로그인The ballroom at the Hôtel du Rhône was drenched in candlelight and quiet power. Crystal chandeliers glimmered overhead, silver cutlery glinted on linen-draped tables, and the murmur of European accents filled the air like a low tide. This wasn't just a dinner - it was a stage, and every investor, politician, and green-tech magnate here was an actor playing for keeps.
Damian's hand rested lightly at the small of my back as we entered. Not possessive, but steady - like a reminder, or a warning. I didn't know which.
The photographers' flashes went off again. I smiled for the cameras, my expression practiced. Inside, my stomach was tight. This was my world once - investors, deals, speeches - but tonight it felt like enemy territory.
"They're waiting for us at the head table," Damian murmured in my ear. His voice was low, velvet over steel. "Ready?"
"Always."
He smiled, the faintest flicker at the corner of his mouth, as if my defiance pleased him.
We took our seats. The table was a who's who of European green-tech power: the chair of the GreenTech Council, a Swiss billionaire who owned half the hydropower stations on the continent, a young French minister with eyes like hawks. They all turned to Damian first, of course. His reputation preceded him like a trumpet blast.
I kept my smile polite as the introductions went around. When it was my turn, I felt their eyes assess me - the underdog, the upstart American CEO clinging to her company in the jaws of a corporate giant.
"It's an honor to finally meet you," said the council chair, a silver-haired woman with diamond studs. "We've heard much about GreenSphere's innovations."
"Thank you," I said. "Innovation has always been our heartbeat."
Dinner began, course after course appearing like magic. Conversation flowed easily around the table, but under it ran a current of calculation. These people weren't here for food. They were here to decide who to back, who to crush, who to ignore.
Damian spoke smoothly about the merger, laying out his vision. The others nodded, murmuring approval. He had them in the palm of his hand, and he knew it.
Then one of the investors - a sharp-eyed man named Victor Lang, whom I'd only seen in headlines - turned to me. "And you, Ms. Grant? How do you feel about... sharing power with Mr. Cross?"
It was a knife wrapped in velvet. I felt Damian's gaze flick to me, a warning to tread carefully.
I set down my wine glass and smiled. "GreenSphere was built on independence and responsibility. Those values haven't changed. Partnering with Mr. Cross allows us to scale while protecting those values. I'm here to ensure we do just that."
A ripple of interest passed around the table. Victor Lang tilted his head, intrigued. "And if Mr. Cross disagrees?"
The question hung in the air like a guillotine.
I held Victor's gaze. "Then Mr. Cross and I will have... spirited discussions. But ultimately, we both want success. And I don't lose."
A soft chuckle went around the table. Even Damian's lips quirked. "She's telling the truth," he said lightly. "She doesn't lose."
The council chair smiled at me with something like respect. Score one for me.
As dessert was served, Damian leaned closer, his shoulder brushing mine. "Nice answer," he murmured.
"Thanks," I said without looking at him. "I've had practice."
He chuckled softly. "You might actually enjoy this if you stopped seeing it as a battlefield."
"It is a battlefield," I said. "You just like the war."
Something flickered in his eyes - not anger, but recognition. "Maybe. But you like it too."
My fork paused halfway to my mouth. "I don't."
"You do," he said quietly. "I watched you tonight. The way you handled Lang. You were electric."
I stared at him. "Electric?"
"Alive," he said simply. "You think I'm your enemy. Maybe I am. But I'm also the only one at this table who sees what you're capable of."
His words sent a strange current through me, more dangerous than his smirk ever could be.
Before I could answer, Victor Lang leaned back and said something about hosting a private roundtable tomorrow morning - just Damian and me. His tone made it sound less like an invitation and more like a test.
Damian accepted smoothly. "We'd be delighted."
After dinner, we stepped out onto a balcony lined with potted olive trees. The night air was crisp, the city lights glittering below. I wrapped my arms around myself.
"You handled Lang well," Damian said again.
"I don't need your approval."
"That wasn't approval. That was admiration."
I turned to face him. "Why are you telling me this?"
"Because you keep looking at me like I'm some cartoon villain," he said quietly. "I'm not here to destroy you, Elena. I'm here because I think we can build something extraordinary together."
"You mean make you richer."
He smiled faintly. "I'm already rich."
The way he said it made something in my chest tighten. I turned back to the view. "We're still opponents, Damian."
"Maybe," he said. "Or maybe we're something else."
I hated the way my pulse jumped at that. "Don't try to play me."
"I'm not." His voice was soft now. "I'm just telling you the truth."
For a long moment, we stood there, the city stretching out beneath us, his presence like heat at my side. It felt dangerously like standing on a cliff edge, the wind at my back.
Then I stepped away. "Goodnight, Mr. Cross."
His mouth curved in a half-smile. "Goodnight, Ms. Grant."
I walked back to my suite without looking back. But even with the door shut and the city lights winking below, I could still feel the echo of his gaze on my skin - a question, a challenge, maybe something more.
Six months. That's all I had. Six months to keep my company, my independence, and my heart intact.
I wasn't sure which would be hardest.
I didn't sleep.Not a single minute.I spent the whole night pacing my apartment like a feral cat, checking my phone every five seconds even though I KNEW the message had been delivered. Delivered. Blue tick. No reply.Damian saw my text.Damian SAW "The pregnancy is yours," and still didn't respond.The longer I thought about it, the more my blood boiled.Who does he think he is? Ignoring me? Acting confused in the hospital, pretending he didn't notice the timeline? Then ghosting me after I finally told him the truth?Unacceptable.So yes - I was fully justified when, at exactly 8:02 a.m. on Saturday morning, I marched straight to his door and banged on it like I was owed money.Because I was.Emotionally.And hormonally.And spiritually.The door finally swung open - and there he was. Damian Cross. Tall, rumpled from sleep, hair messy, wearing joggers and a T-shirt, looking unfairly attractive for someone who deserved to be punched in the throat.His eyes widened the second he saw m
By the time I was discharged from the hospital the next morning, Damian had turned into a robot.A polite, professional, maddening robot.He drove me home in complete silence—well, not silence, the man had the audacity to turn on the traffic updates radio station—then dropped me off with a stiff “Rest.”No hug.No comforting hand.Not even a smile.He didn’t even wait to see if I made it inside the building before driving off.The next day at work was worse.Much worse.I spotted him the second I stepped into the office—standing by the glass panels with two managers, suit immaculate, posture perfect, expression unreadable.When he saw me… he froze.Just for a second.Just enough for me to see the crack.Then he straightened and gave me a nod. A literal nod. Like he was greeting a board member, not a woman whose unconscious body he carried into the ER less than 24 hours ago.“Good morning,” he said stiffly.“Morning,” I muttered, glaring.He didn’t wait for anything else. He just turne
Elena's POVI surfaced into consciousness like someone dragging me out of deep water. Sound came first—muffled voices, the distant beeping of a monitor—then the blinding hospital lights.And then him.Damian.Sitting stiffly beside my bed like he’d been carved out of expensive marble, jaw locked so tight the muscle twitched. His elbows rested on his knees, both hands clasped together like he was praying—or trying very hard not to smash something.He noticed the moment my eyelids fluttered. His head snapped up.And God… his eyes.Cold. Guarded. Calculating.The ultrasound picture lay folded with surgical precision on the bedside table, placed there like evidence in a crime scene.I blinked, throat tight. “Damian?”He didn’t answer right away. He just watched me—too intensely, like every breath I took was suspicious.Finally, he spoke. “You passed out.” His tone was clipped. Controlled. “The doctor said it was stress, exhaustion… and the pregnancy.” The last word came out like it person
Elena's POVIt's been a month. One whole month of simmering rage, indignation, and silent plotting.And I'm still furious at me. Furious at the universe. And absolutely, completely, unequivocally furious that Damian-my Damian, the idiot who got me pregnant-has the audacity to be out there gallivanting with Rachael like nothing happened.Like he didn't just ruin my uterus. Damian, of course, was seated across the conference table in his usual smugly charming way, his designer suit perfectly tailored, hair impossibly styled, and that infuriating half-smile that made women swoon and men hate him in equal measure.I'm sitting in the middle of a meeting, trying my absolute best to look calm and professional while listening to Damian prattle on about quarterly projections. My jaw is tight. My hands are folded neatly on the table, but inside, I am simmering like a pressure cooker.I mean-seriously. I clench my fists under the table, nails digging into my palms.My stomach churns. Not just
I stare at the calendar on my phone for the fifth time this morning, as if the dates will magically rearrange themselves and show me something different. Maybe I counted wrong. Maybe work stress shifted my cycle. Maybe the universe is simply confused.But I'm not.My period is six days late.Six.That has never happened. Not to me. Not with my body that has always been annoyingly punctual-almost too punctual. So why now? Why this month? Why after everything has spun completely off its axis?"No," I whisper to myself, pacing the length of my tiny living room. "You're overthinking. It's stress, Elena. Just stress."Except my chest is tight. My palms are sweaty. And every time I breathe, I feel something coil tighter in my stomach-fear, hope, panic, I don't even know.There's only one explanation. One disturbing, impossible, stupid explanation.Damian.My body goes hot all at once. Not Lucas. Not Lucas-we haven't been intimate in weeks. Not since things got... whatever they became. Cold.
Elena's POVIf humiliation had a shape, mine would've looked exactly like a chrome coffee cup frozen halfway to Lucas's mouth.That was the moment everything went downhill.But today?Today was somehow worse.Rachael was back.Not back as in "visiting."Not back as in "dropping something off."Back as in fully reinstated, standing beside Damian with a shiny new badge and a smile that made me want to throw her into the nearest elevator shaft.I watched them from down the hall because apparently I was a glutton for punishment. Rachael stood close to him-too close-holding her tablet while Damian reviewed something on it. They weren't touching, but the air between them was soft, familiar.Comfortable.The kind of comfortable people only have when they've shared more than spreadsheets.I swallowed a sour taste.Two days ago, she'd been transferred across the city. Two days ago, she'd packed her things and left this office quietly. Two days ago, Damian hadn't said a word about missing her.
Damian's POV The air outside felt different that night. Cold, biting, but strangely clean - like the world was giving me one last chance to breathe before it decided what to do with me. I drove aimlessly for hours. No destination. Just headlights slicing through the dark while my thoughts dragg
The door slammed open before Damian could even reach it, and my heart nearly stopped. A woman stood there, arms crossed, lips curled into a smirk that was equal parts infuriating and impossible to ignore. She was pregnant - the curve of her belly clear beneath her tailored coat - and her presence f
The hospital changed after dark.By day, it buzzed with movement - nurses rushing, monitors beeping, reporters pressing against the glass doors. But at night, it went still. Too still. The kind of silence that hums just beneath your skin, like something waiting to wake.I couldn't sleep. Every time
Elena's POVThere's something about guilt - it doesn't shout, it hums.A quiet, relentless tune in your bones that won't let you rest.All week, I'd been feeding Damian encrypted updates from Ethan's system. Every keystroke felt like walking a tightrope. Ethan's office was three doors away; his ref







