
The Secret He Left Behind.
Chapter 7
Adrian didn't sleep that night.
He sat in his hotel room, staring at the city lights through the glass wall, the reflection of his own face caught in the window - sharp, unreadable, but hollow. The question he'd asked at the showcase echoed in his head on an endless loop. She's mine, isn't she?
He didn't need Elena's answer. Her silence had said everything.
He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, hands clasped tight. His tie lay forgotten on the floor, and the whiskey on the table beside him remained untouched. For the first time in years, the great Adrian Blackwood - the man who could close a billion-dollar deal without blinking - didn't know what to do next.
He wanted to be angry. He wanted to demand why she'd never told him, why she'd carried something so big alone. But beneath all that... was something softer. Something that terrified him more than the betrayal itself.
He felt it the moment he looked at Aria. That unexplainable pull. The kind of connection you don't mistake.
And now that he knew the truth, nothing in his world made sense anymore.
The next morning was golden and cruel - the kind of morning that pretends nothing has changed.
Elena woke early, as she always did. The kettle whistled softly on the stove as she rubbed her temples, trying to ease the dull ache behind her eyes. Aria hummed at the table, kicking her legs, drawing another picture while eating toast.
"Mommy, can we stop by the park after school?"
Elena forced a smile, handing her daughter her lunchbox. "We'll see, sweetheart. Depends on how tired you are after class."
Aria nodded, satisfied. "Okay!"
Her cheerful voice filled the small apartment, and for a moment, it grounded Elena - this quiet life they'd built together, fragile as glass but warm in all the right places. She'd worked so hard for this peace.
But now, it trembled.
Her hands shook slightly as she poured herself tea. She didn't need to look at the clock to know what time it was. Adrian would be at the school soon - the thought alone made her pulse spike.
She told herself he wouldn't confront her. That maybe he'd doubt what he saw, or convince himself he'd been mistaken. But deep down, she knew Adrian Blackwood wasn't the kind of man to let go of unanswered questions.
When she reached the school gates, she could already see his car parked across the street - sleek, black, unmistakable. Her stomach twisted.
"Mommy?" Aria tugged at her hand. "Mr. Blackwood's here again!"
"I see that, baby." Elena's smile didn't reach her eyes. "Come on, let's not be late."
Adrian was standing near the entrance, speaking with the principal. His presence commanded quiet attention even in the morning chaos. But when his gaze lifted and met hers, time stilled.
He didn't move. Didn't say a word.
He just watched her - that calm, unreadable expression that she'd once found impossible to break. Now, it terrified her.
Elena bent to kiss Aria's forehead. "Go on ahead, sweetheart. I'll see you after school."
Aria skipped away happily, leaving Elena and Adrian caught in the soft hum of morning traffic.
"Elena," he said quietly.
She froze at the sound of his voice.
He took a slow step forward. "We need to talk."
Her throat felt tight. "Not here."
"Then tell me when."
"I can't." She adjusted the strap of her bag, looking anywhere but at him. "I have classes all morning. And a meeting after."
"Elena-"
"Not now, Adrian," she cut in, her tone sharp but fragile. "Please."
The word please stopped him cold.
He'd expected denial, maybe even anger. But not this - this tremor in her voice, this quiet desperation that sounded like heartbreak.
He let her pass.
She didn't look back as she disappeared through the school doors. But long after she was gone, Adrian stayed rooted to the spot, hands in his pockets, watching the entrance as if she might come back out.
He'd seen that look in her eyes before - the same one she'd worn years ago, the night he left her in that rain-soaked courtyard on campus.
The difference now was that there was a child involved. His child.
And no matter how much she tried to avoid him, he wasn't going to walk away again.
Hours later, Elena sat alone in the art room, the faint scent of paint and chalk lingering in the air. Her students had gone home, the sunlight spilling through the blinds in golden stripes.
She exhaled slowly, her fingers tracing the edge of Aria's drawing still pinned to the board - the one with the three of them standing side by side.
Her throat tightened. "What am I supposed to do now?" she whispered to herself.
The sound of footsteps in the hallway made her heart jump. She turned sharply - but it wasn't Adrian. It was Lydia, smiling softly from the doorway.
"You okay?" Lydia asked, stepping inside.
Elena forced a weak smile. "Just tired."
Lydia glanced at the drawing on the board, then at her friend. "He knows, doesn't he?"
Elena swallowed hard. "I think so."
"And?"
"He hasn't said anything. Not yet."
Lydia nodded slowly, resting a comforting hand on Elena's shoulder. "Then you need to decide what happens before he does."
Elena looked up, eyes glassy. "It's not that simple."
"It never is," Lydia said gently. "But you can't hide forever, Lena. Secrets don't stay buried - not when hearts are involved."
That night, Elena stood by her window again, the lights of the city flickering beyond the glass. Aria was asleep, curled up in bed with her favorite stuffed bunny.
Elena sipped her tea slowly, her reflection faint in the window. Somewhere across town, she knew Adrian was probably awake too - thinking, wondering, hurting.
She could almost hear his voice again.
She's mine, isn't she?
The silence of her apartment answered him again.
Only this time, even she couldn't pretend it wasn't true.
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