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The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing
The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing
Autor: Opey Lux

Chapter One: The Wrong Name in the Right Room

Autor: Opey Lux
last update Fecha de publicación: 2026-06-04 23:36:14

I got there early.

That was intentional.

I wanted to be in my seat before any of them walked through that door. I wanted to already own the room before they figured out the room had been taken.

Cole Industries. Fourteenth floor. The boardroom with the floor-to-ceiling glass and the table long enough to seat twenty. I used to stand on the pavement outside this building and feel the weight of everything I was hiding. Today I walked through the lobby like I owned the lease.

Claire was right behind me, heels quiet, laptop already open before she sat down.

That is what I love about her. She never needs to be told twice.

"They land in three minutes," she said, eyes on her screen.

"Good."

"Amelia." She said my name like a question.

"I'm fine, Claire."

She gave me the look she reserves for when she thinks I am lying but has decided not to fight me on it. Then she went back to her screen.

I pulled the chair at the head of the table and sat down.

The leather was cold. The room smelled like fresh coffee and recycled air and the particular anxiety of a company that does not yet know it is already losing. I set my folder on the table. Uncapped my pen. Crossed one leg over the other.

And I waited.

I was good at waiting. Six years had made me excellent at it.

They came in nervous. That was the first thing I noticed.

Four of them — Sebastian's senior team — filing in with their navy suits and their matching expressions of barely-held-together composure. They took the seats on the opposite side, arranged their papers, and barely looked at me.

That happened a lot. People looked at me and saw a woman in a nice outfit.

They stopped making that mistake eventually.

One of them leaned toward another and whispered something. The other one nodded, glancing at the door. Waiting for their boss to arrive and make sense of everything. The youngest one — mid-thirties, new haircut, the look of someone recently promoted — kept glancing at my folder like he was trying to read it upside down.

I let him look. There was nothing in that folder he was ready to understand yet.

I picked up my pen and wrote nothing. Just held it. Kept my face easy, open, like this was any other Tuesday.

The door opened again.

He walked in on a phone call.

"Push the filing to Thursday. Not Wednesday —" His eyes were on the floor, one hand loose at his side. "Thursday. Final answer."

He ended the call. Dropped the phone on the table. Pulled out his chair without looking up and said to the room, "Who's leading for Rhodes Legacy?"

"I am."

My voice came out the way I trained it to. Steady. Light. Like I was commenting on the weather.

Sebastian looked up.

And for one full second, the entire room stopped making sense to him.

I watched it cross his face — not dramatically, not in slow motion, just the way a man looks when the ground shifts under him and he has not yet decided whether to stumble or stand. His hand was still on the back of his chair. His mouth was open on a word he had already forgotten.

He looked at me the way you look at something that has no business being where it is.

I looked back.

He was different. Older in the way that suits certain men — the softness gone, everything sharpened. He had always carried himself like someone who expected to be the most important person in any room he entered. That had not changed. If anything, standing there with his team watching him freeze, he looked more like himself than I had seen in years.

Which was the problem, really.

"Amelia."

He said it like the word surprised him. Like my name had been living somewhere at the back of his chest and just fell out.

I gave him nothing back.

I looked down at my folder. Turn to page three. Run my finger along the first line of figures and let the silence do what silence does best.

His team was looking between us now. Claire was typing. The clock was ticking. Everything in the room was functioning like normal.

Sebastian had not moved.

"We have a full agenda," I said, not looking up. "I'd like to start with the Q3 asset review."

"Amelia." Lower this time. Not a greeting. A warning dressed up as a name.

"Page three," I said. "Your briefing document."

One of his team members reached for his papers. Good. That was what I needed — everyone else moving forward while Sebastian stood at the edge of something he was not ready for.

He sat down slowly.

I felt every second of it without looking at him. Six years of silence settling into the chair across from me, rearranging itself, trying to figure out what this was.

The youngest one on his team cleared his throat and opened to page three. Sebastian still had not looked away from me. His team kept their eyes down, suddenly very interested in their documents. Nobody in that room wanted to be the first to speak. Claire, to her credit, did not look up from her laptop once.

He leaned forward.

"We need to talk before—"

"Mr. Cole."

Not loud. Not cold. Just final.

He stopped.

I looked up and met his eyes for the first time since I walked back into his world. No flinch. No apology. No version of the woman who used to make herself smaller so he could feel bigger.

Just me, at the head of his table, in the room he thought was his.

I had spent six years building toward this moment. All of it had been leading here. To this room. To this table. To the look on his face right now.

It felt exactly the way I thought it would.

I was not prepared for how much it still hurt.

"Shall we begin?"

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