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THE RELUCTANT MRS. ROWE
THE RELUCTANT MRS. ROWE
作者: P.W.Knight

Chapter 1: The Boardroom

作者: P.W.Knight
last update publish date: 2026-04-25 16:06:14

Sloane

The contract was eleven pages.

I had read it four times before I walked into the building and I was reading it a fifth time now sitting across from the most controlled man I had ever encountered in a professional setting and trying to find the clause that explained why he had chosen me specifically out of every attorney in New York.

It was not in the contract.

Which meant the reason was somewhere in the room.

Beckett Rowe had not moved since I sat down. Had not looked at his phone. Had not glanced at the door or the window or anything that was not me. He just sat at the other end of the boardroom table with his hands flat on the surface and watched me read with the patience of someone who had all afternoon and had decided I was worth the time.

That was the first thing that unsettled me.

Men like Beckett Rowe did not give anyone their full attention without a reason. And reasons in rooms like this one were never simple.

I set the contract down.

Looked at him directly.

"You chose me from a list," I said. "I want to know why."

Something moved across his face. Just barely. "That is not relevant to the contract."

"It is relevant to me."

"The contract does not require it to be relevant to you."

I looked at him for a moment. He looked back. Neither of us moved. Outside the boardroom New York was doing what it always did which was continue regardless of what was happening inside any particular room. In here it was just the two of us and eleven pages of legal precision and a reason he was not ready to give me.

"I have three conditions before I sign anything," I said.

He did not look surprised. "Tell me."

"The letter supporting my partner consideration gets drafted today. Held in escrow. Released on completion."

"Agreed."

I waited for the pushback. There was none. Which was more unsettling than pushback would have been.

"Full professional autonomy. Nothing I do at my firm is influenced by this arrangement."

"Agreed."

"Six months. Not longer without written consent from both parties."

"Agreed."

Three conditions. Three immediate agreements. No negotiation. No counter offer. No hesitation.

I looked at him across the table.

"You already knew what I was going to ask for," I said slowly.

He held my gaze.

"I told you," he said. "I chose you deliberately."

"That is not an answer."

"It is the answer I am giving you today."

I looked at the contract. At the eleven pages that had been constructed with the specific thoroughness of someone who had thought about every possible exit before presenting the document. At my name on the front page in clean black type.

Then I looked at him.

"There is something you are not telling me," I said.

"Yes," he said. Simply. Without pretending otherwise.

"And you are not going to tell me today."

"No."

"When."

"Before the first event," he said. "You have my word."

I sat in the most powerful boardroom I had ever been in across from the most controlled man I had ever met and thought about my mother's house on Prescott Street sitting as collateral in a loan document I had read six times and the specific math of a situation that had no good options.

I picked up the pen.

And signed.

He watched me do it without moving.

Then he picked up his own pen and signed without looking down.

"The first event is in ten days," he said. "A dinner at the Calloway estate."

"Fine," I said.

I stood up. Picked up my bag.

"Ms. Mercer."

I stopped.

"The thing I am not telling you," he said quietly. "It is not nothing."

I stood with my back to him for a moment.

"I know," I said.

I walked out.

And in the elevator going down I pressed my back against the wall and took one real breath and thought about the way he had agreed to every condition without hesitation and the specific chill of a man who had known what I was going to ask before I asked it.

He had chosen me deliberately.

For a reason he was not ready to tell me.

And I had just signed eleven pages without knowing what that reason was.

The elevator hit the lobby.

My phone buzzed.

Unknown number.

One line.

You have no idea what you just walked into.

I stared at the screen.

The lobby doors opened.

The city came in.

And I stood there holding a phone with a message from someone who was not Beckett Rowe and understood that whatever I had just signed my name to was significantly more complicated than eleven pages of legal precision.

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評論 (3)
goodnovel comment avatar
Ellen Lowery
Sloane is a strong woman. If I was the one, I would scream my father’s ear off.
goodnovel comment avatar
Aura
Wow chapter 1 got me hooked already
goodnovel comment avatar
P.W.Knight
Good story
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