Home / Romance / He Never Claimed Me / Chapter 4: It Felt Like Home

Share

Chapter 4: It Felt Like Home

Author: Veeaura
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-05-20 02:52:15

Her two brothers, Leo and Marcus, were already arguing in the living room, their voices overlapping in the same chaotic rhythm they’d had since they were boys. Across the room, her younger sister, Maya, sat curled into the corner of the couch, eyes fixed on her phone, completely disconnected from everything around her.

In this house, Ava had learned early on that you either had to be loud to be heard, or become someone people couldn’t ignore. She chose the second. She became perfect. Quiet. Successful. Untouchable.

Or at least, that’s what she told herself.

“Ava, pass the salt,” Leo said, not even looking up from his plate.

She passed it without a word, watching him. Her brothers took up space easily, like it was their right. They reminded her of their father men who moved through life without adjusting for anyone else, leaving the women behind to deal with what they broke.

“I heard the parlor is doing well,” Maya said, finally looking up. There was something in her tone something sharp. “Must be nice being the successful one. Mom talks about it all the time when you’re not here.”

“It’s just work,” Ava said quietly.

“Everything is work with you,” her mother added from the head of the table. “You push yourself too much. A woman shouldn’t have to carry that much on her own.”

Ava felt it hit, even though she didn’t react.

Her whole life had turned into performance. Every choice, every achievement, all of it built around one quiet need to be seen, to be enough.

But here, sitting at the table with her own family, she felt invisible.

Her brothers didn’t know her dreams.

Her mother didn’t know her heart.

They only knew the version of her that held everything together.

Her phone vibrated against her thigh.

She knew she shouldn’t check it.

She really shouldn’t.

Still, the urge pulled at her.

Noah was the only person who ever looked at her like she mattered. Really mattered. When his attention was on her, everything else disappeared the noise, the expectations, the constant pressure to be more.

With him, she wasn’t competing.

She wasn’t proving anything.

She just… was.

Even if it only lasted an hour.

“I have to go,” Ava said suddenly, pushing her chair back.

“Dinner isn’t over,” her mother said sharply.

“I have something to finish,” Ava replied, already reaching for her bag.

No one stopped her.

Her brothers kept eating.

Her sister looked back at her phone.

It was like she had never been there.

And that’s when it hit her.

Noah’s distance didn’t feel new.

It felt familiar.

It felt like home.

That realization settled deep in her chest, heavier than anything her mother had said.

She walked out without another word, the night air hitting her as soon as she stepped outside. For a moment, she stood still, letting the silence wrap around her.

She could go home.

She could stay away.

She could choose herself.

But instead, she got into her car.

And drove toward him.

The road ahead stretched out in a blur of streetlights and passing cars, but Ava barely registered any of it.

Her grip tightened on the steering wheel.

She knew exactly what she was doing.

And she knew it wasn’t right.

Her mother’s voice echoed faintly in her mind, mixing with Tessa’s, both of them saying the same thing in different ways. That she deserved better. That she was settling for something that would never be enough.

But knowing didn’t make it easier to stop.

If anything, it made it worse.

Because this wasn’t just about Noah.

It was about the way he made everything else disappear.

The expectations. The pressure. The constant feeling that she had to prove something just to be loved.

With him, there were no rules.

No demands.

Just moments.

Short, intense, fleeting moments that felt real enough to hold onto.

Ava exhaled slowly, her chest rising and falling as she slowed at a red light.

She could turn around.

She could go home, wash her face, and pretend none of this mattered.

She could choose herself.

The light turned green.

And she didn’t stop.

Patuloy na basahin ang aklat na ito nang libre
I-scan ang code upang i-download ang App

Pinakabagong kabanata

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 94: Among the Guests

    For several long seconds, no one spoke. The ballroom remained frozen, every pair of eyes fixed on Noah as he descended the staircase with the black envelope still clutched in his hand. The silence was so complete that the faint crackle of the emergency lights sounded deafening. Noah reached the marble floor without taking his eyes off the grand entrance. Empty. The doors were closed. There was no man in a black tuxedo. No smiling stranger. Only a restless crowd shifting uneasily beneath the chandeliers. Daniel hurried toward him. “Sir?” Noah slowly looked around the ballroom. Every face blurred together—politicians, investors, family friends, journalists, security personnel. Somewhere among them… He was here. “I want every exit sealed,” Noah said quietly. Daniel nodded. “Already done.” “No one leaves.” The order spread through Noah’s security team within seconds. Guards moved toward every entrance, their discreet movements drawing nervous glances from the guests. Murmu

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 93: The Wedding Gift

    No one dared move. The white lily swayed gently beneath the massive crystal chandelier, its petals glowing in the emergency lights. Tied to its stem, the black envelope hung motionless, drawing every eye in the ballroom. The stranger’s voice was gone. Only silence remained. Noah took a slow step forward. “Nobody touches it,” he ordered. His command cut through the panic. The guards immediately raised their hands, stopping guests who had tried to bolt for the exits. Daniel moved to Noah’s side. “Bomb squad?” Noah never looked away from the chandelier. “No.” “You don’t think it’s explosive?” “I think that’s exactly what he wants us to believe.” Noah knew the hunter’s game. Every message and every lily had been a lure, designed to force a mistake. This was no different. Noah handed his jacket to Daniel. “I’m going up.” Daniel’s eyes widened. “Sir, absolutely not.” “If there’s a trap, I won’t send another man into it.” Noah walked toward the grand staircase leading t

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 92: When the Lights Went Out

    Darkness swallowed the ballroom. The music died, leaving a silence so complete that even the guests seemed afraid to breathe. Then the screaming began. Crystal shattered on the marble floor. Chairs scraped back as guests stumbled in the dark, their composure dissolving into chaos. “Stay where you are!” a guard shouted. Noah was already moving. “Ava!” His voice cut through the darkness. He ignored the board members and the investors. He only cared about finding her. Emergency lights flickered, bathing the room in a dim, sinister red glow. Guests looked like ghosts beneath the crimson light. Daniel pressed his earpiece. “Report!” Only static answered. “The network is down,” a guard yelled. “Cameras are offline!” Noah scanned the room. “Ava!” “I’m here.” Noah followed the sound of her voice through the confusion, weaving between overturned chairs and frightened guests. When he finally reached her, relief struck him so hard it almost weakened his knees. He caught b

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 91: The Guests Arrive

    By late afternoon, the estate no longer resembled a family home; it had been transformed into a gilded fortress. Luxury cars rolled through the gates one after another, their polished exteriors reflecting the golden light of the setting sun. Men in tailored suits and women draped in designer gowns stepped onto the red-carpeted entrance, welcomed by attendants who greeted them with practiced, vacant smiles. The cameras never stopped flashing. From the second-floor window, Ava watched every arrival in silence. She had never seen so much wealth gathered in one place, yet she had never felt more like an intruder. A soft knock broke the silence. “Come in.” It was Isabella. She stepped inside wearing a floor-length champagne gown that seemed to weigh her down. Her makeup was flawless and her hair was perfectly styled, yet the expression in her eyes carried none of the excitement expected from a bride-to-be. For several seconds, neither woman spoke. Finally, Isabella broke the silence.

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 90: The Eve of War

    The estate woke before sunrise. By eight o’clock, decorators had begun transforming the grand ballroom. Fresh lilies—the same white flowers that had haunted Ava for weeks—lined the grand staircase. Crystal chandeliers were polished until they reflected every ray of light, and staff hurried through the halls carrying trays, heavy floral arrangements, and expensive table settings. To anyone passing through the estate, it looked like a dream celebration. To Ava, it looked like a funeral for the life she thought she and Noah were building. She stood on the balcony overlooking the ballroom, watching strangers prepare for an engagement she refused to believe in. “They work fast,” she murmured. “They’ve been planning this for months.” Ava turned. Lydia stood behind her, wearing an elegant ivory suit. Her posture was as flawless and cold as a marble statue. “I wondered when you’d show your face,” Ava said. “I imagine you have many questions.” “I only have one.” Lydia waited,

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 89: The Guest List

    The invitations spread across the city faster than Noah had expected. By midday, every major business publication had confirmed the engagement celebration. Television anchors discussed the union as if it had already happened, calling it the merger of two powerful families and a defining moment for the future of the Volkov empire. At the estate, Ava switched off another television before another commentator could finish congratulating Noah and Isabella. The silence that followed was almost unbearable. Her phone vibrated for what felt like the hundredth time that morning. She ignored another unknown number before a familiar name appeared on the screen. Tessa. She answered after a long hesitation. “Ava?” “I’m here.” “What is going on?” Tessa asked. “I’ve been seeing your boyfriend’s face on every news channel. They’re saying he’s getting engaged.” Ava closed her eyes. “I know.” “You know?” Tessa sounded stunned. “Tell me they’re lying.” Ava didn’t answer. The si

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 18: Almost Seen

    The morning at the Volkov estate was brisk and entirely devoid of warmth. Noah stood before the dark mahogany wardrobe in his private quarters, adjusting the knot of his silk tie with mechanical precision. The corporate armor was back in place. Every piece of clothing was a calculation—a shield d

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 16: A Seat at Their Table

    The wrought-iron gates of the Volkov estate parted with a slow, mechanical hiss less like an entrance and more like the opening of a high-security vault. Noah guided his car up the winding, flawlessly manicured driveway, where towering oaks cast long, geometric shadows across the stone path. Ever

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 12: The Weight She Carries

    The golden morning sun poured through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse, dissolving the quiet protection of the night before. Ava opened her eyes to an empty bed. The silk sheets beside her were cold, the faint scent of cedar and rain the only trace that Noah had been there at all.

  • He Never Claimed Me   Chapter 9: It Matters

    Ava stared at the blinking cursor for a long moment. The steady beep of Leo’s monitor filled the silence around her. She had never ignored one of Noah’s messages before. Her thumb hovered, then moved. Ava: I can’t make it to Marcello’s tonight. I’m at the county hospital. No explanation.

Higit pang Kabanata
Galugarin at basahin ang magagandang nobela
Libreng basahin ang magagandang nobela sa GoodNovel app. I-download ang mga librong gusto mo at basahin kahit saan at anumang oras.
Libreng basahin ang mga aklat sa app
I-scan ang code para mabasa sa App
DMCA.com Protection Status