LOGINDaniel's POV
The question left my mouth before I had fully decided to ask it.
I was not a man who spoke before thinking. Every word I had ever used in a boardroom, in a negotiation, in any room that mattered had been measured and deliberate and chosen with the precision of someone who understood that words were not just sounds. They were commitments. They were revelations. They were the kind of thing that once released could not be recalled no matter how badly you needed them back.
And yet I had just asked Blackwood if she loved another man.
In my own office.
With the door closed.
I stood behind my desk and kept my face completely still the way I had trained myself to do in every situation that threatened to show me for what I actually was underneath all of this. Composed. Unreachable. The man who had rebuilt himself from nothing and made sure the foundation this time was concrete instead of trust.
But my heart was not behaving like concrete right now.
My heart was doing something I had not given it permission to do. It was waiting. Suspended somewhere between my last breath and the next one, holding itself in complete stillness for the answer of a woman who did not know that her response was about to determine something I had not even admitted to myself yet.
Aria stood across from me and for a moment she simply looked at me.
I watched her face move through something. Not panic. Not embarrassment. Something quieter and more complicated than either of those things. Her hands were still at her sides and her chin was lifted with that particular dignity she carried everywhere and her eyes were doing that thing again. That thing they had done this morning at her desk when she had forgotten to greet me and I had stood there reading everything she was trying so hard not to show.
She was showing it again now.
All of it.
"No," she said.
One word.
She said it simply and clearly and without hesitation and it landed in the center of my chest with a weight that I felt in places I had specifically closed off for the past two years.
No.
She did not love Marcus Reed.
I held her gaze for a moment longer than I should have. I was aware of this. I was aware of every single thing happening in this office right now including the fact that the air between us had shifted into something that had nothing to do with Singapore contracts or Meridian files or anything that justified the two of us standing this close to each other with the door closed.
I thought about Vivienne.
I always thought about Vivienne in moments like this. It was automatic. Involuntary. The way a body flinches from heat before the mind has time to process the danger. Vivienne had stood in a room very much like this one two years ago and looked at me with eyes that I had believed completely and she had said things I had written into my future and built plans around and she had meant none of it. Not one single word.
Fifty thousand dollars.
A pregnancy that had never existed.
A bankruptcy that had stripped me down to nothing but fury and the stubborn refusal to stay down.
I had not let anyone close since. I had not allowed anyone to matter since. I had built Cole Enterprises back into something that made people lower their voices when they said my name and I had done it without love and without trust and without ever once making the mistake of believing that a woman's eyes told the truth.
But Aria Blackwood had been sitting outside my office for eight months.
And I had been watching her without meaning to.
The coffee that was always exactly right. The notes she left beside my lunch slot that I read every single time even when I pretended they were unnecessary. The way she handled every difficult situation with a quiet steadiness that made the entire floor function better simply because she was in it. The way she had never once tried to make herself noticed by me. She had simply shown up. Every single day. Consistently and completely.
And that consistency had done something to me that I did not have a clean word for.
I pulled back.
I straightened and reached for the file on my desk and opened it to a page I was not reading and let my voice return to the register I used when I needed to close a conversation that was becoming something I could not afford.
"That will be all Miss Blackwood," I said. "You can return to your desk."
She did not move immediately.
I kept my eyes on the file.
"Mr. Cole," she said and her voice was softer than her professional tone. Lower. Like she was reaching for something with it. "What just happened in there. In the break room. I want to make sure it does not affect my position here or my..."
"It won't," I said. Clean and simple and final.
"Are you sure?"
I looked up then because she deserved that much.
"It's okay Aria," I said.
Something moved across her face. Relief maybe. Or something more fragile than relief. She nodded once and then she turned and walked to the door and opened it and left.
I watched the door close behind her.
I set the file down.
I stood in the complete silence of my office and stared at the door she had just walked through and felt the truth of something settle over me with the particular heaviness of a thing that has been true for a long time but has only just been acknowledged.
It's okay.
That was what I had told her.
I pressed two fingers against my desk and looked at nothing.
That was not enough.
Aria's POVTuscany in October was exactly what the photographs had promised.That was the first thing I thought when I woke up in the villa on Friday morning. Before the wedding reality had fully assembled itself in my chest. Before Becca had knocked on my door with coffee and the specific Becca energy of a woman who had been awake since five and had been restraining herself from knocking since six. Before any of it.Just the light.The specific quality of October light in an Italian vineyard coming through the window at seven in the morning. Warm and golden and entirely unhurried. The kind of light that made the starting of a day feel like something that had been considered before it arrived.I lay in it for a moment.Just that.Then Becca knocked.....She came in with coffee and the expression of a woman who had been waiting for this day for considerably longer than the time she had known either of us and was going to experience every moment of it at full Becca capacity.We got rea
Daniel's POVThe apartment was quiet at ten o'clock.Not the quiet that had edges. Not the quiet of the past months that had carried weight and temperature and the specific pressure of things unresolved. Just quiet. The ordinary kind. The kind that existed in a space when everything was exactly where it was supposed to be and nothing was wrong and nothing was coming.I sat on the couch.I did not have the laptop open. I did not have the Singapore correspondence or the Henderson documentation or any of the professional materials that usually occupied the space between me and the quiet. Just the apartment and the city outside the window and the specific stillness of a Thursday evening that was about to become a Friday that was about to become the day.I sat with it.I looked around.Her book was on the side table.Not one of mine. Hers. The specific novel she had been reading in installments over the past month and leaving on the side table when she was here because the side table was w
Aria's POVThe floor felt different in September.Not dramatically. Not the specific visible shift of a space that had received an announcement or a change in direction. Something quieter than that. The particular quality of a place that had been through something difficult and had come out the other side and was now simply getting on with things in the specific unhurried way of somewhere that had remembered what normal felt like and was living inside it.Normal felt good.I had not fully appreciated normal until it had been absent for a while. Now I noticed it every morning when I stepped off the elevator. The conversations at the coffee station that were about work and weekends and nothing that required careful navigation. The specific easy energy of a floor that was not carrying anything heavy.I sat at my desk at seven forty five.Reading glasses on. Coffee on its mat. The small notebook open. The Singapore correspondence requiring final sign off before the end of the week.Normal
Daniel's POVI called my lawyer on Monday morning.Not immediately after Aria left on Saturday. I had needed the weekend with it first. The specific time required to sit with something that had no precedent in my experience and therefore no established process for handling. I had sat with it Saturday evening and Sunday morning at the window and Sunday afternoon at my desk and by Monday morning I knew what I wanted to do.It had surprised me.That was the honest thing about it. The decision had arrived not from strategy or calculation or the specific deliberate reasoning I applied to most significant choices. It had arrived quietly. The way the right decisions sometimes arrived. Not with fanfare. Just the specific settled quality of something finding the place it was always going to land.My lawyer answered on the second ring.I told him what I wanted.He was quiet for a moment."The funds have been verified," he said. "All of it is accessible. You can reclaim them in full whenever you
Daniel's POVAria called at noon.Not a message. An actual call. The specific choice of a call over a message told me something before she said a word. Messages were for information. Calls were for things that needed a voice attached to them."Can I come over?" she said."Now?" I said."When you are free," she said. "It is not urgent. But it is important.""Now is fine," I said. "Come now."She arrived forty minutes later.She was still dressed from wherever she had been in the morning. Something I had not seen before. Not office clothes. The specific quality of a Saturday outfit on a woman who had been somewhere that was not the 34th floor.She had a folder with her.She put it on my desk without preamble."Read it," she said. "The note first. Then the documents."I looked at her.She looked back.Then she walked to the window and stood there with her back to me and I understood that she was giving me the specific privacy of reading something significant without being watched while I
Aria's POVI sat in the chair and I listened.Becca had gone completely still on the other side of the room. The consultant had taken two quiet steps back toward the wall. The bridal shop had reduced itself to the specific focused quiet of a space where something significant was happening in one corner of it and everything else had decided to wait.I listened to the voice on the phone.Male. Calm. The specific professional calm of someone delivering information they had been asked to deliver and were delivering it cleanly without editorializing."My name is not important," he said. "Vivienne Blackwood contacted me two months ago. She wanted me to deliver something to Daniel Cole on her behalf."I held the phone against my ear.Two months ago.Two months ago Vivienne had been in another city. Before the phone call where I told her Daniel's name. Before she had come back. Before any of it had a shape or a face or a name I recognized.She had been planning this for two months.Not the de
Aria's POVSomething was wrong.Not dramatically wrong. Not the kind of wrong that announced itself in raised voices or broken things or any of the visible evidence that most people used to identify that a situation had changed. The kind of wrong that only existed in the space between what a person
Daniel's POVI had been carrying it for three weeks.Not the fact of it. I had been carrying the fact of it for two years and four months and the specific number of days I had decided not to count because counting gave the number significance and I had sworn against significance where Vivienne Jame
Daniel's POVI called the meeting at nine fifteen.Not because I had planned it the night before or mapped it out with the deliberate strategic intention I brought to most things that happened on the 34th floor. Because I had stood in my office for eleven minutes after Aria walked out and thought a
Daniel's POVI blocked the number on Thursday morning.Not because I had decided the problem did not exist. The problem existed. I was not a man who resolved things by pretending they had not happened. I had learned that particular lesson in the same classroom where I had learned everything else ab







