Inherited Complications complete book

Inherited Complications | CH 31-40

Tags:

Chapter 31: Clean Slate

The first week back in Toronto, Julian became a ghost with a calendar.

Ellie understood. HaleCare, transitions, meetings that probably involved words she pretended to know. He texted anyway. Little check-ins that felt careful, considerate, very Julian.

How was your day? Busy? Did you eat?

She replied just enough to stay present without being present.

Good. Yeah. Yep ๐Ÿ™‚

She did not mention that she was spending her days sprinting between auditions and job interviews with the manic optimism of someone who absolutely could not afford to give up yet.

Monday was three auditions and one interview. Tuesday was two auditions and an email that began with Unfortunately. Wednesday was a callback that turned into a polite smile and a suggestion that she was โ€œvery expressiveโ€ in a way that felt suspiciously final.

Ellie stayed cheerful through all of it.

She smiled at casting assistants. She thanked directors. She nodded thoughtfully when people told her she had potential, which she was starting to suspect was code for not this time and probably not ever. She went home exhausted, kicked off her shoes, and opened her laptop to look for more opportunities, because momentum was important and despair was rude.

The next morning brought more rejections.

Lack of experience. Not the right fit. We went with someone else.

She kept going anyway. If she stopped, she would think. Thinking was dangerous.

She made excuses when Julian asked why she had not dropped by his office. She said she was busy. She said she was meeting friends. One morning he stopped by Ethanโ€™s place and she was not there. Ethan said she had gone out early. Julian did not ask more.

By Thursday, the cheerfulness evaporated.

The last audition of the day ended with a director sighing and saying maybe she should consider other careers, because he had seen her audition for five of his plays already.

Ellie smiled. Thanked him. Walked out.

She stood in an alley behind the theater and unwrapped a sandwich she had shoved into her bag that morning. If she ate, she would not cry. That was the rule. Crying required an audience and she was not ready for Ethanโ€™s concerned face yet.

Her phone rang.

Julian.

She stared at it and let it ring out. If she heard his voice, she would lose it.

She took another bite of the sandwich. Her phone rang again.

On the third call, she answered.

โ€œYeah,โ€ she said, trying to sound casual and failing quietly.

โ€œAre you busy?โ€ Julian asked.

โ€œNo, not really. I just got out of an audition.โ€

There was a pause. Not the distracted kind. The listening kind.

โ€œHow was it?โ€

That was it. That was the crack.

โ€œRejected,โ€ she said, and laughed, which immediately betrayed her because her voice wobbled and her eyes burned and suddenly she was crying anyway.

โ€œWhere are you?โ€ he asked.

โ€œIโ€™m just outside Oโ€™Hara Theatre. Iโ€™m going home andโ€”โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t move. Iโ€™m five minutes away.โ€

โ€œJulianโ€”โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t argue with me,โ€ he said, and the line went dead.

Ellie stared at her phone.

When would she stop needing people like this? Would she ever survive on her own? Probably not. She would be homeless and live on granola bars and eventually perish in a bus shelter.

Five minutes passed. The sandwich disappeared. Julianโ€™s car pulled into the alley.

He stepped out, took one look at her, and before she could say anything useful or brave or self-deprecating, the first thing out of her mouth was, โ€œIโ€™m never good at anything.โ€

Julian closed the distance and wrapped his arms around her.

Ellie let herself lean into him, tears soaking into his coat, the city buzzing around them like nothing had just cracked open.


Julian did not plan on bringing Ellie to his apartment.

The plan had been to drop her off, make sure she was steady, send a follow-up text later that night that said something neutral and responsible. Unfortunately, Ellie cried in his car the entire way, quiet at first and then with hiccuping little breaths she kept apologizing for, and he decided he was not dealing with Ethanโ€™s concerned stare or Hannahโ€™s gentle interrogation tonight.

So now they were on his couch.

Ellie leaned into him, her head tipped against his shoulder, his arm around her almost by accident. His hand rubbed absently up and down her arm, a grounding habit he had not consciously chosen. It was either that or start problem-solving out loud, which he suspected would get him punched.

โ€œDo you need money for anything?โ€ he asked, because he was him and this was how he checked on people.

โ€œNo,โ€ Ellie said, exhaling hard. โ€œI just wanted to find something for me, you know? I donโ€™t want to feel helpless if you or Ethan finally decide to get rid of me.โ€

Julian frowned. โ€œI donโ€™t think your brother would do that.โ€

Ellie snorted. โ€œHe wonโ€™t. And thatโ€™s the problem. Iโ€™m no longer his responsibility.โ€

Julian hesitated, then reached for logic, because it was familiar and solid. โ€œWe have a ten-year contract, remember? Youโ€™re stable for the next ten years.โ€

She did not answer.

That silence sat heavier than he expected. He realized, belatedly, that saying ten-year contract to someone who felt disposable was probably not reassuring. He adjusted slightly, enough that she could feel him there.

โ€œYou can tell me anything,โ€ he said.

Ellie straightened, pulling back just enough to pick at her nails. โ€œYour ex-wife is really pretty.โ€

That caught his attention.

He resisted the urge to immediately counter it with facts or reassurances. This did not sound like insecurity. This sounded like a detour she needed to take before getting to the actual problem. He waited.

โ€œAnd the more I stay with you,โ€ she continued, smiling in a way that did not reach her eyes, โ€œthe more obvious it is that I donโ€™t really belong in your life. You hired me because you thought I wouldnโ€™t get too involved, and Iโ€™m failing at that job too.โ€

Julianโ€™s jaw tightened.

โ€œIโ€™m starting to get confused about what we are,โ€ she went on. โ€œAnd Iโ€™d get it if you fired me, because thatโ€™s not what we agreed to.โ€

She kept going, words tumbling now. โ€œIโ€™m not someone you could be proud of, Julian. Even as a fake wife. Iโ€™m not even proud of myself. I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m doing. I donโ€™t want to rely on anyone, but nobodyโ€™s giving me a chance. I’m not even making sense right now.”

Julian stared straight ahead.

Everything she said made sense. Uncomfortably so.

He had built this structure. He had written the rules. He had crossed them first. Her confusion was not a failure of character. It was the predictable result of putting a human being into a contract and then treating her like more than that without explaining himself.

He argued with himself in quick succession. End the arrangement. Start clean. Do not entangle money with feelings. Except she was struggling, and he could fix that, and she hated being fixed. Except letting her flounder felt worse. Except he was already too far in to pretend neutrality.

He hated that she looked defeated. This was not the Ellie who annoyed him daily with questions and commentary and opinions. This was someone shrinking.

โ€œIf thereโ€™s anyone to blame, itโ€™s me,โ€ he said finally. โ€œI took control of the situation, and there are complications. Mostly because of me.โ€

Ellie looked at him, listening.

โ€œIโ€™m not good at this,โ€ he admitted. โ€œbut I’ve been thinking of ending this arrangement.”

Her expression changed instantly, and he rushed to clarify before the damage landed.

โ€œSo we can start on a clean slate,โ€ he added. โ€œI donโ€™t want you to feel pressured, and I donโ€™t want to second-guess everything just because money is involved.โ€

She smiled, faintly.

โ€œBut,โ€ Julian continued, because of course there was a but, โ€œI also canโ€™t sit here and watch you struggle when I can help. Do you see how complicated that is?โ€

Ellie nodded.

He knew what she needed in that moment was reassurance. Validation. Something gentle and emotional. He also knew, with a sinking certainty, that it would not be enough.

He sighed. โ€œYou can stay here in Toronto.โ€


Ellie panicked.

Not outwardly. Outwardly she nodded and blinked and tried to look reasonable. Internally, every thought tripped over the next one.

Stay in Toronto. That was fast. She had just finished a whole emotional speech about independence and now he was casually rearranging geography. Could he at least pretend this was a negotiation?

โ€œWhat about HaleCare?โ€ she asked.

โ€œIโ€™ll talk to Margaret,โ€ Julian said. โ€œWeโ€™ll figure it out.โ€

She looked at him properly then. Not CEO Julian. Not composed Julian. Just a man sitting on his couch with his shoulders slightly hunched, eyes tired, jaw set too tight. He lookedโ€ฆconflicted. And Julian did not do conflicted.

โ€œBeing with someone again was never on my to-do list,โ€ he said. โ€œIt disrupts things Iโ€™ve spent years keeping orderly. That disruption happens to be you.โ€

Ellie was about to say something when Julian interrupted her, โ€œAnd before you overthink what I just said, Iโ€™m not saying thatโ€™s a bad thing.โ€

โ€œAnd it annoys me that youโ€™re confused about where you are in my life,โ€ he added. โ€œThat means Iโ€™m not doing a good job.โ€

Her chest did a strange, sharp thing at that. He was not blaming her. He was blaming himself. That was new. Alarming, even.

โ€œSo stay here,โ€ Julian said. โ€œDo whatever you have to do. But let me support you. Once you find a job, and you will, we stop this. We divorce officially.โ€

Ellie held very still.

โ€œSo we can start on a clean slate,โ€ he said. โ€œNo money attached to feelings. No guessing whether youโ€™re allowed to be here.โ€

Clean slate.

Her brain latched onto that phrase and refused to let go. Clean slate meant choice. It meant no paycheck attached to affection. It meant he was not asking her to leave, just asking her to stay without pretending it was business.

โ€œThatโ€™s the best compromise I can give, Elena,โ€ he said.

Ellie stared at him for a beat too long.

โ€œSo,โ€ she said slowly, โ€œyou mean you like me?โ€

Julian looked at her, unimpressed. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t bring a charger at one in the morning for anyone.โ€

Her mouth curved despite herself. โ€œLike like? For real?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not going to say that,โ€ he replied flatly.

โ€œSay it.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œJulian.โ€

He shot her a look. She leaned closer, eyes bright, absolutely unbearable.

โ€œSay it,โ€ she repeated, softer this time.

โ€œDonโ€™t question your place in my life,โ€ he said finally. โ€œYouโ€™re my wife. And whatever this is now, itโ€™s more than the paper we signed.โ€

He paused, jaw tight.

โ€œand you know I donโ€™t say things lightly.โ€

Ellie smiled and leaned over to kiss him.

She knew what it looked like from the outside. Staying. Letting someone help. Letting things be complicated.

But she also knew what happened when she tried to be brave by herself.

She burned out. She ran out. She disappeared quietly.

Julian wasnโ€™t offering rescue. He was offering time.

And for once, she was going to use it instead of wasting it on pride.

Chapter 32: Final Interview

Pearson International Airport was doing what airports did best. Too loud, too bright, too rushed for feelings that wanted to linger.

Ellie hugged Margaret carefully, aware of the soft wool of her coat, the faint perfume that probably cost more than Ellieโ€™s monthly groceries. โ€œThank you for everything,โ€ she said, and meant it. โ€œAnd Iโ€™m sorry I canโ€™t fly back with you. I have some urgent things to handle in Toronto.โ€

Margaret pulled back just enough to look at her properly. Really look. The kind of look that made Ellie feel fourteen again and vaguely guilty for reasons she couldnโ€™t name.

โ€œYou and Julian arenโ€™t having marital problems, are you?โ€ Margaret asked.

Ellie smiled, smooth and practiced. Theatre training finally paying off. โ€œNot at all. Just personal things. We talked about it. He agreed it makes more sense for him to go with you.โ€

Margaret hummed, unconvinced but letting it go. She kissed Ellieโ€™s cheek, firm and affectionate. โ€œTake care of yourself, Elena. Donโ€™t disappear.โ€

Then she was gone, swept into security with purpose and authority, leaving Ellie standing there with Julian and a strange, buzzing quiet between them.

Ellie shoved her hands into her coat pockets. โ€œSo,โ€ she said, rocking slightly on her heels. โ€œSee you next month?โ€

Julian adjusted his grip on his carry-on. โ€œDepends.โ€

โ€œOn what?โ€

โ€œMy patience,โ€ he said.

She laughed, because it sounded like a threat but landed like a joke. He looked at her then, eyes sharp but warm in that annoying way that made her feel seen and unsettled at the same time.

โ€œAlthough,โ€ he added, almost casually, โ€œIโ€™ve flown back for less. Iโ€™d fly back here even if it were just for a lost charger.โ€

Ellie blinked. โ€œYouโ€™re never letting that go, are you?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he said. โ€œAbsolutely not.โ€

She smiled before she could stop herself. โ€œYouโ€™ll miss your flight.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll call you.โ€ He turned and started walking toward the gate.

Ellie watched him go, her chest doing that quiet, traitorous tightening thing. Then Julian suddenly started walking back toward her, decisively this time.

โ€œYou forgot something?โ€ she asked.

He didnโ€™t answer. He leaned in and kissed her, slow and certain and entirely unconcerned with the people dragging suitcases past them. Someone nearby made an awkward noise. Julian ignored it.

โ€œIโ€™m your husband,โ€ he said softly when he pulled back, pinching her cheeks with familiar affection. โ€œRemember that.โ€

Then he turned and walked away for real.

Ellie stood there, stunned, one hand lifting to her face as if she needed to confirm the kiss had actually happened. Her cheeks were warm. Her heart was doing something unhelpful and dramatic.

โ€œIโ€™m still his wife,โ€ she murmured to herself.

And she smiled all the way out of the airport.


Ellie had officially stopped doing open calls and started looking for jobs more seriously.

She sat at her kitchen table with Sebโ€™s emails open, a half-cold coffee at her elbow, and a browser filled with job listings that sounded only mildly terrifying. Production assistant. Coordinator. Front of house. Anything that didnโ€™t involve waiting in line at six in the morning just to be told she had โ€œinteresting energyโ€ and then never hear back.

Seb, bless him, sent her prospects with short notes attached.

This oneโ€™s real. This one pays. This one does not look sketchy.

Ellie clicked. Applied. Customized her resume until it barely resembled her life. Hit submit. Tried not to think too hard.

Her phone rang.

Unknown number.

She stared at it. Then answered because avoidance had not been working out for her lately.

โ€œHello?โ€

โ€œHi, may I speak with Elena Bennett?โ€

โ€œYes, this is her.โ€ Her voice went polite.

โ€œHi, this is Mara calling from Northbridge Theatre Collective. Iโ€™m following up on your interview yesterday.โ€

Ellie froze. Her brain did that thing where it shut down everything except panic.

โ€œYes,โ€ she said, very calmly for someone who had just mentally screamed.

โ€œWeโ€™d love to move you forward to the final round. Could you come in the day after tomorrow at four p.m.?โ€

She blinked. โ€œYes. Absolutely. I can. I will. I mean, yes.โ€

Mara laughed, kind. โ€œGreat. Weโ€™ll see you then.โ€

The call ended.

Ellie stared at her phone.

She stood up. Sat down. Walked two steps. Whispered โ€œoh my godโ€ to the fridge.

Final round.

Final.

She didnโ€™t even let herself overthink it before texting Julian.

You busy?

The reply came almost instantly.

Wrapping up a call. Iโ€™ll call you in five.

She smiled at her phone, soft and stupid.

Of course he would. He always did.

They hadnโ€™t seen each other in two weeks. Not in person. But every day he checked in. Every night there was a call, sometimes video, sometimes voice, Julian listening while she ranted and jumped topics and talked herself into and out of despair. He never rushed her. Never multitasked. Just sat there with that perpetually annoyed face that somehow meant he was fully present.

Ethan did the same thing with Hannah. No matter how exhausted he was, he still helped with school projects, still listened. Ellie had noticed that years ago. She noticed it now.

Five minutes later, Julianโ€™s face filled her screen. He looked tired. Tie loosened. Hair out of place.

โ€œHow are you?โ€ she asked immediately.

โ€œBetter now,โ€ he said.

Her chest did a small, traitorous flip at that.

โ€œEverything good?โ€ he asked.

โ€œYeah,โ€ she said, then rushed ahead before she lost her nerve. โ€œOkay, question. Are you too busy to maybe do a mock interview with me? Or something?โ€

His eyebrow shot up. โ€œWhat position is this for?โ€

โ€œProduction Coordinator for a theatre house. In-house. They run multiple productions every year. Itโ€™s real. Itโ€™s the final interview and I am actively freaking out because I have never made it this far.โ€

She watched his mouth twitch. He leaned closer to the camera, trying very hard not to smile.

โ€œAll right,โ€ he said. โ€œLetโ€™s hear it.โ€

He didnโ€™t ease her in.

โ€œWhy do you want this role?โ€

She opened her mouth, panicked, then rambled. He stopped her gently. Rephrased her answer. Asked again.

โ€œWhatโ€™s your biggest weakness?โ€

She groaned. โ€œExisting?โ€

โ€œTry again.โ€

They went through questions. He cut in with advice. Told her when she undersold herself. Called her out when she deflected with humor.

โ€œYou realize coordination and being calm under pressure are skills, right?,โ€ he said at one point.

โ€œThey are?โ€ she replied. โ€œOkay.โ€

By the end, her shoulders had dropped. Her breathing had steadied.

โ€œWhenโ€™s the interview?โ€ he asked.

โ€œDay after tomorrow. Northbridge Theatre Collective,โ€ she said, anxiety creeping back in. โ€œI just wish you were here.โ€

โ€œFew more months,โ€ Julian said.

She nodded, smiling anyway.


The interview ended without drama, which somehow felt suspicious.

Ellie sat there nodding, smiling, hands folded so tightly in her lap they were practically shaking hands with each other. The panel exchanged looks. Someone thanked her for coming. Someone else shuffled papers.

Then the woman in the middle smiled and said, โ€œWeโ€™d love to offer you the position. You can start next week.โ€

Ellie blinked.

โ€œOh,โ€ she said, because her brain had temporarily powered down. Then, louder, โ€œOh. Oh! Yes. Yes, absolutely. Thank you. I mean, thank you so much.โ€

She stood up too fast. Almost knocked her chair over. Apologized to the chair. Shook hands. Walked out of the room in a daze and only stopped once she outside in the parking lot.

She had a job.

An actual job.

She pulled her phone out with trembling hands and hit Julianโ€™s name before she could talk herself into being calm.

โ€œHow was it?โ€ he asked.

โ€œI got it!โ€ she shrieked.

โ€œJesus,โ€ Julian said, clearly wincing on the other end. โ€œIโ€™ll take you to dinner.โ€

โ€œYeah?โ€ she said, grinning so hard her face hurt. โ€œCanโ€™t wait.โ€

โ€œNow.โ€

โ€œNow?โ€ She turned and there he was.

Leaning against his car, phone to his ear, smirk already in place, jacket open, looking far too composed for someone who had apparently materialized out of thin air.

Ellie screamed again and ran up to him.

โ€œI got the job!โ€ she said, bouncing on her toes, grabbing his arm. โ€œI got the job. Can you believe it?โ€

Julian didnโ€™t answer. He slid his phone into his pocket and pulled her into him, arms solid and warm and unmistakably real.

โ€œYou missed me?โ€ she asked, her voice muffled against his chest.

โ€œNo,โ€ he said, hugging her tighter.

Ellie laughed. โ€œYou didnโ€™t tell me you were coming.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t miss celebrations,โ€ he said. โ€œBut I need to go back tonight, so we donโ€™t have much time.โ€

She pulled back just enough to look up at him. โ€œYou took a flight just for this? What if I didnโ€™t get the job?โ€

โ€œI wouldโ€™ve flown either way,โ€ he said.

Ellie smiled, even though she tried not to. Julian had a habit of showing up in ways that felt wildly inconvenient for him and impossible for her to ignore.

She leaned back into him, breathing him in, smiling into his shirt. โ€œYouโ€™re annoying,โ€ she muttered.

โ€œI know.โ€

Chapter 33: Coming Home

Julian had been on the call for forty minutes when he realized he had stopped listening to his own voice.

That was usually a sign of exhaustion or irritation. Possibly both.

Seb was on the other end, patient as ever, which Julian both appreciated and resented. He paced the length of the temporary office, phone wedged between shoulder and ear, staring at a spreadsheet that had no business existing in its current form.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ Julian said finally, rubbing his temple. โ€œThe transition is giving me headaches. HaleCare is bleeding money because Margaret refuses to let people go. She wonโ€™t do it herself, she wonโ€™t let me do it, and now itโ€™s apparently my moral failing.โ€

Seb hummed. The sound of someone who had heard this tone before.

โ€œThat sounds very on brand for your grandmother,โ€ Seb said. โ€œAlso very on brand for you to inherit the problem instead of pushing back.โ€

โ€œI am pushing back,โ€ Julian said automatically. Then he paused. โ€œI am pushing back internally. Strategically.โ€

โ€œOf course you are,โ€ Seb said. โ€œSo when are you coming back to Toronto for good?โ€

Julian stopped pacing. He stared at the window.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ he repeated. โ€œSoon. I hope.โ€

Seb was quiet for a second. Then, casually, โ€œHow are you and Ellie?โ€

Julian frowned. โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œI mean,โ€ Seb said, carefully neutral, โ€œI donโ€™t think the marriage is working as professional as it is supposed to be. She dropped by the other day. Brought me coffee. Asked if Iโ€™d heard from you because you hadnโ€™t responded to her in four days.โ€

Julian stilled.

Four days?

โ€œShe wasnโ€™t angry,โ€ Seb added. โ€œShe seemed worried. Are you sure there isnโ€™t something else going on?โ€

Julian opened his mouth. Closed it again.

On the other end, Seb exhaled slowly. โ€œOh my god. Okay. Iโ€™m not pushing, but that absolutely deserves a face-to-face conversation.โ€

โ€œWhatever,โ€ Julian said, and ended the call before Seb could turn that into a lecture.

He stood there for a moment, phone still in his hand, irritation curling into something less comfortable.

He wanted to go back to Toronto. That part was simple. The longer he stayed here, the clearer it became that no one else could handle HaleCare without running it into the ground. Giving it to his brother would be corporate suicide, and Margaret knew it. She just hadnโ€™t said it out loud yet.

And Julian did not want her dying without knowing the truth. He didnโ€™t want her last lucid thought to be that her grandson had played a clean game when he hadnโ€™t.

He also didnโ€™t want to think about Ellie counting days on her calendar.

Julian sighed, already irritated with himself for the delay. Then he straightened his jacket, turned on his heel, and headed for Margaretโ€™s office.

Procrastination, he decided, was becoming a recurring and deeply unflattering habit.


Julian did not bother knocking.

โ€œI need to go back to Toronto so I can properly manage the shitshow that is HaleCare,โ€ he said as he walked in. โ€œDoing this remotely is inefficient, borderline negligent, and making me hostile.โ€

Margaret looked up from her book, unimpressed. โ€œGood evening to you too.โ€

He took the chair across from her desk anyway. โ€œAnd I want you to come with me.โ€

Margaretโ€™s mouth twitched. โ€œWhy would I do that? You know I hate Toronto.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Julian said. โ€œBut I need to be there. And I donโ€™t want to leave you here.โ€

She waved him off, already dismissing the idea. โ€œI understand the need. I would still rather die here. I have people, routines, and the benefit of not dealing with Toronto traffic. Iโ€™ll be fine.โ€

Julian exhaled through his nose. He had expected resistance. He still disliked it.

โ€œAlso,โ€ he said, shifting forward, โ€œI need to tell you something.โ€

Margaret closed her book, slow and deliberate, and finally gave him her full attention. โ€œThat tone usually means I wonโ€™t enjoy this. Go on.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s about me and Ellie.โ€

Her expression sharpened, interest replacing indulgence.

โ€œWe got married because I asked her to,โ€ Julian said.

Margaret chuckled. โ€œYes, Julian. That is traditionally how marriages happen.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he said, irritation creeping in. โ€œI mean because I needed HaleCare. Not out of greed. I wanted to keep it alive. I still do. I fully intend to share it with Lucy someday. But with the conditions you set, I made a calculated decision. Ellie is not a musician. Sheโ€™s a theatre actress. She needed work. I asked her to play a role.โ€

Margaret arched a brow. โ€œSo you and Elena made a fool out of me.โ€

โ€œIf anyone did, it was me,โ€ Julian said without hesitation. โ€œEllie did exactly what I asked. And now I want to divorce her.โ€

Margaret leaned back. โ€œCare to explain why? She wants out?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Julian said. โ€œWe both want to start again. Without transactions attached.โ€

Margaret hummed, thoughtful. โ€œSo what you are saying is, you are divorcing her in order to be with her.โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Julian said, relieved she had arrived there without him spelling it out. โ€œAnd I know we had an agreement. But given HaleCareโ€™s current state, I am the only person who can manage it without causing further damage. You can give it to someone else if you want. It doesnโ€™t matter. Let me oversee it until it stabilizes.โ€

Margaret smiled then, slow and knowing. โ€œJulian, Iโ€™ve known for some time that you and Elena werenโ€™t married in the usual sense.โ€

His spine went rigid.

How?

Had they slipped? Had Ellie said something? Had he miscalculated, underestimated her perception, Margaretโ€™s?

โ€œI am old,โ€ she said mildly, โ€œbut I am not stupid.โ€

Julian did not respond. Experience had taught him that interrupting Margaret when she was winding up was a poor survival strategy.

โ€œLucy clocked it too,โ€ Margaret continued. โ€œYou do know how convenient it was when you suddenly had a fiancรฉe the moment I laid out my conditions? I was amused you actually followed through so I decided to play along.โ€

So that was the word. Amused.

Julian kept his face neutral. He did not deny it. He had nothing to gain by pretending otherwise.

โ€œAnd,โ€ Margaret went on, โ€œin my own way, I have been testing Ellie. I asked Vivienne to offer her two million.โ€

Julianโ€™s spine went rigid.

โ€œThey werenโ€™t serious about HaleCare,โ€ Margaret said. โ€œThey played their parts well enough. Convincing, even. Ellie surprised me when she declined, even when you signed a prenup.โ€

For a brief, deeply uncomfortable moment, Julian realized he had been the only one in the room who did not know he was being evaluated.

All along, he had thought he was managing variables. Structuring outcomes. Controlling risk.

Instead, he had been the case study.

โ€œThis isโ€ฆโ€ Julian said, then stopped. He actually had no words, which was new and unpleasant. โ€œI genuinely donโ€™t have words for this.โ€

โ€œYou passed,โ€ Margaret said simply.

He frowned. โ€œExcuse me?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s true,โ€ she continued, unbothered. โ€œI worried youโ€™d end up alone and run HaleCare the way you run hedge fund managers. Efficient. Cold. Disposable. But Iโ€™ve been watching you. You commit to things and follow through even when they inconvenience you. That matters to me.โ€

She paused, then added, โ€œEllie being with you is a bonus. Such a sweet girl.โ€

Julian exhaled slowly, trying to recalibrate his entire understanding of the last year.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what to say,โ€ he admitted.

Margaret smiled. โ€œYou could thank me for not disowning you after deliberately misleading your own grandmother.โ€

Julian rubbed his temple, torn between relief and the creeping realization that Margaret Hale was far more dangerous than he would ever be.

โ€œThank you,โ€ he said at last.

It was the safest response available.


Three months turned out to be both shorter and longer than Ellie expected.

Shorter because her days were suddenly full in a way they had never been before. Longer because Julian had become a person who existed mostly in her phone, and lately, not even that.

Her job was busy in the unglamorous, deeply untheatrical way. Production schedules. Budget spreadsheets, coordinating rehearsal rooms, herding directors who thought time was a suggestion and actors who thought they were the exception. Making sure costumes arrived. Making sure props did not disappear. Making sure someone remembered to book the understudy.

It was a lot of emails. So many emails. But she was good at it.

She still imagined getting cast in something. That fantasy had not died. It just waited patiently while she sent calendar invites.

Ethan worried less. That alone felt like a win.

Julian, on the other hand, had gone quiet.

Her last message sat there, read, unanswered.

Ellie was not mad. She refused to be mad. They were not officially anything. They wereโ€ฆcomplicated-adjacent. Together-ish, on a technicality, with feelings that were definitely not in the contract. Seb had mentioned, casually and with alarming calm, that Julian barely slept anymore. HaleCare was a mess. Julian was doing damage control on a scale Ellie could not even picture.

She did not want to be another problem. She really did not want to be clingy.

Still.

She was halfway through coordinating a last minute lighting change when her phone rang. She ignored it, because that was what professional people did. Then it rang again.

Julian.

She mumbled something about grabbing coffee and ducked into the stairwell before answering.

โ€œHey, stranger,โ€ she said, aiming for casual and landing somewhere near hopeful.

โ€œCan you talk?โ€

โ€œFor a couple of minutes,โ€ she said. โ€œWhatโ€™s up?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m on my way home.โ€

Home as inโ€ฆ home?

โ€œHome?โ€ she repeated carefully.

โ€œToronto.โ€

Her brain stalled, then sprinted. โ€œLike today?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m at the airport.โ€

โ€œOh.โ€ She swallowed. โ€œDid something happen?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll tell you when I get there,โ€ he said. โ€œJust checking in. The last few days have been crazy.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ she said quickly.

Someone called her name from down the hall, urgent and slightly panicked.

โ€œI gotta go,โ€ Ellie said. โ€œI guess Iโ€™ll see you tomorrow? Iโ€™ll wait for you at the airport.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re free?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll fake an illness,โ€ she whispered.

โ€œElena Bennett,โ€ Julian said, and she could hear the smile in his voice, โ€œthree months in and already faking an illness.โ€

โ€œShut up,โ€ she said, grinning despite herself. โ€œSee you.โ€

She hung up, leaned her forehead against the concrete wall, and tried very hard not to smile too much.

He was coming home.


Ellie had been jumping on her heels for ten full minutes, which was not nervous energy, thank you very much, just circulation. Airports were cold. Also time moved differently when you were waiting for someone you definitely had not been thinking about every night for three months.

She could not believe she missed his stupid face. The particular way his mouth flattened when he was concentrating. The annoyed crease between his brows. The way he looked at her as if she were a problem he kept choosing to solve anyway.

She had the day off. She made sure her hair behaved. She checked her breath twice. She kept telling herself to calm down. She failed at that repeatedly.

Then she saw him.

Julian Hale, walking through arrivals with his usual purposeful stride, scanning the crowd as if the airport might try to waste his time. The sight of him did something unhelpful to her lungs. She smiled and immediately tried to dial it back, pretending she was just someone casually standing there and not someone resisting the urge to sprint.

He spotted her.

The look on his face shifted. Subtle, but she caught it. Relief, maybe. Something warmer than his usual default.

He walked straight to her, dropped his carry on without ceremony, and before she could say a single rehearsed thing, he grabbed her and kissed her. Right there. Public place. No warning.

Ellie froze for exactly half a second before her brain stopped working entirely.

โ€œYou smell nice,โ€ she said, because apparently that was all her system could generate.

He huffed out something that might have been a laugh, forehead resting briefly against hers, and Ellie decided that yes, she had absolutely missed him.

Chapter 34: Progress

โ€œWHAT?!โ€

โ€œElena,โ€ Julian said calmly, from across the room, โ€œlower your voice.โ€

โ€œWHAT HAPPENED?โ€ Ellie repeated anyway.

She spent the rest of the afternoon curled into the corner of Julianโ€™s couch, knees tucked to her chest, watching him unpack. She offered to help once. He looked at her, mildly horrified, and said she was not his maid. She did not argue, mostly because she was enjoying the couch and the fact that he was here and real and unpacking his life back into Toronto.

It was somewhere between him hanging up a jacket and tossing an empty toiletry bag into the trash that he said, casually, โ€œMargaret knew why we got married in the first place.โ€

Ellie sat up so fast she nearly fell off the couch.

โ€œWhat did she say?โ€ Her brain sprinted ahead of her mouth. โ€œWas she mad? Disappointed? Did she sigh dramatically? Is she planning my disappearance? Oh my god, sheโ€™s planning my disappearance. This is how rich people do it, right? Suddenly Iโ€™m gone.โ€

Julian glanced at her, unimpressed, and kept folding a sweater. โ€œShe just knew from the start.โ€

Ellie deflated a little. โ€œI wasnโ€™t very convincing, wasnโ€™t I?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he said, then paused. โ€œActually, you were. Margaret is justโ€ฆsomething else.โ€

Ellie leaned back, staring at the ceiling. Ellie wasnโ€™t sure if she felt relieved or exposed. Probably both. Mostly she felt small in that way she hated, the way that made her wonder if she had ever fooled anyone at all.

Julian zipped the now-empty suitcase shut and walked over. He sat down close.

โ€œI still have HaleCare,โ€ he said.

โ€œDo you still want it?โ€ Ellie asked, softer now. โ€œSeb said itโ€™s been messy.โ€

โ€œNot really,โ€ Julian said. โ€œBut I have to do it.โ€

She didnโ€™t answer. She watched his face instead. He looked tired in a way that went deeper than sleep. She should give him space so he can rest. She knew that. Instead, she scooted closer and leaned into his side, her head against his shoulder, because apparently her instincts were not taking suggestions today.

โ€œEverything okay with work?โ€ he asked.

โ€œYeah.โ€

He wrapped an arm around her, solid and familiar. Then, without changing his tone, he said, โ€œI think this is the best time for us to get divorced.โ€

The word landed softly and still knocked the air out of her.

Ellie stared at the far wall, thoughts tripping over each other. It made sense. Too much sense. Margaret knew. The arrangement had served its purpose. And whatever this was between them had outgrown paperwork and contracts and pretending. Julian wanted to make it real. She understood that. She did.

What she didnโ€™t have was clarity. He told her not to question her place in his life, and she tried. God, she tried. But she was not built for ambiguity, and Julian was not built for speeches. One day she would need reassurance in plain words, not implications and gestures and showing up when it mattered.

She wasnโ€™t sure if that day would come.

Ellie exhaled slowly. โ€œIโ€™ll sign the papers.โ€


The coffee shop was too bright for a conversation that felt this awkward. Ellie sat across from Julian, fingers wrapped around a mug she had not touched in five minutes.

โ€œSo apparently,โ€ she said, โ€œdivorce gets finalized if you havenโ€™t been living together for a year. We stopped living together five months ago.โ€

Julian nodded, unbothered.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know that,โ€ Ellie added, then frowned. โ€œDid you?โ€ A beat. โ€œNever mind. Youโ€™ve been married before.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s in the contract,โ€ Julian said. โ€œYou didnโ€™t read all of it, did you?โ€

Ellie smiled brightly. She absolutely did not. โ€œWow. Look at that latte art,โ€ she said, expertly changing the subject. โ€œSo what now?โ€

โ€œNow that itโ€™s filed, we wait seven more months,โ€ Julian said, sipping his coffee.

Seven months of waiting. Ellie nodded, then immediately realized that was not what she meant.

โ€œCool,โ€ she repeated. โ€œSo what now?โ€ she asked again.

Julian set his cup down and looked at her, calm and patient and infuriatingly unreadable.

Ellie shifted in her seat. โ€œWe can still beโ€ฆtogether-ish, right?โ€ she asked. โ€œAre we still allowed to see each other?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a divorce, Elena,โ€ he said dryly. โ€œNot a restraining order.โ€

Her shoulders relaxed, then stiffened again because that still did not answer the question she was actually asking. Ellie stared at the table, then back at him. Her brain was already spiraling ahead. Contracts were easy. Rules were easy. Feelings were not.

โ€œI guess I need to know where we stand now,โ€ she said, quieter. โ€œNow that we filed. What does clean slate even mean for you?โ€

She hated how much she needed him to answer that.


Julian had already answered the question in his head three different ways before Ellie finished asking it. None of them sounded right out loud.

He watched her across the table, the way she leaned forward when she was anxious, the way her fingers worried the edge of her mug. She kept asking because she was trying to locate herself in the absence of rules. He understood rules. He built his life around them. Ellie did not. Ellie needed orientation. Context. Reassurance delivered in full sentences instead of assumptions.

He had always considered words the most unreliable currency. People overused them. Misused them. Promised things they had no intention of following through on. He preferred action. It was cleaner. Verifiable. If he showed up, stayed, paid attention, that should have been enough.

Clearly, it was not.

Julian exhaled quietly and accepted that this was not a flaw on her part. It was a mismatch he had been pretending did not exist. Ellie was not asking to trap him. She was asking because ambiguity made her feel unmoored, and he had put her there.

He shifted in his chair, then moved closer, sliding into the empty seat beside her. He reached for her hand, grounding himself in the warmth of it before speaking.

โ€œI want you to get to know me first,โ€ Julian said, steady and unpolished. โ€œBefore deciding if you want to be with me.โ€

Ellie stared at their joined hands, Julianโ€™s thumb rested against her knuckles, warm and steady, annoyingly grounding. Her brain, on the other hand, was doing laps.

Get to know him first. Before deciding.

Okay. Reasonable. Sensible. Mature. All the words people used right before everything got emotionally complicated.

She understood why he said it. Julian approached life the way other people approached IKEA furniture. Read everything first. Lay out the parts. Follow the steps. Ellie, meanwhile, had always been more of a grab-the-Allen-key-and-hope-for-the-best person.

Still, something in his carefulness tugged at her.

She wasnโ€™t offended. She wasnโ€™t insulted. But she wasโ€ฆitchy.

Ellie lifted her gaze to him, studying his face. He looked calm in that hyper-focused way he got when he was bracing for pushback. As if he expected her to bolt or argue or cry. She could see him managing the situation in real time, and it made her chest ache a little.

โ€œI know youโ€™re trying to be careful,โ€ she said slowly. โ€œAnd I appreciate that. I really do.โ€

Julian didnโ€™t interrupt.

โ€œBut I should probably say this out loud before my brain turns it into a whole unnecessary spiral.โ€ She paused, then rushed on before she chickened out. โ€œIโ€™m inexperienced, not clueless.โ€

His brow furrowed slightly.

โ€œI havenโ€™t doneโ€ฆ a lot,โ€ she continued, heat creeping up her neck. โ€œBut I know what Iโ€™m choosing. Iโ€™m not confused about wanting you. And sometimes it feels like youโ€™re handling me as if I might shatter if you breathe wrong.โ€

She gave a small, crooked smile. โ€œI promise Iโ€™m sturdier than I look.โ€

Julian exhaled through his nose, something between a sigh and a quiet laugh.

โ€œThatโ€™s not what I think of you,โ€ he said. โ€œAt all.โ€

She watched his jaw tighten, the tell that meant he was choosing his words instead of defaulting to silence.

โ€œI think youโ€™re brave,โ€ he went on. โ€œAnd impulsive. And far more capable than you give yourself credit for. Which is exactly why I donโ€™t want to rush you into something just because Iโ€™mโ€ฆalready there.โ€

Ellie leaned back slightly, absorbing that. She could see his logic now. It wasnโ€™t doubt. It was restraint. The frustrating, grown-up kind.

She nodded. โ€œOkay. That makes sense. I donโ€™t love it, but it makes sense.โ€

His mouth twitched.

โ€œSo,โ€ she said, squeezing his hand once, โ€œwe take it one step at a time. No contracts. No rules. Justus figuring it out as we go.โ€

Julian studied her for a moment, then nodded.

โ€œOne step at a time,โ€ he agreed. โ€œAt a pace we both choose.โ€

Ellie smiled, lighter than she had been all morning.

โ€œGood,โ€ she said. โ€œBecause Iโ€™d hate to rush you into liking me.โ€

Julian couldnโ€™t help but to chuckle. He leaned in before his brain could overtake the moment and kissed Ellieโ€™s temple.

Ellie didnโ€™t pull away. She relaxed into him.

Then, because she was Ellie and peace never lasted long, she tipped her head just enough to look at him and said, โ€œSo. Letโ€™s start with the basics. Why did you and your ex-wife separate?โ€

There it was. No warm-up. No buffer. Straight to the structural integrity test.

He shifted slightly so they were facing the same direction, shoulders touching, his hand still loosely holding hers.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t dramatic,โ€ he said. โ€œNo cheating. No betrayal. We just grew apart.โ€

Ellie waited. He could feel it. She always waited for the part people usually skipped.

โ€œShe tried longer than I did,โ€ he added. โ€œThatโ€™s the part I donโ€™t love admitting.โ€

His thumb traced a slow, absent line along her knuckles.

โ€œIโ€™m not easy to live with,โ€ he continued. โ€œI default to control when I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m doing. I prioritize work because it gives me measurable outcomes. She wanted more presence than I knew how to give at the time.โ€

Ellie stayed quiet, eyes forward, listening.

โ€œIt was mutual in the end,โ€ Julian said. โ€œBut I know I drove us there. Not intentionally, but it still counts.โ€

He glanced at Ellie then, just briefly, to gauge the damage. She looked thoughtful, not scared. That felt encouraging and dangerous at the same time.

โ€œThatโ€™s why I said what I said earlier,โ€ he went on. โ€œAbout you getting to know me first. Iโ€™m not trying to protect myself. Iโ€™m trying to be honest about the terrain.โ€

Ellieโ€™s fingers tightened around his.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to promise I wonโ€™t hurt you,โ€ Julian said quietly. โ€œI will. At some point. Not because I want to. Because people do. I can promise Iโ€™ll try not to. I can promise I wonโ€™t pretend Iโ€™m someone easier than I am.โ€

He paused, then added, โ€œAnd I donโ€™t want to give you a reason to walk away that I could have been upfront about now.โ€

Ellie turned toward him then, and Julian felt that familiar, unsettling awareness that she saw more than he ever intended to show.

โ€œOkay,โ€ she said simply.

She didnโ€™t know yet if she could live with all of that. But she knew she respected him for saying it.

Chapter 35: Dangerous Game

The next couple of months slid by in a way Ellie could only describe as quietly strange.

Things were good. If good meant Julian checking in once a day, sometimes with a short question, sometimes just a โ€œhome safe?โ€ that felt disproportionately comforting. HaleCare was clearly devouring his sanity, and she could tell when his replies went from full sentences to clipped acknowledgments. There were days he didnโ€™t respond at all. She didnโ€™t love that part, but when he did reappear, he reappeared fully. Picking her up after work. Dropping off food. Sending her home with leftovers she definitely did not ask for.

She learned the rhythm. Julian vanished into chaos, then resurfaced with practical affection.

One afternoon, that affection arrived in a branded paper bag so expensive it made her coworkers stop mid-conversation.

โ€œEllie,โ€ one of them said slowly, eyeing the logo. โ€œIs that from Auberge Laurent?โ€

Ellie looked down at the bag, then at them, then back at the bag again. โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œHow can you afford that?โ€

Ellie smiled the smile of someone who had absolutely no intention of explaining her life choices. โ€œBudgeting.โ€

She sat down, opened the container, and ate every bite without sharing. She did not feel guilty. She felt victorious.

And okay. Fine. There was another thing.

Ellie wanted to get laid.

Badly.

She was almost twenty-nine. She shaved regularly. She owned skincare now. She had done the emotional work. The self-reflection. The whole I-am-a-grown-woman montage. She was not asking for marriage. She wasnโ€™t even asking for declarations. Technically, they were still married, which was its own ridiculous layer, but still.

Julian would kiss her senseless, hands steady, mouth devastating, and then stop. Every time. Right when her brain shut off and her body started making decisions without consulting her.

She hated it.

Not him. The stopping.

She also hated that she did not want to initiate. She could, theoretically. She had a mouth. She had courage. She had Google. But something in her balked. Was it wrong to want him to want it first? Was she being dramatic? Probably. Did she care? Not even a little.

She lay awake some nights staring at the ceiling, thinking about her own frustration with the same efficiency Julian used to dismantle businesses. She was patient. She understood his pace. She respected boundaries.

She was also incredibly, painfully, distractingly horny.

Ellie sighed into her pillow, rolled onto her side, and decided she would not text him about it. Not yet. Maybe tomorrow. Or maybe sheโ€™d just kiss him harder next time and see what happened.

That seemed reasonable.


Ellie pressed the doorbell twice, because once felt tentative and three felt reckless.

The door opened and her brain stalled.

Julian was shirtless.

Just standing there, casual about it, hair a little rumpled, skin warm-toned and unfairly real. Ellie stared. She registered the broad sweep of his shoulders, the quiet strength in his arms, the faint trail of hair across his stomach that made her rethink every opinion sheโ€™d ever had about body hair. She noticed things she somehow never had before. The small dimples at the base of his back. The way his body looked lived-in rather than sculpted for display.

Sheโ€™d slept in the same room as him for months. She had seen this body before. She had simply never looked at it properly.

Is thisโ€ฆ allowed? Is this mine? Temporarily? Emotionally? Legally? She had no idea.

Julian waved a hand in front of her face. โ€œElena.โ€

She blinked, swallowed, forced her mouth to cooperate. โ€œHi.โ€

โ€œWhat happened to you?โ€ he asked, stepping aside to let her in.

โ€œUh,โ€ Ellie said, pulling herself together by sheer will. โ€œIโ€™m free. Thought Iโ€™d come by and spend time here. If thatโ€™s okay.โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ Julian said, as if it had never been a question. โ€œI already activated your keycard by the way. You can come in anytime Iโ€™m not around.โ€

โ€œAnd steal groceries?โ€ she asked, because jokes were safer than admitting she had just mentally catalogued his back.

โ€œItโ€™s not stealing if itโ€™s yours.โ€

Yours.

Ellie followed him inside, heart doing something loud and inconvenient.

Julian checked his phone. โ€œI have a few meetings this morning. Iโ€™ll be free after. What do you want to do?โ€

She smiled, dropping onto the couch. โ€œNothing. I just want to sit here and watch you be Julian the executioner.โ€

He looked at her, unimpressed. โ€œThereโ€™s food in the kitchen. Make yourself comfortable.โ€

She nodded, suddenly aware of how easy this felt. How natural. Which was a problem.

โ€œAnd Elena?โ€

โ€œYeah?โ€

โ€œYou can bring clothes next time.โ€

Ellie laughed, heat creeping up her neck. Right. Clothes. She was definitely not thinking about those dimples again. Not at all.


Ellie lay sprawled across the couch, phone hovering inches from her face, pretending to scroll while only catching every third word Julian said.

Something about budgets. Something about timelines. Something about people being wrong and him being right.

He was irritated. Focused, jaw tight, voice low and clipped in that way that suggested someone on the other end was seconds away from regretting their life choices.

Ellie glanced up. Watched the way his shoulders moved when he argued, restrained but sharp.

Why is this doing something for me?

She knew better than to interrupt him. He would snap. Still, the thought crossed her mind anyway.

What would happen if she did? What would that look be? The one he got when he was annoyed but trying not to show it.

She smiled to herself and slid off the couch.

The bed area was only half-separated from the rest of the apartment. Ellie padded across the floor, timing it so she moved just as he wrapped up one call and immediately clicked into another.

When he paused to adjust his laptop, she cleared her throat.

โ€œMind if I borrow one of your shirts?โ€ she asked, breezy. โ€œI spilled something on mine.โ€

He didnโ€™t look away from the screen. โ€œGo ahead.โ€

And just like that, he was back to being important.

Ellie headed for his closet. It was veryโ€ฆJulian. Organized in that meticulous way that made her feel both impressed and vaguely judged. She reached for a white button-down, soft and probably expensive, and held it up to herself.

Sure.

She slipped into the bathroom, shut the door, and took a breath.

Ellie, what are you doing?

Annoying him. That was the plan. Definitely just that.

She removed his tshirt and pulled the shirt on, sleeves swallowing her hands, hem brushing mid-thigh. Her pants came off easily, tossed over the counter. Bare feet on cool tile. She looked at herself in the mirror and raised an eyebrow.

This might be reckless.

She opened the door and walked back out.

Julian was seated at the table, laptop open, camera angled just right. She made sure to stay out of frame, drifting across his line of sight instead. Slow enough to be noticed. Casual enough to pretend it wasnโ€™t intentional.

She felt his eyes flick up.

Pause.

Then back to the screen.

Ellie kept walking, heart thudding a little too loudly, lips pressed together to keep from smiling.

Mission accomplished.


The meeting should have ended five minutes ago.

Julian knew this because the agenda had ended five minutes ago, the action items were clear, and the person currently speaking had been repeating himself with new adjectives. He kept his face neutral, voice clipped, attention divided between the screen and the very real problem moving through his apartment.

Ellie crossed his line of sight in his shirt.

He did not look at her. He absolutely did not. He stared at the spreadsheet on his laptop and nodded at the appropriate intervals, said โ€œweโ€™ll circle backโ€ once, and resisted the urge to end the call by force.

This was deliberate. He knew that much.

Ellie did not wander. She staged herself. Bare legs tucked under her, his white shirt hanging off her shoulders, fabric riding high on her thighs. She lounged on his couch as if she had not just detonated every last ounce of his concentration.

This is a dangerous game, he thought calmly, while something south of his belt had very different opinions.

He finished the call, closed the laptop, and set it aside with care. Then he walked over.

Ellie looked up at him, eyes bright, expression innocent in a way that fooled no one. โ€œWhat?โ€ she asked.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ he said, tone even.

โ€œNothing?โ€ she offered, smile widening.

He did not answer her. He leaned down instead, catching her wrists and pinning them gently but decisively against the couch cushions. Ellie laughed, breathless and surprised, the sound going straight through him.

โ€œYou think youโ€™re clever,โ€ he said.

โ€œIโ€™m not,โ€ she said, still laughing, cheeks flushed.

He kissed her.

The kind of kiss that had been building through restraint and irritation and far too many meetings. Her laughter dissolved into a soft sound against his mouth, her hands slipping free to clutch at his shoulders.


She was smiling into it, lips tugging upward even as he pinned her back against the couch, his weight settling over her in a way that felt intentional and warm and very distracting. The world narrowed fast. Couch. Shirt. Julian. That was it.

He kissed her harder, slower somehow, as if he had all the time in the world and none at the same time. Ellieโ€™s thoughts scattered immediately. Something about this was different. Hungrier. Less careful. She felt his mouth open, felt his tongue slide against hers, felt teeth graze her lip just enough to make her inhale sharply.

Her brain tried to keep up and failed. She was very aware of where she ended and where he began. His hands braced on either side of her. The heat of him. The pressure. The fact that she was still wearing his shirt and nothing else that mattered.

Julian broke the kiss just to drag his mouth down her jaw, then her neck. Ellie tilted her head without thinking, giving him access she did not remember granting. When his lips found the sensitive spot under her ear, she sighed.

Julian muttered something under his breath.

He shifted, pulling one of her legs higher, fitting himself closer between her thighs. Ellieโ€™s brain fully checked out at that point. She felt his hand slide along her side, fingers spreading, grounding her. Then his hand was at her waist. Then higher. Then his thumb brushed her jaw, tilting her face back toward his.

She barely registered the way his other hand moved until it slipped under the hem of the shirt.

Her breath hitched so hard it surprised her. Every sensation felt amplified, unfamiliar, electric. His hand was warm, confident, and when it brushed her skin she almost laughed from the shock of how intense it felt. When his palm settled against her breast, she went very still.

This is happening, her brain said calmly, while the rest of her absolutely lost it.

She made a sound she did not know she could make. Julian froze for half a second, then his mouth was back on hers, deeper now, his kiss turning slow and unreasonably distracting. Ellieโ€™s hands came up without permission, gripping his shoulders, then his shirt, needing something to hold onto.

Everything felt too much and not enough at the same time. Her heart was racing. Her skin felt too tight. She had no reference point for any of this and that somehow made it worse and better all at once.

Then a phone started ringing.

Ellie ignored it. Julian ignored it. The phone kept ringing.

Julian finally groaned and dropped his forehead against her shoulder, his breath hot against her neck. โ€œI should quit my job,โ€ he said into her skin.

Ellie laughed, a little breathless, a little frustrated, entirely amused. She slid her hand into his hair and squeezed. โ€œWe have lots of time.โ€

Julian lifted his head just enough to look at her, eyes dark, expression torn between restraint and something much less responsible.

The phone kept ringing.

Ellie smiled anyway.

Chapter 36: Fog

Ellie had planned to spend her day off doing nothing productive and everything indulgent. That meant cereal for lunch, no bra, and a long argument with herself about whether watching reruns counted as rest.

Then the mail came.

She stood by the door, flipping through envelopes, bills, flyers she did not ask for, until she saw the official-looking one.

She opened it anyway and saw that their divorce is already finalized.

That was it.

โ€œOh,โ€ Ellie said to the empty living room, because apparently she needed an audience for this.

She sat down on the couch and read it again, slower, as if the words might rearrange themselves into something else. They did not. The marriage was over. Properly. Legally. No footnotes. No asterisks.

She exhaled and leaned her head back against the cushion.

The thing was, she had not expected it to feel like this.

Julian was still very much in her life. Every weekend, without fail. He cooked for her. Actual meals, not sad bachelor food. He listened when she talked about work, even when she was just venting about lighting cues and impossible directors. They kissed. A lot. Enough that her brain frequently goes haywire and forgot its own name.

But that was it.

No sex yet. And honestly, sex was not even the problem.

It was the fog.

The constant, low-level confusion. The way nothing had a label anymore. Before, at least, there was a structure. Fake, yes, but solid. She had been his wife. Legally. Technically. Defensively.

Now what was she?

A situationship felt too modern. Make-out buddy sounded like something a teenager would say. Whatever they were, it did not come with instructions, and Ellie hated not knowing the rules.

She picked up her phone and called Julian.

It headed straight to voicemail.

Of course.

He was always busy. She knew that. She understood it. She told herself she understood it daily, sometimes hourly. HaleCare was a mess. He was carrying it on his back with sheer force of will.

He always made it up to her. He showed up. He tried.

Still, she could not shake the feeling that she was always the one reaching. Always the one waiting for the next opening in his schedule, the next sliver of time he could spare.

It made her feel smaller than she liked.

Maybe it just was not the right time. Maybe she was asking for something he could not give right now. She hated that thought, hated how reasonable it sounded.

โ€œOkay,โ€ she muttered. โ€œOne more try.โ€

She called again.

Still voicemail.

Ellie stared at the screen for a beat, then sighed and switched targets.

Seb picked up on the second ring.

โ€œHey, pretty,โ€ he said, far too cheerful for someone who worked with Julian daily.

โ€œHi,โ€ Ellie said. โ€œUm. Is Julian in the office?โ€

โ€œHe just stepped out,โ€ Seb replied. โ€œItโ€™s been a morning. He said he was grabbing lunch.โ€

Ellie frowned. โ€œJulian? Grabbing lunch? I thought he had a lifelong commitment to delivery apps.โ€

Seb laughed. โ€œHe does. But even he needs to breathe.โ€

Something in his tone made her pause. โ€œEverything okay?โ€

Seb hesitated, just a fraction. โ€œHeโ€™s under a lot of pressure. Margaret wonโ€™t budge on layoffs, and the numbers are not great. Heโ€™s trying to figure out where to pull money from without setting the whole thing on fire.โ€

Ellie closed her eyes briefly.

โ€œDo you know where he is right now?โ€ she asked.

โ€œHe mentioned The Copper Finch,โ€ Seb said. โ€œSaid he just needed thirty minutes.โ€

Ellie glanced at the clock. Then at her shoes by the door.

โ€œYou think I can still make it?โ€

โ€œI think so,โ€ Seb said. โ€œHe left five minutes ago.โ€

That was all she needed.

Ellie grabbed her bag and keys, and booked an Uber before her brain could talk her out of it.


Julian had left the building because if he stayed another ten minutes he was going to say something irreversible to someone who did not deserve it.

He was not hungry. He knew that because his stomach felt flat and irritated, not empty. Lunch was just an excuse to move his body somewhere else, to put physical distance between himself and the collection of problems that had piled up since eight that morning.

He checked his phone while waiting to cross the street.

Three missed calls from Ellie.

He did not ignore her. He corrected himself immediately. Ignoring implied intent. This was triage. He did not have the patience today to hear her voice and not let the edge bleed through. If he snapped at her, even slightly, he would spend the rest of the day hating himself for it.

The morning had been a disaster in small, grinding increments.

A meeting that should have taken fifteen minutes dragged past an hour because no one wanted to say the obvious thing. HaleCare could not keep everyone. Margaretโ€™s refusal to let people go was bleeding them dry, and the numbers were now loud enough that even denial had started to sound ridiculous. Vendors were circling. One of the hospitals had delayed payments again. Someone had suggested a โ€œtemporary workaroundโ€ that involved borrowing from a reserve fund that was already spoken for.

Every solution involved someone getting hurt. Every delay made it worse. He was holding the structure together with planning, pressure, and the quiet understanding that if it collapsed, it would do so on his watch.

So yes, he was done. And no, he could not drop it. That was the problem.

He was a block away from Copper Finch when his phone rang again and saw it was Candice.

He considered letting it go. He did not have the bandwidth for past lives today. But Candice never called casually. She texted for birthdays. She emailed for logistics. Calls meant emergencies or humiliation-level favors.

โ€œCandice,โ€ he answered.

โ€œJulian,โ€ she said. Her voice was tight. โ€œI need to talk to you.โ€

โ€œAbout what?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s better if I say it in person. Can we meet?โ€

He glanced at the restaurant ahead of him. โ€œIโ€™m at Copper Finch.โ€

โ€œGreat. Iโ€™ll be there in ten minutes.โ€

Twelve minutes later, Candice slid into the chair across from him.

โ€œI donโ€™t know who else to turn to,โ€ she said immediately. โ€œBelieve me, you are the last person Iโ€™d ask.โ€

Julianโ€™s mouth twitched despite himself. โ€œSomehow, I believe that.โ€

She huffed a short laugh, then sobered. She told him about the fire first. Her parentsโ€™ house, gone overnight. Then the insurance, or rather the absence of it. They had stopped paying years ago and never told her. She had drained what little savings she had getting them settled somewhere temporary. Credit cards were maxed. Student loans still very much alive. A doctorโ€™s salary only stretched so far when it was supporting more than one generation.

โ€œIโ€™m not asking you to fix it,โ€ she said quickly. โ€œI justโ€ฆ need a bridge. I hate that Iโ€™m even saying this.โ€

Julian listened without interrupting. He noticed what she did not say. She did not ask him for money outright. She did not frame it as entitlement. When they divorced, she had walked away with exactly what was agreed upon and nothing more.

โ€œHow much do you need?โ€ he asked.

โ€œNot much,โ€ Candice said, immediately downplaying it. โ€œJust enough to get me through this month.โ€

He nodded once. โ€œIโ€™ll ask Seb to wire it today.โ€

She blinked. โ€œJulian, Iโ€ฆโ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll pay me back when you can,โ€ he said. โ€œOr you wonโ€™t. Itโ€™s fine. Just deal with what you need to deal with.โ€

Candice exhaled, something loosening in her shoulders. โ€œThank you. Really.โ€

She reached across the table and covered his hand with hers, a brief, grateful squeeze.

Julian let it happen. He registered the contact, the familiarity, the absence of anything complicated underneath it.


Ellie walked into the restaurant smiling. Busy or not, Julian always made space for her. Even when he was distracted, even when he was quiet, he still let her exist beside him. That had been the constant for almost a year, and she trusted it enough to walk in without hesitation.

She found him easily.

Julian sat near the window, jacket slung over the chair, posture attentive in that focused way he slipped into without effort.

Then her gaze slid sideways to Candice.

Ellie registered her in pieces. Too close. Too comfortable. The angle of her body turned inward, the way people lean when they expect to be heard. And then Ellie saw their hands on the table.

Candiceโ€™s fingers rested over Julianโ€™s, casual and unguarded.

Something in Ellieโ€™s chest collapsed inward.

So thatโ€™s why.

Her smile stayed in place, frozen and humiliating. She could feel it pulling at her cheeks, absurd and misplaced. Of course this was happening. His silence had an explanation that made sense now. The missing replies. The careful distance. The refusal to call whatever they were anything solid.

Clean slate. Take it slow. Get to know me first.

Sheโ€™d built a whole structure around those words. Turns out it had no walls.

Maybe he was easing back into something familiar. Maybe he was waiting for the paperwork to clear. Or maybe she had simply mistaken access for intimacy and filled in the rest because she wanted to.

Julian looked up.

โ€œElena.โ€

No hesitation or flicker of discomfort. Just her name, spoken easily, as if this moment didnโ€™t require adjustment.

That stung worse than if heโ€™d looked guilty.

He stood immediately, already closing the distance between them.

Ellieโ€™s throat tightened. The urge to say something flared hot and reckless. Ask him what this was. Ask him where she fit. Ask him why she was standing here feeling small while everyone else seemed to know the rules.

And then she remembered.

She had never been promised anything.

She inhaled, slow and shallow, and turned around.

By the time Julian reached the edge of the table, Ellie was already walking toward the door. Her steps stayed steady, her spine straight, dignity held together by muscle memory alone.

She didnโ€™t look back.

She refused to give the room that satisfaction.

Chapter 37: Misunderstanding and Guilt

Julian hit the sidewalk at a pace that would have annoyed him under any other circumstance.

โ€œElena!โ€

His voice cut through the afternoon but she kept moving. People turned to look. He didnโ€™t care. Public embarrassment ranked low today, somewhere beneath missed calls and catastrophic misunderstandings.

Because thatโ€™s what this was. A misunderstanding. A spectacularly poorly timed, badly framed misunderstanding.

He replayed the moment at the restaurant in real time as he jogged. The look on her face when she saw Candice. The way her expression froze for half a second before she shut it down and walked out. No pause. No confrontation. Just a clean exit.

She had drawn the wrong conclusion and he should have seen it coming. Candiceโ€™s hand on his. The timing. The silence earlier. The divorce papers finalized that morning. Put that together and the story wrote itself.

Julian hated stories he didnโ€™t get to edit.

โ€œElena, wait.โ€

She didnโ€™t.

She slipped into a cab, door already closing by the time he reached the curb. He caught a glimpse of her profile through the window, she never looked at him.

The cab pulled away.

Julian stood there, breathing hard, hand still half-raised, watching the taillights merge into traffic. He pulled out his phone immediately.

Straight to voicemail.

He tried again. Same result.

He swore under his breath, turning once in a tight circle, scanning the street as if she might reappear. His car sat two blocks away. He could make it. He could follow. He could fix this before it calcified into something worse.

His phone buzzed.

Seb.

Julian answered without greeting. โ€œWhat.โ€

Seb didnโ€™t bother softening it. โ€œWe have a problem. HaleCare just lost the Eastside clinic contract. Payrollโ€™s exposed. Vendors are calling. Margaretโ€™s in a meeting and refuses to cancel.โ€

Julian closed his eyes.

The timing would have been funny if it werenโ€™t so on brand it felt targeted.

โ€œGive me thirty minutes,โ€ he said automatically.

โ€œWe donโ€™t even have ten.โ€

Julian looked down the street again, long after the cab was gone. Ellie was already halfway home, already replaying the scene. He knew how her mind worked. She filled in silence fast. She didnโ€™t wait for clarification.

And this was on him.

He had built a system that worked for him. Minimal explanations. Deferred conversations. Assumptions that things could be handled later.

Later had just left in a cab.

Julian exhaled through his nose, jaw tight. He turned back toward the office, steps heavy now, phone still in his hand.

โ€œLoop me in,โ€ he said to Seb. โ€œIโ€™m coming in.โ€

The rest could wait.

Except it couldnโ€™t.

And that realization followed him all the way back to work.


The weeks blurred into a single extended headache.

Julian spent most of it arguing with people who refused to hear him and chasing numbers that refused to behave. HaleCare was bleeding in quiet, irritating ways. Contracts stalled. Vendors grew bold. Margaret remained immovable, as if sheer will could substitute for cash flow. Every conversation with her ended the same way, with Julian clenching his jaw and reminding himself that yelling at an elderly woman with impeccable timing would not solve anything.

Ellie, meanwhile, had vanished.

Blocked. Phone. Texts. Socials. Even the email he sent, which he hated on principle, came back unanswered. He reread it once, then never again. It sounded stiff. It sounded defensive. It sounded exactly like something written by a man trying to explain himself without admitting fault.

She had left him no better option and he resented that more than he should have.

Seb bore the brunt of it.

โ€œI already told you,โ€ Julian snapped one afternoon, fingers drumming against his desk, โ€œwe cannot afford another delay. Call them back and make it clear this is their last extension.โ€

Seb blinked at him slowly.

Julian exhaled, โ€œIโ€™m sorry. That was unnecessary.โ€ He stopped himself. โ€œThat was unhelpful. Iโ€™m justโ€ฆโ€

Seb leaned against the doorframe, unbothered.

โ€œJulian,โ€ Seb said lightly, โ€œweโ€™ve worked together for ten years. You could snap at me daily and Iโ€™d still show up. Youโ€™d have to do a lot worse to scare me off.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s comforting,โ€ Julian muttered.

Seb smiled. โ€œYou could try the bend and snap.โ€

Julian looked up. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œNever mind. Pop culture. Youโ€™re stressed.โ€

โ€œThat is an understatement.โ€

Meanwhile, Ellie remained unreachable.

He tried their place again. Sometimes sheโ€™s not home. Sometimes Ethan answered, arms crossed, expression tight. The message was clear even without words. Julian didnโ€™t push. He wasnโ€™t afraid of Ethan. He just knew when pushing would make things worse.

He tried her work once. Waited outside longer than he cared to admit. A call came in twenty minutes before she got out. HaleCare again. Always HaleCare. He left before she appeared, driving away mid-thought with the familiar, bitter sense that timing had once again betrayed him.

At some point, he started to feel mocked by it.

The nights were worse.

Sleep came in fragments or not at all. His brain refused to shut up, replaying conversations that hadnโ€™t happened and scenes that had gone wrong. Some nights he gave up and poured a drink, then another, just enough to dull the edges so his thoughts slowed to something manageable.

He didnโ€™t enjoy drinking alone. That should have bothered him more than it did.

There were moments, rare and quiet, when he considered walking away from everything. Selling what he could. Letting HaleCare collapse under someone elseโ€™s watch. Finding a beach with terrible Wi-Fi and no expectations.

Then his phone would buzz. Another fire. Another meeting. Another reminder that walking away was a fantasy reserved for people without obligations.

Ellie stayed silent.

Julian kept going.

He told himself this was temporary. He told himself things could still be fixed. He told himself a lot of things, most of them while staring at the ceiling at three in the morning, wide awake, jaw tight, mind running in circles.

It had been hell.

And he was still standing in it.


Ellie read Julianโ€™s message three times.

Once standing in the kitchen. Once sitting on the couch. Once lying on her bed, phone hovering above her face in a way that felt dramatic even to her.

He said she misinterpreted things. He said he hadnโ€™t planned to meet Candice. He said she needed help and that was it. Full stop. End of explanation. Very Julian. Efficient. Defensive in that clipped, orderly way that made her want to argue and apologize at the same time.

She stared at the screen.

Of course people went to Julian when they needed help. That was the problem. That had always been the problem. He walked around pretending to be made of steel and spreadsheets, but the second someone he cared about looked even mildly desperate, he folded. She knew that. She had benefited from that. Repeatedly.

Which meant there was a very real chance sheโ€™d been wrong.

That realization landed badly.

What hurt wasnโ€™t even seeing him with Candice anymore. That sting had dulled into something quieter and meaner. What hurt was realizing she didnโ€™t know if she was allowed to be upset. Hurt with no permission felt worse. Hurt without a clean villain felt embarrassing.

So what were those days of silence then? The missed calls. The unanswered messages. The way sheโ€™d felt herself shrinking, trying to give him space while quietly panicking that sheโ€™d already fallen off his priority list.

Did helping Candice explain that? Maybe. Did it excuse all of it? She didnโ€™t know. Her brain kept offering counterarguments and then immediately undercutting them. A debate club entirely staffed by her worst instincts.

That night, Ethan knocked on her door without waiting for permission.

โ€œHe was here again,โ€ he said, leaning against the frame. โ€œThis is dayโ€ฆsix? Seven? Iโ€™m starting to feel bad for him, and I hate it.โ€

Ellie kept scrolling, thumb moving without absorbing anything.

โ€œWhat did he say?โ€ she asked.

โ€œHe wonโ€™t tell me,โ€ Ethan said. โ€œJust that he needs to talk to you.โ€

She nodded, eyes still glued to her phone, as if Instagram had suddenly become urgent work.

Ethan crossed his arms. โ€œI donโ€™t know whatโ€™s going on, and Iโ€™m trying very hard to stay out of it. You know Iโ€™d prefer you forget him entirely. Thatโ€™s my brotherly bias talking. But at least tell him to fuck off so he stops haunting our front porch.โ€

Her thumb froze.

Could she even do that? Tell Julian to stay away. Tell him she didnโ€™t want to talk. That she was done. It sounded decisive in theory and impossible in practice.

Ethan sighed. โ€œBut if you want him, Iโ€™ll support you. Just donโ€™t do this halfway thing. Itโ€™s cruel.โ€

That one hit too cleanly.

Ellie finally looked up.

The truth was, she didnโ€™t know how to face Julian now. Not after storming out. Not after blocking him everywhere. Not after reading that message and realizing there was a non-zero chance sheโ€™d misread the whole situation and reacted like a woman who tripped over her own pride and took everyone down with her.

How did you show up after that? How did you say, โ€˜surprise! I might be wrong, please donโ€™t look too closely at how confident I was about being rightโ€™.

She hated that this was about her ego. She hated that she knew it.

โ€œYeah,โ€ she said finally. โ€œI got it.โ€

Ethan studied her for a moment, then nodded and walked away.

Ellie stared back at her phone.

Julianโ€™s message was still there.

Unread in her heart. Fully read in her head.


The following week, Ellie learned exactly how fast she could move when properly motivated.

Julian waited for her outside the theatre. She clocked him immediately and pivoted so hard she nearly walked into a trash can. She slipped behind a group of workmates she barely spoke to, nodded too much, laughed at nothing, and pretended she had always been a group person. She was not. She hated groups. Today, she loved them.

It worked. Twice.

On the third day, it did not.

She came out later than usual, bag slung over her shoulder, phone already in her hand, Uber app open before she even cleared the door. And there he was, closer this time, blocking the natural escape route with his entire inconvenient existence.

Great.

Up close, she noticed the lines at the corner of his eyes, the slight slump in his shoulders. He looked exhausted. That should have softened her. It almost did.

โ€œHave you read my messages?โ€ he asked.

โ€œNo,โ€ she said, thumb hovering over her screen as if the Uber might materialize faster out of fear.

โ€œCan we talk?โ€

โ€œArenโ€™t you busy?โ€ She finally looked up at him, challenge baked right into the question.

โ€œEllie, at least let me explain.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ she said, breath sharp. โ€œSo tell me. What are we? Iโ€™m not your wife. Iโ€™m not your girlfriend. Iโ€™m not even a fuck buddy.โ€

โ€œEllieโ€ฆโ€

โ€œItโ€™s humiliating,โ€ she went on, words spilling now that sheโ€™d cracked the seal, โ€œto feel that angry when I donโ€™t even know if Iโ€™m allowed to feel it. And I believe you. I do. I know it was nothing. But that makes it worse because then Iโ€™m just standing here feeling stupid for reacting at all.โ€

He watched her, jaw tight, saying nothing.

โ€œAnd I know you have a million things going on,โ€ she continued. โ€œYou donโ€™t even tell me any of it. You disappear when things are bad. You show up when things are good. I donโ€™t want to wait around until you feel better before you remember I exist. What does that make me?โ€

His phone buzzed.

He ignored it.

It buzzed again.

Julian exhaled and closed his eyes for a second, the way he did when everything pulled at him at once.

โ€œDeal with it,โ€ she said quietly. โ€œIโ€™m done playing this game.โ€

Her Uber rolled up right on cue. She opened the door without waiting for him to respond, slid inside, and shut it behind her.

The second the car pulled away, she pressed her forehead against the window and cried.

โ€œWhat am I even doing,โ€ she whispered to herself.

Chapter 38: We’re Back

Ellie learned very quickly that silence could be loud.

Julian stopped reaching out after that afternoon outside the theatre, and she told herself it was fine. Healthy, even. She focused on work, stayed late, reorganized props that did not need reorganizing, said yes to drinks she did not want. At night, though, she lay on her bed with her phone balanced on her stomach, thumb hovering over his name.

What would she even say?

Hey, I changed my mind felt pathetic.

Hey, sorry I snapped at you felt dishonest.

Hey, please donโ€™t disappear when things get hard felt like begging.

She rolled onto her side and stared at the wall.

Boundaries, she reminded herself. Boundaries were good. Boundaries meant self respect. Boundaries meant she was not chasing someone who could not meet her halfway.

So why did she hate every second of it?

Her phone buzzed, startling her enough that she nearly dropped it on her face. Sebโ€™s name flashed across the screen.

Watch the news.

She frowned and typed back.

What channel?

Any.

That did not help her anxiety at all.

Ellie padded to the living room, turned on the TV, and barely had time to process the anchorโ€™s serious tone before Julianโ€™s face filled the screen. Not a flattering photo. Tired. Jaw set. The kind of image people used when they wanted to sell panic.

The headline crawled across the bottom.

HALECARE UNDER FIRE AS FRAUD ALLEGATIONS ROCK BOARD

She sank onto the couch.

Apparently, a senior board member had been falsifying financial reports for years. Investors were pulling out. Beneficiaries were panicking. The word โ€œmisrepresentationโ€ got thrown around a lot, followed closely by โ€œoversightโ€ and โ€œaccountability.โ€ Julian Hale, newly appointed CEO, was being named in the same breath as if he personally forged the documents with a villain laugh.

Ellieโ€™s chest tightened.

Of course they were blaming him. He had inherited the mess, which apparently made him responsible for cleaning it up while everyone stood around pointing.

She grabbed her phone and called him.

Straight to voicemail.

She tried again. Same result.

Her fingers moved on instinct as she dialed Seb.

โ€œHeโ€™s at his apartment,โ€ Seb said the second he picked up, voice sharp and already tired. โ€œPhoneโ€™s off. Heโ€™s been there since this broke.โ€

โ€œThanks,โ€ Ellie said, already pulling on her shoes.

She hung up, grabbed her coat, and flagged down the first cab that she saw. As she slid into the backseat, one thought kept circling her head, loud and insistent.

She could be wrong about a lot of things.

But she knew what Julian looked like when he carried everything alone.


Ellie let herself in quietly, the soft beep of the keycard sounding too loud in the dark apartment.

The lights were off. The city outside did most of the work, a dull glow leaking through the windows. She followed it toward the bedroom, heart doing that annoying fast thing it did when she was about to see him in a state he usually kept hidden.

Julian was sitting on the edge of the bed, shoulders rounded forward. One hand held a glass of whiskey, the other pressed to his forehead, elbow braced on his knee. His head was bowed, resting into his palm, hair mussed in a way she rarely saw. He looked smaller like this. Not weak. Just worn down.

Ellie stepped closer and gently took the glass from his hand. He startled, a sharp inhale, eyes lifting in confusion before landing on her. Recognition followed, slow and heavy.

She set the glass on the nightstand and wrapped her arms around his head, fingers sliding into his hair without thinking about it. The motion felt instinctive, automatic, the way her body moved before her brain could argue.

Julianโ€™s arms came around her waist immediately, pulling her in as if he had been waiting for permission. His forehead pressed into her stomach. He let out a breath that sounded stuck in his chest.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ he said.

She did not answer. Words felt too blunt for the moment. Instead, she leaned down and kissed the top of his head, soft and careful.

His grip tightened. When he spoke again, his voice cracked just enough to make her throat ache.

โ€œIโ€™m tired.โ€

They stayed that way for a long time. Ellie counted his breaths without meaning to, felt the tension ease from his shoulders bit by bit. This was Julian without the armor. No explanations. No fixes. Just weight and exhaustion and the quiet trust of letting someone see it.

Her thoughts did not stay quiet, though.

She had stayed away to protect herself, told herself it was dignity, told herself it was boundaries. Standing here now, it felt selfish. He had been drowning and she had been arguing with herself about pride.

She also knew she could not keep waiting for him to say everything first. If she wanted clarity, if she wanted him, she had to step forward too. The idea terrified her. If he hesitated, she would feel it in places she did not know how to repair.

Then again, what was love if not choosing to risk that?

Ellie rested her cheek against his hair and finally spoke.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry too.โ€


They ended up sitting on Julianโ€™s bed, side by side, knees touching. His hand wrapped around hers, warm and steady, thumb brushing slow circles over her knuckles as if that motion alone could keep the room from tilting.

Ellie watched his hand for a second longer than necessary. This was not the right time to define anything. He was exhausted. His world was on fire. But if she could lift even one weight off his shoulders, she wanted it to be this one.

She cleared her throat first.

โ€œI know what you said about Candice was true,โ€ Ellie said. โ€œAnd I know you meant it when you said you wanted to start over.โ€ She huffed a small laugh, shaking her head. โ€œStill, when I saw you two together, I got jealous. Then immediately embarrassed about being jealous at all. Very Elena Bennett.โ€

Julianโ€™s thumb paused, then resumed, slower now.

โ€œWhen we were married,โ€ she continued, โ€œI could tell myself I was your wife. I had a label. Something solid. I could confront you without feeling ridiculous.โ€ She glanced at him, then back at their hands. โ€œWhen we filed for divorce, I kept waiting for you to tell me what we were instead. You did not. I tried to be understanding. You had a thousand things going on. You disappear when things get bad. I know that now.โ€

Her voice softened. โ€œThe day the divorce was finalized, I did not feel relieved. I feltโ€ฆuntethered. I went from being something to being nothing. And part of that is on me, because I waited instead of asking outright.โ€

Julian exhaled, long and tired.

โ€œThe thing is,โ€ he said quietly, โ€œyou did ask. More than once. I kept pushing it off.โ€ He looked down, jaw tight. โ€œThis fell apart because of me. I was not honest, because I was scared you would see me differently.โ€

Ellie stayed still, listening.

โ€œI let myself be the guy who fixes things,โ€ he went on. โ€œThe one who always has it together. If I let you in fully, you would see the version of me who fails. The one people eventually leave.โ€ He swallowed. โ€œI am not hesitant because I do not trust you. I am hesitant because I do not trust myself when things stop being controlled. I did not want you seeing that and deciding you made a mistake. Everyone else did.โ€

Ellieโ€™s chest tightened, sharp and aching.

So this was it. This was Julian without the scaffolding. Not impressive, not composed. Just scared.

โ€œI really want to be with you, Ellie,โ€ he said. โ€œI just do not know if I can survive another loss. And somehow, look where we are anyway.โ€

She turned toward him fully then, studying his face. The dark circles. The strain he never talked about. How exposed he was right now, sitting there saying all the things he usually buried under logic and timing.

Ellie reached up and cupped his jaw, thumb brushing along the edge where tension always lived.

โ€œI want to be with you too,โ€ she said. โ€œBut I want all of you. The messy parts. The parts that scare you. Do not protect me from that. I am not asking for perfect. I am asking to stand next to you when things are hard. I want to be your partner, not someone you manage or shield.โ€

Julianโ€™s eyes softened. He nodded once, then smiled, small and real.

โ€œI love you, Ellie.โ€

Her smile came easily this time. She leaned in and kissed him, slow and certain. When she pulled back, she was still smiling.

โ€œSo,โ€ she said, โ€œwe are back.โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Julian said, his voice lighter now. He kissed her again, deeper this time. โ€œWe are.โ€

Chapter 39: Surrender

Julianโ€™s kiss didnโ€™t rush. It deepened in that deliberate way of his, the kind that made Ellie forget where her hands were supposed to go. She felt his palms settle against her back, broad and warm, steadying her as if he was anchoring her in place instead of pulling her under.

He pulled back just enough to look at her, eyes dark, intent, searching her face as if checking whether she was still there with him. His thumb brushed her cheek, pushing a strand of hair away, and then he kissed her again, slower this time, more certain.

When she felt his tongue against hers, something in her loosened. She made a soft sound and shifted instinctively closer, climbing into his lap without fully deciding to. Her hand slid into his hair, fingers curling there, testing how much she could hold him.

Julian cursed quietly, the sound low and wrecked, and his grip tightened. Her movement pressed them closer and the reaction was immediate, unmistakable. Ellie felt it through him and her breath stuttered, heat blooming fast.

He kissed her mouth again, then her jaw, then the soft place beneath her ear. His lips traced a path down her neck, unhurried, intentional, and she tilted her head without thinking, giving him access. Her pulse thudded hard where he kissed, every touch registering too loudly, too vividly.

His hands moved with care, sliding to her waist, thumbs brushing bare skin beneath the hem of her blouse. When he tugged it upward, he paused, eyes flicking to her face, waiting. Ellie nodded, barely breathing.

Julian pulled the blouse over her head slowly, as if committing every inch of her to memory. His gaze lingered, reverent in a way that made her chest tighten. When his mouth followed, warm against her skin, she gasped. His kiss over her breast was gentle, exploratory, his tongue a soft, teasing heat that sent a sharp shiver through her.

Ellieโ€™s fingers tightened in his hair. She had no script for this. Every sensation felt new and overwhelming, her body responding faster than her thoughts ever could.

He lifted her with ease then, shifting them onto the bed, laying her back against the sheets while he hovered over her, bracing himself on his hands. He kissed her again, deeper now, mouths moving together in an unspoken rhythm, his weight a promise rather than a demand.

Ellie curled her legs around his hips, breathless and dizzy, entirely aware of him above her, around her, choosing patience even as his restraint thinned.


Julian was aware, distantly, that he could stop.

Ellie was beneath him, hair spread across the sheets, cheeks flushed, eyes too bright, and his brain kept tripping over that image instead of producing anything useful. He had seen her a thousand times. In oversized sweaters, in borrowed T shirts, laughing with her mouth full, pacing the apartment while on the phone. None of that prepared him for this version of her, open and trusting and watching him with an expression that made his chest tighten.

He traced a line down her side with his hand, slow enough to feel the shudder it pulled from her. He noticed everything. The way her breath hitched before his fingers even finished the movement. The way her body reacted before her mind caught up. He kissed where his hand had been, following the path deliberately, as if he was mapping her.

This was overdue. That realization landed clean and undeniable.

Ellie wrapped her legs around his thigh, instinctive and clumsy and entirely sincere, and Julian had to close his eyes for a second. He wanted to take this slowly. He meant to. He kept reminding himself that this was new for her, that rushing would steal something he didnโ€™t want to take away. He wanted her present for every second of it.

But she made that difficult.

Every sigh from her mouth felt like a provocation. Every soft sound pressed him closer to the edge he was trying to stay away from. He adjusted his weight, grounding himself, kissed her again, slower, steadier, even as his restraint thinned.

Ellie fumbled with the buttons of her pants, fingers slipping, a breathless laugh breaking through.

โ€œGive me a sec,โ€ she said, amused and flustered. โ€œThis isโ€ฆโ€

Julian smiled despite himself. โ€œIโ€™ve got it.โ€

He helped her, hands gentle, unhurried, easing the fabric away instead of letting her struggle through it. When he finished, he paused, taking her in properly this time. No rush. No distraction.

โ€œYouโ€™re beautiful,โ€ he said, quietly, as if stating a fact he had confirmed repeatedly.

She scoffed, heat rising in her cheeks. โ€œYouโ€™re ridiculous.โ€

He kissed the inside of her knee, then higher along her thigh, slow and deliberate, his mouth learning the curve of her skin. Her breath caught again. He followed the reaction, not the plan, kissing where her body responded most, where she tensed and relaxed beneath him.

Julian stayed aware of himself even as he let go a little. Careful hands. Measured pace. Attention fixed entirely on her.

And still, with every sound she made, he knew exactly how close he was to losing that control.


Julian was between her legs and everything inside her had gone incandescent, every nerve suddenly loud and demanding attention all at once. Her hands were in his hair, fingers curling, tugging, holding on as if that was the only thing keeping her anchored to the bed. She didnโ€™t know she could feel this much, didnโ€™t know her body could build toward something so sharp and overwhelming.

Sounds were coming out of her mouth that she would absolutely pretend never happened. They werenโ€™t words. They werenโ€™t even thoughts. They were reactions, stripped down and unfiltered.

Her hips moved on instinct, chasing the sensation, and Julianโ€™s hands held her steady, firm and grounding, keeping her right where she was as if he knew sheโ€™d float off otherwise.

โ€œJulianโ€ฆโ€ she gasped, breath breaking, โ€œI think Iโ€™m close.โ€

The word close barely made it out before everything tipped.

The sensation crashed over her all at once, dizzying and bright, her body tightening and releasing in waves. She shook through it, clinging to him, eyes squeezed shut, overwhelmed and exhilarated in equal measure. It felt endless. It felt impossible to come back down from. Part of her didnโ€™t want to.

When she finally opened her eyes again, Julian was standing, pushing his sweatpants down, and her brain stalled completely.

Oh.

That wasโ€ฆa lot.

Her gaze flicked up, then back down, then immediately regretted all of her life choices that led her to saying the first thing that popped into her head.

โ€œItโ€™s mine?โ€ she blurted, then cringed so hard she almost folded in on herself.

Julian smiled. He hovered back over her, familiar and solid and entirely too calm for someone who had just dismantled her.

โ€œYes,โ€ he said

โ€œNice to know,โ€ Ellie muttered, mortified and still very distracted.

He grew serious then, hands gentle as he settled closer. โ€œIโ€™ll take it slow. Tell me if you want me to stop.โ€

โ€œI wonโ€™t,โ€ she said immediately, without thinking.

Julian kissed her again, deep and steady, and when she felt him ease closer, she tensed despite herself. The first sensation was unfamiliar, a pressure that made her gasp, her body unsure, adjusting. He moved carefully, watching her face, giving her time.

It wasnโ€™t painless, but it wasnโ€™t frightening either. It was strange and intense and deeply intimate, every movement registering as something new. She clutched at his back, breath uneven, grounding herself in the feel of him there.

Then the discomfort softened, replaced by warmth, by a fullness that tipped into pleasure she hadnโ€™t known sheโ€™d been missing. The realization hit her all at once and made her laugh softly into his shoulder.

โ€œOh,โ€ she breathed. โ€œOh.โ€

Julian moved slowly, deliberately, every motion careful and attentive, and Ellie held on, body opening to the rhythm, to the closeness, to the way he stayed right there with her, as if nothing else existed beyond this moment.


Julian had every intention of pacing himself.

This was not a lie he was telling her. It was the plan. Slow entry. Monitor breathing. Watch her reactions. Do not rush. Do not be an idiot.

The problem was that plans tended to fail when confronted with reality.

Ellie was tense in that way that had nothing to do with fear and everything to do with anticipation. He felt it immediately. Too tight. Too aware. Too much.

He exhaled through his nose and adjusted, forcing himself to move carefully, deliberately, even as his focus narrowed while his control was slowly slipping.

He kissed her neck instead, grounding himself in something familiar. Her skin was warm. She smelled clean, unmistakably her. His mouth brushed just below her ear as he muttered, low and rough despite his best efforts, โ€œYouโ€™re making it hard.โ€

That earned him a sharp intake of breath from her and then her hands tightened, nails digging into his shoulders.

That did it.

Whatever structure he had built cracked clean through.

Julian swore under his breath, his movements losing their careful edge, instinct overriding strategy. Her grip anchored him, her reactions immediate and unfiltered, and suddenly he was far less interested in restraint than he had been thirty seconds ago.

He pressed his forehead briefly to hers, a last, futile attempt at composure, then moved again, slower than he wanted, faster than he should, fully aware he was already past the point of no return.

So much for pacing.


Ellie lost track of when things tipped from controlled to completely unhinged in the best possible way.

One second Julian was visibly trying, to keep himself measured, and the next everything sped up. His grip tightened. He pulled her closer, and whatever restraint he had been clinging to dissolved without ceremony.

She felt it in the change of his breathing, the way his body shifted against hers, the way his mouth dropped into the curve of her neck as if he needed something solid to hold on to.

โ€œEllie,โ€ he said against her skin, rough and strained. โ€œYou feel it?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ she gasped, the word tumbling out half-laughed, half-broken. โ€œOh my god, yes. Donโ€™t stop.โ€

She was not scared. She was soaring. Everything felt louder, brighter, more urgent. Her hands clawed at his back, nails scraping because she needed an anchor and he was the only thing keeping her from floating off entirely.

Every movement knocked the air from her chest. Sounds kept spilling out of her mouth before she could stop them, sharp breaths and soft cries and something embarrassingly close to begging. She registered, distantly, that she was loud. That awareness lasted about half a second before it vanished again.

Her body tightened, sensation piling too fast to keep up with, heat curling low and insistent.

โ€œJulianโ€ฆโ€ she managed, then lost the sentence completely.

Julian stayed with her, murmuring encouragement she barely heard, his voice steady even as everything else unraveled. โ€œLet go,โ€ he whispered, right when she needed it most.

She did.

The feeling hit her all at once, dizzying and overwhelming, stealing her breath and her grip on time. Julian followed her there, a strained sound leaving him as he pulled away just in time, the moment cresting hard and sudden for both of them.

Ellie lay there afterward, blinking at the ceiling, heart racing, limbs buzzing, entirely unsure if gravity still applied.

Julian pressed a kiss to her cheek, then her temple, his fingers brushing her face in a way that felt grounding and careful.

โ€œYou good?โ€ he asked softly.

She turned her head toward him, still catching her breath. โ€œThat wasโ€ฆโ€ She searched for a word, gave up immediately. โ€œCan we do it again?โ€

His laugh was low and warm, unmistakably pleased. โ€œBe careful what you wish for, Elena,โ€ he said, already pulling her back against him.

โ€œWhat?โ€

He answered by kissing her, unhurried this time, and the rest of the night blurred into heat and laughter and tangled limbs, the world narrowing down to just the two of them and the quiet certainty that neither of them was going anywhere.

Chapter 40: Marginally Survivable

Ellie woke up wrapped in sheets that definitely did not belong to her, very aware of two things right away.

One, she was naked. Very naked.

Two, Julian was already dressed.

She burrowed deeper into the bed, tugging the sheets up to her chin. From this angle she could see him moving around the bedroom, freshly shaved, hair styled, shirt crisp. It was unsettling how quickly he looked put together again, as if last night had been a dream she made up and he had simply slept eight responsible hours and gone on with his life.

He caught her staring and paused, then walked back and sat on the edge of the bed, his hand settling on her back in a slow, grounding sweep.

โ€œYou okay here?โ€ he asked.

She nodded, voice still sleepy. โ€œYeah. Can I stay? I donโ€™t have work today.โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ Julian said easily.

She squinted up at him. โ€œYou okay?โ€

He raised a brow. โ€œDefine okay.โ€

โ€œDo you want to escape and live in the mountains,โ€ she clarified, โ€œraise goats, refuse email, that sort of thing.โ€

He chuckled. โ€œBelieve me, Iโ€™ve considered it. But Iโ€™m better today than I was yesterday.โ€

โ€œThe offer stands,โ€ Ellie said. โ€œIโ€™d be an excellent goat herder.โ€

Julian leaned down and kissed her, quick and warm. โ€œI have to go. Thereโ€™s food here, but if you want to order somethingโ€ฆโ€

He reached into his jacket and handed her a black card.

Ellie stared at it, then at him. Her brain took a second to reboot. โ€œI didnโ€™t realize my performance last night came with compensation.โ€

He gave her a look.

โ€œIโ€™m kidding,โ€ she said quickly, already taking the card anyway. โ€œI think Iโ€™ll buy a car.โ€

โ€œI have an extra one in Willowridge,โ€ Julian said, entirely serious. โ€œI can have it shipped.โ€

She laughed, loud and surprised, suddenly remembering how oddly economical he could be with everything except solutions. She loved that about him. It was ridiculous and endearing and very Julian.

โ€œHey,โ€ he added, โ€œitโ€™s only five years old. Itโ€™s still good.โ€

โ€œI was joking,โ€ Ellie said.

โ€œLetโ€™s see if you can joke ater tonight,โ€ he said, smirking as he leaned down to kiss her again.

He headed for the door, jacket already on, phone in hand.

โ€œHey,โ€ Ellie called out, clutching the sheets around herself. โ€œMind if I bring lunch later?โ€

โ€œNot at all.โ€

The door closed behind him.

Ellie immediately shoved her face into the pillow and let out a muffled shriek, limbs flailing once for emphasis before she collapsed back onto the bed, grinning at the ceiling and very briefly planning their entire future in a way she pretended she did not do.

She was still floating when reality tapped her on the shoulder.

Ethan.

She shot upright. โ€œOh shit.โ€

She grabbed her phone, typing furiously. Didnโ€™t die. Slept somewhere else. Will explain. Love you.

She stared at the message, then added another. Itโ€™s not a cult.

She hit send and fell back onto the bed, laughing to herself, the black card glinting on the nightstand and Julianโ€™s pillow still warm beside her.


Ellie made a pit stop at Ethanโ€™s place first, because showing up to Julianโ€™s office in last nightโ€™s clothes felt like tempting fate.

She let herself in, grabbed a few clothes then changed at record speed. Before leaving, she slapped a note on the fridge in aggressive handwriting.

Staying at Julian. Iโ€™m not kidnapped. Love you. Talk later. P.S. Please donโ€™t get mad, Ethan. I love you.

She stared at it, added a heart for diplomacy, then bolted.

By the time she reached Julianโ€™s office, she had a backpack slung over one shoulder and two lunch boxes in her hands.

Seb looked up from his desk and immediately lit up.

โ€œWell,โ€ he said brightly, eyes flicking to the lunch boxes. โ€œSomething happened.โ€

Ellie rolled her eyes, smiling despite herself. โ€œIs Julian here?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s in a meeting,โ€ Seb said. โ€œShould be done soon. Or heโ€™ll explode and end it early. Hard to say.โ€

Before Ellie could reply, raised voices drifted from the reception area. She turned to see a small crowd clustered near the front desk, faces tight with worry, hands gesturing, the receptionist trying valiantly to keep her voice calm while being emotionally bulldozed.

Seb sighed, long and theatrical. โ€œBeneficiaries. Theyโ€™ve been coming in waves.โ€

Ellie watched them, the way fear sat right under their anger. โ€œTheyโ€™re scared.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Seb said. โ€œAnd I get it. But thereโ€™s nothing we can tell them yet. Weโ€™re justโ€ฆwaiting for Julian to pull off some miracle.โ€

Ellieโ€™s stomach twisted. Waiting was the worst thing you could ask people to do when their future was wobbling.

โ€œCan I talk to them?โ€ she asked.

Seb blinked. โ€œIโ€™m not sure Julian would be thrilled about that. No offense, honey.โ€

โ€œNone taken,โ€ Ellie said quickly. โ€œIโ€™m not planning to promise them the moon. Justโ€ฆlisten. Maybe calm things down enough so they donโ€™t stage a coup in the lobby.โ€

Seb hesitated, weighing risks, glancing once toward the closed conference room door.

Finally, he exhaled. โ€œFine. Iโ€™ll come with you. Itโ€™s not that I donโ€™t trust you. This is just wildly unplanned and I prefer chaos with witnesses.โ€

Ellie beamed. โ€œGreat. So what should I tell them?โ€

Seb gasped, hand flying to his chest.

Ellie winced. โ€œOkay. Right. Iโ€™ll justโ€ฆ listen. Validate feelings. Nod sympathetically. I can do that.โ€

She straightened her shoulders, took a breath, and muttered under it, โ€œYou are emotionally competent. You are calm. You are not going to cry in front of strangers.โ€

Seb leaned in. โ€œYou ready?โ€

Ellie nodded, stepping forward with a smile that said I donโ€™t have answers, but I do have ears and hoping very hard that would be enough.


Ellie stepped forward and immediately realized crowds did not respond to soft voices or polite hovering.

โ€œHi,โ€ she tried anyway, lifting a hand.

Someone in the back squinted at her. โ€œAre you lost?โ€

Another voice followed. โ€œSweetheart, this is a corporate office.โ€

A third added, generously, โ€œShe probably just wandered in.โ€

Ellie smiled, tight but friendly. โ€œI did not wander in.โ€

That earned her a few blinks.

โ€œYou look twelve,โ€ one woman said. โ€œAre you an intern?โ€

Ellie glanced at Seb, who had gone very still beside her, then back at the group. โ€œOkay. First of all, I am twenty-eight. Second, Iโ€™m not an executive. Third, Iโ€™m also a beneficiary.โ€

Seb coughed so hard it sounded like a medical emergency.

That got their attention.

Ellie took a breath and did the thing she was actually good at. She listened.

They talked over each other at first. About retirement plans. About spouses. About medical bills and tuition and timelines that suddenly felt fragile. Ellie nodded, asked questions, repeated things back to them so they knew she heard it correctly. She didnโ€™t promise fixes. She didnโ€™t throw out dates or numbers. She just made space and said, calmly, that the company knew the stakes and was working through them.

People relaxed in inches.

By the time she finished, the tension had softened into something quieter. Worry, still. But less sharp.

โ€œThatโ€™s all we wanted,โ€ one man said. โ€œSomeone to acknowledge it.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll wait,โ€ another added. โ€œAnd pray he pulls it off.โ€

Someone else nodded solemnly. โ€œHe looks stressed enough to deserve divine intervention.โ€

Ellie followed their gazes.

Julian stood by the conference room door, jacket off, sleeves rolled up, watching her with an expression she couldnโ€™t decode at all.

The group began to disperse, offering him nods and encouragement on their way out, one woman patting his arm and telling him sheโ€™d light a candle.

When the last of them left, Julian walked over slowly, eyes still on Ellie.

He looked confused. Impressed. Alarmed. Possibly all three.

Ellie lifted the lunch boxes slightly. โ€œHi,โ€ she said. โ€œLunch?โ€


Ellie followed him into his office and closed the door behind her.

Julian turned around mid-thought, brain still buzzing from numbers and angry faces and whatever fresh disaster was waiting in his inbox, and then she was justโ€ฆthere.

โ€œWhat did you just do,โ€ he said, flatly.

She froze for half a second, then lifted her hands. โ€œOkay. Nobody was promised anything, Seb was there, and your reception desk is still standing.โ€

He looked past her, half-expecting to see smoke or security guards or at least a broken plant. Everything was fine. Quiet, even.

Julian exhaled through his nose.

She moved to the side table, already unpacking the containers sheโ€™d brought, as if this were normal. As if she hadnโ€™t just walked into a room full of angry people and somehow walked out with them calmer than before.

โ€œYou do realize,โ€ he said, watching her, โ€œyou walked into a mess Iโ€™ve been avoiding all morning and made it smaller.โ€

She glanced over her shoulder. โ€œI did?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd I didnโ€™t ask you to. Which is irritating.โ€

She turned fully now, brows raised. โ€œThat didnโ€™t sound like a complaint.โ€

โ€œIt isnโ€™t,โ€ he said. He crossed the room before he could overthink it, reached for her wrist, and pulled her in.

Ellie startled, then laughed when he leaned his forehead against her shoulder.

โ€œYouโ€™re a menace,โ€ he muttered. โ€œDo you know that.โ€

She slid her fingers into his hair. Julian closed his eyes.

โ€œYou look exhausted,โ€ she said.

โ€œI am,โ€ he replied. โ€œMargaret wonโ€™t budge. No layoffs. She thinks it builds character.โ€

โ€œAnd does it.โ€

โ€œIt builds migraines,โ€ he said. โ€œIf she werenโ€™t my grandmother, I wouldโ€™ve lost my temper an hour ago.โ€

She stayed there, fingers moving slowly through his hair, grounding him in a way he hated needing and loved having.

After a moment, she nudged him. โ€œLetโ€™s eat.โ€

โ€œWhat did you make,โ€ he asked, eyeing the containers.

โ€œMexican,โ€ she said, then corrected, โ€œMexican-ish. I wanted to cook back in Willowridge, but your house staff acted like I was trying to overthrow the monarchy.โ€

โ€œThey take their jobs very seriously,โ€ he said.

The food lookedโ€ฆsuspicious. It had the energy of something thrown together at the last minute. Julian took a careful bite.

Then another.

Then he stopped pretending to be cautious.

Ellie watched him, smug. โ€œTold you.โ€

He swallowed, stared at the food, then at her. The thought hit him fully formed and completely unhelpful.

He could marry her again for this alone.

โ€œItโ€™s fine,โ€ he said, deadpan, reaching for more. โ€œI suppose I can tolerate it.โ€

She laughed. โ€œYouโ€™re lying.โ€

โ€œI am,โ€ he admitted. โ€œCan I have more?โ€

โ€œYou can have mine.โ€

He took it without hesitation. Then, because apparently today was about honesty, he added, โ€œFor the record, what you did out there was impressive.โ€

Her smile softened, just a little.

Julian looked at her, and thought, not for the first time, that everything felt marginally survivable when she was in the room.

Rate this story

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

Share with your friends

Chapters

    0 Comments

    Submit a Comment

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recommended Reads โญ

    The Road Home

    The Road Home

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 17 Summary Silver is returning home after seven long years. She has a lot of darkness in her past, but this just might be her chance to find happiness. Liam has been working on his family's ranch while raising his son, but with his troubled past, he...

    Silver’s Second Chance

    Silver’s Second Chance

    Chapter | 13 Summary Silver has been dealt a painful blow when her mate, the beta of her pack, rejects her. Instead of falling apart, she threw herself into work at the pack clinic. As a natural healer, her alpha presents an opportunity for her to get away from the...

    His Unexpected Luna

    His Unexpected Luna

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 20 Summary Archer has lost hope of finding his mate, but it seems fate has other plans. Meeting his mate, Emery, should've been one of the best moments of his life, but things aren't always as they seem. Chapter 1 Archer๏ปฟ I swear the goddess has a...

    Filtered Moments

    Filtered Moments

    Chapter | 13 Summary Charlotte has been the victim of her best friends random adventures since they were kids, but when she signs them up for a reality TV show, she's not prepared for the adventure that lies ahead. With the cameras always rolling, will she embrace the...

    Fighting Chance

    Fighting Chance

    Chapter | 14 Summary Olivia has found herself in the cliche of all cliches, but an unexpected encounter with a bartender who has a rather cliche story of his own may be just what her life needs...or it may be another disaster to add to the ever growing list. Chapter 1...

    Facing Her Demons

    Facing Her Demons

    Chapter | 11 Summary Everyone has demons, but for Lita, the demons wear flesh and destroy everything they touch. Sometimes, it takes darkness to defeat darkness and for Lita, that darkness has a name...Antoni Grecco. Maybe it takes a demon to destroy one. Chapter 1...

    Emotional Cadence

    Emotional Cadence

    Chapter | 15 Summary A self-proclaimed "loser extraordinaire" and the new kid with good looks and a secret. When friendships fail, and everyone shows you how to leave, sometimes it only takes one person to teach you how to stay. Chapter 1 Cadence๏ปฟ Hi! My name is...

    Earning His Love

    Earning His Love

    Chapter | 14 Summary Camille hasn't been lucky in life, but when she moves back home to help her grandma, she has an unpleasant first meeting with her new neighbor, Cole, before she can even make it through the door. Cole is cold, bitter and impossible to figure out,...

    Joelene 2

    Joelene 2

    Ch 1-10 Chapter | 29 Summary Eric comes back this summer, Joelene is on the glowing cusp of her youth. 1 summer sun ๏ปฟSummer came like a skinny hot girl on sandy legs. Pale skin with red pebbles on two slender cheekbones. I always did like summer, you see but I loved...

    The master and the maid

    The master and the maid

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 17 Story Notes This story grew out of a question rather than a plot: What happens when attraction is structured like a hierarchy, and desire is mistaken for entitlement? The house came first. Not as a setting, but as a system. A place that rewards...

    The Warm Up

    The Warm Up

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 22 Story Notes Victor, young, good-looking, modest, and broke. Living in New York gets expensive, especially when you have a family to support. When an opportunity presents itself to Victor named Carmen. Can Victor stomach what she wants him to do?...

    Freedom in Marriage: Southern Historical Romance

    Freedom in Marriage: Southern Historical Romance

    Chapter | 16 Summary It's 1854, and the south is thriving on agriculture. Men do the hard work, and women raise the babies. I feel like I'm being smothered. I've always been too smart for my gender. Too eager to learn. Too expressive. I want too much. At least, that's...

    Red Fever

    Red Fever

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 29 Summary Zikara Farrayn has always been an outsider. Born human into a pack of hunters and werewolves, she lacks the beast inside her that makes the others strong, fast, and deadly. To her father, the legendary Alpha Tarak Farrayn, she is little...

    Joelene 2

    Joelene 2

    Ch 1-10 Chapter | 29 Summary Eric comes back this summer, Joelene is on the glowing cusp of her youth. 1 summer sun ๏ปฟSummer came like a skinny hot girl on sandy legs. Pale skin with red pebbles on two slender cheekbones. I always did like summer, you see but I loved...

    Liberty’s Flower

    Liberty’s Flower

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 38 Summary A Beautiful Story Sweat dripped from Williamsonโ€™s brow as he held the broadsword stiffly in his hands, bracing himself for the impact of Chief Meelocksโ€™ sword. They had been sparring in the training yard for a good hour and a crowd had...