contracts.After the employees.After the investigations.After the articles.After the money.She wanted more.The thought repeated itself over and over as I drove.Like a song stuck in my head.An irritating one.I replayed the conversation countless times.Her expression.Her voice.The way she’d looked at me.Calm.Col
For a long moment after Dean said please, nobody spoke.The silence settled over the room like a heavy blanket.I could hear the distant ringing of phones outside my office. The faint sound of employees moving through the hallway. The hum of the city beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows.Inside my office, though, it felt as though the world had stopped.Dean was still kneeling.Kai was still staring.And I was suddenly very aware of how hungry my son looked.The realization came out of nowhere.One second I was looking at Dean.The next, I was noticing how much thinner Kai’s wrists appeared.How his cheeks weren’t quite as round as they used to be.How there were faint shadows beneath his eyes.Not enough to concern a doctor.More than enough to concern his mother.My throat tightened.I looked away before either of them could notice.Then reached for the phone on my desk.Dean’s eyes followed the movement immediately.Hope flickered across his face.The sight almost made me laugh.He
I hadn't slept properly in days.At first, I thought it was because of the hearing. Then I thought maybe it was because Kai and I were still trying to settle into the new apartment, because the unfamiliar silence at night felt wrong after spending so long in Brandon's house, where there was always
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







