تسجيل الدخولThursday came faster than I expected.
I spent Wednesday evening in the penthouse going through the board file Adrian had left me, cross-referencing names against everything I already knew about Bellington Holdings which was more than most people would have assumed. I had spent years after my father’s death quietly educating myself on the company that had destroyed him. I knew the key shareholders. I knew which board members had been in place when the fraud accusations were filed and which had joined afterward. I knew who had voted to proceed with the case against my father and who had abstained.
Knowledge, as my father had always said, was the only currency that couldn’t be taken from you.
He didn’t pick me because he wanted me. He picked me because I was desperate enough to say yes.
Adrian’s words from the first night hadn’t left me. I had turned them over a hundred times since then, examining them the way you examine something that has cut you not to dwell on the wound, but to understand the angle of the blade. He had been honest with me. Brutal, yes, but honest. And in a world built entirely on lies and manipulation, honesty even the uncomfortable kind was something I didn’t know quite what to do with.
I closed the file at eleven, turned off the light, and lay in the dark listening to the city below.
On the other side of the wall, Adrian Bellington was presumably sleeping. Or working. Or doing whatever cold, deliberate men did in the hours when the rest of the world went quiet. I had noticed, in the three days since we had moved in together, that he kept late hours. The light beneath the study door was always on when I came out for water in the middle of the night. He never explained it and I never asked.
There was an entire language developing between us made entirely of things we didn’t say.
The boardroom on the fortieth floor was everything I had expected it to be and everything I had prepared for. Long mahogany table, leather chairs, floor-to-ceiling windows with a view of the city that was designed to remind everyone in the room exactly how far above the rest of the world they sat. The air smelled of coffee and authority and the particular brand of tension that gathered whenever powerful people were forced to pretend they weren’t measuring each other.
I walked in beside Adrian, and felt the shift in the room immediately.
To the outside world, we were a perfect match the dashing billionaire heir and the elegant mystery bride.
I understood that now, standing in this room, in a way I hadn’t fully understood it at the wedding. The performance wasn’t just for cameras and guests. It was for this for the fifteen men and women seated around this table who needed to believe that the transition of Bellington Holdings from Raymond’s era to Adrian’s was stable, unified, and unshakeable. A married CEO was a settled CEO. A settled CEO was a safe investment.
I was part of the architecture of their confidence.
I sat at Adrian’s right hand and kept my expression composed and my eyes moving, cataloguing faces, matching them to names from the file. Harrison Cole, chief legal officer grey-haired, watchful, the kind of man who had survived every corporate transition by being indispensable to whoever was in charge. Margaret Fenn, head of investor relations sharp eyes behind elegant glasses, her smile the practiced warmth of someone who had been performing warmth professionally for thirty years. David Osei, head of acquisitions younger than the rest, perhaps mid-forties, the only one who met my gaze directly when I entered and nodded with what appeared to be genuine acknowledgment rather than performative welcome.
I filed all of it away.
The presentation moved through Q3 results methodically revenue figures, acquisition updates, the European expansion strategy Adrian had apparently been building toward for the better part of two years. He spoke with the kind of quiet authority that didn’t need volume to command attention. The room listened because he was worth listening to, not because his name was on the building. I noticed that distinction and found it harder to dismiss than I wanted to.
Then Harrison Cole looked at me.
“Mrs. Bellington,” he said, during a pause between agenda items, his tone carrying the practiced neutrality of a man who was testing rather than greeting. “It’s a pleasure to have you with us. We’re all delighted by the recent news, of course.” He smiled in the direction of Adrian. “Your father would be ”
“My father,” Adrian said, with a quiet finality that closed the sentence like a door, “isn’t relevant to today’s agenda, Harrison.”
A beat of silence. Cole’s smile thinned almost imperceptibly. “Of course. My apologies.”
I said nothing. But beneath the table, I felt Adrian’s hand brief, almost accidental rest against mine for just a second before withdrawing. Not a gesture anyone else would have seen. Not quite a reassurance. Something smaller than that. Something private.
I didn’t look at him.
After the presentation, as the board filtered out with handshakes and low conversations, David Osei stopped beside my chair.
“Ms. Okoye,” he said using my birth name, deliberately, and watching to see how I responded to it. “I worked with your father briefly, about ten years ago. Before everything.” He paused. “He was a good man. Meticulous. Honest. The kind of man this industry doesn’t produce often enough.”
The words hit me somewhere unguarded. I had not expected to hear my father spoken of well inside this building. I had not expected to hear him spoken of at all.
“Thank you,” I said, and was quietly proud of how steady my voice remained.
Osei nodded once, gave Adrian a measured look, and left.
The room emptied until it was only the two of us. Adrian stood at the window with his back to me, looking out at the city in that way he had as if he were calculating something the rest of us couldn’t see.
“Cole was testing me,” I said.
“Cole tests everyone.” He turned around. “How do you feel it went?”
I considered the question seriously, the way he’d asked it seriously. “Useful,” I said. “I understand the room better now than I did this morning.”
Something shifted in his expression. Not quite approval more like recognition. As if he had expected a different answer and found this one unexpectedly accurate.
“Osei knew your father,” he said.
“I know.” I picked up my notebook and stood. “Is that a problem?”
Adrian looked at me for a long moment. “Not for me.”
I held his gaze. “Good. Because I’m not going to pretend my father didn’t exist just because it makes certain people in this building uncomfortable.”
“I’m not here to survive,” I said. “I’m here to win.”
The words had come out before I fully decided to say them. They hung between us in the empty boardroom, more honest than I had intended, more revealing than I was comfortable with.
Adrian didn’t flinch. He didn’t look away.
“I know,” he said quietly. “I counted on it.”
Then he picked up his folder and walked out, leaving me standing in the boardroom of the empire that had taken everything from my family feeling, for the first time since I had entered this building, like I might actually belong here.
Not because it was mine.
But because I was going to make it answer for what it had done.
I followed him out into the corridor, and the fortieth floor hummed with quiet power around us, and somewhere beneath it all, beneath the marble and the glass and the gold lettering above every door, I felt the faint, dangerous stirring of something I hadn’t planned for.
Not just purpose.
Something else entirely.
Something that had everything to do with the man walking three steps ahead of me and nothing to do with revenge at all.
I quickened my pace and told myself firmly that I was imagining it.
I was very good at lying to myself.
I was getting less good at believing it.
We went on a Saturday morning.I had chosen Saturday deliberately. Not a weekday. Not a rushed hour between obligations. Saturday meant the cemetery would be quiet, the drive unhurried, and I could stand at my father’s grave for as long as I needed without watching the clock.Adrian had not asked a single question about the logistics. He had simply said tell me when and been ready at eight in the morning with coffee already made and Marcus already waiting at the kerb. That was how he did things. Without fuss. Without needing to understand everything in advance. With a capacity for simply showing up that I had come to rely on in ways I had not fully articulated even to myself.The cemetery was in Queens. My father had grown up there had taken the subway to school from the age of eleven, worked his first job three blocks from his parents’ flat, carried that borough with him through everything that came after. The scholarship. The university. The career. The slow and painstaking building
The statement went live on a Friday morning at nine o’clock precisely.I know because I was sitting at the kitchen counter with my second cup of coffee when my phone lit up with the notification a link from David Osei with a single line of text: It’s out. Well done, Selina.I set the cup down. Opened the link.The Bellington Holdings press release was clean and formal and exactly the kind of document that corporate communications departments spent days crafting to say large things in measured language. It acknowledged the SEC investigation into Harrison Cole, announced his immediate removal from the board, and confirmed the discovery of fabricated evidence in a historical fraud case that had resulted in a wrongful accusation against a former business associate.Then it said his name.Emmanuel Okoye.Not a case number. Not a reference. His name my father’s name in print, on the official letterhead of the company that had destroyed him, restored to exactly what it had always been: the n
We left Prague on a grey Tuesday morning.The city was quiet at that hour mist still clinging to the river, the old town not yet fully awake, the cobblestones slick from overnight rain. Marcus was waiting at the hotel entrance with the car. I came down with my bag already packed, my coat belted against the cold, and found Adrian in the lobby with his phone pressed to his ear, speaking in the low, deliberate tone he used when the information he was receiving required careful management.He saw me and held up one finger. One minute.I sat in one of the lobby chairs and watched the city through the glass doors and thought about what it meant to be going home. Not the surface of it the plane, the penthouse, the familiar skyline but the deeper thing underneath. The fact that home had become, somewhere in the past weeks, a specific place rather than an abstract concept. A kitchen counter. A study lamp throwing shadows across research documents. A man who made extra coffee without being as
The sun cast long shadows over the ancient city of Prague, its golden hues dancing upon the cobblestone streets. The city’s timeless beauty stood in stark contrast to the turmoil brewing within me. I had woken early. Earlier than Adrian, which was unusual he was typically the one already at the window with his coffee when I emerged, looking as though he had never quite gone to sleep. But this morning the suite was quiet, the study door closed, and the only sounds were the distant bells of a church somewhere in the old quarter counting out the hour.I dressed quietly and went out alone.It was not something I had planned. I had simply needed air, and movement, and the particular kind of thinking that only happened when I was walking. Prague offered all of those things in abundance. The city was extraordinary in the early morning ancient and unhurried, its stone bridges and baroque spires still wrapped in the low mist that came off the river, its streets not yet crowded with the day’
The cold silence in the room was louder than any argument we could have had.Adrian sat at the edge of the hotel bed, his head bowed, fingers laced tightly together. I stood near the window, watching the slow drizzle outside blur the lights of Prague. We had not planned to come here. Prague had not been on any itinerary, not part of any step in the careful, methodical plan we had been building since Dubai. But plans have a way of dissolving when events move faster than the people trying to manage them. The SEC filing had triggered something we hadn’t fully anticipated a response from Cole’s side that had been faster, and more dangerous, than either of us had accounted for.We had forty-eight hours of warning. Enough to move. Not enough to feel safe.Now we were here, in a hotel room above a cobblestone street in a city that had nothing to do with us, and the silence between us was doing the thing it had stopped doing weeks ago pressing in, filling the space with everything unsaid.I
We came home from Dubai on a Sunday.The flight was quiet. Adrian worked through most of it reviewing legal documents, responding to messages, doing the ten thousand things that running a company the size of Bellington Holdings apparently required even at thirty thousand feet. I sat beside him and read, or tried to, and watched the clouds shift and thin outside the window and thought about Orion’s face in the gallery courtyard when he had said: Your father was a good man.The envelope sat in my bag. I had not opened it on the flight. I had not opened it in Dubai, not that night in the hotel suite when I had sat on the edge of the bed with it in my hands for a long time before setting it on the nightstand. I was not ready for it yet. I understood this about myself without judgment some things you need to circle before you can enter them. Some truths are too heavy to absorb standing still.I would open it at home.Home. I noticed the word and let it settle without examining it too clos







