로그인The glass doors of the office building slid open, letting in a rush of humid city air that did nothing to cool the anger burning in Lillian’s chest. She walked quickly, her heels clicking against the concrete sidewalk. She needed to breathe. She needed to get away from the air of that conference room, away from the smell of expensive leather and greed, and most of all, away from Nathaniel.
“Lillian! Wait!” She heard his voice over the rumble of midday traffic, but she didn’t slow down. She kept her eyes fixed straight ahead, navigating through the crowd of office workers on their lunch break. A hand caught her elbow, firm but careful not to pull too hard. She stopped abruptly and spun around, yanking her arm back. Nathaniel stood there, breathing heavily, his tie slightly crooked. The pristine facade he usually maintained was completely gone. “Do not touch me, Nathaniel,” Lillian said, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. “Do not even come near me.” “Lillian, please, just look at me,” Nathaniel said, holding his hands up in a defensive gesture. “We need to talk about what just happened in there. You can’t just walk away from a meeting like that without a plan.” Lillian let out a cynical laugh. “A plan? For whose benefit, Nathaniel? Yours or the Brooks Group? Because yesterday you were begging me to come back on my mother’s porch, telling me how much you regretted everything. And today, I find out that if I sign those papers, you lose every single thing your father built. You didn’t want me back because you realized my worth. You wanted me back because your entire inheritance depends on it.” Nathaniel winced, looking around at the passing pedestrians before stepping closer to her. “That is not entirely true. I didn’t know about the clause, Lillian. I swear to you on my father’s memory, I had no idea he put that in the will.” “But you know now,” she shot back, her eyes narrowing. “And the minute the lawyer read it, I saw your face. I saw the panic. You didn’t look at me like a husband who wanted his wife back. You looked at me like a businessman who just realized he accidentally sold his most valuable asset for pennies.” “Can we please go somewhere private?” Nathaniel pleaded, rubbing the back of his neck. “We are standing in the middle of the street. Let’s get in the car. I’ll have George drive us somewhere quiet where we can discuss this rationally.” “There is nothing rational about this,” Lillian said, shaking her head. “My entire marriage was a lie, and now my divorce is a corporate strategy. I am not getting into a car with you, Nathaniel. I am going back to my mother’s house, and I am going to think about exactly what I want to do next.” “Lillian, think about the company,” Nathaniel said, his voice taking on a harder, more desperate edge. “If the shares transfer to you, the board will panic. The stock prices will plummet by tomorrow morning. You don’t know how to run an international conglomerate. You dropped out of school, Lillian. You don’t have the experience for this. It will destroy everything my father built.” The words struck her like a physical blow, but instead of making her shrink, they made her spine stiffen. She looked at the man she had loved for over a decade, the man she had cooked for, cleaned for, and sacrificed her own dreams for, and she felt a cold wave of clarity wash over her. “You’re right,” she said softly, her voice deadly calm. “I don’t know how to run a conglomerate. But I do know how to read a contract. And right now, according to your father’s will, I hold every single card in this game. If I sign those papers today, you are ruined.” Nathaniel’s face went pale. “Are you threatening me?” “I’m stating a fact,” Lillian replied, adjusting the strap of her handbag on her shoulder. “For three years, you treated me like an inconvenience. You brought Vanessa into our life, you humiliated me in front of our friends, and you made sure I knew exactly how worthless I was to you. Now, the tables have turned. Let’s see how much you enjoy being at my mercy.” “Lillian, don’t do something foolish out of spite,” he warned, stepping forward again. “Vanessa and I—” “I don’t care about Vanessa,” Lillian interrupted, turning her back on him. “And right now, I don’t care about you either. Do not follow me.” She walked away, heading toward the nearest subway station instead of calling a cab. She wanted to be lost in a crowd of ordinary people who didn’t care about stock options, board members, or billion-dollar inheritances. When she finally reached her mother’s house an hour later, she felt completely drained. She opened the front door and found Margaret sitting in the living room, a notebook and a pen in her lap. “Lillian,” her mother said, standing up immediately. “How did it go? What did the lawyer say?” Lillian sank into the armchair, burying her face in her hands for a moment before looking up. “William left a clause in the will, Mama. A very specific one.” Margaret frowned, walking over to sit on the arm of the chair. “What kind of clause?” “If Nathaniel and I divorce within twelve months of his death, all the controlling shares of the Brooks Group transfer to me,” Lillian explained, the words still sounding surreal even as she spoke them aloud. “If we stay married, he keeps everything. But if we split up anytime this year, I get the empire.” Margaret stared at her daughter, her jaw dropping slightly. “William did that?” “Yes,” Lillian said, leaning back against the cushion. “He knew Nathaniel would try to cast me aside the moment he wasn’t around to protect the marriage. He built a trap.” “And Nathaniel?” Margaret asked quietly. “Did he know?” “He claims he didn’t,” Lillian said, staring at the floor. “But it doesn’t matter if he knew before or not. He knows now. That’s why he came here yesterday begging me to come back. He must have suspected something, or his private lawyer warned him to fix things with me just in case. He lied straight to my face, Mama. He acted like he suddenly realized he loved me, when all he cared about was his precious company.” Margaret pressed her lips together, her eyes flashing with anger. “That boy is exactly like his grandfather. Calculating until the very end. So, what are you going to do, sweety? Are you going to sign the papers and take the company from him?” Lillian looked out the window, watching the leaves rustle on the trees in the front yard. “If I sign the papers now, I get the shares, but the company goes into chaos. Nathaniel will fight me in court for years, and his lawyers will tear my life apart to prove I’m incompetent. But if I don’t sign them…” “If you don’t sign them, you stay married to a man who humiliated you,” Margaret said, her voice filled with concern. “No,” Lillian said, a slow, determined smile spreading across her lips. “If I don’t sign them, I stay married to him on paper, but I don’t go back to his house. I don’t play the dutiful housewife anymore. I make him wait. I make him sweat for a whole year, wondering when or if I’m going to pull the rug out from under his feet. And while he’s watching his back, I’m going to rebuild my life.” Margaret looked at her daughter, realizing that the fragile, heartbroken girl who had arrived on her porch two nights ago was gone. In her place stood someone entirely different. “You’re going back to school,” Margaret stated, a proud smile touching her lips. “Tomorrow morning,” Lillian agreed. “I’m going to register for the fall semester at the nursing school. Nathaniel wants me to be his shield for the next twelve months so he can keep his billions. Fine. But the price of that shield is going to be higher than he ever anticipated.”The kitchen in Margaret Harper’s house always smelled faintly of cinnamon and old cookbooks. Lillian sat at the small wooden table, an open textbook on maternal-newborn nursing resting beside a half-empty mug of chamomile tea. It was nearly eight in the evening, and she had spent the last two hours trying to memorize fetal development stages, but her mind kept drifting back to the cold stare Nurse Harrison had given her at the hospital.The front door opened, and Margaret walked in carrying two heavy bags of groceries, her keys jingling loudly in her hand.“Don't get up, sweety,” Margaret said quickly, using her elbow to nudge the kitchen door wider. “I’ve got it. How was the rest of your shift after that corporate idiot showed up?”Lillian closed her textbook with a soft sigh, standing up to help her mother unpack the bags. “Humiliating, Mama. Nurse Harrison warned me that if my personal life bleeds onto her floor again, I’m out of the clinical program. Nathaniel is doing this on pur
The smell of burnt coffee and industrial disinfectant filled the breakroom of the hospital’s third-floor medical-surgical unit. Lillian stood by the window, holding a paper cup of lukewarm water, watching the first rays of sunlight break over the city skyline. It was 5:45 a.m., and her feet were already aching from the orientation walk-through the previous afternoon.“Rough first night?” Maya asked, walking into the breakroom with a groan as she slumped into a plastic chair. She was wearing the same hospital-issue blue scrubs as Lillian, her hair tucked into a surgical cap.“I didn't sleep much before the shift,” Lillian admitted, turning around with a small, tired smile. “But once the charts started piling up, the adrenaline took over. I forgot how fast things move on a public floor.”“It’s a madhouse,” Maya agreed, tearing open a packet of instant oatmeal. “The nurse preceptor told me we have six bed baths and twelve vital sign checks to complete before the morning medication round
Chapter 10: Shadows in the GalleryThe classical music playing inside the grand downtown art gallery was soft, designed to blend into the background of clinking champagne flutes and muted conversations. Nathaniel Brooks stood near a massive abstract oil painting, his hands clasped behind his back, his eyes fixed on the canvas but his mind completely elsewhere.He hadn't slept properly in five days. Every time he closed his eyes in the quiet, echoing master bedroom at Oakfield, he kept seeing the cold, empty look in Lillian’s eyes as she walked out with her single suitcase. It bothered him more than he cared to admit.“Nathaniel, darling, you aren't even looking at the artist’s brushwork,” Vanessa whispered, her hand sliding smoothly down his arm as she leaned into his side. She was wearing an emerald green silk gown that drew glances from several patrons, her red lipstick perfectly painted.Nathaniel subtly pulled his arm back, stepping an inch away from her under the guise of looking
The sharp chime of the laboratory timer cut through the low murmur of the university lecture hall. Lillian quickly pulled her hand back, adjusting her safety goggles as she checked the solution she was measuring. Around her, twenty-five other nursing students were busy packing up their stethoscopes and clipboards, the frantic rustle of paper signaling the official end of the first week of clinical trials.“Make sure your lab reports are submitted to the online portal by midnight,” Dr. Evans called out over the noise of shuffling chairs. “And don’t forget, your hospital rotations begin next Monday at dawn. Wear your proper scrubs or you won’t be allowed on the floor.”Lillian smiled as she wiped down her black slate workstation with an alcohol wipe. It was a tedious task, but she enjoyed the simplicity of it. For three years, her routine had been defined by Nathaniel’s dinner schedule and the endless, silent management of a house that never truly felt like hers. Here, surrounded by the
The Oakfield estate looked exactly the same as it had the night Lillian walked out, yet to her, it felt like a completely different house. The grand iron gates opened automatically as her modest sedan drove up the long, winding driveway. She parked near the front entrance, turning off the engine and taking a deep breath before getting out.She wasn’t here to move back in. She was here to collect the rest of her belongings and to deliver her terms to Nathaniel face-to-face.She unlocked the front door with her key and stepped into the quiet foyer. The house felt cold, devoid of the warmth she had spent years trying to cultivate. She walked upstairs to the master bedroom, pulled a large suitcase from the closet, and began systematically packing her clothes, books, and personal mementos.She was halfway through her jewelry box when she heard the sound of a sports car engine outside, followed by the heavy front door opening downstairs. Footsteps hurried up the grand staircase, and Nathani
The campus of the city university was bustling with students holding schedules, buying textbooks, and rushing between buildings. Lillian stood in the administrative office, holding a folder containing her old transcripts. It had been nearly three years since she last walked through these halls, and the familiar smell of floor wax and old books brought a sudden rush of nostalgia. “Everything seems to be in order, Miss Harper,” the academic advisor said, looking up from his computer screen with a pleasant smile. “Since you completed your first two years with excellent grades, we can reinstate you into the clinical program starting next week. You’ll have to make up a few updated laboratory modules, but you can easily graduate within two years.” Lillian felt a massive weight lift from her shoulders. “Thank you, Dr. Evans. You have no idea what this means to me.” “We are glad to have you back,” he said, handing her a printed schedule. “Welcome back to the nursing department.” Lillian wa







