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Signed For An Heir Novel Cover

Signed For An Heir

She married the man who destroyed her family to find the evidence that would bury him. He married her to save a billion-dollar inheritance. Neither planned to fall , and neither planned to find out the truth would hurt worse than the lie. Elara Vaughn is twenty-six, brilliant, and furious. When her father is arrested for a forty-million-dollar fraud she doesn't believe he committed, she does the only thing her forensic accountant's mind can construct: she walks into the office of the man the world says is responsible, and proposes a deal. One year of marriage. She gets access to the executive archives that hold the real evidence. He gets a legal wife before his thirty-fifth birthday , the one condition standing between him and a hidden two-billion-dollar subsidiary. Rowan Vale agrees. He is not a man who loses. She is not a woman who trusts. Their contract is airtight. Their chemistry is not. But the ledgers Elara finds don't say what she expected. And the man she married to destroy is beginning to look dangerously like the only honest person in the room. Some truths cost everything. Some people are worth it.
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Chapter 6

***

The first morning, they didn't speak.

Elara came into the kitchen at seven-fifteen and found Rowan already there, standing at the counter with a coffee and his phone, reading something that required the deep, locked focus he brought to everything. He was dressed for the office already, dark suit, no tie yet, the top button of his shirt still undone in a way that felt less like casualness and more like the last remaining privacy he permitted himself before the day required its performance.

She moved to the coffee machine. He moved, without looking up, slightly to the left to give her access to it. The adjustment was so automatic that she wasn't sure he registered doing it. She registered for it.

She poured her coffee. Added two sugars. No milk. Stirred

She felt him notice. Not staring, just the slight shift in attention that meant he'd filed something away. She didn't look at him.

"That's not coffee."

She looked up. He was still looking at his phone.

"Excuse me?"

"Two sugars, no milk." He finally glanced at her. His expression was somewhere between disapproval and something that wasn't quite amusement. "That's hot dessert. Not coffee."

"I've been drinking it this way since I was sixteen."

"That explains a lot."

She stared at him. "Did you just insult my coffee?"

"I stated a fact."

"You stated an opinion."

"Elara." He set down his phone. Actually looked at her, fully, which he hadn't done since the press conference. His eyes were darker in the morning light. "There is no reality in which that is coffee."

She picked up her mug. Took a long, deliberate sip. Held his gaze the entire time.

Something shifted at the corner of his mouth. So small she would have missed it if she hadn't been watching. It was gone in an instant, buried back under the composure, but she'd seen it.

Rowan Vale had almost smiled.

She took the stool at the far end of the counter and opened the document she'd been reviewing on her tablet, the Vale Industries quarterly report she'd pulled from the board pack, specifically the vendor cost summary section. She read with a pencil, underlining in the margins.

He turned a page on his phone. She underlined a figure.

At seven thirty-two, without looking up from his screen, he said: "You underline rather than highlight."

She kept reading. "Highlighting is passive. Underlining means you went back."

A pause. "Went back to what?"

"The number I'm not sure about yet."

Another pause, longer. She felt the quality of his attention shift again, less filed-away, more present. She turned a page.

She went back to her quarterly report.

At seven forty-eight, he folded his newspaper, an actual newspaper, physical, which she'd thought was an affectation until she noticed the annotations in the margins, the same system as hers, and set it aside.

"The board pack for Thursday's session goes out tonight," he said. "You'll receive it as a board-adjacent observer. If you have questions about any line items, direct them to Sandra rather than raising them in the room."

"Why?"

"Because the room will be watching you, and every question you ask will be interpreted as either evidence that you're out of your depth or evidence that you're fishing for something. Neither serves the arrangement."

She considered this. It was not wrong. "And if I find something that warrants a question?"

"Bring it to me first."

"And if it's about you?"

The pause this time was different. Shorter. "Especially then," he said, which was almost word for word what he'd said to her in his office, and hearing it again in this kitchen, in the unhurried morning light, felt different than it had across a glass desk.

He picked up his jacket from the back of the chair and left for the office.

Elara sat with her terrible coffee and her underlined quarterly report and thought about the way he'd said it, especially then both times now, like it was a principle he'd decided on, not a performance.

She turned back to the vendor summary. In the margin, beside a figure she'd circled the night before, she wrote one word: Meridian.

***

The board meeting was on the fourteenth floor, in a room that communicated power through restraint: a long table of dark wood, fourteen chairs, no windows, and the kind of lighting that made everyone look simultaneously important and slightly tired. Elara took the seat at the far end, against the wall, where observers sat. She had a notepad. She did not open her laptop, which she'd decided would read as either aggressive or anxious, and she was neither.

Rowan sat at the head of the table. He did not look at her when she came in. She hadn't expected him to.

There were nine people at the table. She identified them from the bios Sandra had sent the evening before: the CFO, three non-executive directors, two division heads, the Head of Legal, and Gideon Hart, VP of Strategy, who sat two seats to Rowan's right and who was the only person in the room who looked at Elara when she entered.

Not a long look. Just a registration. She filed it.

The meeting ran for ninety minutes. She said nothing. She took notes in a system of shorthand that was entirely her own, and by the time the CFO had finished presenting the quarterly divisional performance summary, she had identified three things that didn't sit right.

The first: a variance in the facility's maintenance line that had been attributed to an "infrastructure review" without a corresponding work order reference. Small. Possibly administrative.

The second: a consulting fee paid to an unnamed advisory firm in the same quarter, categorized under General and Administrative. Larger. Less easy to explain away.

The third: the consulting fee's vendor code. Not in the board pack. A consulting fee. Unnamed vendor. G&A column. No description, no reference number. Significant amount.

She'd seen that vendor code before. Yesterday morning. In the quarterly report she'd been reading over breakfast.

Something was wrong here. She didn't know what yet. But in her experience, the numbers that nobody questioned in a room full of people paid to question numbers were always the most interesting ones.

She kept her face completely still and wrote the code in the margin of her notepad and drew a small box around it.

At the end of the meeting, as chairs were being pushed back and conversations beginning, Gideon Hart appeared beside her.

"Mrs. Vale." His voice was pleasant. His eyes were not unpleasant, exactly, just alert in a way that made the pleasantness feel like a choice rather than a default. "How are you finding the board environment? A lot to absorb for a first meeting."

"It's interesting," she said, which was true and told him nothing.

"Do feel free to ask questions if anything is unclear. We're all happy to help you get oriented." A pause just long enough to carry weight. "It can be a complex world to navigate if you're coming at it from outside the industry."

She met his eyes. "I was a forensic accountant before I was anything else, Mr. Hart. The numbers are usually the clearest part of any room."

Something moved in his expression. Quick. Controlled. "Of course... how impressive," he said. "We'll have to have a proper chat sometime."

"I'd like that," she said.

He smiled, and excused himself.

Elara watched him cross the room to where Rowan was standing with the CFO. He said something. Rowan's gaze moved briefly to her, a half-second, unreadable, and then back to the CFO.

She looked down at the vendor code in her notepad.

Then she added a second box around it.

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