PART 2
For one breathless moment, nobody moved.
The city stretched behind Adrian Hartwell’s office windows in polished towers and distant silver light, but all I could see was his face. I had seen that face on magazine covers, charity banners, and across dinner tables where silence had sat between us like a third person. I had watched it turn cold during arguments and unreadable during negotiations.
But I had never seen it afraid.
His attorney, Mr. Lowell, recovered first. He cleared his throat and rose halfway from his chair.
“Mrs. Hartwell, this is a private legal meeting.”
I looked at him, then at the thick folder on the table with my married name printed neatly across the label.
“I know exactly what this is.”
Rose shifted against my chest. Her tiny mouth parted, and she made the softest sound, barely more than a sigh. Adrian’s eyes dropped to her again, and something in him seemed to fracture quietly.
“How old?” he asked.
His voice was low, almost unfamiliar.
I placed one protective hand over Rose’s back. “Four months.”
The words settled over the room like dust after a collapse.
Four months.
Long enough for sleepless nights, hospital bracelets, first smiles, and frightened mornings when I had wondered how I would pay for formula after choosing between rent and medicine. Long enough for me to stop expecting his call. Long enough for my heartbreak to harden into something steadier.
Adrian stood slowly.
Around the conference table, executives looked anywhere but at us. Some pretended to study papers. Others stared at their screens, though nothing had changed there. Everyone understood they were witnessing something money could not soften.
His gaze returned to me.
“Clara,” he said. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
I laughed once, quietly, because the question was so small compared to the answer.
“I tried.”
His brow tightened.
“You blocked my number,” I said. “Your assistant returned my letters unopened. Your attorney told me all communication should go through the firm. When I came here six months ago, security escorted me out of the lobby.”
A muscle moved in his jaw. “I never ordered that.”
“No,” I said. “You simply built a life where nobody had to ask you before making people disappear.”
That landed.
I saw it in the way his shoulders drew back, not with anger, but with the reflex of a man struck by truth in front of witnesses.
Mr. Lowell stepped forward again. “Mrs. Hartwell, perhaps we should schedule a separate discussion.”
“No,” Adrian said.
The attorney stopped.
Adrian did not look away from me. “Everyone leave.”
No one hesitated.
Chairs scraped softly. Papers were gathered. Tablets snapped shut. The executives filed out with careful, embarrassed expressions. Mr. Lowell lingered, clearly torn between professional duty and self-preservation.
“Adrian,” he began.
“I said leave.”
This time, even he obeyed.
The double doors closed behind them.
For the first time in nearly a year, I was alone with my husband.
Except we were not alone.
Rose blinked sleepily, studying the stranger before her with solemn blue-gray eyes. They were Adrian’s eyes. I had known that from the moment the nurse placed her in my arms. I had spent four months loving and fearing that resemblance.
Adrian took one step closer, then stopped as if the space between us had become sacred.
“What’s her name?” he asked.
“Rose.”