Home / Romance / The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing / Chapter Twenty-One: Watched

Share

Chapter Twenty-One: Watched

Author: Opey Lux
last update publish date: 2026-06-18 06:08:47

Chapter Twenty-One: Watched

I did not show my face change.

That was the one thing I held onto in the seconds after I read that message — whoever was in this room watching us, I was not going to give them the satisfaction of seeing it land. I set the phone face-down on the table, picked my water back up, and looked at Sebastian like nothing at all had happened.

"Everything okay?" he asked.

"Fine," I said. "Claire. Work thing."

He studied me for a beat longer than the lie deserved, but he let it
Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App
Locked Chapter

Latest chapter

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-Six: Eli Asks the Question

    AmeliaI was at the kitchen table going through emails when Eli came in and stood across from me, very straight, his hands clasped together in front of him in a way I had never seen him do before."Mummy," he said. "Can you sit down? I have something serious to say."I closed my laptop.There was something about the way he said it — formal, deliberate, a child borrowing the cadence of every serious conversation he had ever overheard adults having — that told me this was not about dinosaurs or homework or anything I could redirect with a snack and a change of subject.I sat down properly, facing him. I folded my hands on the table the same way he was folding his, and I was not entirely sure which one of us had borrowed the gesture from the other."Okay," I said. "I'm sitting."He climbed onto the chair across from me, settled himself, and looked at me with a steadiness I had watched grow in him for years, piece by piece, the same way I had built my own."I know Sebastian is my dad," he

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-Five: Sebastian Breaks Daniel

    I scheduled the meeting myself.Not through my assistant, not through the usual channels — I called Daniel directly, kept my voice exactly as it always sounded, and asked him to come by the office Thursday afternoon to talk through some restructuring ideas for the board. Ordinary. Routine. The kind of meeting we had had a hundred times across fifteen years.He arrived at three, the way he always did, with his easy smile and his confident walk and the particular warmth he had perfected over a decade and a half of being the person everyone trusted in a room."Sebastian." He sat down across from my desk without being asked, the way he always did. "You said restructuring. What's on your mind?""A few things," I said.I let the conversation run normally for almost ten minutes. Board composition. The Hendricks deal. A question about quarterly projections that he answered the way he always answered things — smooth, confident, a half-step ahead of where I expected him to be.I had spent fifte

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-Four: The Article That Never Runs

    Theresa's message came in at six forty-seven in the morning.I was on my second coffee, standing at the kitchen window while Eli ate breakfast and argued with himself about whether dinosaurs could have survived if the asteroid had been slightly smaller. He had been developing this theory for three days and had reached no conclusion he was satisfied with. The current working hypothesis required the asteroid to have been at least thirty percent smaller, which was a figure he felt very confident about and which he was prepared to defend at length to anyone who asked, and also to several people who had not asked.My phone buzzed on the counter.I picked it up.Victoria Sinclair came in yesterday. Handed over a folder — photos, BC copy, AH financial docs. Wants an exposé. Framing is predator angle. She left it with me. Your call.Below the message was a document attachment. I opened it.I set my coffee down.Send everything she gave you, I typed back. All of it. Today.Then I called Claire

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-Three: What Victoria Knows

    VictoriaI had given Daniel long enough.Three weeks since the restaurant. Three weeks had passed since Sebastian had looked at me with eyes that did not recognise the woman I used to be to him and said you knew who she was in a voice so quiet and so final that I had walked to my car and sat in it for forty minutes before I could drive.Daniel's response, when I told him what had happened, had been characteristically smooth. It was always going to come out eventually. We manage the fallout. As if Sebastian's knowing was simply another variable to account for, another piece to reposition. As if I had not spent six years positioning myself carefully enough that Sebastian's trust in me should have been unassailable by now.Daniel managed things for Daniel.I had learned that slowly, across six years of believing we were partners, and I was done waiting for him to manage something that was actively coming apart.I had my own options.I had found the journalist through a contact I had cult

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-Two: Three Seconds

    She had not replied to my text from the night before.Not the photos. She had answered those instantly, sharp and certain, the woman who traces a face through six tables of restaurant footage in under twelve hours. It was the four words after — I'll handle it — that she had simply left sitting there, unanswered, daring me to do something stupid so she could prove her point.I had not done anything stupid.I had called Marcus instead, quietly, and started building a paper trail on Daniel's PA through channels that would hold up properly when the time came. I had not gone near Daniel. I had not confronted anyone. I had done exactly what she told me to do — and then I had sat with the evidence file open on my desk for an hour, not working, just sitting with it, thinking about a woman who had spent one sleepless night solving something that should have taken days.That was why I was at her house at nine that evening, laptop under my arm, telling myself this was strategy.Eli had been asle

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Twenty-One: Watched

    Chapter Twenty-One: WatchedI did not show my face change.That was the one thing I held onto in the seconds after I read that message — whoever was in this room watching us, I was not going to give them the satisfaction of seeing it land. I set the phone face-down on the table, picked my water back up, and looked at Sebastian like nothing at all had happened."Everything okay?" he asked."Fine," I said. "Claire. Work thing."He studied me for a beat longer than the lie deserved, but he let it go, because Eli was stirring against his shoulder and that mattered more right now than whatever was sitting on my face.The waiter came to clear the last of the dessert plates. I thanked him, asked for the bill in a voice that sounded entirely ordinary to my own ears, and spent the next several minutes performing the small, mundane choreography of ending a dinner — coats, the booster seat, Eli's shoes which had somehow come off under the table without anyone noticing when. None of it touched wh

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Sixteen: Daniel's Call

    "Sebastian—"I had just said his name when the screen changed.The call did not drop. It did not crackle or cut out the way calls sometimes did. It simply ended — replaced, mid-word, by a new screen. A photo. A name. Daniel Ashford.For a moment I genuinely did not understand what I was looking at.

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Fifteen: What the Investigator Found

    I did not know what to do with my face.Eli was looking up at me on that path, waiting — the way he waited for everything, patient and watchful, like he had all the time in the world for an adult to catch up to something he had already understood.Mummy cries sometimes. When she thinks I'm sleeping

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Fourteen: Saturday Morning

    EliHe was there before I even finished putting my shoes on.I heard the car outside and I knew it was him because it made a different sound from the other cars on our street — quieter, like it was trying not to wake anyone up even though it was already nine fifty-nine in the morning and everyone w

  • The Heiress He Mistook For Nothing   Chapter Thirteen: The Dinner He Did Not Plan

    The board dinner had been on the calendar for two weeks.Six of us. The private room at the back of the restaurant, the one I always used for things that needed to be said in a room where nobody outside it would hear. Marcus was there. Two board members. The usual people saying the usual things ove

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status