Chapter 4
Lydia POV
"Good."
The word leaves my mouth quietly, but it doesn't soften anything between us. Adrian doesn't smile. He doesn't step closer. He steps back instead, and that restraint feels far more dangerous.
"Rest," he says evenly. "Tomorrow will be worse."
He says it like weather. Like rain is coming and we simply need umbrellas.
I hold his gaze a second too long before turning down the hallway. I don't look back, but I can feel his eyes on me, steady, measuring. Not protective. Not romantic. As if I've become an asset he's still calculating the value of.
The guest suite door shuts behind me, sealing in a different kind of silence than the one at the chapel. That silence had been public humiliation. This one feels suspended, like something waiting to snap.
I sit on the edge of the bed, still wearing his shirt. It brushes mid-thigh, crisp cotton that smells faintly of starch and something colder beneath it. Controlled. Like him.
My phone lights up again.
Marcus: 12 missed calls.
Selene tagged you in a story.
I open it.
She's in a hospital bed under soft, careful lighting. Fragile, but arranged. Not messy enough to be real. Marcus sits beside her, still in his wedding suit. His jacket is gone, but the cufflinks remain.
The ones I fastened on the morning of our wedding.
"Don't lose them," I'd said, smoothing his sleeve.
He didn't lose them. He just chose where to wear them.
Caption: Family comes first.
My throat tightens not with heartbreak, but with clarity. They're shaping the narrative already. A responsible man chooses an unborn child over a bride. It's clean. Noble. Marketable.
I lock the screen. No reaction from me. No counterstatement.
He chose optics. I chose power.
A knock interrupts the quiet. Two firm taps. "Come in."
Adrian enters without hesitation. Jacket gone, sleeves rolled, the formal armor stripped down but not removed. He reads my face before speaking.
"You saw it."
"Yes."
"And?"
"She wants sympathy. He wants redemption."
His gaze sharpens slightly. "Are you shaken?"
"I'm thinking."
"That wasn't the question."
"No," I admit. "It wasn't."
He steps closer, not touching, but close enough that I feel the shift in air. "You will not respond."
"I wasn't planning to."
"Good." He keeps watching me.
"Stop dissecting me," I say.
"I'm assessing damage."
"I'm not damaged." He holds my eyes, and something unreadable passes through his expression. "No," he says finally. "You're not."
It sounds almost reluctant."You almost lost control earlier," I say quietly.
"I don't lose control."
"You stepped back."
"Yes."
"Why?"
A pause. He chooses his words carefully. "Because proximity changes outcomes."
"That's careful."
"It's accurate."
"Because you wanted to," I press.
His eyes darken just slightly. "You're testing me."
"Maybe."
"And what are you hoping for?"
I don't answer, because I don't fully know. Part of me wants to see how far I can push him. The other part wants to see if he'll ever stop holding back.
His phone vibrates. He checks it once.
"The board moved the vote."
My pulse spikes. "When?"
"Forty-eight hours."
"They're reacting to the scandal."
"They're reacting to instability."
"And you married me to stabilize it."
"Yes." I stand, steady. "Then we don't react."
He watches me carefully. "What do we do?"
"We escalate. We show up together. Untouchable."
"There's a Hale gala tomorrow," he says. "Sponsored by Marcus."
Of course there is."Then we attend."
"Marcus will confront you."
"He already did."
"In private."
"I don't fear the public."
His gaze lingers longer than necessary. "You're enjoying this."
I hesitate, then let the truth sit between us. "Maybe."
"Why?"
"Because for seven years I stood behind him. Now I'm beside someone no one controls."
His jaw tightens slightly. "No one controls me."
"I know." That's what makes this dangerous.
Later, under the shower's heat, memory slips in anyway. Marcus is laughing in the kitchen. Marcus apologizes for the late nights. Marcus said I was the only one who understood him. Seven years of smoothing rooms that didn't respect him. Seven years of defending him. Seven years ending with a ringtone.
I press my palm against the tile and breathe. I don't miss him.
I miss who I thought he was.
By morning, the markets are vicious. Hale Global dips. Cole Industries climbs. Commentators call it strategic. Ruthless. Brilliant.
Adrian is already in the kitchen when I walk in, coffee poured, tablet glowing with headlines.
"You didn't sleep," he says.
"Neither did you."
He studies my face. "You're pale."
"I'm fine."
"You're not."
A sudden wave tightens my stomach. I grip the counter before I can stop myself.
He's on his feet immediately. "What is it?"
"It passed."
"You didn't eat yesterday."
"Adrenaline."
He doesn't look convinced. He stores the information quietly, like everything else.
By afternoon, stylists line the living room with garment bags. Black feels predictable. Gold feels celebratory. Silver feels precise.
"Silver," he agrees.
The dress is structured, sharp, unforgiving. As they adjust the waist, another wave hits me, stronger. I steady myself against the vanity.
"Enough," Adrian says quietly.
"It's fine."
"You've gone pale again."
"I'm fine," I repeat, but my voice sounds thinner than I'd like.
The gala is glittering, untouched by yesterday's scandal. Camera flashes as we step out of the car. His hand settles at my lower back, firm, deliberate.
Inside, whispers follow us.
Marcus stands across the ballroom with Selene, her hand resting lightly over her stomach. Subtle. Intentional.
He approaches first.
"Lydia."
"Marcus."
"You didn't have to do this."
"I didn't have to be left."
His jaw tightens. "You married him to hurt me."
"I married him because you chose someone else."
"That's not fair."
I let out a quiet breath. "Fair?"
Selene steps forward. "This isn't the place."
"It's the perfect place," Adrian says calmly.
Marcus looks at him. "You planned this."
"Yes." The honesty unsettles him.
"You don't belong in this war," Marcus says to me.
"I was already in it."
His eyes drop to Adrian's hand at my waist. "You think he won't discard you too?"
Adrian's grip tightens almost imperceptibly. "Careful. You're speaking to my wife."
Wife. The word lands heavily.
Then Selene's voice cuts through the space. "Are you pregnant?"
The room shifts.
"No," I say automatically.
But my hand moves, just briefly, toward my abdomen.
All three of them see it.
Adrian leans closer, his voice low enough that only I hear it. "Are you certain?"
My mind races through dates, through the night before everything collapsed, through the nausea that won't quite explain itself.
"I don't know," I whisper. He stills.
Not visibly. Not enough for anyone else to notice.
But I feel the shift in him. If I am
Then this isn't just a scandal anymore. It's succession. Legacy. Power rewritten.
Adrian straightens, composure sliding back into place. "Enjoy your evening," he says evenly.
We walk away together, his hand firm at my back.
The music swells. Conversations resume.
But something irreversible has tilted.
If I'm pregnant, the board vote won't be the real battle.
And this time, I won't be the woman left at the altar.
I'll be the one they can't move.
