Henry startled at the voice beside him. Lavinia had appeared with her lunch tray, hesitating by the newly vacated seat.
"She is," he agreed, gesturing for Lavinia to sit. When she looked uncertain, he added, "Please. I'd rather not eat alone." Lavinia sat down carefully, as if expecting someone to object to her presence. "I thought your father avoided cultivating distractions," she said, unwrapping her sandwich with methodical precision. Henry's eyebrows rose. "Been eavesdropping on my father's lectures?" A faint smile touched her lips. "You mentioned it once. At Verity's birthday party last year. You said your father thought romantic attachments were inefficient uses of cognitive resources." "I don't remember that conversation." "We weren't having one," Lavinia clarified. "You were talking to James Porter about why you never dated. I was setting out the cake." Something about this bothered Henry—the image of Lavinia quietly placing down a cake while he spoke, not even registering her presence. Had he really been so oblivious? "My father has strong opinions about many things," he said finally. "But seeing Verity save his life... it changed his perspective. And mine." Lavinia nodded, taking a small bite of her sandwich. "So he approves of your interest in her?" "He thinks she'd make an excellent addition to the Wynthorne dynasty," Henry admitted, the words tasting slightly bitter. "Though not for the reasons that matter to me." "Which are?" Henry considered the question. No one had actually asked him that before—what he saw in Verity beyond the obvious. Even James just assumed it was her beauty or her social status. "She's fearless," he said after a moment. "Not reckless, but... certain. When everyone else froze watching my father collapse, she knew exactly what to do. She never hesitates." He paused, searching for the words. "And she's kind, but not soft. She volunteers at the hospital every weekend, even when she has three tests to study for. She doesn't talk about it to get credit. She just does it." Lavinia listened without interrupting, her gaze steady. "That sounds like love," she observed quietly. The word hung between them, startling in its directness. Henry had never labeled his feelings for Verity, even in his own mind. Attraction, certainly. Admiration, absolutely. But love? "Perhaps," he allowed, suddenly uncomfortable with the conversation's intimacy. "And what about you, Lavinia Hartwell? Anyone captured your fearless heart?" He meant it as a deflection, a lighthearted turn away from his own feelings. But something in Lavinia's expression shifted, a shadow passing behind her eyes. "My heart's not particularly fearless," she said, her voice softer than before. "And no, there's no one." Before Henry could probe further, the bell signaled the end of lunch. Lavinia gathered her things with efficient movements, her expression once again carefully neutral. "Thank you for the company," she said formally, as if they were strangers who had accidentally shared a table. As she walked away, Henry found himself watching her progress through the cafeteria. Unlike Verity, who drew attention with each step, Lavinia moved through the crowd like water—fluid, unnoticed, leaving no ripples in her wake. It was a skill, he realized, to be so completely unremarkable in a room. Yet for some reason, his eyes followed her until she disappeared through the double doors. * * * "Mr. Wynthorne?" The nurse's voice jerked Henry from a fitful doze in the hospital waiting room. He straightened, blinking away sleep, and checked his watch. Nearly midnight. "Yes?" "Your father is asking for you." Henry followed her down the sterile corridor, his stomach knotting with familiar dread. Each hospital visit seemed worse than the last, his father growing smaller against the white sheets, his commanding voice reduced to a rasp. Edward Cleveland lay propped against pillows, oxygen tubes disappearing into his nostrils, his once-powerful frame diminished by months of illness. Yet his eyes were as sharp as ever as they fixed on his son. "Sit," he commanded, patting the edge of the bed. Henry obeyed, noticing the new lines of pain etched around his father's mouth. "How are you feeling?" "Like hell," Edward replied bluntly. "But that's not why I called you in. We need to discuss your future." Henry tensed. They'd had this conversation repeatedly since the first collapse—his father insisting he abandon his plans to study science abroad, pressuring him instead to prepare for taking over Wynthorne Industries. "I'm still planning to attend Cambridge," Henry said carefully. "The astrophysics program—" "Is a luxury we can no longer afford," Edward cut in. "My condition is progressing faster than anticipated. The company needs a Wynthorne at the helm, and soon." "Dad—" "I've already spoken with the board. They've agreed to a transitional plan. You'll finish high school, then spend the summer learning the business. By fall, you'll be ready to step in as interim CEO while completing your business degree locally." The familiar suffocation closed around Henry's chest—the weight of expectation, the narrowing of possibilities. "What about my scholarship? The space research opportunity—" "Opportunities come and go," his father said dismissively. "Legacy endures. The Wynthorne name means something in this city. Are you prepared to let that die because you want to study stars in England?" Henry swallowed his frustration. Arguing with a sick man felt both futile and cruel. "I'm not making any decisions tonight," he said instead. "You need to focus on getting better." Edward's laugh was a dry, rattling sound. "Getting better isn't on the table anymore, son. Managing decline is the best we can hope for." The blunt acknowledgment of mortality hung between them, too heavy for Henry to respond to immediately. His father had never been one for gentle illusions. A soft knock at the door interrupted the tense silence. To Henry's surprise, Verity's face appeared in the doorway, her expression apologetic. "I'm so sorry to intrude," she said. "The nurse said I could peek in for just a moment." Edward Wynthorne's stern face transformed, softening into a genuine smile. "Ms. Sinclair. Please, come in." Verity glided into the room, a vision even in simple jeans and a sweater, her hair pulled back in a loose ponytail. She carried a small potted plant, which she placed on the windowsill. "African violet," she explained. "They thrive in hospital lighting. I thought it might brighten the room a bit." "Thoughtful as always," Edward approved. "Unlike my son, who brings only arguments and resistance to my sickbed." Henry winced at the comparison, but Verity smoothly interjected, "Henry's been here every day, Mr. Wynthorne. The nurses tell me he stays until they force him to leave." Her defense, gentle but firm, made something twist in Henry's chest. She crossed to stand beside him, her hand briefly squeezing his shoulder in silent support. "How are you feeling?" she asked Edward, her voice taking on the professional tone she used during her hospital volunteering. As his father launched into a detailed account of his symptoms—information he typically withheld from Henry to "avoid unnecessary worry"—Henry watched Verity nod and ask intelligent follow-up questions. She belonged here, he realized. In hospitals, in moments of crisis, Verity Sinclair found her clearest purpose. "You should listen to your doctors about the experimental treatment," she was saying. "The success rates for your specific condition are actually quite promising." Edward waved a dismissive hand. "Promising isn't certain. And I have a company to consider." "Your company needs you alive," Verity countered, with a directness few people ever used with Edward Wynthorne. To Henry's astonishment, his father seemed to actually consider her words. "Perhaps," he conceded. "I'll review the literature again." The nurse appeared in the doorway, tapping her watch meaningfully. "Five minutes up," she announced. Verity nodded and bent to kiss Edward's cheek. "Rest well, Mr. Wynthorne. I'll bring you those journal articles tomorrow." As they walked toward the hospital exit, Henry found himself studying Verity's profile in the harsh fluorescent lighting. "You didn't have to come," he said. "It's nearly one in the morning." "I was already here," she explained. "Weekend volunteer shift. When I heard your father was admitted again, I wanted to check on you both." She paused by her car. "Are you okay? You look exhausted." The genuine concern in her eyes loosened something in Henry's chest. Without thinking, he reached for her hand. "Thank you," he said simply. "For everything." Verity's fingers curled around his, warm despite the cool night air. "That's what friends are for." Friends. The word should have disappointed him, but tonight, it felt like enough—her presence, her support, her unwavering kindness. "Can I give you a ride home?" she offered. Henry shook his head. "My car's here. But thank you." She hesitated, then stood on tiptoe to press a light kiss to his cheek. "Get some sleep, Henry Wynthorne. The world will still need saving tomorrow." As he watched her drive away, Henry touched his cheek where her lips had been. The gesture was friendly, perhaps even sisterly, yet it kindled something warm in his chest—a feeling too tender to examine closely in a hospital parking lot at one in the morning. His phone buzzed with a text from an unfamiliar number: Any update on your father? -Lavinia Henry stared at the message, unexpectedly moved by this small reaching out from Lavinia Wren, who had somehow noticed his absence from school that day. Stable for now. Thank you for asking. he replied after a moment's consideration. Her response came quickly: If you need notes from today's classes, let me know. Such a practical offer, so characteristically Lavinia. No empty platitudes or expressions of sympathy, just a concrete way to help. I might take you up on that, he typed back. As he drove home through the empty streets, Henry found himself caught between thoughts of Verity's kiss and Lavinia's quiet thoughtfulness—two such different forms of care, from two such different women. But it was Verity's face that stayed with him as he finally fell into exhausted sleep, her certainty and capability a beacon he desperately wanted to follow out of the growing darkness of his father's illness.The week after the stalker incident passed in deliberate silence. Henry Wynthorne made no attempt to follow Lavinia Hartwell’s evening routines, telling himself he’d done enough damage simply by being discovered. But by Thursday, the restlessness had returned—a gnawing uncertainty that pulled at him like an undertow. He found himself lingering near the office windows as five o’clock approached, watching the street below with the careful attention of someone pretending not to care. When Lavinia emerged that evening, her shoulders bore the same tired slump he’d noticed before. Something about the sight made his chest tighten with an emotion he refused to name. Without conscious decision, his feet carried him to his car. The distance he maintained was greater this time, more careful. He told himself it was prudent caution after her obvious displeasure at being followed. But the truth sat heavier in his stomach—he couldn’t bear to stop, and he couldn’t bear
The question hung between them like an accusation, and Henry felt heat rise in his cheeks. How could he explain that he’d been following her? That he’d become the kind of man who lurked in shadows, driven by impulses he couldn’t name or control?“I was nearby,” he said, the lie sitting poorly on his tongue. “Client meeting.”Lavinia’s eyes searched his face, and Henry had the uncomfortable sensation that she could see through him as easily as window glass. Her gaze moved past him to his car, parked haphazardly across the street with the driver’s door still hanging open.“In a residential neighborhood? At eight o’clock at night?”“Lavinia—”“How long have you been following me, Henry?”The directness of the question stole his prepared excuses. She stood there in the harsh glow of the store’s fluorescent lights, her grocery bag still clutched against her chest, waiting for an answer he couldn’t give without revealing more about him
The following Tuesday arrived wrapped in the kind of October chill that crept through wool coats and settled in bones. Henry had spent the better part of the week fighting the urge to repeat his Tuesday evening surveillance, telling himself it had been a moment of temporary madness brought on by Uncle Peter’s revelation about the emerald set. Rational men didn’t follow their former fiancées through city streets. Rational men respected boundaries.But Tuesday evening found him parked across from Sterling & Associates at half past seven, his hands gripping the steering wheel with white-knuckled determination to simply drive away. The rational part of his mind catalogued all the reasons this was inappropriate: Lavinia had made her wishes clear, he had no right to monitor her movements, and Verity was expecting his call about their dinner plans.The irrational part—the part that had been growing stronger each day—noted that the streets weren’t entirely safe after dark,
She walked with purpose through the financial district, her heels clicking against the pavement in a rhythm that was distinctly hers. When she turned onto a quieter residential street, Henry had to duck behind a parked car to avoid being seen, his heart hammering with the absurdity of it all. What was he doing? This was madness. Lavinia Hartwell was a grown woman perfectly capable of taking care of herself. She’d made that abundantly clear. But he couldn’t seem to stop. She stopped at a small convenience store wedged between a dry cleaner and a flower shop, the kind of place that stayed open late for the neighborhood’s working population. Through the large windows, Henry watched her move through the narrow aisles, her selections sparse: instant noodles, canned soup, a bottle of headache medicine. The fluorescent lights overhead cast harsh shadows under her eyes, making her look younger and older simultaneously. When she
The afternoon light had begun its slow retreat from the windows of Wynthorne Enterprises when Henry found himself standing at his office door, watching Lavinia Hartwell pack her things with the same methodical precision she brought to everything else. Her movements were economical, purposeful—no wasted motion, no lingering glances around the space that had been hers for nearly five years. “The Morrison contract revisions are on your desk,” she said without looking up, her voice carrying that polite distance that had become her default tone with him. “I’ve flagged the sections that need your attention.” “Thank you.” The words felt inadequate, but what else could he say? That he’d spent the better part of the week finding excuses to walk past her temporary workspace? That the sight of her empty office next to his felt like a missing tooth he couldn’t stop probing with his tongue? His phone buzzed against his desk. Verity’s name flashed on t
“By work? Or by her?” Henry couldn’t bring himself to lie. “I keep thinking I should call her. Just to check in.” “But you promised yourself you’d give her space,” Verity finished knowingly. “How did you—” “Because I know you, Henry. You’re honorable to a fault, even when it makes you miserable.” That evening, Henry stood in his penthouse apartment, staring at Lavinia’s contact information on his phone. His finger hovered over the call button for ten full minutes before he finally set the device aside, honoring his commitment to respect her wishes despite the growing certainty that something fundamental was missing from his life. The next afternoon found Henry on the Hartwells’ doorstep, armed with the excuse of retrieving a project file Lavinia might have accidentally taken. Diana Hartwell greeted him with excessive warmth, ushering him into their modes