ログインI ordered wine. The work wasn't finished. The room was quieter. She took the glass without comment. Drank. Set it down and kept writing. She spoke about the eastern corridor communities directly, without framing or adjustment, as if they existed in the room with us. Her hand moved as she talked, m
Edward's POV The door opened behind me. No knock. She came in already talking. "I need your numbers from Rotterdam before we fix anything else," she said. "The version you gave him assumes—" She stopped. I didn't turn immediately. Just reached for the towel, dragged it once over my face, then
The auctioneer's cadence moved through the wall. I had built something without him. That was still true. It would stay true. Whatever I said next didn't touch it. "I don't know," I said. "That's the honest answer. Not the managed version." I met his gaze. "I don't know if what's left is enough to
Alicia's POV The older man was still talking. "Seven years," he said. "Four jurisdictions. We moved water infrastructure across borders that hadn't spoken to each other in a generation." His hands traced corridors in the air between us. "The archive is the proof it happened. That it worked." He tu
“You entered without cause,” I said. “You stayed without one.” “I don’t know what this is between you two but—” “My wife.” No variation in tone. No additional weight needed. Alicia’s hand lifted a little, then halted mid-motion and settled again without completing the gesture. The woman exhaled
Edward’s POV “Forty thousand. Do I have forty-five?” The paddle was already raised. Alicia’s hand remained under mine, unchanged in position, as though neither of us had adjusted to its presence since it settled there. “Forty-five.” I raised. “Fifty. Fifty-five.” On the left, a man leaned forw
When Edward finally spoke, his words were measured. Careful. "With respect, Ms. Valentine, we're not talking about conditional compensation. These bonuses were earned. The question is whether we approve them now or create uncertainty that undermines executive retention." The room went quiet. He'd
Alicia’s POV I was already sitting when I noticed the nameplate. Someone had placed it on the corner of the desk. Silver. Flat. Alicia Valentine Majority Shareholder My jacket hung on the back of the chair. The folder from the board meeting sat open in front of me. Zoning variance timeline. Br
I could feel the shift in his posture as he gestured toward the projection. “Our biggest project right now: an entire Midtown block, rising into luxury apartments, offices, and shops. The total cost—four hundred and thirty million dollars, backed by floating‑rate bridge financing, with limited rate
"This isn't normal," she said quietly. "What isn't?" "This. You. Standing there like you have the right." "The right to what?" "To look at me that way." "What way?" "Like you want something." "I do want something." "You can't have it." "Can't I?" "No." "Why not?" "Because you gave it up.







