Lena’s POV
The school gym smelled faintly of tempera paint and floor polish. Paper lanterns hung from the rafters, each one painted my tiny hands; messy and cute. The low hum of parents chatting filled the air, broken ever so often by bursts of laughter from children darting between tables. Lena firmly gripped the strap of her purse as she scanned the crowd. She had told him not to come, almost texted “never mind”. But when Eliana had asked her this morning if Dominic would be there, her eyes bright with hope, Lena hadn’t been able to say no. And now, he was here. Dominic stood by the refreshment table,gone was the tailored suit instead he wore a dark jean jacket over an opened-collared shirt, looking like he wandered into the wrong universe- except he did not look uncomfortable. He was talking to one of the teachers, nodding as if he was discussing boardroom strategies instead of preschool art. A few mothers were already looking at him over their paper cups of juice,whispering to each other. Of course they were. Lena’s pulse picked up as his gaze found hers across the room. He smiled - not the polished, press- photo smile she remembered, but something softer. Something real. And just for a dangerous moment she almost smiled back. She told herself it was just relief. Relief that he’d shown up on time. Relief that he hadn’t caused a scene. Relief that he was keeping his distance. Except he wasn’t. He started moving toward her. Dominic’s POV She had almost smiled at him. Dominic caught the flicker of it before she dropped her gaze and busied herself with the display of finger paintings on the wall. He had been in hundreds of rooms like this before — loud, chaotic, full of strangers — but never as himself. There was always a title attached: CEO. Black Enterprises. The man in charge. Here, he was just Eliana’s father. Or trying to be. And it mattered more than any meeting he’d ever taken. Eliana spotted him then, her wild curls bouncing as she ran across the gym. “Dominic! You came!” He crouched to meet her at eye level. “Of course I came. You told me you had something to show me.” She grabbed his hand without hesitation and pulled him toward the far wall where her artwork hung. Her small fingers curled around his, warm and certain, as if they’d been holding his hand her whole life. Lena’s POV She watched them from a few steps away, her throat tightening. Eliana was chattering, pointing to a crayon-scribbled lion wearing a crown. Dominic listened like it was the most important presentation he’d ever heard. He even asked questions, nodding solemnly at her answers. No one watching would think they’d met only once. Lena should have been happy for her daughter. She was. So why did she feel like the ground was shifting under her feet? When another mother sidled up beside her, whispering, “Is that your husband?” Lena’s chest tightened. “Ex,” she replied quickly. The woman’s eyes widened in interest. “Well, if you ever change your mind, I think half the women here would volunteer to be his next wife.” Lena forced a thin smile and turned back toward Eliana and Dominic, ignoring the flare of irritation she couldn’t quite explain. Dominic’s POV The lion was crooked, the colors outside the lines — and it was perfect. “She said it’s our family lion,” Eliana explained. “Because lions take care of their cubs.” Dominic swallowed hard. “They do,” he said quietly. “They always do.” He glanced over his shoulder then, finding Lena watching him. Her eyes softened — just for a heartbeat — before she turned away. But that heartbeat was enough. That heartbeat gave him hope. He wanted to go to her. Wanted to tell her that he wasn’t the man she remembered, that he wouldn’t walk away this time. But he knew better than to rush a wounded animal — and right now, Lena’s trust was exactly that: fragile and easily spooked. Lena’s POV After the showcase, parents and kids spilled into the hallway. Dominic walked beside her, Eliana skipping between them, holding both their hands. It looked… normal. Dangerously normal. When they reached the exit, Dominic hesitated. “Thank you for letting me come.” Lena nodded, her voice caught somewhere between you’re welcome and don’t get used to it. In the end, she said nothing. Because a part of her — a small, traitorous part — already wanted to see him at the next one. He opened his mouth like he wanted to add something, thought about it before he simply gave her the faintest nod before stepping away. Lena watched him go, the rain blurring his outline. And for the first time in five years, she wasn’t sure if keeping her distance was strength… or fear.Lena’s POV The school gym smelled faintly of tempera paint and floor polish. Paper lanterns hung from the rafters, each one painted my tiny hands; messy and cute. The low hum of parents chatting filled the air, broken ever so often by bursts of laughter from children darting between tables. Lena firmly gripped the strap of her purse as she scanned the crowd. She had told him not to come, almost texted “never mind”. But when Eliana had asked her this morning if Dominic would be there, her eyes bright with hope, Lena hadn’t been able to say no. And now, he was here. Dominic stood by the refreshment table,gone was the tailored suit instead he wore a dark jean jacket over an opened-collared shirt, looking like he wandered into the wrong universe- except he did not look uncomfortable. He was talking to one of the teachers, nodding as if he was discussing boardroom strategies instead of preschool art. A few mothers were already looking at him over their paper cups of juice,whis
It had been 24 hours since he met Eliana,and Dominic still could not get her voice out of his head. Her soft giggles and playful chatter. Not the way she’d said his name— like she was trying it on to see if it fit. Not the way she sat cross legged on the floor, completely unselfconscious, explaining that her lions were now “best friends”. Not the way she smiled. Soft. Trusting. Something he hadn’t earned. He was determined to earn it Lena’s face still haunted him just as much. Guarded. Calculated. Always waiting for the other shoe to drop. She didn’t believe him. Not yet. Maybe she never will. He knew better than to try and buy his way in. Lena would see that for exactly what it was. She didn’t want grand gestures. She wanted something really rare. Something he never wholeheartedly gave anyone before. Consistency. ******** That afternoon,Dominic called a supplier he sometimes used for corporate gifting. He ordered a small shipment of illustrated children’s books both cl
Lena stood in the kitchen doorway, watching Eliana talk to her lions as she munched on her apple slices.Dominic was gone.But his presence still lingered—like the scent of his cologne,the weight of memories pressing on her chest.“Max and Leo are best friends now,” Eliana said happily, holding the two lions together.“Who?” Lena asked blinking continuously, to bring herself back from painful memories.“Silly mummy, my lions” Eliana giggled cheerfully.“That’s wonderful, sweetheart,” Lena murmured, brushing a loose curl off her daughter’s forehead.But her hands trembled.She turned away before Eliana could notice, retreating to the small laundry room at the back of the apartment. She pressed her palms against the cool wall and then her chest, finally letting herself breathe.She hadn’t expected it to hit so hard.Seeing Dominic on the floor beside their daughter—smiling, gentle, almost human, pretty sure he was definitely human. That wasn’t the man she remembered from five years ago,
Dominic hadn’t been this nervous in years.Not during his first merger.Not when the board tried to push him out.Not even when he stood at the altar beside Lena in a suit custom-tailored to hide how hollow he felt.But this?This was different.He stood just outside the bookstore’s back entrance, staring at the small wooden steps that led up to the apartment Lena shared with her daughter—his daughter.The word still felt foreign. Heavy. Powerful.He clenched his fists in his coat pockets and glanced down at the bag he held. Inside was a small stuffed lion—something he had bought on impulse. He remembered the way the girl had clutched hers the other day. It had looked old, loved, maybe even falling apart.He hadn’t known what else to bring. What do you give a child who doesn’t know you exist?The door opened before he could knock.Lena stood in the doorway, her eyes guarded. She wore a simple sweater and jeans, her hair pulled into a loose bun. She looked nothing like the woman he’d l
The bell above the bookstore door chimed softly.Lena looked up from the counter, heart thundering in her chest.And there he was.Dominic Black.He stepped through the doorway like he owned the world. Tall, sharp in a tailored navy suit, his black hair slicked back, jaw tense. His eyes scanned the room—until they locked on her.For a moment, neither of them spoke.The silence between them buzzed louder than words ever could.Lena felt as though the floor beneath her had vanished. Every breath took effort. Every second felt like a year.Dominic was the first to speak.“So it is you.”His voice was low. Controlled. But not calm.Lena straightened. “What do you want, Dominic?”He walked closer, eyes never leaving hers. “Answers.”She swallowed hard. “About what?”“You disappeared five years ago,” he said coldly. “Changed your name. Cut all contact. And now I find you here… with a little girl who looks exactly like me.”Lena stiffened. “You don’t get to walk in here after everything and
Dominic POVHe wasn’t a man who got distracted.He didn’t forget faces, didn’t dwell on the past, didn’t lose sleep over unfinished chapters.But today… something was off.Dominic leaned back in the leather seat of his car, staring out the tinted window at the bustling street outside Riverside Books. His assistant sat beside him, tapping away on her tablet.“Amanda,” he said without looking at her, “did you find out who she was?”She paused. “The woman? She’s not on any employee records. Apparently, she rents a room upstairs and works part-time managing the register. Paid under the table.”He turned to her now. “Name?”Amanda hesitated. “I asked the shop owner. She said the woman goes by Lena Hart.”The name dropped like ice water down his spine.Dominic sat up straighter. “Say that again.”“Lena Hart,” Amanda repeated. “Why?”His mind went blank for a split second.No. It can’t be.“She was my wife,” he said flatly.Amanda’s jaw dropped. “Wait—that’s Lena Hart? The one from the contr