LOGINThe photograph stopped him cold.
Stellan had been in the middle of a call — something about quarterly projections, something his CFO had been saying for the past four minutes — when the notification appeared on his second screen. A financial column. A headline. A photograph.
He said, "I'll call you back," and hung up without waiting for a response.
He leaned forward.
Corinna Voss, newly appointed CEO of the Voss Group, closes landmark Northaven deal in what analysts are calling the most significant private infrastructure acquisition of the quarter.
The woman in the photograph was his ex-wife.
Except she wasn't — not really. Not this woman. This woman stood at the head of a boardroom table in a charcoal suit with her chin slightly lifted and her eyes directed at something off-camera with the kind of focused certainty that made other people in the room lean forward without realising they were doing it.
He had never seen that expression on her face.
Not once. In three years of marriage.
His chest did something he didn't have a name for.
He picked up his phone. Found her name. Pressed call.
It rang three times.
"You've reached Corinna Voss. Please leave a message and I'll return your call within one business day."
One business day.
He ended the call without leaving a message and sat back in his chair and looked at the photograph for a long time.
Across the city, Corinna watched his name disappear from her screen.
She was standing at the floor-to-ceiling window of the Voss Group's forty-second floor, the Northaven documents still spread across her desk, her heels off because she had been on her feet since five that morning. She had felt the phone buzz in her jacket pocket. She had looked at the screen. She had made a decision in three seconds and put it back.
She then turned back to the window.
Below, the city moved with its usual indifference. Traffic. People. The particular momentum of a place that did not slow down for anyone's private reckoning.
Her assistant appeared in the doorway. "Ms. Voss. You have a visitor."
Corinna didn't turn around. "I don't have any appointments this afternoon."
"She doesn't have one." A pause. "She said you'd see her."
Something in the way he said she made Corinna turn.
"Her name?" Corinna said.
He cleared his throat. "Maren Cole."
The silence that followed lasted four full seconds.
Corinna reached for her heels. She put them on slowly, deliberately, the way a person reached for armour without calling it that. She smoothed the front of her jacket. She looked at her reflection in the dark glass of the window — composed, present, completely unreadable.
"Send her in," she said.
Maren Cole was more beautiful in person than in the photographs Corinna had seen — and she had seen enough of them in the peripheral wreckage of a marriage falling apart. Tall, auburn-haired, wearing something ivory and effortless that had cost a significant amount of money to look that simple.
She walked in like a woman who had rehearsed this moment and was determined not to show it.
"Corinna." She extended her hand. "Thank you for seeing me."
Corinna shook it. Firm. Brief. "Maren."
They sat — Corinna behind her desk, Maren across from it. The power geometry was not accidental and both of them knew it.
"I'll be honest," Maren said. "I didn't come with a business proposal."
"I know," Corinna said.
That seemed to throw her slightly. She recovered quickly — she was good at recovering quickly. "I came because I thought we deserved a real conversation. Woman to woman."
"About Stellan."
"About all of it." Maren folded her hands on her lap. Her composure was excellent. Her eyes, though — her eyes were doing something her composure hadn't caught up to yet. "I want you to know that I'm not your enemy."
Corinna looked at her for a moment.
"You came to my office," she said quietly, "unannounced, two weeks after my divorce, to tell me you're not my enemy." She tilted her head slightly. "What does that tell you about how this conversation is going?"
Something flickered across Maren's face.
"He talks about you," she said. The composure cracked — just slightly, just enough. "He doesn't mean to. But he does." She paused. "He looked you up the morning after he signed the papers. I saw the search history." Another pause, harder to make. "He looked you up and then he sat in his car for forty minutes and didn't come back inside."
The office was very quiet.
Corinna said nothing.
"I'm not telling you this to hurt you," Maren said. "I'm telling you because I think you deserve to know that the man who asked you for a divorce is not as certain as he appeared." Her voice was steady but the steadiness was costing her something. "And I think you deserve to decide what to do with that information before he figures out how to come to you himself."
Corinna looked at this woman — this woman who had been the reason, or the excuse, or both — and felt something she hadn't expected.
Not anger.
Not satisfaction.
Something closer to recognition.
She's scared, Corinna thought. She came here because she's losing him and she knows it and she thought seeing me would tell her something.
She stood. "I appreciate your honesty."
Maren blinked. "That's all you're going to say?"
"What would you like me to say?"
A long pause. "I don't know," Maren admitted. The performance was fully gone now, just a woman sitting across from another woman with too much between them. "I just thought...." She stopped.
"You thought seeing me would make you feel better," Corinna said simply. "Or worse. Either way you'd know something."
Maren said nothing.
"Did it work?" Corinna asked.
Maren picked up her bag slowly. She stood. She looked at Corinna one final time with an expression that was almost honest.
"Yes," she said quietly. "That's what I was afraid of."
She left.
Corinna stood alone in the office for a long moment. The city hummed below. The documents on her desk waited.
She picked up her phone.
Not to call Stellan. Not to call Dorian.
She opened her messages and scrolled to a thread she had not opened in three years. A name she had not spoken since the week before her wedding.
Her thumb hovered.
Then her office door opened without a knock — her assistant, pale-faced, holding a printed document with both hands like it might burn him.
"Ms. Voss," he said. "This just came through our legal system. Someone has filed a formal inquiry into the Voss Group's founding share structure." He set it on her desk. "They're claiming partial ownership." He swallowed. "The claim is filed under the name Roland Voss."
Corinna looked at the document.
Then she took her phone and did something she had told herself she would not do.
She called Stellan.
He answered on the first ring — like he had been waiting.
"I need to see you," she said. "Tonight. And Stellan...." A pause. "Don't tell anyone."
Stellan was already on his feet before Corinna could react.He turned the phone over, face down, like hiding the photograph would undo the fact that someone had been standing outside that window four minutes ago watching both of them through the glass. His jaw was tight. His eyes moved to the window immediately — scanning the street beyond it with the focused attention of a man running calculations he didn't want to be running."They're gone," Corinna said quietly. She hadn't moved from her chair. "If they wanted us to see that photo, they're already gone.""You don't know that.""I know Roland." She picked up her water glass and took a slow, deliberate sip. Not because she was calm — because she had learned, a long time ago, that the most dangerous thing you could do when someone was trying to frighten you was let them see it working. "He doesn't confront. He observes. He collects. He wants us rattled and second-guessing every move we make." She set the glass down. "So we're not goin
Corinna read the message twice.Then she looked up at Stellan and watched his face do something she had never seen in three years of marriage — crack. Not dramatically. Not with noise. Just a quiet fracture behind his eyes, the specific expression of a man realising that someone he trusted completely had been watching him the entire time."How long has Marcus had access to your personal phone?" she said.Stellan's jaw tightened. "He doesn't.""He knew you were with me tonight." She kept her voice even. "You didn't tell anyone where you were going. Your assistant only knew the club name, not who you were meeting." She slid the phone back across the table. "So either Marcus has someone watching you physically, or he has access to something he shouldn't."The silence that followed was the kind that had texture.Stellan picked up the phone. He looked at the message again. Something moved through his expression — not just anger. Something older than that. The particular betrayal of a perso
He was already outside when she arrived.Not at the entrance — further back, leaning against the building's stone pillar with his jacket open and his tie loosened and his eyes on her the moment her car turned into the street. Like he had been watching for her specifically, and had been standing there long enough to get cold and had decided not to care.Corinna stepped out of the car and the night air hit her all at once.She had changed out of the charcoal suit. She didn't examine why.Stellan pushed off the pillar and walked toward her and stopped two feet away — close enough that she could see the exact quality of his expression. Not the boardroom composure. Not the careful distance she had spent three years navigating. Something rawer than that. Something that looked, uncomfortably, like a man who had been thinking very hard and hadn't reached a comfortable conclusion."You said tonight," he said."I did.""You didn't say where.""You found me anyway."A pause. His jaw shifted slig
The photograph stopped him cold.Stellan had been in the middle of a call — something about quarterly projections, something his CFO had been saying for the past four minutes — when the notification appeared on his second screen. A financial column. A headline. A photograph.He said, "I'll call you back," and hung up without waiting for a response.He leaned forward.Corinna Voss, newly appointed CEO of the Voss Group, closes landmark Northaven deal in what analysts are calling the most significant private infrastructure acquisition of the quarter.The woman in the photograph was his ex-wife.Except she wasn't — not really. Not this woman. This woman stood at the head of a boardroom table in a charcoal suit with her chin slightly lifted and her eyes directed at something off-camera with the kind of focused certainty that made other people in the room lean forward without realising they were doing it.He had never seen that expression on her face.Not once. In three years of marriage.
The Meridian Industry Forum arrived on a Tuesday.The kind of Tuesday that felt like it had been building toward something — cool morning air, a sky that could not decide between grey and blue, the city moving with a particular sharpness that came with the start of something significant.Corinna arrived at seven forty-five.The forum did not begin until nine. She knew that. She had come early deliberately — not out of nerves but out of the particular discipline she had relearned over the past three weeks. Preparation was not anxiety. Preparation was respect for what you were walking into.She stood at the registration desk in a deep navy suit that her mother had said nothing about and therefore approved of completely. Her hair was up. Her heels were the kind that announced each step without apology. She collected her lanyard, exchanged brief pleasantries with the event coordinator, and walked into the main hall with the unhurried ease of a woman who had spent three years learning to b
The restaurant on Calloway Street was the kind of place that did not need to announce itself.No sign above the door. No listing in the obvious guides. Just warm light visible through frosted glass, a quiet that felt intentional rather than empty, and a maître d' who greeted Dorian by name and led them to a corner table without being asked.Corinna had changed after work. Not dramatically — a deep burgundy dress, her hair down for the first time in days, small gold earrings that had belonged to her grandmother. Simple things. But she had looked at herself in the mirror before leaving and felt, briefly, like someone she recognised.Dorian was already seated when she arrived.He stood when he saw her. Not in the performative way some men did — the grand gesture designed to be noticed. Just quietly, naturally, because it was what he did. He waited until she was seated before he sat back down."You look well," he said."You sound surprised.""Not surprised." He studied her for a moment wi







