Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 270: Same Advice, Different Woman from Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle, a Romance novel by anjeeriku.

The chandelier humd overhead.

Joyce sat across from Franz. The smile she gave him was smaller now — less performance, more person. The smile of soone who’d been running interference for two hours and was finally allowed to stop.

Yosef was still at the sideboard. Two fingers of the gifted whiskey. He hadn’t moved back to the table.

Julian stayed in his chair. Gio at the far end, watching.

The door to the study was closed down the hall. No sound ca through it. No sound ca from anywhere except the hedges scraping the windows and the low electric buzz of the light.

"She’ll be fine in there," Joyce comnted.

"I know," Franz replied.

A beat. She looked at him — really looked, not the charming curiosity from lunch.

"Does it bother you? Being left out here."

"No."

"So n find that hard. When the woman they married doesn’t need them in the room."

Franz wrapped his hands around the cup. "I’m not in the room because she needs there. I’m here because she asked to co."

"What’s the difference?"

"She knows I’ll be here when she gets out. That’s enough."

Joyce held that. The tight thing in her face — the thing she’d been carrying all through lunch, through the soup and the coffee and Evelyn’s cold silences — loosened a degree. She’d been watching him for two hours deciding whether he was what he appeared to be.

She picked the coffee pot back up. Gave her hands sothing to do.

"Seven years," she said.

Franz waited.

"She was with that man for seven years." Joyce didn’t look at him now. She looked at the closed door down the hall. "We watched from here. The engagent announced. The company she was building. The photographs in the papers. We told ourselves — she’s Arianne. She manages things. She always has."

Her hands flattened on the table.

"Aunt Evelyn gave her order. Don’t interfere. She chose him. Let her see it through."

"And you followed it."

"We always follow it." Not defensive. Just true. "That’s how this house works. So we waited. We told ourselves she would co to us when it beca too much. When she needed help. When it fell apart."

She was quiet for a mont.

"She never ca. And then the banquet happened and she was gone. No call. No letter. One day she existed in the press and the next — nothing."

Franz didn’t look away. "She wouldn’t have called."

"I know that now."

"It wasn’t about trust. It wasn’t about this family." He was careful with it — not defending her absence, explaining it. "When things break, she removes herself from everyone who knew her before. She doesn’t want to be seen in the wreckage."

Joyce absorbed this. Her fingers curled against the tabletop. "I thought she was punishing us."

"She wasn’t."

"I know." The words ca out quieter than the rest. "It’s worse that she wasn’t. That she simply didn’t think of us. That we weren’t even the people she thought to call."

The table held the silence.

Julian spoke without looking up from his glass. "She didn’t think anyone would want to know."

Joyce turned to him.

"That’s how she is. When sothing breaks she assus she broke it. She removes herself before anyone can confirm it." He paused. "It’s not about you. It’s about her."

Joyce pressed her lips together. Her napkin was in her hands again — the sa anxious twist from lunch, the sa small motion.

"Did she know?" she asked. "That we would have wanted to help."

"No," Franz said. "Not then."

"And now?"

He looked toward the hall. The closed door. The silence behind it.

"She’s in that room. She ca back. That’s the answer."

Yosef moved from the sideboard.

Slow. The limp was more pronounced now — the long day settling into his bones. He crossed to the table. Sat. Set his glass down. His hands folded in front of him.

He didn’t look at Joyce. He didn’t look at Julian. He looked at Franz — the sa look from lunch, the one that wasn’t hostile but was exacting. A man taking a reading he needed to get right.

"Ysabella ca to once."

The room adjusted. Joyce’s hands went still around her napkin. Julian’s pen stopped moving.

"Before things were bad. Early in the marriage." Yosef’s voice was low. Rough at the edges. "She sat in this house and told things weren’t what she’d expected."

He didn’t gesture toward the chair. They all knew which one.

"She was my younger sister. She was sitting right there asking what to do."

The pause had weight. Not for effect — because he was choosing words that had been turned over many tis, worn smooth by handling.

"I told her marriages required patience. That ti would settle things."

The clock from down the hall. The chandelier’s hum.

"She went back. Fourteen years later she was gone."

No elaboration. Just the fact, held out in the open.

"I was the one who told her to stay."

Franz didn’t move.

"A generation later — Arianne. Seven years with Dominic Blackwood." His hand closed around the glass but didn’t lift it. "I followed my mother’s order again. Sa advice. Different woman." He looked up. "She disappeared too."

A long beat. The hedges scraped the windows.

"I’m not going to give that advice a third ti."

He held Franz’s gaze. The look of a man who had run out of the comfort of waiting.

"What kind of man are you with her?"

Franz didn’t rush it. He set the cup down. When he spoke, his voice was level — not defensive, not performing humility.

"I have my own work. My own na. My own decisions." A beat. "I don’t need her to make relevant and she knows it. That matters more than anything else I could tell you."

Yosef’s expression didn’t shift. "That’s not an answer."

"It is." Franz looked at him directly. "Every man who diminished a woman did it because he needed sothing from her she wasn’t giving him. Her compliance. Her silence. Her reflection of him." He paused. "I don’t need any of that. She can be exactly what she is and it doesn’t cost anything."

"And when she’s wrong?"

"I tell her."

"And when she doesn’t listen?"

"I let her find out." No satisfaction in it. Just fact. "And then I’m there when she does."

Yosef was quiet. His hands around the glass.

"Gabriel Sumrs also said he needed her. Said it at the altar. ant it, probably, for a ti."

"He needed her to be less." Franz’s voice didn’t rise. "I don’t."

The distinction sat between them.

Yosef held it for a long mont. Then he picked up the glass. Drank. Set it down flat. His shoulders dropped — one fraction, barely visible — and whatever he was holding, he held a little less of it now.

Julian set his pen down.

"For what it’s worth." He looked at Joyce, then Yosef — not Franz. "She didn’t disappear because she didn’t trust this family."

Joyce turned. "Then why — "

"Sha." Clean. No softening. "When things break, she assus she broke them. She doesn’t want to be seen until she’s fixed whatever she thinks she ruined. She didn’t call because she didn’t think she deserved to."

The table was quiet.

"I’ve known her since we were children," Julian said. "It took years to understand that. And I was there. I can’t imagine how it looked from here."

Joyce smoothed her napkin flat on the table. Slowly. Deliberately. Like she was pressing sothing down.

Gio spoke from the far end of the table.

"She ca back."

Three words. No sentint. No softening. Just the fact of it — against everything, despite everything, through all of it — she’d walked through the front door of this house today.

Joyce looked at him. The tight thing in her face finally loosened.

"Yes," she said. Quiet. "She did."

Footsteps in the hall.

Joyce straightened. Julian’s hand went still on the table. Yosef’s eyes moved to the door without his head turning.

Franz set his coffee cup down. Hands open on the table. He didn’t stand.

Arianne ca in.

She crossed the room — one pass, taking them all in. Joyce. Yosef. Julian. Gio. Franz. Her face gave nothing away. But Franz read her the way he’d learned to read her: the set of her jaw, the way she was carrying herself just slightly apart from whatever had happened in that study. She’d gotten sothing. It had cost sothing.

She reached the table. Her fingers touched the back of his hand.

He turned his palm up. Her hand settled into his. Neither of them looked down.

Joyce crossed to her. Both palms to Arianne’s face — the sa gesture from the foyer, the one she used when she was confirming sothing she already knew. She held it for a mont. Looked at her.

"Co back," she said. "Not for the estate. Just co back."

Arianne held her gaze. Nodded.

Yosef rose as they moved toward the door. He didn’t cross the room. He stood where he was — the limp, the steadiness of a man who had stopped pretending the weight wasn’t there. When Arianne passed him, he spoke.

"Your mother would have been proud of you."

No context. No preamble. He said it the way a man says sothing he’s been holding for thirty years and is finally, carefully, setting down.

Arianne stopped. She didn’t turn all the way. She looked at him over her shoulder.

She didn’t reply. There was no reply. But sothing in her face — the smallest thing, barely there, gone almost before it appeared — moved.

Then she walked out.

The light outside was still afternoon when they walked out — golden, the low slant of late-day sun cutting across the drive. The car was waiting. Gio climbed into the front passenger seat without a word. The driver held the door, and Franz waited until Arianne was settled before sliding in beside her.

The gates opened. The estate fell away behind them.

Franz’s hand found hers on the seat between them. Neither of them spoke for the first mile.

Then Arianne told him. Piece by piece. The way she told everything in a low voice.

The signing. The waiting. The window Evelyn had made from Alex’s investigation — using the noise as cover to close the tap. Franz went still at that.

"She used his investigation to close it."

"Yes."

He didn’t let go. His thumb moved once across her knuckles.

"She wants back," Arianne said. "Alone."

"When?"

"Soon."

"She knows who sent Dominic."

"Yes."

The road curved. The city ca into view through the windshield — rooftops, office towers, the ordinary world going about its ordinary business. The sun was still above the skyline, the light rich and amber on the glass.

Neither of them said anything else.

His hand stayed in hers all the way ho.

You are reading Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle Chapter 270: Same Advice, Different Woman on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.