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The Interview She Didn’t Flinch Through

Author: Miss Awo
last update publish date: 2026-03-18 14:13:24

By ten, three different reporters had asked whether Freeda was ready to “clarify.” The word had seeped into every corner of the office. Clarify the post. Clarify Randy’s share. Clarify whether she was ending things or simply “creating distance.” It bounced off the walls, spilled from emails, whispered in the break room.

Freeda sat at her desk, her hands resting lightly on the keyboard, eyes scanning each new subject line. Around her, the office moved in oblivion. Printers spat paper, some machi
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  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The name she kept

    Six months later, the house still smelled faintly of milk, soap, and warm cotton. Freeda stood in the nursery doorway, one hand on the frame, watching her daughter sleep. The late afternoon light came in soft through the curtains, laying a pale stripe across the crib blanket and the curve of the baby’s cheek. One tiny fist was still tucked near her mouth, as if even in sleep she refused to let the world think it had all of her. Freeda understood that instinct. She smiled and stepped in quietly. The room was small, but nothing in it felt lacking. A white crib. A chair by the window where too many dawn feedings had turned into quiet conversations with the dark. Folded blankets stacked with Winnie’s severe neatness. A stuffed rabbit Kris claimed the baby liked because she had blinked at it twice in a row. On the shelf above the changing table, one framed photo from the hospital sat. Not posed. Not polished. Just Freeda, tired and wrecked and radiant in ways she had never trusted bef

  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The Last line he didn't get

    Randy saw her by accident. That was what made it final. Not at a gala. Not outside a boardroom. Not in one of the polished rooms where he used to stand half inside the doorway and wait for people to decide whether his presence still changed the air. He saw her on a quiet weekday afternoon outside a pediatric clinic with a pale green sign and a cracked flowerpot by the entrance. Freeda came out first, the diaper bag on one shoulder and her daughter against her chest in a soft wrap, the baby asleep with one tiny fist tucked under her chin. Scott followed, carrying a paper bag from the pharmacy, and the kind of careful tiredness new fathers wore when love had taught them to keep functioning on too little sleep and too much feeling. No witnesses that mattered. A woman pushing a stroller farther down the pavement. A delivery rider was at the corner. An older man was under the awning of the chemist next door—life, ordinary and blind to history. That was why the moment hit harder. Be

  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The baby girl

    The hospital at two in the morning looked like every building that had ever promised mercy, with white walls and fluorescent light. Too bright. Too clean. Too awake. Freeda gripped Scott’s hand through another contraction as the nurse at intake asked questions in a voice that was kind enough not to become irritating. “First baby.” “Yes,” Freeda said through her teeth. “How far apart?” “Close enough that he’s starting to look useful,” she muttered, nodding once at Scott. The nurse smiled despite herself. Scott did not. He stood beside the desk with the bag over one shoulder and every paper already ready in his free hand, face too controlled to be calm. Freeda could see the effort in it. He was holding himself together the way men hold a door against the weather and pray no one notices the shaking in the frame. By the time they got her into the labor room, the contractions had stopped feeling like warnings and started feeling like work. Real work. Deep. Primitive. A force in h

  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The night before she became a Mother

    The hospital bag had been packed for four days and repacked twice because Winnie did not trust men to know what mattered in a crisis, and Scott did not trust a zipper unless he had tested it himself. Now it sat by the bedroom door, closed and ready, while Freeda lay on her side in bed with one hand under the curve of her stomach and the other gripping the sheet every time another tightening rolled through her body. Not pain exactly. Not yet. Pressure. Pull—a warning with teeth. Scott came back from the kitchen carrying water and stopped the second he saw her face. “Another one.” Freeda nodded once and breathed through it. “Do not start counting out loud.” “I wasn’t going to.” “You were about to.” His mouth shifted. “I was absolutely about to.” That almost made her laugh, which was rude because the tightening had not finished, and laughter felt like a bad betrayal of muscles already doing too much. When it passed, she took the glass from him and drank. The room was dim ex

  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The reveal she kept gentle

    Freeda chose the photograph herself. Not a studio shot. Not a soft-focus announcement with flowers, ribbons, and a hand under her stomach like the baby needed to be presented before it had even arrived. She stood in the kitchen after breakfast, wearing one of Scott’s white shirts and her own dark trousers, hair tied back, no makeup except what sleep and peace had left behind. The morning light came through the window cleanly. That was enough. Winnie leaned against the counter with her arms folded. “You are really doing this without drama.” Freeda looked down at her phone. “That’s the point.” Kris sat at the table with the James Fund briefing notes stacked beside her. “Then no paragraph.” “No paragraph,” Freeda agreed. Scott stood near the window, too quiet in a way that usually meant he was feeling too much and trying not to turn it into pressure. Freeda glanced up at him. “You are making this look emotional already.” His mouth shifted faintly. “It is emotional.” “Not on th

  • Runaway Bride to his Billionaire Rival    The day he finally looked small

    Randy arrived five minutes late and still expected the room to wait for his shape. Freeda saw him through the glass before he entered the foundation hall—dark suit. No tie. Face arranged into that careful neutrality men used when they wanted to look above the scandal they had spent months creating. The event itself was not grand. She had made sure of that. A donor briefing for the James Fund’s first disbursement cycle. One clean room. No stage. No giant floral arrangement pretending generosity could be bought by the meter. Just tables, printed packets, tea, and people who had finally learned how to sit without looking over their shoulders for Randy’s version first. He paused at the entrance anyway. That was the first sign. Not because he was afraid to walk in. Because he could feel it before touching it. The absence of invitation. The absence of anticipation. The way rooms went cold when they no longer bent around a man by habit. Kris sat near the registration desk with a stack

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