LOGINBy the time I reached the hotel ballroom, my nerves were steel wrapped in satin.
The investor conference was Damian Cross's idea, not mine. "Reassure the market," he'd said with that infuriating calm. "Show them we're aligned."
Aligned. As if he hadn't just hijacked my company.
The ballroom was a chandeliered ocean of suits, glittering jewelry, and clinking glasses. Cameras perched like vultures at the edges of the crowd. The event had been organized in less than 48 hours, yet it looked like a coronation - his, not mine.
Sofia fell into step beside me as we moved through the crowd. "You've got this," she murmured, handing me a glass of sparkling water. "Smile. Investors can smell blood."
"I'm not bleeding," I said, even though I could feel my pulse in my throat. "I'm sharpening my knives."
At the far end of the room, Damian stood on a small stage, talking to a cluster of investors. The gray of his suit looked almost silver under the chandeliers. He laughed at something one of them said, and they leaned in as if he were the sun.
I hated how good he looked under the lights.
I hated even more that I noticed.
When he saw me, his expression shifted - just slightly, but enough. A flicker of awareness. He excused himself from the investors and crossed the room with the smooth confidence of a man who'd been born to own it.
"Ms. Grant." His voice was lower here, almost intimate despite the crowd. "You're on time."
"Of course." I sipped my water. "Wouldn't want to keep you from your admirers."
His mouth curved. "Jealous?"
"Of your boardroom fan club? Hardly."
His smirk deepened but his eyes stayed cool. "We're speaking together at the podium in ten minutes. I'll start with an overview of the merger. You'll follow with a statement about GreenSphere's future under joint leadership."
"Under joint leadership," I repeated, sweet as poison. "Right."
He tilted his head. "You're going to make this difficult, aren't you?"
"Every second."
He chuckled, low and amused, as if my defiance entertained him. That smile - it was dangerous, the way a cliff edge is dangerous. "Good. I'd hate for this to be boring."
Before I could retort, a young woman with a tablet rushed up. "Mr. Cross, Ms. Grant - you're on in five."
He extended his arm toward the stage, a mock-chivalrous gesture. "Shall we?"
I brushed past him without taking it.
The stage was blinding under the lights. A sea of faces stared up at us - investors, journalists, competitors, all waiting to see the power couple of the hour. The phrase made my stomach twist.
Damian spoke first. He was smooth, of course, his baritone wrapping around words like "synergy" and "global reach" as if they were poetry. The room hung on every syllable.
Then it was my turn.
I stepped to the microphone, spine straight, smile fixed. "Good morning. GreenSphere was built on innovation, sustainability, and integrity. Those values remain unchanged. While recent events have created uncertainty, I want to assure you that our vision - my vision - remains strong. This partnership represents an opportunity to scale responsibly, without sacrificing the principles that built this company."
A polite ripple of applause followed. Cameras flashed. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Damian's mouth twitch - approval? Amusement?
We fielded questions. A journalist asked if the rumors of a personal relationship between us were true. My pulse spiked. Damian's gaze flicked to me, unreadable.
"That," he said smoothly, "is an unfounded speculation. Our relationship is entirely professional."
I leaned in to the mic. "Very professional," I echoed, my smile sharp enough to cut.
More polite laughter. More flashes. I wanted to melt into the floor.
As soon as we were offstage, I beelined for the exit. I needed air.
"Ms. Grant," Damian's voice called behind me. "Wait."
I didn't. I pushed through a side door and out onto a terrace overlooking the city. The cool air hit me like a slap. I gripped the stone railing, staring at the traffic crawling below.
A moment later, the door opened again. Footsteps. Damian.
"You handled the question well," he said, coming to stand beside me. "Quick thinking."
I turned to glare at him. "Do you enjoy this?"
"Enjoy what?"
"Humiliating me. Parading me around like some trophy while you gut my company."
His brows drew together, just slightly. "If I wanted to gut your company, Ms. Grant, I wouldn't be standing here on a terrace explaining myself."
I laughed, but it sounded brittle. "You expect me to believe you're the good guy in all this?"
He leaned a little closer, voice dropping. "I expect you to believe I'm not your enemy. Not if you're smart."
"Smart?" My heart beat faster - with anger, I told myself. Only anger. "I built GreenSphere from nothing. I know exactly who my enemies are."
Something flickered in his eyes - frustration? Respect? Both? "And yet you agreed to the co-CEO arrangement."
"I agreed to save my company, not to play house with you."
The corner of his mouth lifted, but it wasn't a smirk this time. More like... interest. "House?"
"You know what I mean." I stepped back, needing distance from the way he was looking at me. "You may have bought shares, Mr. Cross, but you haven't bought me."
He studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. "Good."
I blinked. "Good?"
"I don't want someone I can buy." His voice was low, almost a growl. "I want someone who can stand next to me."
For a heartbeat, neither of us moved. The city roared below, the terrace door clicked shut behind us, and suddenly it felt like the whole world had gone quiet except for the space between us.
Then I stepped back, breaking the moment. "This conversation is over."
Damian's jaw tightened, but he inclined his head. "As you wish. We have another press event tomorrow. I'll send you the details."
He turned and walked back inside, leaving me alone on the terrace with the sound of my own heartbeat and a strange, unwelcome heat creeping under my skin.
I gripped the railing harder. I would not be another one of Damian Cross's acquisitions.
Not my company.
Not me.
But the way he'd looked at me just now - like I was a challenge, not a conquest - it unsettled me more than anything else.
Six months. That was all I had to survive this merger. Six months to outmaneuver him.
I squared my shoulders and headed back inside. Let him think he was in control.
He had no idea what was coming.
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 POVRacheal's suitcase looked too small to hold all the fear she was carrying.She stood at the edge of my living room that evening, fingers knotted in front of her, eyes darting around like she expected Lucas to burst out from behind one of the couches with another bomb."Are you sure I'm
Elena's POVLucas's voice sliced through the room like broken glass."Elena?"That one word-my name-hit harder than a slap. Damian and I sprang apart so fast his chair rolled back and hit the shelf behind him. My breath froze in my chest. I turned, slowly, like a guilty criminal awaiting a verdict.
Elena's POV"I'll help you remember," I said, my voice barely more than a whisper.The space between us went still, like the air was holding its breath. Damian's eyes locked on mine - the tension between us was no longer just emotional, it was physical, magnetic, relentless. He didn't move. Didn't
Elena's POVMorning came quietly - too quietly for what had happened.I woke up in Damian's bed, the sheets warm and tangled around my legs, the taste of last night still clinging to my lips. Skin flushed. Muscles sore. Heart full - and annoyingly attached.I stretched, letting memories flood throu







