LOGINHe threw her away like she meant nothing. She buried his secret and rebuilt herself from the ashes. Now he's back — as her new boss, and the one man she can never escape. Three years ago, Ethan Blackwood handed Nora a divorce paper on the same night she lost their child alone in a hospital room. No explanation. No apology. Just silence. She survived. She rose. She swore she'd never be weak again. But when Nora walks into her new job and finds Ethan sitting at the head of the table — cold, powerful, and staring at her like she's a ghost — she realizes the universe isn't done with them yet. What he doesn't know could destroy his entire empire. What she's hiding could destroy them both.
View MoreNora saw him before he saw her.
Ethan Blackwood. Her ex-husband. The man who had handed her divorce papers three years ago without a single explanation and walked out of her life like she never mattered.
He was standing at the head of the office in a charcoal grey suit, holding a phone, looking every bit like the powerful billionaire the world knew him to be.
And he was staring straight at her.
Nora's legs stopped moving. Her heart stopped with them. For one terrible second, the entire world shrank down to just this moment, just this floor, just the two of them and three years of silence standing between them.
This was her new job. Her fresh start. The position she had worked fourteen months to earn.
And Ethan Blackwood was her boss.
She almost laughed. If it didn't hurt so much, she actually would have.
The receptionist was still talking beside her but Nora heard nothing. Her eyes stayed on Ethan and he stayed on her. His expression gave nothing away, same as always. Cold. Controlled. Unreadable. The face of a man who had never once lost sleep over anything he had done.
She lifted her chin and looked away first.
That was the only power she had right now and she was going to use it.
"Sorry," she said to the receptionist with a calm smile. "Please continue."
She made it in four hours.
Four hours of meeting colleagues, sitting through briefings and nodding at information she barely absorbed. Four hours of pretending her heart was not pounding every time she heard footsteps behind her. Four hours of being the composed, professional woman she had spent three years building herself into.
Her new colleague Marcus Cole made it easier. He was warm and straightforward, the kind of person who laughed easily and made you feel welcome without trying too hard. He remembered she took her coffee black after she mentioned it once.
"You'll like it here," he told her cheerfully. "Mr. Blackwood is demanding but he's fair. Once you get used to how he operates you'll be fine."
Nora smiled. "I'm sure I will."
She had already spent two years getting used to how Ethan Blackwood operated. She knew exactly what he was.
At half past six in the evening, when most of the office had gone home, her desk phone rang.
She looked at it. Internal call.
She already knew who it was before she picked up.
"Come to my office." His voice. Direct. No greeting. Like three years had not passed. Like he still had the right to summon her anywhere.
"Everyone has gone home," she said.
"I know. Come anyway."
"Give me one reason I should."
Silence. Then, quieter: "Because if we don't talk now, we will spend the next several months pretending in front of everyone. And I think we are both tired of pretending."
Nora hated that he was right.
She hated even more that she was already standing up.
His office was exactly what she expected. Large, expensive, cold. No personal touches anywhere. Floor to ceiling windows with the whole city glittering below.
He was standing with his back to her when she walked in.
She did not speak. She used to fill his silences. She did not do that anymore.
He turned around. And for the first time without other people around them, she saw something in his face that had not been there before. Something heavy. Something that looked almost like guilt.
She did not let herself care about it.
"What do you want Ethan?"
"I want to explain what happened three years ago."
"No." She said it simply, without anger. "That door closed a long time ago. I am here to work. Nothing else. We keep things professional and stay out of each other's way. That is all I want from you."
He took one step toward her. She did not move back.
"Nora."
"Don't." Her voice dropped. "Don't say my name like that. You lost the right to say my name like that the night you handed me those papers and walked away."
Something moved across his face. Pain, maybe. Or something close to it.
Then the control came back. Smooth. Practiced. The mask he wore so well.
"Fine," he said. "We keep it professional."
"Good."
She turned and walked to the door.
"Nora." His voice stopped her. "I am glad you are doing well."
She stood with her back to him and said nothing for a moment.
She thought about the hospital. The cold room. The phone that never rang. She thought about a little boy at home right now who had his father's dark eyes and had never once heard his father's voice.
"Are you," she said quietly.
She walked out before he could respond.
In the elevator going down she leaned against the wall and focused on breathing. Her hands would not stop shaking.
Her phone buzzed. Unknown number. She answered.
A woman's voice came through. Smooth. Elegant. Familiar in a way that made Nora's stomach drop.
"Hello Nora. This is Diana Blackwood."
The elevator doors opened to the lobby.
"We need to talk. Before my son gets any ideas about playing father. Because we both know that cannot happen."
Nora could not move.
She knows about Lily.
"I am here," Ethan said finally.His voice came out rough in a way Nora had rarely heard from him. Not the controlled measured tone he used in boardrooms or courtrooms or even in the most painful conversations with his mother. Something underneath all of that, raw and unguarded.Elise studied him through the screen."You look different than I remember," she said. "Less certain of everything.""I have had reason to become less certain of a great many things," Ethan said.A small silence passed between them, heavy with eighteen months of distance and unspoken accusations."Is she mine?" Ethan asked quietly.Elise's arms tightened slightly around the sleeping child."I told you she was, eighteen months ago," she said. "You did not believe me.""I asked for a test," Ethan said. "You refused.""Because you asked for it through lawyers," Elise said, her voice sharpening. "You sent legal representatives to demand proof of my daughter's existence as though I were attempting fraud against your
Three words sat on Nora's screen like something with weight she could physically feel.Her name is Mei.She looked up from her phone. Sophie was still narrating the merits of the hot chocolate shop to Lily, who nodded along with the seriousness of someone evaluating a business proposal. Ethan was watching her face, the way he always did, reading her before she chose what to reveal."Another message," he said quietly. Not a question.She turned the phone toward him.He read it.His jaw set in a way she had not seen since the night Diana's plea changed everything. Controlled. Absolute."A name," he said. "Not proof. A name.""It is more than we had ten minutes ago," Nora said.He nodded slowly, processing something she could not fully access yet."I need to find a way to reach Elise without going through Diana's old networks," he said. "If this is real, if there is a child, I cannot keep operating through anonymous messages and guesswork.""Henderson," Nora suggested."Henderson is alre
She waited until Lily was fed.That was deliberate. Lily had been patient all morning and he was hungry and none of what was sitting in Nora's chest was his to carry. So she sat across from him in the breakfast place he had chosen with the authority of someone who had earned the right to choose and she drank her coffee and watched him eat and kept her face exactly as it needed to be.Normal. Present. His mother ate breakfast on a significant morning.Ethan sat beside her and ate nothing and said the right things to Lily at the right times and she could feel him not looking at him.Sophie read the room with the precision she always brought to reading rooms and kept Lily engaged in conversation about something involving the very large dog from his dream and whether dogs could in fact be trusted with important responsibilities.Lily had strong opinions about this.When Lily finished eating Sophie suggested that she and Lily go and find the best hot chocolate in the area which Lily consid
Nora did not tell Ethan about the email that night.She told herself it was because he had enough to carry until morning. Clara's statement. Grace Alderton. The folder. The weight of what Margaret had said about his father sitting in him like something with no clean edges.She told herself he did not need one more thing before nine o clock.That was partly true.The other part was that she needed to think about it first. To sit with the fact that someone had been watching them on that pavement outside the restaurant. Someone close enough to see a moment she had not planned and had not announced and had believed belonged only to them.Someone who was not Clara.Clara had been inside Henderson's office all evening. Clara had not been on that pavement.Which meant Diana's reach was longer than they had dismantled.She thought about it for the four hours she slept and she thought about it while she made Lily's breakfast and she thought about it in the car on the way to the courthouse whil
The assistant's name was Ruth Owens.Patricia had given them the address the night before. A small house in a quiet neighbourhood forty minutes outside the city. The kind of place where people went when they wanted to be left alone and meant it.Nora sat in the passenger seat of Ethan's car and wat
Patricia Vane lived in a quiet building on the east side of the city.Nothing flashy. Nothing that announced itself. The kind of building where people went to live their lives without being noticed, which Nora supposed was exactly the point for a woman who had spent years watching powerful people f
Nora did not tell Ethan about the call.Not immediately.She stood in that bathroom for three full minutes after the line went dead, thinking about Richard Cole's voice. Smooth. Measured. The voice of someone who had rehearsed that conversation many times before making it.Someone who was destroyed
Nora drove home in silence.She did not turn on the radio. She did not call Sophie. She just drove with both hands on the wheel and her mind running through everything Helen had said like a film she could not switch off.Diana had forged her signature.Ethan had not abandoned her. He had been shown






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.