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Chapter 14

Author: Ernest
last update publish date: 2026-06-30 03:12:52

I didn’t respond to Julian’s text for six days.

Not out of strategy this time — I want to be honest about that, even if only with myself. I didn’t respond because I genuinely didn’t know what true thing I could say back that wouldn’t either reopen a door I’d worked hard to close, or slam it shut in a way I might later regret.

So I said nothing, and went to work, and let the silence between us become its own kind of answer.

The board review moved fast once the fraud allegations became official. Richard kept me updated in the clipped, efficient way he updated everyone — facts only, no editorializing — and through him I learned, in pieces, what was actually happening to the company I’d once quietly kept alive.

Two more senior staff members resigned. The interim chairman started attending meetings Julian wasn’t invited to, a humiliation so specific and so total that even Richard, usually unmoved by Van Corporation’s suffering, paused for a second before delivering that particular update.

“He’s not gone,” Richard said. “Not yet. But he’s becoming someone the board talks around instead of to. That’s usually how it starts.”

I thought about a man stepping over broken glass without looking down, ordering a medical team for someone else’s comfort while my blood dried on his kitchen floor.

I thought, more uncomfortably, about the crack in his voice at that podium.

I didn’t know what to do with either memory, so I filed them both away and kept working.

Vivian texted me twice that week — brief, businesslike, nothing like the woman who’d called me staff in front of thirty guests. The Singapore fund had quietly withdrawn its interest once the patents transferred cleanly to Hale Capital; without that specific prize, the broader takeover chaos apparently held less appeal for opportunists who preferred clean kills to messy ones.

Vivian: For what it’s worth, I’m leaving New York. The ballet offered me a teaching position in Geneva. I’m taking it.

Vivian: I know this doesn’t fix anything. I just wanted you to know I’m not going to be a complication anymore.

I read both messages twice and felt, surprisingly, almost nothing — no triumph, no lingering anger, just the quiet, slightly anticlimactic sensation of a conflict ending not with confrontation but with someone simply leaving the stage. I didn’t respond to those either, though for entirely different reasons than my silence toward Julian.

Some doors didn’t need closing ceremonies. They just needed to stop being relevant.

On the seventh day, Julian showed up at my office.

Not the lobby this time — somehow, impossibly, he’d gotten past the front desk, and I looked up from my desk to find him standing in the doorway of the glass-walled conference room I’d been using for the afternoon, security hovering uncertainly a few feet behind him like they weren’t sure whether this counted as an emergency.

“Five minutes,” he said. “I know I keep asking for five minutes. I know it’s not fair to keep showing up like this. But I’m asking anyway, because I don’t know how else to reach you, and I’d rather you tell me to leave to my face than keep reading silence as an answer I’m too afraid to actually hear.”

I looked past him at security, who looked back at me, clearly waiting for permission to remove him.

“It’s fine,” I told them. “Give us a minute.”

They retreated, reluctantly. Julian stepped fully into the room and closed the door behind him, and for a moment we just stood there, ten feet apart, in a glass box overlooking the trading floor, completely visible to anyone who cared to look and completely alone in every way that mattered.

“You didn’t respond,” he said.

“No,” I said. “I didn’t.”

“Was it true? What I said at the press conference. Did you believe it, even a little?”

I considered lying. It would have been easier, cleaner, more consistent with the version of myself I’d been building since that dinner — cold, controlled, unmoved.

“I believed you meant it,” I said instead. “That’s different from it mattering.”

Something in his face shifted. “Why doesn’t it matter?”

“Because you said it in a room full of cameras, Julian, to repair your own reputation as much as mine,” I said. “You’ve had five years of private moments to tell me something true. You chose a press conference. That tells me everything about which audience you were actually performing for.”

“I wasn’t performing,” he said, and something raw entered the voice that I hadn’t heard from him before — not in five years, not at the dinner, not even on my sidewalk two nights ago. “I’ve been trying to find the courage to say something like that to you privately for over a week, and I kept failing, because every time I imagined it, I imagined you looking at me exactly the way you’re looking at me right now — like you’re waiting for the catch.”

“There’s always been a catch with you,” I said quietly. “I spent five years discovering that the hard way.”

“I know.” He said it simply, without defense, which somehow landed harder than any argument could have. “I know exactly what I did. I’ve had nothing but time to sit with it since the board started circling, since the company started falling apart around me, since I lost every single thing I thought defined who I was — and the only thing that’s actually kept me upright through any of it is the humiliating, undeniable fact that the only person who ever really saw me clearly is you, and I spent five years too blind to see you back.”

The trading floor hummed faintly beyond the glass. Somewhere out there people were buying and selling pieces of companies that weren’t ours, indifferent to the two people standing very still in a conference room, finally saying things that should have been said years earlier.

“What do you actually want from me, Julian,” I asked. “Not the speech. Not the version you’d give a journalist. What do you actually want?”

He was quiet for a long moment, and I watched him search for an honest answer instead of reaching immediately for the practiced one.

“I want to learn how to be someone who doesn’t need you to fix anything,” he said finally. “I want to be someone who shows up because he wants to know you, not because he’s drowning and you’re the only person who’s ever pulled him out. I don’t know how to do that yet. I don’t even know if it’s possible for me, given everything. But I want to learn how, even if you never let me close enough to prove it.”

I felt something crack open in my chest — not forgiveness, not yet, but something adjacent to it, something that recognized, however reluctantly, the difference between this and every other version of Julian Holloway asking me for something.

“That’s the first thing you’ve said,” I said slowly, “that didn’t sound like you needed something from me.”

“I know,” he said. “It terrifies me how long it took to say it.”

We stood there in silence for a moment, the city moving indifferently below us, neither of us reaching for the other, both of us aware that something had shifted slightly without either of us fully understanding what it meant yet.

“I’m not ready to forgive you,” I said finally. “I want to be honest about that, the same way you’re being honest with me.”

“I’m not asking you to be ready,” he said. “I’m just asking you not to close the door completely. Not yet.”

I looked at him for a long moment — this man who’d once stepped over my blood without looking down, now standing in a glass conference room admitting, for the first time in five years, that he didn’t know how to love someone without needing them.

“I won’t close it completely,” I said quietly. “But I’m not opening it either. Not today.”

He nodded, slowly, like that was more than he’d expected and exactly as much as he deserved.

“Today’s enough,” he said.

Then he left, and I stood alone in that glass room for a long time afterward, watching the trading floor below, trying to understand why the silence he left behind felt heavier than any of the silence that had come before it.

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