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chapter 9

Author: Didi writes
last update publish date: 2026-06-19 04:44:19

The question hung in the air between them, heavier than anything Richard had said so far.

Maureen forgot how to breathe for a second. She had known this moment was coming the instant her father started flipping through the report. She'd known he would find the name eventually. She just hadn't expected it to happen this fast.

Richard waited behind his desk, calm and quiet. He wasn't raising his voice. Somehow that made it worse than if he had.

Maureen looked down at the file between them. Damien's name was everywhere in it—rental agreements, hospital records, employment papers. Whoever had put this report together hadn't missed a thing.

"Maureen." Her father's voice softened. "Who is he?"

She swallowed hard. For the first time since walking into this study, she wanted to bolt for the door—not because she was scared of Richard, but because she wasn't ready to dig up any of it again.

Richard studied her, and something in his expression shifted. "Did he matter that much to you?"

The question cracked something open in her. A short, broken laugh slipped out before she could stop it.

"He mattered too much."

Richard's face darkened. That answer told him more than he wanted to know. He took off his glasses slowly and set them down on the desk.

"Who is Damien Vance?" he asked again, quieter this time.

And this time, Maureen gave him the truth. "He was my husband."

The words seemed to echo around the study, and then nothing—just a long, heavy silence. Richard didn't move at first. He simply stared at her, as if he wasn't sure he'd heard right.

"Your husband," he finally said.

Maureen nodded.

Richard leaned back in his chair. His face stayed calm, almost too calm, and that was what worried Maureen most. She knew her father well enough to know that this kind of stillness was far more dangerous than shouting would have been. When Richard Ashford went quiet like this, it meant he was working hard to hold himself together.

"You got married," he said, "and didn't tell your family."

"Yes."

"Didn't tell me."

"Yes."

He let out a short laugh with no humor in it at all. "My daughter vanishes for three years and gets married behind everyone's back, and I genuinely can't decide if I should be furious or impressed."

For a second, something close to a smile tugged at Maureen's mouth. It didn't last.

Richard's eyes stayed locked on her. "When?"

"Three years ago."

That landed harder than he expected. Three years meant she'd married almost right after leaving home—right after walking away from medical school, cutting herself off from everyone who loved her. A hundred questions crowded into his head at once, but only one mattered.

"Why didn't you tell us?"

Maureen looked away, because she already knew the answer and saying it out loud felt unbearable. She'd been afraid her family would disapprove, afraid they'd try to talk her out of it, or worse, stop it altogether. Afraid they'd look at Damien the way they'd looked at every man before him and decide, once again, that he wasn't good enough. Back then, she'd loved him too much to risk any of that. So she'd chosen him over everyone, including her own family.

"I thought I was protecting it," she said, her voice barely above a whisper.

"Protecting what?"

"My marriage."

Richard closed his eyes for a moment. For the first time, he was starting to understand how much his daughter had given up for a man. A man she'd loved enough to disappear for, whose name was stamped across nearly every page in that report.

He opened his eyes again. "Where is he now?"

Maureen's fingers dug into the armrest. There it was—the question she'd been dreading since she sat down. The room felt smaller all of a sudden.

Richard caught the change in her immediately, and his stomach dropped before she even answered. He was only now putting it together: his daughter had come home alone. If this marriage had been working, where was her husband? Why wasn't he here with her? The answer seemed obvious, and Richard found himself hoping, almost desperately, that he was wrong.

"Maureen." His voice gentled even further. "When did it end?"

The tears came before she could stop them—one, then another, then a third sliding down her cheek. Richard froze. He couldn't remember the last time he'd seen his daughter cry. As a child she'd barely cried at all; she'd broken her arm at eleven and refused to shed a single tear until the doctor was finished setting it. Now she sat in front of him completely undone, and something in his chest twisted at the sight.

"Four days ago," she said, her voice cracking on the last word.

Richard's stomach dropped further. Four days. The wound hadn't even begun to close. Suddenly everything made sense: she hadn't come home because she missed it, or because she'd finally forgiven him, or because she wanted her family back. She'd come home because she had nowhere else left to go. His daughter hadn't returned to him—she'd collapsed into his house, broken, and those were two very different things.

Richard sat with that for a moment before asking the only question that really mattered. "Did he hurt you?"

Maureen shook her head immediately. "No."

It came too fast, and Richard didn't believe it for a second. He'd spent thirty years across negotiating tables from politicians and billionaires. He knew exactly what it looked like when someone was hiding something.

"Did he hit you?"

"No."

"Did he abuse you?"

"No."

"Did he betray you?"

This time she didn't answer at all. The tears just came harder, and she looked away from him. That silence told Richard everything the word "no" hadn't. His jaw tightened, and real anger rose up in him.

Richard stood and walked to the window, needing a moment before he said something he'd regret.

Behind him, Maureen wiped at her face. She hated crying in front of anyone, and especially in front of her father.

"What happened?" Richard asked finally, turning back around.

It was a simple question, but answering it felt impossible. How was she supposed to explain years of loving someone who never loved her the same way back? three years spent trying to be the perfect wife, only to end up signing divorce papers while another woman waited upstairs in what used to be her bedroom? The words wouldn't come, so she said the only sentence she could manage.

"He chose someone else."

That was enough for Richard. He closed his eyes, and the rest filled itself in without her needing to say another word. When he opened them again, his expression had changed completely—the disappointment was gone, the frustration was gone, and only concern was left.

"My daughter left this house for a man," he said quietly, "and that man was foolish enough to let her go."

Fresh tears burned behind Maureen's eyes, but this time they came from somewhere different—from the relief of having someone on her side, not because she'd been right or wrong, but simply because she was his daughter.

A soft knock broke the moment, and Richard straightened himself before answering. "Come in."

One of the household staff stepped through the door. "Sir, Mr. Michael is asking whether Miss Maureen will join the family for lunch."

Richard glanced at his daughter. She looked wrung out, completely drained.

"Tell Michael she needs to rest."

"Yes, sir." The staff member slipped back out, and the study settled into quiet once more.

Across the city, inside Damien's office, Aurora sat watching him work through a stack of documents, answer emails, and take calls back to back. On the surface, everything about him looked completely ordinary. It wasn't, though—not to her. Every time Selene's name came up in conversation, something in Damien shifted. It was subtle enough that most people would have missed it entirely, but Aurora didn't miss things like that.

She'd noticed it at breakfast. And half an hour ago, when one of his executives mentioned, almost in passing, that he'd spotted Selene at L'Etoile. Aurora's smile had nearly slipped right off her face. At first she told herself Damien was just irritated by the gossip. Now she wasn't sure that was all it was. A cold, uneasy feeling had started settling into her chest—the first real fear she'd felt since coming back into his life. Not fear of Selene exactly. Fear that Damien might actually still be thinking about her.

That evening, once Damien had left for a meeting, Aurora sat alone in her room with her phone in her hand, staring at the screen for a long moment before she made up her mind. She dialed a number.

The call connected. "I need a private investigation done."

The man on the other end answered without hesitation. "Who are we looking into?"

"Michael Ashford," Aurora said. Then, after a pause, her voice dropping lower, "and I want to know exactly what he is to Selene."

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  • The Goodbye he regretted    CHAPTER 22

    Damien guided Aurora straight into his private office under the watchful gaze of his entire corporate staff. The moment the heavy doors clicked shut, Aurora burst into tears, throwing her arms around his waist and clinging to him tightly.‎"Damien, thank goodness you came down for me," she sobbed, her voice trembling. "I was absolutely terrified out there..."‎Damien’s expression darkened. Without a word, he placed his hands firmly on her shoulders and unclasped her grip, stepping back to distance himself. Aurora blinked, looking up at him in utter confusion. "Damien?"‎"Why did you do it?" Damien asked, his voice dripping with an icy, intimidating authority.‎"Do what?" she faltered.‎"Why did you leak our relationship status to the Daily News?" he demanded flatly.‎Aurora secretly let out a quiet breath of relief before immediately wrapping her arms around him again. "Because I love you, and I can't wait to be your wife. Don't you want to marry me too?"‎"I do, but forcing it into t

  • The Goodbye he regretted    CHAPTER 21

    "Aurora?" Damien's tone smoothed out slightly as he answered his phone."Damien! Please, you have to help me!" Aurora cried desperately. "I'm trapped in your office lobby, and a massive crowd of reporters has completely surrounded me! I don't know what to do, I'm so scared!""Stay where you are, I’m coming down right now," Damien said without a second thought, grabbing his tailored suit jacket and heading for the door."Mr. Vance! You can't go down there yourself!" Lucas hurried forward to block his path. "Just let me send the security team down to escort Ms. Moon upstairs. If you show your face in the lobby right now, the press will absolutely swallow you alive!"Damien's expression remained dark and stormy. Completely ignoring the warning, he swept past Lucas and out into the hallway.Downstairs, the atmosphere was total pandemonium."Ms. Moon! Has a date been finalized for your wedding with Mr. Vance?" a reporter yelled, shoving a microphone forward."The rumors say you and Mr. Van

  • The Goodbye he regretted    CHAPTER 20

    Maureen nodded slightly toward her secretary, signaling him to open the office door.‎"Ms. Vance!"‎Luther Adams, the hotel's vice president, pushed his way inside before Steven could stop him. He was the executive responsible for the major operational oversights discovered the day before, and he looked completely unraveled.‎‎Maureen watched him approach her desk with a cold, unbothered expression. "Mr. Adams, your resignation has already been processed. There is no reason for you to be here. I suggest you look for a job elsewhere."‎"You can't just throw me out!" Luther shouted, wiping sweat from his forehead as panic set in. "I’ve dedicated twenty years to this hotel, ruining my health from overwork! Your father wouldn't treat a loyal employee this way! How can you dismiss me without a second thought?"‎Maureen leaned back, a mocking smile on her lips. "I looked over the medical records of our upper management. Your 'exhaustion' boils down to a fatty liver and some gallbladder pol

  • The Goodbye he regretted    CHAPTER 19

    Maureen swept her hair into a messy bun, pinning it in place with a diamond clip before taking center stage in front of Michael. Dressed in a sky-blue outfit, she began to sing "Speechless" by Michael Jackson. Her performance was captivating, her features alive with expression.As the final note faded, Michael broke into warm applause. "Brilliant. Celeste certainly taught you well. In the old days, a performance like that would have easily won over royalty.""Who wants to be a princess anyway?" Maureen replied, snapping her fingers with a confident grin. "If I have a choice, I’m going to be the ruling queen."Michael gave a helpless laugh. "Well, our stepmother definitely treat you like one."Maureen looked down as she took a seat next to her oldest brother, feeling a brief wave of sympathy for the woman."She missed you terribly over the last three years, Maureen," Michael said gently, squeezing her shoulder. "She cares about you deeply and ask me about you all the time. I know you

  • The Goodbye he regretted    CHAPTER 18

    Hell no!" Ethan shouted as Michael hit the speakerphone.​“I’m looking for my wife,” Damien’s voice came through, dripping with possessive arrogance.​Ethan cussed and stepped forward, but Maureen instantly slammed his head down onto the table to silence him.​“Mr. Vance, Selene is no longer your wife. You’re divorced now,” Michael reminded him smoothly, intentionally using her alias to protect her true identity.​“She knows she’s still my wife,” Damien shot back icily.​Maureen snatched the phone, turning off the speaker as she ducked into an empty room. “Damien, why were you chasing me so aggressively on the highway just now? Cut to the chase.”​“Why did you change your phone number? Give me your new one so Grandma can contact you,” Damien commanded righteously.​Maureen smiled mockingly. “You can just call Mr. Ashford if you need to reach me.”​Damien ground his teeth. “Selene, is this your way of getting revenge? Are you so excited to move in with Michael that you can’t even wait

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  • The Goodbye he regretted    Chapter 1

    "Mrs. Vance, are you sure your husband didn't come with you today?"Selene looked up from across the doctor's desk and offered a small smile. "I came straight from the office. Damien is busy."The doctor shook his head with a chuckle as he flipped through her file. "Busy or not, I have a feeling he

  • The Goodbye he regretted    Chapter 4

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    The silence that followed Aurora's question was so thick that even the servants seemed afraid to move.Selene stood completely still, fingers tightening around the strap of her handbag.Aurora"s smile slowly faltered as she looked around and read the room. "Oh no, I didn't mean it like that," she s

  • The Goodbye he regretted    Chapter 2

    "Welcome home, Aurora."The words rang in Selene's ears as she stood frozen in the hallway.Aurora. She knew that name. She'd spent three years trying not to think about it, and here it was, hanging in the air like it had never left. Slowly, she tightened her grip on her handbag. The tiny baby shoe

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