LOGINA few hours after Elara left, Adrian was still buried in work and hadn’t eaten lunch. The rush of meetings had slowed, leaving the office quiet. At his desk, he reviewed a report on his laptop, barely noticing the time passing.
On the small table near his desk sat the lunch Elara had brought earlier.
He had ignored it for hours.
The insulated containers remained exactly where she had left them. For a long time, Adrian didn’t even look in their direction. He had already said what needed to be said.
Throw it away. That should have been the end of it.
Thomas had stepped out briefly to deliver documents to another department, leaving Adrian alone in the office.
After a moment, Adrian leaned back slightly in his chair and glanced toward the table. His eyes rested on the containers for a second longer than necessary.
It wasn’t appreciation. It was curiosity.
With a quiet exhale, he stood and walked over. His movements were slow, casual, as if the act meant nothing. He opened one of the containers and looked inside.
Soup. A light, clear broth with vegetables and thin slices of chicken. Nothing heavy. Nothing overly seasoned.
He frowned faintly. It looked... simple.
Adrian picked up the spoon beside the container. For a moment he simply held it, as though debating whether this was even worth his time. Then he took a small spoonful.
The taste surprised him.
Clean and balanced. The broth was light but flavorful, warm without being too rich. The seasoning was subtle, just enough to bring out the ingredients without overpowering them.
Adrian’s brow creased slightly.
It was exactly the kind of meal someone would prepare for digestion during a stressful workday, light, nourishing, and easy on the stomach.
Not something he would ever expect from Alessia Vale.
A thought crossed his mind. Maybe Gloria prepared it. That seemed more likely.
He took another spoonful before realizing he was still eating. The motion paused halfway as the thought registered.
His eyes narrowed slightly. That didn’t match the woman he thought he had married.
The socialite he remembered from society gatherings had been loud, dramatic, and careless about anything practical. Cooking was the last thing anyone would associate with her.
Yet the soup in front of him had clearly been made with attention. Another quiet spoonful followed. Adrian frowned deeper.
Then footsteps approached outside the office... Thomas.
Without hesitation, Adrian set the spoon down and closed the container. He moved it back exactly where it had been.
By the time Thomas entered, Adrian was already seated behind his desk again, eyes on the laptop screen.
The lunch sat untouched on the table. At least, that was how it appeared.
By the time Elara returned to the mansion, the afternoon sun had softened into the warm light of early evening. The house was quiet, the staff moving through their usual routines.
She stepped into the kitchen, placing her bag carefully on the counter.
Gloria was there, overseeing dinner preparations. The older woman glanced up as Elara entered.
For a moment, she studied the young woman’s face.
“Did Mr. Wolfe like the lunch?” Gloria asked carefully.
Elara paused before answering. “He said nothing.”
Gloria watched her a moment longer, then gave a small nod. “That usually means it wasn’t terrible.”
A faint smile touched Elara’s lips.
The kitchen was calm and orderly. Pots simmered softly on the stove while the staff moved quietly between counters and cupboards. For a moment, Elara simply watched the steady rhythm of the room.
Then she stepped forward. “May I help?”
One of the younger maids blinked in surprise.
Gloria studied her again, measuring her expression. “You don’t have to, Madam.”
“I know,” Elara replied gently. “But I would like to.”
She moved beside the counter and began arranging the ingredients neatly. Her movements were precise, done with an ease that suggested she was used to this kind of work.
Over the next few minutes, she asked small questions, about the house routines, meal schedules, and Adrian’s usual dinner habits.
Gloria answered slowly at first, but as the conversation went on, her tone began to relax.
She noticed how carefully Elara listened. The way she thanked the staff when they handed her something. The way she spoke without arrogance.
After a while, Gloria spoke thoughtfully.
“Madam,” she said, “you’re not quite like what people say.”
Elara glanced up. “What do people say?” she asked calmly.
Gloria hesitated for a moment before answering. “That Ms. Alessia is... difficult.”
Elara didn’t react. Instead, she returned her attention to the vegetables she was slicing.
People believed many things. For now, it was better that way.
Still, Gloria watched her a little longer. Something about this young woman didn’t match the stories circulating in social circles.
And slowly, quietly, Gloria found herself beginning to trust her.
Adrian returned to the mansion later that evening.
The house was lit warmly, the quiet order of the household already settling into night.
He stepped inside and loosened his tie slightly as he walked through the hall. As he passed the kitchen, his pace slowed.
Inside, Elara stood beside the counter, speaking softly with one of the staff. She held a small screwdriver in her hand, adjusting the loose hinge of a cabinet door.
The motion was simple and practical.
Adrian stopped briefly.
Since when did Alessia Vale fix things herself?
She finished tightening the screw and tested the cabinet door. It closed smoothly.
“Thank you,” the maid said gratefully.
“It was nothing,” Elara replied.
Her tone was gentle, natural. Not performative.
Adrian continued down the hallway without announcing himself.
Later, in the sitting room, he noticed her again.
Elara sat quietly by the window, a book in her hands. Its cover was filled with diagrams and technical text, hardly the kind of reading you’d expect from someone known for fashion events and parties.
Adrian’s eyes lingered on the cover for a moment before he looked away.
He wasn’t interested in her reading, or in her, but the thought stayed with him longer than he expected.
That night, inside the quiet guest room, Elara sat at the small desk. A small notebook lay open in front of her.
She held a pen and wrote slowly, carefully. Her handwriting was neat.
Coffee: black, no sugar
Each line was written like a research note. Precise. Observational.
Elara paused, reviewing what she had written.
Adrian Wolfe was not a man who acted carelessly. His habits were structured, efficient, and consistent. Understanding them would make everything easier.
She turned the page and added a few more notes. The notebook was becoming a quiet study of the man she now lived with.
Finally, she set the pen down.
“Three years,” she murmured softly to herself.
Her voice barely disturbed the still room.
“I just have to do this perfectly.”
There was no emotion in the words, only quiet determination.
The drive to Ashbourne Medical Center felt longer than it was.Beatrice leaned back, one hand over her belly as another contraction hit. Aria stayed calm beside her, while Marcus sat on the other side, tense and ready to bolt.“You’re doing well,” Aria said softly. “Just keep breathing.”Beatrice gave her a strained smile and nodded, drawing in a slow breath.Marcus gripped the seat tightly, his knuckles white.Nolan caught his expression in the rearview mirror. “You look worse than the patient.”Marcus barely looked up. “I’m trying not to panic.”Nolan snorted. “You’ve negotiated billion-dollar contracts without blinking.”Marcus gave a short breath that was almost a laugh. “Contracts don’t come with contractions.”That earned him a glance from Nolan and a faint smile from Aria, though Beatrice was too busy riding out the pai
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A few months had passed since Richard Vale’s arrest, and life had grown quieter, though not quite the same as before. Too much had changed for that. The shock had faded, but everyone was still finding a new rhythm.Marcus and Beatrice had married a few months after the arrest in a ceremony that was intimate by their standards, though still elegant enough that most people would have called it grand. They had wanted something simple and warm, without the kind of spectacle their families could easily create. Of course, with the Sterlings and the Volkovs in attendance, even a modest gathering had turned into an impressive affair.Now another celebration had brought everyone together again.The Wolfe Estate had been transformed for Caelum’s sixth birthday and his formal introduction as the young Wolfe heir.The gardens were filled with tents, banners, and science exhibits instead of formal billionaire party decorations. Caelum had asked for science
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Several months later, the final judgment was delivered.By then, the trial had lasted through many hearings. Financial experts, investigators, forensic accountants, trust administrators, and several witnesses had all testified. The court had also reviewed thousands of pages of bank records, corporate filings, emails, and trust documents.The prosecution argued that Richard Vale had carried out a long-running fraud built on deception and abuse of trust. They said the evidence showed years of deliberate misconduct for personal gain.His defense challenged the reliability of some records, questioned witness credibility, and argued that several transactions had legitimate business explanations. They maintained that much of the case was circumstantial and that the prosecution had not proved intent on every count.In the end, the court disagreed.When the courtroom fell silent, the judge looked directly at Richard."The defendant carried out a lon
Two days after Caelum declared Operation Surprise, Adrian stood in his office with Thomas and a small black velvet box on the desk between them.Thomas had just returned from London and, for once, looked almost pleased with himself.“It’s ready,” he said.Adrian opened the box.The ring was exactly what he had asked for: classic, elegant, and expensive without being loud. A flawless oval-cut diamond sat low in a slim platinum band, framed by a hidden halo that only caught the light when it moved. It was refined rather than flashy, the kind of piece that suited Aria because it never tried too hard. Inside the band, the jeweler had engraved one word in tiny script.Always.Adrian stared at it for a moment longer than he meant to.Thomas watched him. “You wanted something special, not something that belongs in a display case.”Adrian closed the box. “She’s not marrying a price tag.”
The moment Aria’s office door closed, the sound of Aurelia Nexus faded into a distant, controlled hum.She didn’t sit right away. She walked straight into her private lounge, removed her clothes, and cleaned u
Morning arrived without peace.Aria had barely left her room when a security staff approached her near the staircase.“Ma’am,” he said carefully, “the press i
Aria stayed in her study long after Marcus ended the call.The alerts on her laptop kept flashing, one after another, but she no longer reacted to them the same way. Her focus had already shifted.What had once looked like chaos now started to resemble structure, patterns hidden inside noise.Slowl
The moment Solen stepped into her car, she shut the door harder than necessary. The sound echoed sharply inside the quiet vehicle.“Drive,” she said coldly.The driver started the engine, but Solen barely noticed.Her hands tightened around her phone, fingers trembling slightly.Aria’s words kept r







