登入Advik’s POV
The virtual call with the Korean delegation ended with formal smiles and muted microphones. The deal was done. The partnership secured. Exactly the way I had intended. Suraj disconnected the screen and looked at me. “The internal board discussion is scheduled now, sir.” I nodded once and stood up. Meetings never made me nervous. I didn’t prepare for them. I didn’t rehearse answers or anticipate objections. People adjusted to me, not the other way around. That’s how it had always worked. The boardroom was already occupied when I entered. Raghav Malhotra sat at the head of the table, glasses resting low on his nose, fingers interlocked. Senior-most board director. Thirty years of corporate experience. A man who believed time automatically translated into authority. The others followed my movement with their eyes as I took my seat. “The Seoul partnership was rushed,” Raghav said immediately. No greeting. No courtesy. “We should have waited for legal clearance before proceeding.” “I gave the clearance,” I replied calmly. Silence spread across the table. Raghav adjusted his glasses. “That’s precisely the concern, Advik. You’re making decisions too quickly. This is not a personal firm. It’s a public empire. Every move affects shareholders.” I leaned back slightly. “Empires don’t survive by waiting for permission.” He frowned. “This isn’t about ego. It’s about risk management.” I looked at him properly then. “You think I don’t understand risk?” My voice was quiet. Controlled. The kind of tone that usually ended discussions. But Raghav didn’t stop. “With all due respect,” he said, “you’re new to this role. You may be an exceptional doctor, but corporate leadership works differently. You can’t run this company like an operation theatre.” The word doctor hung in the air. Something inside me shifted. Slowly, I leaned forward. “You’re fired.” The room froze. Raghav laughed once, uncertain. “Excuse me?” “Effective immediately. Your position as board director is terminated.” No one moved. No one spoke. “This isn’t how procedure works,” he said sharply. “You cannot dismiss me without board consensus.” I stood up. “This is exactly how it works now.” I turned to Suraj. “Send HR the documents. Security will escort Mr. Malhotra out.” Raghav stood up so fast his chair scraped loudly against the floor. “You’re making a massive mistake, Advik. You don’t even know what forces you’re playing with.” I stepped closer to him. “You’re right,” I said quietly. “You don’t.” Security entered. Two men. Silent. Professional. Raghav looked around the room, searching for support. No one met his eyes. That’s the truth about power. Everyone respects you — until the moment you fall. They escorted him out. The door closed. I turned back to the table. “Next agenda point.” No one spoke. The meeting ended in less than three minutes. As the directors filed out, I noticed her standing near the far end of the room. Aadhya. She hadn’t said a word. Hadn’t moved. But her expression wasn’t what I expected. I dismissed the room with a gesture. Everyone left. Except her. “Sir,” she said, her voice calm but restrained. “May I speak?” “This isn’t your department,” I replied. “That’s why I’m speaking as a person. Not an employee.” I looked at her fully then. “Raghav Sir served this company for three decades,” she continued. “He questioned your decision. He didn’t betray you.” I felt irritation rise slowly. “You think you understand corporate loyalty better than I do?” “No,” she said. “I think you confuse authority with fear.” The words landed sharper than I expected. “I don’t pay you to analyse me,” I said. She didn’t flinch. “You pay me to support your decisions. Not to pretend they’re always right.” I stood up abruptly. “Do you realise who you’re talking to?” “Yes,” she replied. “And that’s exactly why I’m talking.” My jaw tightened. “You’re crossing a line, Aadhya.” “No, sir,” she said softly. “I’m showing you where it is.” The air felt heavier. “You fired him to prove dominance,” she continued. “Not because it was necessary.” Something snapped inside me. “You think I owe him mercy?” “I think you owe yourself honesty,” she replied. “You didn’t fire him because he was wrong. You fired him because he challenged you.” Silence followed. Not the comfortable kind. The dangerous kind. Every instinct in me screamed to shut her down. To remind her how replaceable she was. How easily I could erase her from this building, this career, this world. And yet— I didn’t. Instead, I felt something unfamiliar. She wasn’t afraid of me. That was the problem. “You’re here to execute my decisions,” I said slowly, “not question them.” She met my gaze without blinking. “Then you don’t need an assistant. You need a shadow.” The words cut deeper than they should have. I felt heat rise in my chest. Not just anger. Something else. “You should be careful,” I said. “People who challenge me don’t last long.” Her lips curved slightly. Not a smile. More like understanding. “Then you should be careful too, sir,” she replied. “Because I don’t know how to stay quiet when something feels wrong.” She turned and walked out. Just like that. No apology or fear I stood there, staring at the closed door. I had removed men who controlled industries. Broken people who threatened governments. Ended careers with a sentence. And yet a woman with honest eyes and quiet strength had just looked at me like I was the one being tested. For the first time in years, I realised something unsettling. I didn’t want to silence Aadhya Suryavanshi. I wanted to see how far she would push me. And that made her far more dangerous than any enemy I had ever faced.Chapter Fifty-EightAadhya's POVThe afternoon felt strangely different after Advik left. The entire executive floor became quieter, but not calmer. His presence always carried a certain weight, and the moment he walked out, I felt it disappear. Even when he wasn't physically present, his decisions, his schedules, and his people continued moving through the building like clockwork.Before leaving, he stopped near my desk and looked directly at Viktor. His expression remained serious enough to make anyone nervous. "If she leaves this floor, I want to know immediately," he said.Viktor sighed dramatically and rubbed his forehead. "Sir, she's not a criminal. She's your wife, not a high-risk prisoner." His tone carried obvious frustration.Advik didn't even blink. "No," he replied calmly. "She's worse. She ignores instructions whenever it suits her." The confidence in his voice immediately irritated me.I looked up from my laptop and narrowed my eyes. "I am sitting right here, in case eve
Aadhya’s POV I woke up before sunrise, but for a few moments I didn't move. My head rested against Advik's chest while his arm remained securely around my waist as if even in sleep he refused to let me go. The room was silent except for the steady rhythm of his heartbeat beneath my ear, and strangely, that sound had become one of the few things capable of calming me. Then Nischel's voice returned. The memory came without warning, dragging me back to everything I had been trying not to think about. His confidence. His threats. His certainty that one day Seena would take my place. I hated how much those words still affected me, but pretending they didn't exist wouldn't change anything. My eyes slowly lifted toward Advik's sleeping face. He looked exhausted, far more exhausted than he allowed anyone to see. The shadows beneath his eyes had deepened over the last few days, and for the first time I wondered how much of that exhaustion came from me.The memory of yesterday tightened my
Advik’s POV The moment I walked downstairs, the entire atmosphere changed again. Nobody spoke. The silence inside the living room was thick enough to suffocate. They were all waiting for my reaction after what happened upstairs. But right now, I wasn’t interested in emotions. If I stayed inside that anger for one more minute, I would start throwing people out of my mansion one by one. So instead, I looked at Derek.“Where is the Geneva dispute file?” I asked coldly. Derek straightened immediately. “Still under review, sir. The Norwegian delegation rejected the revised pharmaceutical export clauses. They’re demanding direct inspection rights before signing the cross border agreement.” I walked past him toward the study while loosening my cuffs slowly. “And why am I hearing rejection instead of solution?” Derek followed instantly. “Sir, the issue escalated after the Zurich licensing authority forwarded complaints regarding the biogenetic transport permissions. Their legal team..”
Author’s POV By the time Advik’s car entered the mansion gates, the night had already settled heavily around the property. The entire drive back had been quieter than usual. Aadhya sat near the window, watching the city lights disappear one by one while Advik occasionally looked toward her without saying anything. He knew she was disturbed again. He could feel it in the way she kept slipping into silence after every small moment of peace. But this time he didn’t push her. The car stopped near the entrance. Advik stepped out first and moved toward her side automatically. Before she could open the door herself, his hand was already there waiting for her. Aadhya stared at his hand for one brief second before placing hers into it quietly. They walked inside together. And the moment they entered the living room everything changed. Laughter echoed softly across the hall. Kade sat comfortably on the large couch while Raghav argued over something useless near the center table. Leon
Aadhya’s POV By the time we reached Singhal Corporate again, I already understood one thing clearly. Advik was not asking anymore. He was deciding. And everyone around him had already accepted it. The moment we entered his floor, I noticed the changes immediately. My old cabin no longer existed separately near the executive section. Instead, a new workspace had been created directly beside his office, divided only by transparent glass walls. It wasn’t completely inside his cabin. But it was close enough for him to see me every second without moving from his chair. I stood there silently for a moment, staring at the glass partition. “You shifted my cabin?” I asked slowly. Advik walked past me calmly while removing his coat. “No,” he replied without even looking up. “I fixed the problem.” I frowned immediately. “What problem?” He finally looked at me then, his expression completely serious. “The distance,” he said simply. That answer made my chest tighten in a way I didn’t know h
By seven in the morning, the mansion was already awake, but the atmosphere inside remained heavy from the previous night. The staff moved carefully, speaking in lowered voices, sensing the tension without needing explanations. And in the middle of that silence, Advik sat in the living room like he hadn’t slept at all, calm on the outside, ruthless underneath. His eyes moved once across the room before stopping completely. Seena was still there. Sitting quietly near the far couch, holding a cup of coffee she hadn’t touched, watching the space around her more than the people inside it. The moment Advik noticed her, something in his expression hardened slightly. He didn’t greet her. He didn’t ask if she was comfortable. Instead, he called out, “Kade.” His voice was low, but sharp enough to make everyone around straighten immediately. Kade entered from the study with a file still in his hand. “Yeah?” he asked, already aware something was wrong. Advik’s gaze didn’t leave Seena as he sp
Aadhya’s POV The house didn’t sleep. It only softened. When I came out after freshening up, wrapped in the nightwear he had chosen with quiet care, I felt it again—that presence. Not people. Not cameras. Him. As if the entire space was calibrated around where he stood. He hadn’t moved. He was
Aadhya’s POV The jet doors closed with a sound that felt final. Inside, everything slowed down. The engines hummed beneath us, steady and controlled, nothing like the chaos we had left behind on the ground. The cabin lights were dimmed, casting soft shadows across leather seats and polished surf
Advik’s POV She caught my hand before I reached my cabin. Not gently. Not angrily. Decisively. I turned, already knowing what I would see. Her face was serious. Calm. Unmoving. The same expression she had worn the first day we met—when she had stood across the boardroom table and refused to b
Advik’s POV I woke before dawn. The room was still wrapped in sleep, the kind that feels heavier just before morning breaks. She lay beside me, breathing evenly, her face calm in a way that made me hesitate for a moment longer than necessary. I didn’t touch her. Not because I didn’t want to— b







