登入CHAPTER 7
Eliora’s POV
“The board members are ready and waiting, ma’am,”my assistant, Clara, whispered, trying to match my quick steps.
“Good,” I replied. Even though nothing was good about the meeting that was about to be held. It was a meeting about him. Kian.
The elevator chimed and opened. I stepped out, Clara following behind, her face down on the work tablet clutched tightly in her hands.
As we reached the boardroom, I swiped my sweaty palm on my blazer. If he joins, everything I’ve built could unravel. I took a deep breath while Clara pushed the door open.
I walked in, straight to my chair at the head of the table, greeted by a few tight nods which I returned with a small smile.
The moment I took my seat and straightened my spine, one of the investors spoke.
“We have a promising new investor who's shown serious interest—”
I cut him off, not wanting to hear any more. “I’m aware. And I strongly object.”
The room fell silent, each investor passing confused glances to each other.
I rose from my seat, drawing down my blazer. “We’re a publishing firm. His background is tech. He’s a mogul, yes—but he knows nothing about the literary world.”
I paused and glanced around the not-so-pleased faces in the room, but I still continued. “This is a delicate ecosystem. It’s not just about money. It’s about legacy.”
“With all due respect, Ms. Monroe, I understand where you're coming from,” Mr. Larson spoke—my long-term business partner.
Do you?
He leaned forward from his seat, hand resting on the table. “But his investment is substantial—he’s offering resources we can’t ignore.”
The rest of the investors nodded, muttering in agreement, while I had to keep myself from boiling over.
Why can’t they see where I’m coming from?
Of course they can’t. They weren’t the ones once trapped in a loveless marriage. They didn’t bear the weight of betrayal, of wounds still barely stitched together.
My heart dropped at the next statement.
“Plus,” Mr. Larson added carefully, “we’ve already signed preliminary papers.
I blinked unconsciously, jaw tightening. “Without consulting me?”
I placed both hands on the table, trying to keep my voice under control. “Isn't it weird that he’s choosing to invest in a firm that has nothing to do with him?”
They all fell quiet, each one deep in thought. This was the last card I had, and I honestly hoped it would work.
“Ms. Monroe, I think it will be a plus for us. Moreover, I don’t see any reason why you can’t accept,” a female investor said.
Of course you don’t.
Another investor added, “If he’s not on board, we may have to reconsider our own involvement.” And the others agreed.
I slowly sat in my seat, keeping my expression neutral. The investors and board members continued talking about how Kian’s involvement could help the firm grow, but their words faded into the background.
I nodded along like I was still present in the conversation, but inside, my thoughts were spiraling.
He did this on purpose. Of course he did. Strategic bastard.
I clenched my hands beneath the table, nails digging into my palm as I smiled tightly at nothing in particular.
What happens if the press finds out?
Popular Tech Mogul Invests in Budding Literary Firm.
The headline already made me sick to my stomach. They’d spin it. They always did. They’d sniff around, dig up things—things I’ve tried so hard to keep buried.
They’d ask questions. Too many questions.
And all it takes is one curious journalist.
Ezra...
Just the thought of his name in the same sentence as Kian’s sent a cold chill through my spine.
I forced myself to sit straighter, to breathe. One slow inhale. One steady exhale.
But my hands were still trembling under the table.
And then—
The door opened.
I didn’t have to turn to know it was him.
The room went still for a split second, and then came the polite clearing of throats and chairs being adjusted as he strolled in, crisp gray suit fitting him like it was made just for him.
Of course it was.
He moved with calm precision, like someone who belonged in every room he walked into. And he greeted the board like he’d been doing it for years.
“Good afternoon, everyone. It’s a pleasure to be here. Thank you for having me.”
A chorus of welcomes followed. A few even smiled. Smiled.
I stayed still, back straight, jaw locked.
He took his seat casually across the table—far, but not far enough. Not for someone like him.
He spoke again, his voice smooth and laced with that same old dangerous charm. “I’ve admired your firm for a long time. Your commitment to amplifying new voices is commendable. It’s why I chose to invest.”
His eyes found mine then—just briefly. Not too obvious. Just enough to throw me off balance.
And then he turned fully toward me.
“Ms. Monroe,”he said, voice even, “It’s good to finally meet the face behind such a powerful brand.”
My lips tightened. I said nothing.
Because if I opened my mouth now, I wasn’t sure what would come out.
I stayed through the rest of the meeting, even though every word felt like sandpaper against my skin.
Kian spoke like he belonged—calm, articulate, smooth. His words were wrapped in corporate professionalism, but I knew better. I knew what lived behind that voice.
“I’ve been thinking,” he said toward the end of the meeting, locking eyes with me, “about telling my story. Everything from the ground up—my life, the company, the brand, the truth.”
The investors murmured their interest. One even smiled like it was the greatest idea in the world.
“And I want her,” Kian added, tilting his chin toward me, “to write it.”
I blinked.
“You mean a biography?” someone asked.
“Autobiography,” he corrected. “Written by her. In her voice. Her style. That’s the only way I’ll agree to the full investment.”
The room turned toward me.
I could feel my pulse pounding in my neck.
Was this a joke?
But no—he was serious. He was offering the firm millions and turning it into my problem. My choice. And he knew I couldn’t say no.
I gave him a long, unreadable look. Every nerve in my body screamed no.
But instead, I said:
“If this is about professionalism, then I’ll do it.”
My voice was steady. I didn’t flinch. I gave them the only answer I could give with that many eyes on me.
“This won’t interfere with our work.”
I saw the flicker of satisfaction in Kian’s eyes before I looked away.
…..
Clara tried her best to keep up with my steps, her heels clicking fast behind me.
“Ma’am—are you okay?” she whispered carefully, clearly reading the storm brewing behind my eyes.
I didn’t answer. I just kept walking, clutching my tablet like a lifeline.
My mind raced. My chest felt tight. But I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing me crumble—not in there, and definitely not now.
We reached the elevator just as the boardroom doors closed behind us. I pressed the button and exhaled, letting the silence swallow me whole for one brief second.
Then— “Rora.”
I froze.
I didn’t need to turn around. Clara didn’t either.
I felt her tense beside me, eyes wide, body going still like she’d sensed a predator behind us.
Kian’s hand curled gently but firmly around my wrist. Not tight, but enough to make a statement.
My jaw clenched tightly, “Let go of my arm, Mr. Donovan.” I said, trying to control the storm raging in me.
Clara’s eyes darted to the contact, then up to my face, but she didn’t say a word.
“We’ve talked about personal space before,” I said coolly, my voice razor-sharp. “I would appreciate it if you let go of my arm.”
He didn’t budge.
I drew in a slow breath, then turned to him, calm as ever—even if my stomach had twisted into knots.
“What do you want?”
His eyes locked with mine. His voice was low, quiet… deadly serious.
“We need to talk.”
Eliora's POV "You're going to be at the signing tomorrow, right?" my publicist asked, half her attention on her phone, half on me, while I gathered my bag and tried to remember if I'd eaten lunch."I'll be there," I said, checking my watch and feeling a small jolt of panic at the time. "I need to go. It's late.""His Wife On Paper just hit number one again," she called after me, grinning. "Third week running.""I know," I said, already halfway out the door. "I know, it's incredible, I have to go."I'd barely had time to process any of it, the book deal that had come together almost by accident two years ago, a quiet evening of writing down everything that had happened to me, never imagining anyone would actually want to read it, let alone that it would become the thing currently dominating every bestseller list I checked. The title felt obvious the moment I typed it. “His Wife On Paper.” Because that's exactly what I'd been, once. On paper. Nothing more.I drove home with the radio
Eliora's POV "Whose grave is this?" Noah asked, looking up at the headstone with the particular seriousness he brought to questions he actually wanted answered properly."This is your grandfather," I said. "My dad."Ezra had gone quiet beside me, his hand finding mine the way it did when he sensed something mattered before he fully understood why. He'd asked me weeks ago why he'd never met him, and I'd told him the truth, that his grandfather had died before either of the boys existed, that there hadn't been time, that some people you loved you only got to know through stories instead of memories."What was he like?" Noah asked.I crouched down between them, looking at the headstone. His name carved into it along with the dates that had always felt too close together. David Monroe. No mention of everything he'd built, everything that had been taken from him, everything that had eventually, years later, found its way back."He was careful," I said. "Thoughtful. He used to write ev
Zoey's POV "You're staring," Drew said, nudging me with his elbow while the photographer fussed with her lens cap."I'm allowed to stare. I'm emotionally invested.""You're emotionally invested in everything.""That's not a flaw, Drew, that's a personality trait." I watched Eliora across the garden, adjusting Noah's collar for the third time even though it had looked fine the first time, and felt my chest do the thing it always did when I looked at her.I'd known her since we were nineteen, both of us crammed onto a dorm room floor eating instant noodles at two in the morning because neither of us could sleep and neither of us wanted to admit why. She'd been quieter then. Careful in a way that used to worry me, like she was always doing math in her head about how much of herself was safe to show people.She wasn't doing that math anymore. I could see it from here."Remember when she used to apologize for taking up space?" I said."I wasn't there for that version of her.""I know. I'm
Eliora's POV "Nobody move," the photographer said, adjusting something on her camera while Noah, predictably, had already started fidgeting with his collar. "Just two more minutes.""You said that three minutes ago," Ezra pointed out."I'm aware," she said, not unkindly, and gestured for Kian to shift slightly closer to me. "Perfect. Hold there."We'd planned this for weeks, a proper family photo, the kind we'd never quite managed to get done amid everything else, always too busy, too scattered, too consumed by whatever crisis or quiet recovery was happening at the time. But Kian had insisted, the way he did sometimes now, deciding certain things mattered enough to actually schedule rather than hope would happen organically."This feels very formal," I said, trying not to move my mouth too much while still talking."It's supposed to be a little formal," Kian said. "That's the point.""You hate formal.""I've made an exception."Noah, beside me, had gone completely still in the parti
Eliora's POV "Make a wish before you blow them out," I said, watching Noah eye the four candles on his cake with deep suspicion, like they might do something unexpected."What do I wish for?""Anything you want."He thought about this with the seriousness he gave everything, glancing once at Ezra, who was practically vibrating with anticipation beside him, then closed his eyes and blew out all four candles in one go."What'd you wish for?" Ezra demanded immediately."You're not supposed to tell," Noah said."I told mine when I turned six.""That's because you forget rules," Noah said, which was true enough that nobody, including Ezra, bothered arguing.Kian cut the cake while Mrs. Halloway hovered nearby with the particular pride she'd developed over the years for these small milestones, taking photos on her phone with the same dedication she'd once reserved for documenting Ezra's stone collection."Four," Kian said, handing Noah the first slice. "How does it feel?""The same as thr
Eliora's POV "Finally," Kian said, setting two mugs down on the coffee table and dropping onto the sofa beside me, "some peace and quiet.""Don't say that too loud," I said. "The universe is listening.""The universe can wait a day." He pulled my feet into his lap without asking, the way he'd done a thousand times before, and started rubbing the arch of my foot with his thumb. "Drew and Zoey have all three of them until tomorrow. I checked the group chat….they're fine. Mitchell's already 'won' two arguments with Ezra and Noah's been reading the same book since they arrived.""Sounds about right."The house held a kind of silence I'd forgotten existed, not the heavy kind, not the kind we'd lived through during the silent treatment weeks, but the easy, settled kind. No small feet on the stairs. No negotiations happening in another room. Just us, the morning light coming through the kitchen window, and tea going lukewarm because neither of us had the urgency to drink it quickly."I al
Eliora's POV I was happy. It was a real laughter, the kind that filled my heart with a warmth and joy that had always felt so far-fetched.Everything was fine. Life felt worth living again—until Tonia walked in.Kian’s mother entered like she owned the place, her heels clicking sharply against the
Eliora's POV “If you don’t let him go, Eliora, I will make sure there isn't a single bookstore in this city that will carry your name on its shelves.”The voice cut through the quiet of my office like a jagged blade. I didn't even have to look up from my laptop to know who it was. The scent of clo
Kian's POV I stared at my phone for what felt like the hundredth time this morning. Still nothing.No calls. No messages. Just silence.Eliora refused to pick any of my calls since the day of the meeting, and it’s been a week now. A full week of unanswered calls and restless nights.I sighed and s
CHAPTER 9Eliora's POV “He did what?”Zoey’s voice rang through the kitchen like an explosion. I just kept tracing the rim of my coffee cup with my finger. My eyes felt heavier than usual.Did I have a sleepless night? Yes.Why? One word? Kian.I looked up to find Zoey now pacing the kitchen, bare







