로그인The Monday board meeting started at eight and ran long.
Roman sat at the head of the table with his coffee and let Hartwell do what Hartwell did best, which was talk through numbers with the kind of enthusiasm most people reserved for things that actually mattered outside a conference room. Roman listened. Took notes when something required it. His mind kept drifting back to his desk drawer.
"The biggest development this week is Devlin Corp," Hartwell said, clicking to a new slide. "They went quiet Friday afternoon and we found out why this morning. They've been acquired. Fully. Deal closed over the weekend."
Roman looked up. "Who bought them?"
"Montague Industries." Hartwell said the name the way you say the name of a restaurant you've walked past a hundred times but never been inside. "Private holding group. Old family money. They've been moving quietly for the past year, but this is their biggest play yet."
Roman's pen stopped moving.
"Who runs it?" he asked. He kept his voice even.
Hartwell glanced down at his notes. He looked mildly surprised by the question. Roman usually only asked about numbers, not names. "The family heir. Goes by Seraphina." He checked the page again. "Seraphina Montague. Took over from her father a couple of years back. Kept a low profile until recently."
Someone else at the table started talking about what the Devlin acquisition meant for their own position in the market. Roman nodded. He wrote something down that he would not remember writing.
Seraphina Montague.
He had heard that name for the first time three years ago, at a charity dinner, when she had shaken his hand and said *I'm Sera. Sera Montague,* and smiled at him in a way that did not try to be anything more than what it was. By the end of that night he had stopped thinking of her as Seraphina, stopped thinking of her as a Montague, stopped thinking of her as anything other than Sera. Just Sera. The quiet woman who never tried too hard and somehow stayed in his head anyway.
He had never once looked up her full name.
…
He was back at his desk by ten.
He opened his laptop. Pulled up his browser. Typed *Seraphina Montague* and hit enter.
The results came back fast.
Montague Industries at the top. Clean website, conservative and expensive. Founded by Savio Montague. Current operations led by his daughter, Seraphina. Legitimate holdings in real estate, private equity, import logistics. Estimated value undisclosed. A short list of philanthropic projects, hospitals and arts foundations mostly, all donated to quietly with no press releases attached.
He scrolled past the company pages into the image results.
Every photo was from a public event. Charity galas, fundraising dinners, hospital openings. But in every single one, she was near the edge of the frame. Not hidden, just never at the center. Standing slightly apart from the group, or caught mid-turn, or looking just past the camera at something nobody else could see. He scrolled through two pages of results and could not find one photo where she was looking directly at the lens.
He had been to a dozen events with her. She did the same thing in person. He had always thought it was shyness. Sitting at his desk now, looking at five years of photographs, he wondered if it was something else entirely. If she had always known exactly where the cameras were and chosen, deliberately, to stay just outside them.
He clicked on a business journal profile from two years ago. *Montague Industries: The Quiet Giant.* The article mentioned Savio's reputation, his decades of careful relationship-building, his daughter's education abroad, her return at twenty-two. It used the word *connected* four times. It did not elaborate on what that meant. The journalist clearly knew better than to try.
Roman leaned back in his chair.
She had told him she came from an old family. He had not asked what that meant. He had been busy. He was always busy, and Sera had never pushed him to know more, had never laid out her history and asked him to look at it. She had existed quietly beside him and let him assume he already understood who she was.
Three years. He had not typed her name into a search engine once.
He went back to the image results and kept scrolling. The recent photos were professional. But deeper in the results, further back in time, the pictures changed. Older. Less polished. The kind that surfaced from personal collections, shared somewhere online years ago and never taken down.
He found one that looked like a family gathering. Long tables in a garden, people eating, late afternoon light. Sera was young in it, nineteen maybe, in a pale dress. She was laughing at something to her left, her hand resting on the arm of the man beside her, leaning toward him slightly. Completely relaxed. He had never seen her look that relaxed. Not once in three years.
He looked at the man she was leaning against.
Older. Sixties. Gray at the temples and broad across the shoulders. The kind of face that looked like it had made difficult decisions without blinking and slept fine afterward. He was smiling back at Sera the way you smile at someone you would do almost anything for.
Roman had seen that face before.
Not in person. In a file. Eight months ago, attached to a legal brief his security team had flagged during a routine review of third-party contacts. He pulled up a second tab and typed the name from the file.
The results loaded. News articles. Federal proceedings. An active investigation. Organized crime connections across four states, with two more under review.
Roman went back to Sera's photo.
She had her hand on the man's arm. She was smiling at him the way you smile at someone who has known your name since before you could say it yourself.
Not like a family friend.
Like family. Because he was.
Roman sat very still with both tabs open on his screen and his coffee going cold beside him.
…
Chapter 200: The Last Entry"You're up early," Roman murmured, his voice a low, sleep-roughened vibration that still made my skin tingle.I didn't answer him right away. I just watched the city lights through our bedroom window, the dawn starting to bleed over the horizon. I’d woken before him, as I always did. It was the only time of day when the world felt quiet enough for me to hear my own thoughts.I slid out from the expensive silk sheets and made my way to the kitchen. My bare feet didn't make a sound on the marble floors. I moved with a confidence I hadn't possessed a year ago. I knew where everything was. The beans, the grinder, and the specific French press that Roman insisted made the only drinkable cup of coffee in the tri-state area.I stood at the kitchen window, watching the steam curl from my mug. It was a Tuesday. An ordinary Tuesday. Below me, the city was waking up, people rushing to jobs they probably hated and apartments they could barely afford.I leaned my head a
"The offer is non-negotiable."I leaned back in the leather chair of the Montague Industries boardroom, my gaze fixed on the man across from me. He was older, seasoned, and used to intimidating people with his silence. I wasn't a person. I was a Montague, and I had spent the last few years building a version of myself that didn't flinch. I let the silence stretch, the weight of the negotiation pressing into the room until he finally blinked. He signed. I stood up, smoothed my skirt, and walked out.Across the city, at Ashford Global, Roman was likely doing the same. It was a Tuesday, ordinary, busy, and full of the high-stakes chess we both played for a living.My phone buzzed in my bag. I pulled it out as I reached my office.*Roman: Don’t forget the good olive oil. I’m attempting the pasta again.**Sera: I’ll bring it. And a backup plan for dinner.**Roman: Have a little faith, Sera.**Sera: I have exactly as much faith as your last attempt earned. See you at six.*I put the phone
"What do you want for your birthday?"I looked up from my tablet, my fingers stalling on a spreadsheet. Roman was leaning against the doorframe of my home office, his expression unreadable but his focus entirely on me. It was a month before the day, exactly the kind of lead time a man like Roman Ashford used to plan a military invasion or a billion-dollar acquisition."You're asking me," I said, leaning back in my chair."Every time," he answered. There was no hesitation in his voice. No suggestion that he would go behind my back and plan some sprawling, over-the-top gala that served his ego more than my comfort. He wasn't the man who made assumptions anymore."Good," I said, a small smile tugging at my lips.I told him. I didn't hold back, and I didn't play games. I told him I didn't want a ballroom or a press release. I didn't want five hundred strangers drinking expensive champagne while I smiled until my face ached. I wanted my people. I wanted the specific flowers that made our
"Are you ever going to empty those boxes, or are they just part of the decor now?"I didn't answer the voice in my head, Sera’s voice, which had become the permanent soundtrack to my life. I stood in the storage room of the old penthouse, surrounded by the ghosts of a man I barely recognized anymore. The air was thick with the scent of dust and stale air. I’d been avoiding this room for months. Every other part of my transition into our new life was complete, but these last few boxes felt like a weight I wasn't ready to shift.I reached for the nearest crate, the cardboard rough under my palms. This was the final stretch. I hauled it into the center of the room, the sound of the drag echoing against the bare walls. I popped the tape. Inside were documents, old contracts from the Ashford merger, bank statements from years that felt like decades ago. Paperwork that used to be the only thing I lived for.I dug deeper, past the cold, hard facts of my business empire. At the very bottom,
"Sera. I want to ask you something."My father stopped walking, his hand resting lightly on the sun-warmed stone of the garden wall. It was Sunday at the estate, the kind of morning where the air felt thick with the scent of blooming jasmine and damp earth. Savio is fully recovered now. He moved with the same steady, mountain-like strength he’d had before the world tried to break him. We were alone, just the two of us, pacing the gravel paths that wound through the roses.I stopped beside him, adjusting the sleeve of my sweater. "Ask."He didn't look at me at first. He looked out over the hedges, his profile sharp against the morning light. "Are you happy in the way your mother was happy?" He paused, his voice dropping into a register that was purely personal. "The complete kind."I stopped walking entirely. The gravel crunched once under my heel and then went silent.The complete kind.I knew exactly what he meant. I thought about what that looked like growing up. I thought about m
"You're home early."The words weren't mine. They came from the kitchen, deep and familiar, but I didn't answer right away. I was frozen in the entryway of our apartment, my keys still heavy in my hand. My gaze was locked on the dining table. There, sitting in a crystal vase I’d bought myself three months ago, was an arrangement of flowers.They weren't the flowers a man usually buys when he’s trying to be charming. There were no generic red roses, no supermarket lilies, and no flashy orchids designed to scream for attention. They were muted, textured, and wild. They were the specific, obscure stems I’d spent the last year sourcing from a tiny boutique on the edge of the city. They were the ones I bought for myself every Sunday morning as a ritual of my own independence.I didn't move. I just looked at them. The scent hit me, earthy and sharp, exactly the way I liked it. For a long time, my independence was a fortress I’d built to keep the world out, especially Roman. Buying my own
Garrett arrived at nine with a folder he had not sent ahead.That was the first thing Roman noticed. Garrett sent documents in advance. Eleven years of working together, and the rule had never changed: a client should never be surprised in a meeting. The fact that he was carrying something Roman ha
Roman told himself he was going to clear the air.That was the exact phrase he used in his own head as he watched Sera excuse herself from the chief of surgery and move toward the far end of the room. Clear the air. Practical. Reasonable. They were going to be in the same professional circles and i
Isabella went to bed at eleven thirty.Roman said he would follow soon. He went to his study instead, removed his jacket, and sat in the chair he had been sitting in most nights since the divorce when there was something he could not set down. He left most of the lights off. Just the desk lamp, its
Sera had been reading for twenty minutes when her phone lit up.Unknown number. She looked at it for one second. Then she set it face-up on the cushion beside her and went back to her page.She knew.She couldn't have explained how. The number was unsaved, clean, nothing her phone recognized. But s







