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CHAPTER FOUR

Author: Cherry
last update publish date: 2026-07-12 22:33:40

Mia stirred when she heard movement outside the spare room. She lay still for a moment, eyes half-open, before pushing herself up. The apartment was quiet except for the low sound of the coffee machine in the kitchen. She pulled on a robe and walked out barefoot.

Callum was already dressed. Dark trousers, button-down shirt with the sleeves rolled once at the cuffs. He stood at the counter, pouring coffee into two mugs. A few of his things were already mixed in with hers — a spare shirt draped over the back of a chair, his watch on the small table by the door. He had been moving things over slowly, without asking, the way he did everything.

He looked up when she came in. “Good morning.”

“Morning,” she answered, voice still soft from sleep.

“I made coffee. Want some?.” He slid one mug toward her without waiting for a reply.

Mia wrapped her hands around the warm mug and took a sip. It was exactly right. She noticed the way he moved around the kitchen like he already knew where everything was. She took another sip and stayed quiet.

He checked his phone, then glanced at her again. “I’m gonna head out, I have a meeting.” He says with a warm smile. Then he finished his coffee, rinsed the mug, and picked up his keys. “Have a good day Mia, I’ll see you later.”

She nodded. He left without another word.

Mia knew that she was going to have to get used to him being in her place moving forward. But she didn’t know how to feel about it.

Callum stepped out of the elevator on the top floor with Jax right beside him. The morning strategy meeting had just wrapped. They walked down the wide hallway together, the city skyline visible through the glass walls. Blackwood Capital had been in the family for two generations. Callum’s grandfather started it as a small investment firm. His father expanded it into private equity — buying struggling companies, fixing them, and selling them for profit. Callum had taken it further. He pushed into bigger deals, more aggressive turnarounds, and strategic partnerships that multiplied the firm’s reach. The wealth had always been there, but he had made the name mean something bigger.

They reached the conference room and took their seats. The team was already waiting, along with the CEO of the target logistics company who had joined by video call. Callum sat at the head of the table and opened the folder in front of him.

“Let’s go through the numbers one more time,” he said. “I want to see the full picture before we move forward.”

The lead analyst started the presentation. “The infrastructure is solid, but the supply chain is bleeding money. If we buy it, we can cut the dead weight in operations and bring in our own team. Projected turnaround in eighteen months.”

Callum listened, eyes on the slides. “Eighteen months is too long. We can do twelve if we fix the supply chain first. That’s the real value here. The rest falls into place after that.”

The analyst nodded. “We’d need to bring in new leadership early to make that happen smoothly.”

Callum glanced at the screen where the other CEO was listening. “We’ll bring in new leadership early. That’s the plan if we move forward. The current CEO is resistant to change, so we’ll need to structure the deal carefully.”

The other CEO on the call shifted in his seat. “I’m still here, you know.”

Callum met his eyes on the screen. “I know. And I respect what you’ve built. But if we do this deal, we do it right. That means changes. You can stay on during the transition if you want, but the direction will shift.”

The meeting went back and forth for nearly an hour. They debated timelines, costs, risks, and how to handle the leadership transition without disrupting operations. Callum asked sharp questions and listened to the answers. By the end they had adjusted the plan. Twelve months. New leadership structure in place within the first quarter. The team packed up their things and left the room.

Jax stayed behind as the others filed out. He loosened his tie and leaned back in his chair. “You were quiet in there today. Usually you’re the one asking the hardest questions.”

“I was listening,” Callum said. He closed the folder in front of him. “They had some decent points. Didn’t mean I was going to change the timeline though.”

Jax nodded. “Fair. Your mother called me again this morning. Twice before I even got here. She’s not happy you haven’t been by the house.”

Callum leaned back in his chair. “She’s been calling me too. I know she’s up to something. She doesn’t usually push this hard unless she wants something.”

Jax gave a short laugh. “Yeah, that’s what I figured. She kept asking if I’d seen you lately. Said you’ve been hard to reach. I told her you’ve been busy with work, but she wasn’t buying it. Kept saying she needs you to come by the house soon.”

Callum rubbed his jaw. “I told her I’d go see her tonight. She’s been persistent about it for weeks now. Keeps saying it’s important.”

Jax raised an eyebrow. “Important. Right. I think I know what this is about.” He paused, then looked at Callum directly. “I think she wants to introduce you to someone. She didn’t say the name straight out, but she was dropping hints. Talking about how some friend’s daughter is back in town and how she’s ‘such a lovely girl’ and from a ‘good family.’ You know how she talks when she’s trying to set something up.”

Callum stayed quiet for a moment. He tapped his fingers once on the arm of the chair. “She should know better by now. I’m not interested in anyone else.”

Jax nodded slowly. “You think that’s going to stop her? She’s been on this for months. Even before everything with Mia. She’s not the type to let things go just because you tell her you’re not interested.”

“I know,” Callum said. His voice was low but steady. “That’s why I’ve been putting it off. Every time I go over there she finds a way to bring it up. I’m not in the mood to sit through another dinner where she tries to sell me on someone new.”

Jax studied him for a second. “So you’re actually going tonight?”

“Yeah. Told her I would. Figure it’s better to get it over with than keep dodging her calls.” Callum picked up a pen from the desk and turned it between his fingers. “She’s been calling you because she knows I’ve been avoiding the house. She’s using you to get to me.”

“Smart woman,” Jax said with a small smirk. “She knows I’ll tell you. And she knows I won’t sugarcoat it.” He paused again. “You want me to come with you? Might make it easier if she tries to push too hard.”

Callum shook his head. “No. I can handle it. It’s just dinner. I’ll go, listen to whatever she has to say, and leave.”

Jax held up his hands. “Alright. I get it.” He stood up and walked toward the door. “Just checking in, that’s all. You’ve been… different lately. More distracted. I figured it had something to do with the new living situation.”

Callum kept his eyes on the pen in his hand. “It does. But it’s nothing I need to hash out right now. I’m handling it.”

Jax nodded once. “Fair enough.” He opened the door. “Let me know how dinner with your mom goes. If she starts introducing you to random women at the table, text me. I’ll call with a fake emergency.”

Callum gave a short nod. “I’ll be fine.”

Jax stepped out and pulled the door closed behind him.

Callum sat there for a minute after he left. The office was quiet again. He stared at the city outside the window. His mother had always been like this — persistent, opinionated, convinced she knew what was best. Elena Blackwood didn’t take no for an answer easily. He would go see her tonight and deal with whatever she had planned. But he wasn’t going to let her push him into something he didn’t want. Not anymore.

He closed the laptop and stood up. He had a few more things to handle before he left for the evening. The drive to his mother’s house would take almost an hour in traffic. He wasn’t looking forward to it, but putting it off any longer would only make things worse.

Mia arrived at Lumen Studio just after nine. The small branding studio occupied the second floor of an old brick building downtown. Sunlight poured through the big windows, lighting up the open-plan space. Desks were scattered with sketchbooks, color swatches, half-finished mockups, and coffee cups from the morning rush. The air smelled faintly of fresh printer ink and the vanilla candle someone always kept burning near the reception desk. She liked it here. It felt creative but grounded — not too corporate, not too chaotic. She was still junior, but every day she felt like she was learning something new. This was her chance to build something of her own, step by step.

She sat at her desk near the window and opened the new project files. The local fashion brand wanted a full rebrand — logo, packaging, social assets. She had been excited about it since the brief landed yesterday. She started pulling reference images, building a mood board, trying different type treatments. The work pulled her in. For a while she forgot about everything else.

Lena rolled her chair closer during a break. “Hey. How’s the new project going?”

Mia looked up with a small smile. “It’s keeping me awake in a good way. I think the warm neutrals with the bold accent color could really work for them. The client has been asking for something fresh but still true to their aesthetic. I’m trying to keep it clean but still feel warm.”

Lena leaned in to look at the screen. “Oh, I like that. You’re nailing the balance. The client is going to eat this up. Keep going like this and they’ll probably let you present the next round yourself.”

Mia felt a small rush of pride. She scrolled through a few more variations on the mood board. “I’ve been playing with the packaging ideas too. I want it to feel premium but not stuffy. Like something you’d actually keep on your shelf instead of throwing away.”

Lena nodded. “That’s a good direction. The last round they sent back felt a little too safe. You’re giving it personality without going overboard. How many variations are you planning to show them?”

“Four solid ones for now,” Mia said. “I want to have options ready in case they want to mix and match. I also added a couple of social media mockups to show how it would look in real use. I think that helps them see the full picture.”

They talked for a few more minutes about the client’s feedback on the last round. Lena pointed out a few small adjustments that could make the logo even stronger. Mia made notes on her sketchbook, grateful for the input. It felt good to have someone who understood the work and gave honest feedback without making it feel like criticism.

Lena eventually rolled back to her own desk. “Let me know if you want a second pair of eyes on the final files before you send them over.”

“I will,” Mia said. “Thanks.”

She went back to her files, feeling focused. This was what she wanted — to build something on her own, step by step, without anyone smoothing the way for her. The work felt good. Solid. Like she was proving to herself that she could do this. She spent the next hour refining the mood board, adjusting colors, and testing how the logo looked in different sizes. She even mocked up a quick I*******m post to see how the brand would feel in use. The client had asked for something that felt modern but approachable, and she was starting to see it come together.

Her phone buzzed on the desk a little later.

Callum: How’s work going?

She read it once, then turned the screen face down. She noted it quietly in the back of her mind but didn’t reply. The project was waiting. She dove back in, adjusting a logo variation and saving the file. The afternoon stretched ahead with more revisions and a quick team check-in. For now, this was enough.

She spent the rest of the morning tweaking packaging concepts. The fashion brand had a clean, minimalist vibe, so she focused on simple shapes and elegant fonts. She tried a few different layouts, printed a couple of versions, and pinned them to the board above her desk to see them in physical form. The paper versions helped her spot things the screen missed — how the colors shifted under different lighting, how the logo felt when you held it in your hand.

Lena came by again later with two cups of tea. “Thought you might need a break. You’ve been staring at that screen for hours.”

Mia accepted the tea with a grateful smile. “Thanks. I think I’m getting close on the logo. I just want to make sure it works across everything — packaging, social, even the website banners they mentioned.”

“You’re doing great,” Lena said. “I remember when I was junior. I used to overthink every little thing too. It gets easier. You start to trust your eye more.”

They chatted for a few minutes about other projects in the studio — a restaurant rebrand that was giving the team headaches, a new client who kept changing their mind on colors. Nothing heavy. Just normal work talk. Mia felt relaxed. For the first time in a while she wasn’t thinking about the apartment or what was waiting for her when she got home. She was just here, doing the work she loved.

By the time the afternoon team check-in rolled around, she had three strong directions ready. She presented them quickly, getting positive feedback from the group. The senior designer even asked her to lead the next client call if the revisions went well. Mia left the meeting with a quiet sense of accomplishment. She felt like she was making progress. Real progress. The kind she could see and feel for herself.

She went back to her desk and kept working until the light outside started to soften. The project was coming together. She saved her files, packed her bag, and headed home.

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