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The Wrong Mr Calloway
The Wrong Mr Calloway
Author: Elodie

Chapter One

Author: Elodie
last update publish date: 2026-07-02 21:23:00

Sienna's Pov

“Mommy, you’re staring again.”

I blinked and looked down at Ava.

My four-year-old daughter sat at the kitchen table, swinging her legs while eating cereal. She was watching me with the kind of concern only a child could have, her little brow furrowed in concentration.

I forced a smile. “I am not.”

“You are.”

“I was thinking.”

“That’s staring,” she declared with the absolute certainty of a four-year-old.

I laughed despite myself. Leave it to Ava to call me out before seven in the morning.

Today was important. Very important. My first day at Calloway Industries meant a better position, better pay, better hours—the kind of job that could finally let me stop worrying every time Ava needed new shoes or got sick. I should have been excited, but instead, I felt nervous. Maybe because it seemed too good to be true. Or maybe because every good thing in my life always seemed to come with a catch.

“Finish your breakfast,” I told her.

Ava saluted me with her spoon. “Yes, ma’am.”

I shook my head, smiling. Sometimes I forgot she was only four.

By eight-thirty, I’d dropped her off at daycare and was standing in front of the tallest building in the city. Calloway Industries stretched into the sky like it owned the clouds, and honestly, the Calloways probably did own everything else. I adjusted my blazer and walked inside, muttering under my breath, “Don’t mess this up, Sienna.”

The lobby was already busy with employees rushing in every direction, phones ringing, elevators opening and closing. Money moved through this building every second, and standing here, I felt impossibly small. I hated feeling small.

A woman from Human Resources greeted me and handed me a visitor badge. “Conference Room Twelve. The executive team is waiting.”

The executive team. Great. No pressure.

I followed her directions to the elevator, and my stomach twisted tighter with every floor that passed. When the doors finally opened, I took a deep breath and walked toward the conference room.

The door was already open. Several people sat around a long table—people I recognized from company articles. Department heads. Executives. People with power.

Then I saw him.

My entire world stopped. For one impossible second, I couldn’t breathe, couldn’t move, couldn’t think. Dark hair, strong jaw, broad shoulders, dark eyes. No. My heart slammed against my ribs.

I knew that face. I had traced that jawline with my fingertips four years ago. I had kissed that mouth. I had spent one unforgettable night with that man. The father of my daughter.

The room suddenly felt too small, too hot, too loud.

He looked up. Our eyes met, and my pulse exploded as the memories hit all at once—the hotel bar, his laugh, the tattoo on his arm, the way he looked at me like I was the only woman in the room. Four years vanished in a heartbeat.

The man frowned slightly. Not in recognition, but in confusion, like he’d never seen me before. Something felt terribly wrong.

“Miss Vale?”

I jerked. Everyone was looking at me. Wonderful. First day and I was already embarrassing myself.

The man stood. “You’re our new project manager?”

His voice hit me next—cold, controlled, professional. Not him. The face was right, but everything else was wrong.

I stared, struggling to make sense of what I was seeing.

“Yes,” I finally managed.

His expression didn’t change. No recognition, no shock, nothing. As if we’d never met. As if Ava didn’t exist. As if that night had never happened.

A strange feeling settled in my stomach—not anger, but confusion. The man from four years ago had warmth. This man felt like ice.

“I’m Roman Calloway,” he said.

Roman. The name landed heavily. Not Cole. The name from the hotel had been Cole—I remembered that clearly. The realization hit me so hard I almost sat back down.

Twins. They had to be twins. There was no other explanation.

The meeting started, but I heard almost none of it. People talked, charts appeared on screens, numbers were discussed, but my mind was racing. Roman. Cole. Calloway. Twins. My eyes kept drifting toward him, and every time they did, I noticed another difference. The posture. The voice. The expression. The way he carried himself. The man I remembered smiled easily. Roman looked like smiling required actual effort. Still, the resemblance was terrifying.

Ava had his eyes. Or not his. Cole’s. But the difference suddenly felt meaningless.

By the time the meeting ended, my head was pounding. People filed out, and I gathered my papers quickly, needing air, answers, maybe both.

I stepped into the hallway.

“Miss Vale.”

My entire body froze. Roman stood behind me, too close, too familiar, too wrong.

“Yes?”

His eyes narrowed slightly. “I feel like we’ve met before.”

My pulse stopped. For a moment I thought everything was about to come crashing down. Then he continued.

“Have we?”

I forced myself to breathe. “No.”

A lie. A huge one. But technically true—I had never met Roman, only his brother.

Something unreadable flashed across his face. Then he nodded. “Strange.”

“What is?”

“You looked shocked when you saw me.”

I laughed nervously. “First-day nerves.”

His gaze lingered, like he didn’t believe me, like he knew something wasn’t right. Then his phone rang. He glanced at the screen, and his expression hardened instantly.

“Excuse me.”

I watched him walk away. The moment he disappeared around the corner, I grabbed my phone with shaking hands.

The search took less than thirty seconds. Calloway family. Images. Articles. Profiles. And there he was—Roman Calloway, CEO, billionaire, the public face of the company.

Then I saw another picture, and my breath caught. Standing beside Roman was another man. Identical. Same face, same eyes, same jaw. But unlike Roman, this one was smiling.

The caption read: COLE CALLOWAY — Former Executive Director.

I stared at the image as my stomach dropped. There was no doubt, no uncertainty, no possibility I was mistaken. The man in that photograph was Ava’s father.

Then I noticed the date. The article was two years old. Beneath the photograph was a single sentence that made my blood run cold.

“Cole Calloway has not been seen publicly since the scandal that forced his departure from Calloway Industries.”

My phone rang.

I jumped. June. My best friend.

I answered immediately. “Sienna? How was your first day?”

I looked at the photograph again, at the smiling man who had disappeared, at the face that matched my daughter’s perfectly.

Then I whispered, “June… I think I just found Ava’s father.”

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  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter Eleven

    Cole’s PovI’d been standing outside Sienna’s apartment building for almost an hour before I found the nerve to move.Four years. Four years of watching her from a distance, telling myself it wasn’t the right time, that showing up would only put her in danger. Four years of convincing myself that staying gone was the same thing as keeping her safe.Tonight I’d finally decided it wasn’t.I checked my phone one more time, rehearsing what I was going to say. Something simple. Something that wouldn’t scare her off before she even understood who I was. “Sienna, I know this is going to sound insane, but I need you to hear me out.” That was as far as I’d gotten in four hours of practicing.I took a step toward the entrance, and that’s when the black SUV pulled up across the street.I froze instinctively, years of habit kicking in before my brain even caught up. Two men got out, both dressed like they were trying too hard to look casual, both scanning the street the way people do when they’re

  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter Ten

    Roman’s Pov I waited until the office emptied out before I went looking for answers about Cole.Nobody talked about my brother anymore. It had been three months since he vanished, and the official story was that he’d taken a leave of absence to clear his head. I never believed that, not for one second, because Cole didn’t take breaks. He barely took weekends.I sat down at the security terminal in the server room and started pulling files from the week he disappeared. Camera footage, badge access logs, anything that could tell me where he went and why.Most of it was gone.I checked the dates again, thinking I’d made a mistake. I hadn’t. The footage from three days before Cole vanished had been deleted, along with two days after. Someone had gone in and wiped it clean, then covered the gap so it wouldn’t look obvious unless you were specifically looking for it.I sat there for a long moment, just staring at the empty folders.“Who has access to this?” I muttered to myself.I pulled u

  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter Nine

    Sienna’s PovRoman called me into his office at eight in the morning, and I thought he was going to fire me.“Sienna, get your coat,” he said instead. “You’re coming with me.”“Coming with you where?”“The investor meeting. The one for the Hartley project. You’re the only person who actually knows what happened with the delay, so you’re going to explain it to them instead of me guessing.”I stared at him. Roman Calloway didn’t ask people to come with him anywhere. He gave orders and expected them followed.“You want me in the room with investors?”“I want the truth in the room with investors. You’re the truth. Now grab your coat, we’re already late.”I grabbed my coat.The car ride was silent except for him typing on his phone, jaw tight, eyes tired in a way I hadn’t noticed before. I always thought Roman looked exhausted because he was bored with everyone around him. Now I wondered if it was something else.“You okay?” I asked.He looked up, surprised. “Why do you ask that?”“Because

  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter Eight

    Cole’s PovI arrived outside The Grand Monarch almost twenty minutes before Sienna did.The truck was parked across the street beneath the shade of a large oak tree, far enough away that nobody would pay attention to it but close enough for me to keep the restaurant entrance in clear view.I hated that Eleanor had reached her first. Nate had warned me she was moving, and Victor had started digging. Nothing about this meeting was a coincidence.I leaned back in my seat and checked my watch for what had to be the fiftieth time. One hour passed, then another, before the restaurant doors finally opened.Sienna stepped outside first. She wasn’t crying, and she wasn’t angry, she simply looked lost, the kind of lost that came after hearing something capable of changing the way you saw your entire life. She stood motionless on the sidewalk with an envelope clutched tightly against her chest while my mother’s car disappeared into traffic.I watched her remain there for several seconds before s

  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter Seven

    Sienna’s PovFor several long seconds, neither of us spoke.I remained standing beside the chair while Eleanor Calloway watched me with a level of composure that somehow made me even more nervous than anger would have.She looked exactly the way every magazine described her, elegant, perfectly dressed, and completely in control. Even the way she held her teacup seemed like she practiced over and over. She finally smiled.“Please.”She gestured toward the empty chair opposite her.“I don’t enjoy speaking to people while they’re standing.”I hesitated before slowly sitting down. The chair suddenly felt much smaller than it actually was.A waiter appeared almost immediately.“Would you like something to drink, Miss Vale?”“I’ll just have water, thank you.”He nodded politely before disappearing again.Eleanor waited until he was gone before speaking.“I appreciate you coming.”I blinked. That wasn’t what I had expected.“I wasn’t sure I had much of a choice.”“You always have a choice,”

  • The Wrong Mr Calloway    Chapter 6

    Sienna’s Pov The afternoon sun hung low outside the glass walls of Calloway Industries, but I barely noticed it because every sound around me had faded beneath the pounding of my own heartbeat.I was still standing outside the building with my phone pressed tightly against my ear.The silence on the other end lasted only a few seconds, but it felt endless.Finally, I forced myself to speak.“…My daughter?”“Yes.”The woman didn’t hesitate.“I believe we should have a conversation about her.”Every instinct inside me screamed that I should hang up.Instead, I swallowed hard.“I think you’ve made a mistake.”“I rarely do.”Her voice was calm, polished, and completely emotionless.“I know exactly who you are, Miss Vale.”My fingers tightened around the phone.“I don’t understand.”“You don’t need to understand over the phone.”Her tone never changed.“We will discuss everything tomorrow.”“No.”The word escaped before I could stop it.“I’m not meeting a stranger.”A soft laugh came thro

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