There was irritation in his face, but beneath it, something else.
Caution.
Good.
A man expecting tears does not know what to do with calm.
“You’re being dramatic,” he said.
You smiled faintly.
“No. I’m being quiet. You usually like that.”
His mouth tightened.
“Chloe.”
You walked past him toward the guest room.
“Good night, Holden.”
He stood.
“We need to discuss arrangements.”
You stopped at the hallway.
“Not tonight.”
“This is my life too.”
You turned.
“No, Holden. Tonight you made very clear which life is yours.”
For a second, his polished mask slipped.
Anger flashed.
Then he smiled.
That old controlled smile that had once made you doubt your own instincts.
“You should be careful,” he said softly. “People are already concerned about you.”
There it was.
The opening move.
You nodded.
“Then let them be concerned.”
You walked into the guest room and locked the door.
Your hands shook only after the lock clicked.
That night, you did not sleep.
You opened your old encrypted drive, the one Holden thought you had abandoned along with bylines, deadlines, and the version of yourself he found inconvenient.
You searched the Plaza Charity Gala.
Board members.
Corporate sponsors.
Silent auction donors.
Real estate names.
Art patrons.
Charitable trusts.
Then you saw it.
Montero Urban Renewal Initiative.
Holden’s newest philanthropic project.
You had heard him mention it twice at breakfast, in that dismissive voice he used when he wanted you to know something was important without inviting you to ask questions.
A housing redevelopment fund.
Publicly, it promised affordable housing preservation.
Privately, your old instincts screamed.