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The CEO’s Secret Triplets
The CEO’s Secret Triplets
Author: TEG

Chapter 1

Author: TEG
last update publish date: 2025-12-29 06:26:57

Dante Blackwood didn’t look up. The screen light hit his face. Blue. Cold. He sat at the head of the mahogany table, the silence of the room a physical weight. He had a silver pen in his right hand. He didn’t click it. He didn’t tap it. He just held it, a small, polished anchor in a room of people waiting for him to speak. The twelve board members sat perfectly still. They watched the pen. They watched his eyes. They were terrified of the silence.

​"Singapore," Dante said. His voice was low, carrying across the polished wood without effort. "The numbers are wrong."

​Nobody spoke. The HVAC system hummed, a sterile, expensive sound.

​"Marcus. The four percent gap. Explain it."

​Marcus cleared his throat. It was a wet, nervous sound that echoed. He looked at his tablet, his fingers trembling as he scrolled. "Market shift, sir. Fourth quarter. We didn't... the analytics didn't predict the volatility. It was sudden."

​"I don't pay you for sudden." Dante looked up. Gray eyes. Like slate. Like the sky before a hard winter. "I pay for control. If the market shifts, you shift it back. If the numbers don't match the projection, you make the world match the numbers. This is a billion-dollar merger, not a lemonade stand."

​"Sir, the geopolitical—"

​"I don't care about the news, Marcus. I care about the exit strategy. You have twenty-four hours to find that four percent or you can find a new firm to disappoint."

​The double doors at the back of the boardroom opened. They were heavy, soundproofed wood, designed to keep the world out. They didn't creak, but the shift in air pressure was enough to make every head turn. No one knocked. No one ever interrupted a Blackwood Global closed session.

​Bella Vance walked in.

​She wore a charcoal suit. Sharp. Tailored. Her hair was pulled back into a knot so tight it looked painful. She carried a leather portfolio under her arm like a shield. She didn't look at the board members. She didn't look at the expensive art on the walls or the panoramic view of the skyline. She just looked at the empty chair at the far end of the table, exactly opposite Dante.

​Dante’s pen stopped. It stayed frozen an inch above the mahogany. He stopped breathing for a second. The world outside the window—the sirens, the wind, the millions of people—simply ceased to exist.

​"This is a closed session," Dante said. Flat.

​"I know," Bella said.

​Her voice was different. Steelier. The soft edges he remembered from three years ago were gone, replaced by a cold, professional resonance. She went to the chair. She pulled it out. The long, loud scrape of the legs against the floor made Marcus jump. Bella sat. She didn't ask for permission. She placed a single business card on the table and slid it with her index finger. It stopped halfway across the table, white and stark against the dark wood.

​Dante looked at the card. Then he looked at her.

​Three years.

​Three years since she had walked out of his penthouse at 3:00 AM. No note. No suitcase. Just a cold pillow and a silence that had lasted a thousand days. He had spent the first six months looking for her. He had spent the next two years trying to convince himself he hadn't.

​"You're in the wrong city, Bella," Dante said.

​"The contract says I'm not."

​She opened her folder. Her fingers were steady, but he noticed the way she gripped the edge of the leather. "Vance and Associates has been retained by your majority shareholders. They’re concerned about the Singapore leak. I’m here to lead the independent audit."

​She didn't wait for him to respond. She turned her gaze to the man on her right.

​"Marcus. The fourth quarter. Go on. I checked the filings before I walked in. The offshore accounts in the Cayman subsidiary don't match your story about volatility. There’s a ghost expenditure of twelve million. Care to explain that before I put it in the preliminary report?"

​The room felt like a vacuum. Nobody was breathing. Marcus looked at Dante, his eyes pleading for help. Dante didn't give it. He was just staring at Bella’s hands. He was looking for a ring. He was looking for a sign of where she had been.

​"Leave," Dante said.

​"Mr. Blackwood, we still have the—"

​"Get out. Now."

​Chairs scraped. People moved fast, gathering their tablets and phones with frantic energy. They didn't look back. They didn't whisper. The doors clicked shut, and the silence returned, but it wasn't the silence of a boardroom anymore. It was the silence of a tomb.

​Dante stood up. He didn't go to her. He went to the window. He didn't look at the buildings. He looked at her reflection in the glass.

​"The subpoenas," he said. "You ignored them. My investigators... they found nothing. You just stopped."

​Bella didn't look at him. She looked at her tablet. She was scrolling through a spreadsheet, but her eyes weren't moving fast enough to be reading. "I was busy, Dante."

​"Busy." Dante turned around. He leaned against the glass, the sun at his back. "For three years? My guys said the Midwest. Some town near the border. Why there?"

​Bella’s thumb moved on the screen. Just a twitch. A small, involuntary movement. She thought about her phone in her pocket. She thought about the 4:00 PM alarm. The school bus. The lunchbox with the crusts cut off. She looked at the sticky note on the corner of her tablet, a messy scrawl she’d written in the taxi: Pick up Leo, Maya, and Toby by 4. Don't forget the inhaler.

​"My life isn't part of the audit, Dante. I’m here to do a job."

​"Everything is part of the audit when it’s my company."

​Dante walked toward her. Slow. Deliberate. He stopped a few feet away. He didn't touch her, but he could feel the heat radiating off her. She smelled like she always had—jasmine and something like rain—but there was a new scent now. Soap. Cheap, drugstore soap.

​"Why come back? You knew. The second you signed a contract with a board seat in this district, I’d know. You knew I wouldn't let it go."

​"I needed the leverage," Bella said. Her voice broke, just a tiny fraction. She stopped. Cleared her throat. "My firm has a seat here now. I have the legal right to every server, every email, every private ledger. If you interfere... if you follow me again or try to force a meeting outside these walls... I’ll leak the sub-ledgers. All of them. Blackwood Global will be a case study in federal court by Friday."

​Dante narrowed his eyes. He watched her. She was holding the edge of the table so hard her knuckles were white. She wasn't here for a fight. She wasn't here for revenge. She was hiding something, and she was using his own company as a shield to keep him at a distance.

​"You keep looking at your watch," Dante said.

​"I have a commitment."

​"At five o'clock on a Tuesday?"

​Dante reached out. Before she could move, he took the leather folder from the table.

​"Don't," she said. It wasn't a command. It was a plea.

​He opened it anyway. He didn't see audit files. He didn't see spreadsheets. He found a single sheet of paper tucked into the side pocket. A medical record. Five years old. His own name was at the top. A genetic screening they had done when they were... before.

​Someone had used a red marker. A specific section regarding a rare blood marker.

​Dante looked at the paper. Then the date she left. He did the math in his head. The cold, logical calculator that had made him a billionaire just stopped.

​He looked at her. Really looked at her. The exhaustion in her eyes wasn't from the flight. It was from years of a weight he couldn't imagine.

​"Bella," he whispered.

​She stood up. She grabbed the paper back, her fingers shaking visibly now. She stuffed it into the folder.

​"I didn't come back for you," she said. Her voice was trembling, but her eyes were hard.

​She headed for the door. She didn't look back. She didn't wait for him to respond.

​"I came back because the specialist at the Children's Hospital... the one who handles this specific pathology... he only takes people with a Blackwood referral. He’s on your foundation’s payroll."

​She stopped at the door. Her hand was on the heavy brass handle. She didn't turn around, but her shoulders were shaking.

​"He has your eyes, Dante. And he’s running out of time."

​The silence in the room was absolute. It was the heaviest thing Dante had ever felt.

​He watched her go. He didn't move. He couldn't. The world was shifting under his feet, the skyscrapers outside suddenly feeling like toothpicks.

​"Wait," he said.

​She didn't wait. The door shut with a soft, final click.

​Dante stood there in the center of the room. The medical record. The red marker. The eyes.

​"Three years," he said to the empty room.

​He went back to the table. He picked up the business card she had left. Vance & Associates. He turned it over. There was a smudge of something on the back. Blue ink.

​He held it up to the light of the window.

​It was a drawing. A small, messy, blue-ink dinosaur with a long neck and three legs.

​Dante felt his throat get tight. He sat down in the chair she had just occupied. The room was too big. The lights were too bright. Everything he had built—the towers, the mergers, the billions—it all felt like ash.

​He picked up the phone.

​"Get me the director of the Children's Hospital," he said. His voice was cracked.

​"Sir? It's after five. The office is—"

​"I don't care. Get him on the phone. Now."

​He hung up. He looked at the dinosaur.

​Three years of looking for a ghost. Three years of silence. And she had been right there, four hundred miles away, holding up the sky by herself.

​Dante leaned back and closed his eyes. He could still smell her. Jasmine. And soap.

​The kid. Leo. Running out of time.

​He opened his laptop. He didn't look at the Singapore files. He didn't look at Marcus’s failures. He started typing. He looked for her name, Isabella Vance, in every database he had.

​And then he saw it. A news clip from a small-town paper. A fundraiser from six months ago.

Local boy fights rare condition. Community rallies for Leo Vance.

​There was a photo.

​Dante zoomed in. The boy was sitting on a park bench. He had a baseball cap on, pulled low. He was smiling, holding a plastic dinosaur.

​He had gray eyes.

​Dante stared at the screen until his own eyes burned. The silver pen on the table rolled slightly as the building vibrated from a passing train. It hit the floor with a tiny click.

​He didn't pick it up. He just sat there in the blue light of the monitor.

​The phone rang.

​"Mr. Blackwood? I have the director."

​Dante cleared his throat. He looked at the boy's eyes on the screen.

​"This is Dante Blackwood," he said, his voice returning to that low, melodic friction. "I have a son at your hospital. Tell me what he needs to stay alive."

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Comments (2)
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Clara’s Pen
Chapter one, and the story is getting addictive. I love
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E. Vale
This chapter drops us into the tension already. Love it!!
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    ​The rucksack strap tore with a sharp, canvas snap, but Bella didn't let go of the frame.​She swung the iron poker downward, not at Vance, but directly into the heavy bronze casing of the ledger safe behind the counter. The metal tip jammed into the lock housing with a dull, echoing thud that vibrated through the floorboards, locking the gears from the inside.​"Miller," Bella said, her breath coming short and cold as she kept her body between Vance and the desk. "Leave the keys. Get Cynthia out to the avenue."​"Isabella," Vance said, his silver cane shifting as he adjusted his weight with that slow, mechanical roll of his hip. His pale face remained completely level, but his long fingers tightened against the bone handle until his knuckles went yellow. "The Boston sheriff is already at the county gate. If the transmission isn't certified, the ridge belongs to the liquidation bank by sunrise. You’re holding an empty box."​"The box has the names, Vance," Bella said. She didn't look

  • The CEO’s Secret Triplets   Chapter 99

    The bronze bolt didn't slide; it sheared through the rotted pine casing with a dry, splintering roar that shook the wire house floorboards.​The front door swung inward, hitting the interior brick wall so hard the frosted glass finally gave way, raining large, jagged triangles across the parquet floor. The cold Manhattan rain swept inside, smelling of grease and soot, instantly wetting the edges of the uncertified papers on Mr. Miller’s desk.​The man stepped over the threshold, his silver bone-handled cane tapping once—click—against the brass sill. His dark oilskin coat didn't make a sound as he advanced, his right hip giving that strange, mechanical roll, but his pale face remained entirely smooth. He didn't look at Cynthia’s gasp or the shattered glass around his boots; his unhurried gaze fixed directly on the black ledger notebooks under the clerk's hands.​"The transmission is dead, Isabella," Mr. Miller whispered, his fingers freezing over the manual key. The thin copper needle

  • The CEO’s Secret Triplets   Chapter 98

    The frosted glass didn't shatter. It caved inward with a sharp, dry crackle that sounded like winter pond ice splitting under a boot.​The silver bone-handled cane didn't retreat. It remained pressed flat against the white fractures, the pale hand behind it applying a slow, hydraulic pressure until the bronze frame of the night-latch gave a long, metallic groan.​"Isabella," Cynthia whispered, her voice dropping into a flat, dry rattle as she backed into the oak ledger desk. Her knuckles hit Mr. Miller's inkwell, sending a thin stream of black fluid across the uncertified Boston probate sheets. "The frame is coming out of the brick."​Bella didn't step back. She stood four feet from the vestibule, her canvas rucksack resting square against her left calf, her hands holding the iron poker with the short, choked grip she had used to carry the baseline timber. The green flannel of Dante's shirt was damp against her shoulder blades, but her hazel eyes didn't track the cracks in the glass.

  • The CEO’s Secret Triplets   Chapter 97

    The heavy iron crowbar bit into the dry spruce of the window frame with a wet, splintering scream. Dante threw his shoulder against the lever, his bare forearms straining against the wood until the rusted nails in the casing gave way all at once, popping out of the plaster like old teeth.​"Get back, Arthur," Dante growled, his voice cutting through the hollow roar of the creek outside.​The entire lower sash tore loose from its tracks. The moment the pine frame cleared the sill, the mountain creek didn't just seep into the kitchen—it punched through the open square with a grey, churning violence that instantly knocked Sofia’s tin bread box off the counter. The water was thick with black silt, dead hemlock needles, and the crushed bark of the baseline ridge.​"The stove leg is clear," Arthur shouted, his hand shaking as he held the tallow candle three feet above the rush. The small yellow flame danced frantically in the wet draft, casting long, jerky shadows of the floating wood acros

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    The door to the Springfield wire house didn't open.Bella pressed her palm flat against the heavy frosted glass, her fingers leaving five dark streaks in the condensation. Inside, the long oak counter was empty, the green-shaded banker’s lamps turned low until they were nothing but faint circles of yellow in the deep shadows of the office."The lock is thrown from the interior," Cynthia whispered, her voice cracking as she leaned her wet shoulder against the brick frame of the vestibule. The rain was running down her neck now, staining the collar of her silk blouse a dark, bruised purple. "He’s gone, Isabella. The clerk always takes the four-forty express back to Stamford when the market log closes.""He hasn't taken the express," Bella said. She didn't look back at the avenue, where the yellow headlights of the city cabs were cutting through the downpour like slow fireflies. She raised her right hand, her knuckles chalky with the dried flour dust, and struck the glass twice—thud, thu

  • The CEO’s Secret Triplets   Chapter 95

    The iron poker hit the chain with a dull, wet clank that sent a single spark bouncing off the black brick. The brass rivet at the third link didn't snap. It sheared halfway through, the metal twisting under the force but holding the iron bars of the gate together.​"Isabella," Cynthia hissed, her fingers digging through the green flannel of Bella's sleeve until her nails touched skin. "The lock on the cellar door just dropped. They're in the passage."​"Stand back from the frame," Bella said.​She didn't look at the cellar exit behind them. She adjusted her grip on the rusted poker, her knuckles chalky with the dried flour dust, and drove the blunt end directly into the fractured rivet. The brass tore with a sharp, metallic rip, and the heavy links slid down the iron bars, piling into the grey puddle at her feet with a heavy splash.​Bella didn't wait for Cynthia to move. She shoved the iron gate outward, its rusted hinges groaning against the brick pillar, and pulled her sister into

  • The CEO’s Secret Triplets   Chapter 62

    The library felt like the inside of a vacuum, the air sucked out by the presence of the man standing by the fire. He was older than he had been in the grainy Geneva surveillance stills—his hair was a sharp, military silver, and the lines around his mouth were deeper—but the eyes were the same. They

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