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Now reading: Chapter 269: You Made Me Leave from Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle, a Romance novel by anjeeriku.

The door closed.

The study was unchanged. Oak desk. Tall windows, the light going amber at the edges. Bookcases lining the walls, their spines faded to the sa dull brown. And the clock — the sa clock from every visit she’d ever made to this room, its brass pendulum marking seconds with the sa unhurried rhythm. Nothing in this house changed except the people in it. And even they changed slower than anywhere else.

Evelyn sat across from her. The desk between them. No folder. No lawyer. No Yosef standing by the bookcases with his arms crossed. Just the two of them and the clock.

"You married him."

Not a question. A statent. The words landed in the quiet with the weight of sothing Evelyn had known for a long ti and chosen not to say until now.

Arianne t her eyes. "Yes."

"The family was not inford."

"It wasn’t a family event."

Evelyn held the pause. She was good at pauses — better than anyone Arianne had ever t. She didn’t fill them. She let them do the work.

"When?"

This was the real opening. Not why — Evelyn was too precise to start there. She wanted the tiline first. The shape of it. What circumstances produced a marriage that the papers still didn’t know about.

"Early," Arianne said. "Before the board transition. After the Chairman’s heart attack. The circumstances required it."

"Required."

"The board needed stability. The company needed a leadership structure that couldn’t be challenged. Marriage was the fastest legal frawork available."

"You married for the company."

"At first."

Evelyn’s expression didn’t change. "At first."

"The marriage was a legal structure. It beca sothing else."

"It beca sothing else," Evelyn repeated the words without inflection. Not mockery. Not warmth. She was weighing them.

"Yes."

Evelyn leaned back in her chair. Her hands settled on the armrests. The clock ticked through the silence — four seconds, five.

"He pulled out your chair at lunch."

Arianne waited.

"He didn’t finish your sentences. He didn’t correct your numbers. He added only what you left room for. I watched him through four courses." Evelyn’s eyes were steady. "I’ve watched n sit beside capable won in this house for fifty years. Most of them can’t help themselves."

She didn’t say the nas. She didn’t need to. Arianne’s father. The uncles. The husbands of cousins who’d been married off and absorbed into the family like minor acquisitions. And Dominic — who’d stood beside her at functions and spoken over her every ti.

"He’s not like that," Arianne said.

"I noticed." A pause. "How do you know it holds? Under pressure."

"Because I’ve seen him under pressure."

Evelyn waited for more. Arianne didn’t give it. She didn’t need to list the monts — the blackmail, the accident, the airport, the board eting, the twenty years of silence that preceded all of it. Evelyn wasn’t asking for evidence. She was asking if Arianne believed what she was saying.

"You chose him," Evelyn said. "Not the Rochefort na. Not the company. Him."

"Yes."

"Why?"

Arianne could have given her the logical answer. She could have talked about the structure of the marriage, the alignnt of interests, the strategic fit. She’d done that in boardrooms. She’d done that with the brotherhood. She’d done that with herself, in the beginning, when she was still telling herself the marriage was a contract and nothing more.

She didn’t.

"Because he’s never asked to be smaller."

Evelyn went still.

Not the stillness of soone who was listening carefully. The stillness of soone who’d just been hit. Her hands didn’t move on the armrests. Her face didn’t change. But sothing behind her eyes shifted — a door opening that had been closed for a long ti.

The clock ticked.

Arianne didn’t look away.

Evelyn had spent fifty years watching Conway won accommodate. Shrink themselves by degrees. She’d watched her own daughter — Arianne’s mother — unravel in a marriage to a man who’d nad his child after a dead lover. She’d watched cousins and aunts and nieces negotiate with husbands who took and took and called it partnership. She’d watched it happen to herself, probably, a long ti ago.

Because he’s never asked to be smaller. It was the truest thing Arianne could say. It cost her sothing to say it. She said it anyway.

Evelyn didn’t comnt. But when she spoke again, her voice had shifted. Not warr — Evelyn didn’t do warmth. But the testing had stopped. She was talking now, not interrogating.

"You were eligible to run this estate."

She gestured toward the window. Beyond the glass, the grounds stretched out — overgrown hedges, dry fountain, the family land that had been Conway property for generations.

"After the restructuring. The voting block is yours. You had grounds to plant yourself here. Build from inside the family."

"I know."

"Instead you went to Rochefort Group."

"Yes."

"A company not your own. A na that wasn’t yours yet."

"It is mine now."

"You married into it."

"I built it back from collapse." Arianne’s voice was even. "The marriage ca with that. The na followed." She paused. "In this family, you understand the difference between inheriting sothing and earning it."

That landed. Evelyn had spent her life managing inherited wealth — the trust, the estate, the voting blocks, everything passed down, everything handed from one generation to the next. She knew exactly what Arianne was saying. She didn’t dispute it.

"Conway Capital would have been handed to you," she said.

"Yes." Arianne held her gaze. "And soone had already been reaching into it for years."

The pivot. Clean. Evelyn had opened the door herself — asking why Arianne chose Rochefort — and now Arianne walked through it.

"I went where the work was clean. Where I could see what I was building. Here — " She didn’t finish the sentence. She didn’t need to.

Evelyn’s hands went flat on the desk.

"You knew," Arianne said. Not accusation. Statent.

Silence.

"Not what it was feeding. Not at first."

The first admission. Small. Precise.

"But you knew sothing was moving."

"Yes."

Arianne nodded. She didn’t press. She let the word sit between them. Yes. Evelyn had known. For how long, she hadn’t said yet. But she’d known.

The clock marked off the seconds.

Arianne didn’t reach for a folder. She didn’t need one.

"The Conway Property Trust. Years of quarterly transfers. Sa routing. Sa intervals. Sa amounts." She recited it from mory — the sa facts Julian had laid out at Nate’s bar. "A trust feeding a holding company feeding a Blackwood subsidiary. Three layers between the family money and where it ended up."

Evelyn didn’t move.

"Your signature is on every routing docunt. Every single one."

Still nothing.

"Soone outside this family built that structure. You didn’t build it. But you signed for it."

Evelyn’s voice, when it ca, was sharp. Not angry. Testing. "How do you know I didn’t build it?"

"Because you stopped the paynts." Arianne didn’t hesitate. "Whoever built it wouldn’t have stopped them."

The clock.

Evelyn looked at her across the desk. The amber light had deepened — the afternoon was moving toward evening. Sowhere outside, a bird called and went quiet.

"I signed what was placed before ," she said. "For a long ti."

"Until?"

"Until I was able to stop."

"That’s not the sa as until you wanted to stop."

"No." Evelyn’s voice was quiet. "It isn’t."

"What changed?"

"Alexander Rochefort." She said the na plainly. "He began finding the shells. Mapping them. He was thodical — more thodical than anyone expected. He traced the first one six months before the paynts stopped."

"That should have made it harder to move money. Not easier."

"It did. It made everything harder. For everyone." Evelyn’s hands were still flat on the desk. "But noise can be cover. When there’s enough disruption, it’s difficult to tell which action triggered which response. I halted the paynts the sa week he mapped the first address. Anyone watching would assu the operation had been spooked. Not that I had closed it myself."

Arianne went still.

Evelyn hadn’t stopped the paynts despite Alex’s investigation. She’d stopped them because of it. She’d used the chaos as camouflage. Years of waiting, and the window that finally opened was Alex Rochefort with a map and a question.

"You were waiting for cover," Arianne said.

"I was waiting for a window."

"How long?"

Evelyn looked at her. The weight of it moved behind her face — not grief, sothing older. Sothing that had been held in place for a very long ti.

"Since I understood what I had signed."

The clock.

Arianne didn’t ask what had been held over her. Blackmail, threat, leverage — it didn’t matter which. What mattered was that Evelyn had been trapped inside the sa structure that had bled the trust, and she’d found her way out by waiting until soone else’s investigation gave her a door.

"You never told anyone."

"Who would I have told?" Evelyn’s voice was dry. "The family? The board? Your father was dead. Your mother was dead. The one person who might have understood was thirteen years old and already carrying enough."

You, Arianne thought. She ant .

Arianne stood.

The conversation was over. But there was one more thing. One question she’d carried into this room twenty-three years ago and never asked.

"When you sent away. After my father. After my mother." She paused. "You said I resisted correction."

Evelyn’s face went absolutely still.

"Was that what you thought?" Arianne’s voice was level. "Or was it the reason you chose?"

The distinction hung in the air between them. Did Evelyn believe it — that Arianne was too stubborn, too willful, too resistant to be molded into a proper Conway heir? Or had she needed a reason that would make a thirteen-year-old girl leave and not look back?

Evelyn looked at her for a long ti.

"You had dismantled one institution at thirteen," she said. "Your father. You found the evidence, you presented it, and he was gone. You were already visible. Already marked." Her voice didn’t waver. "Staying visible in this house would have made you useful to whoever was watching it. I needed a reason you would accept."

Arianne’s chest tightened. "You chose the one that would make leave and not co back."

"I chose the one that would make you leave and beco soone they couldn’t predict."

The room was very quiet.

Arianne stood at the door. Sothing moved in her chest — not forgiveness, not warmth. Recognition. The shape of a protection she was never ant to recognize as protection. Evelyn had pushed her out, and she’d pushed hard, and she’d made sure the door looked closed from both sides. Because if Arianne had stayed, she would have been useful. A tool. Another asset to be bled.

Twenty-three years. She’d carried resisted correction like a scar. And it had been a shield.

She turned back at the door.

"Dominic ca to you at that gala. He didn’t find you by accident."

"No."

"You know who sent him."

Evelyn held her gaze. Didn’t confirm. Didn’t deny.

"Co back," she said. "Without the others. Just you."

Arianne looked at her grandmother — the straight spine, the sharp eyes, the hands that had signed docunts for ten years because there was no way out that wouldn’t make things worse. She’d been trapped. She’d waited. She’d used the one window she got.

And she’d sent Arianne away not to punish her, but to save her.

"I will," Arianne said.

She opened the door. Closed it behind her.

The clock kept ticking.

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