“Cancel everything for the rest of the day,” he said. “No exceptions. Find out who handled all correspondence from Mrs. Hartwell in the past year. Quietly. I want names, dates, and copies.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And call Dr. Merrin.”
Elise nodded and closed the door.
“Who is Dr. Merrin?” I asked.
“A family attorney. Not the company’s. Mine.”
“I already have legal help.”
“Good,” he said. “Keep it.”
That answer disarmed me.
He sat across from me, leaving the table between us. “I won’t ask you to trust me.”
“Good.”
“I won’t ask you to come back.”
“Better.”
His mouth tightened slightly, but he nodded. “I will ask what Rose needs.”
I looked down at my daughter. She had fallen asleep again, one hand curled beneath her chin, innocent of wealth, divorce, and men who spoke of babies as legal complications.
“She needs stability,” I said. “Health insurance. A safe home. Time. A father, maybe, but only if he can become one without making her life into a headline.”
Adrian absorbed every word.
“And you?” he asked.
The question nearly broke me.
Nobody had asked me that in a very long time.
I looked toward the windows, where afternoon light had softened into gold against the glass. Below us, the city moved on, unaware that my private world had tilted.
“I need to stop being afraid every time the mail comes,” I said. “I need to stop choosing which bill can wait. I need to sleep without wondering whether pride is the only thing keeping me upright.”
His eyes closed.
“I’m sorry.”
I wanted to reject it. Apologies from powerful men often arrived polished and empty. But this one came quietly, without excuse.
So I let it remain in the room.
I did not forgive it.
I did not throw it away.
Adrian stood and walked to a cabinet near his desk. He removed a blanket still wrapped in tissue paper, cream-colored and soft. I recognized it with a jolt.
It was from Milan.
A baby blanket I had once admired in a shop window during our honeymoon, laughing at the absurd price. I had said no child needed anything so expensive. Adrian had bought it anyway, joking that maybe one day we would find out.
I thought he had forgotten.
He held it out, uncertain.
“I kept this,” he said.
I stared at the blanket.
A memory opened between us. Rain on stone streets. His hand warm around mine. A younger version of me believing love could grow simply because we wanted it to.
I took the blanket, because Rose was innocent of our history.
“Thank you,” I said.
His eyes flicked to mine.
It was a small thing.
It was not enough.
But sometimes not enough was still the first step away from nothing.
We spent the next hour discussing practical matters. Names of doctors. Copies of records. Temporary support arranged through attorneys, not whispered promises. A revised legal process. Boundaries. Visitation only after counsel agreed. No press. No sudden appearances at my apartment. No decisions made by Richard Hartwell.
Adrian wrote everything down himself.
That surprised me too.