“You know what your problem is?” Ethan asked suddenly, leaning forward as though he could not bear to let her leave without landing one final blow. “You always thought loyalty was enough. The world doesn’t reward women like you.”
Emily paused with one hand on the back of her chair.
“No,” she said quietly. “It doesn’t reward men like you forever.”
Vanessa gave a sharp little laugh. “Please. Is that supposed to sound threatening?”
Emily looked at her for a brief second, and the pity in her eyes was so calm that Vanessa’s smile faltered. Then Emily turned toward the door.
A chair moved behind them.
It was not a loud sound. Just the soft scrape of wood and leather against the carpeted floor.
But in the strange, stretched silence of the room, it might as well have been thunder.
Everyone turned.
At the far end of the conference room, a man in a charcoal suit stood from the seat he had occupied without drawing attention. He had been quiet the entire time, almost indistinguishable from the shadows near the back wall, as though the room itself had conspired to hide him until the last possible moment.
Now that he was standing, hiding was impossible.
He was tall, silver at the temples, broad-shouldered, and composed in the particular way powerful men become when they no longer need to prove that power exists. His face was controlled, but his eyes were fixed on Emily with a depth of feeling he had not let the room see until now.
The older attorney went pale.
“Mr. Reed?” he said before he could stop himself.
Vanessa frowned. “Who?”
Ethan stared, confused first, then annoyed. “I’m sorry, this is a private meeting. Who exactly are you?”
The man ignored him.
He walked forward with measured steps, each one quiet, each one somehow making the room smaller. When he reached Emily, he stopped beside her and laid one hand, gentle and steady, on her shoulder.
Every person at the table seemed to stop breathing.
His voice, when he spoke, was low and controlled. Yet it carried through the room with the kind of authority that could silence markets, boardrooms, and men who had built their identities on never being the least important person present.
“Are you finished, sweetheart?”
Emily closed her eyes for the briefest second.
In that instant, some of the strength she had worn like armor softened into something more fragile and more human. When she opened her eyes again, she looked up at him, and the ache she had hidden all morning flickered there before settling back into calm.
“Yes, Dad,” she said.
No one moved.
No one spoke.
The word landed harder than any scream could have.
Vanessa’s phone slipped from her hand and hit the floor faceup with a sharp crack against the polished wood. Ethan remained frozen in his chair, one hand still hovering near the abandoned black card, his expression emptied by shock so complete it looked almost childlike.
The attorney who had spoken first lowered his eyes at once, as though suddenly aware he was standing in the presence of a man whose name could close deals before breakfast and bankrupt pride before dinner.
Alexander Reed.
Owner of the building. Head of Reed Financial. Quiet architect of ventures that rose, merged, survived, or vanished depending on which way he turned his attention.
And Emily’s father.
Ethan’s mouth parted, but no words came.
For the first time since she had known him, he looked genuinely afraid.
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