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(Joseph’s POV)

The conference room was quiet—too quiet.

I sat across the long oak table, hands clasped together, elbows resting on the polished surface. The city skyline beyond the glass walls was sharp and clear, but his thoughts were anything but.

Across from him sat Attorney Brent Dawson and two senior partners from the firm—faces composed, expressions professional. This was not the first crisis they had handled, nor would it be the last. But to , this one felt heavier than any hostile takeover or shareholder revolt.

"Let’s begin with the facts," Brent said calmly, sliding a thin folder toward him. "Miss Dianne Jenkins claims she is six weeks pregnant. She presented an ultrasound and a dical report."

My jaw tightened.

"Yes," I replied. "She showed it during our eting."

Brent nodded. "Whether the pregnancy is later confird or not, the claim itself already exists. From a legal standpoint, we must assu it is true until proven otherwise."

I leaned back slightly, exhaling through his nose.

"In the twenty-first century," one of the senior lawyers added, adjusting her glasses, "having a child out of wedlock is no longer a scandal in itself. Society has moved on from that."

"That’s not the problem," I said quietly.

"No," Brent agreed. "The problem is your public image."

The words landed cleanly, precisely—like a scalpel.

"As the acting CEO of Hamilton Hotels Inc., your personal life is already under scrutiny," Brent continued. "An engagent announced publicly, followed by a broken engagent and a pregnancy, will inevitably draw attention."

"But it’s manageable," the other lawyer said. "With the right approach."

I straightened. "Tell ."

Brent opened the folder. Inside were neatly organized docunts—contingency plans, press statents, legal outlines.

"First," Brent said, "you do not deny responsibility."

I frowned. "Even if—"

"Even if there is doubt," Brent interrupted gently. "Denial will damage you more than the truth ever could. Acknowledging responsibility—while reframing the narrative—positions you as mature and accountable."

The word accountable echoed uncomfortably in my chest.

"Second," the female lawyer continued, "you and Miss Jenkins may release a joint statent—if and only if necessary—stating that while the engagent is under reconsideration, you will fully support the child regardless of the outco."

My fingers curled slightly.

"And the marriage?" I asked.

"That," Brent said, "is not legally required."

I looked up sharply.

"There is no law," Brent continued evenly, "that obligates you to marry the mother of your child. Co-parenting agreents, child support, custody—these can all be handled privately."

Silence stretched.

"You can end the engagent," Brent concluded, "without appearing heartless. The key is timing and control."

Control.

I let out a slow breath.

"Publicly," Brent added, "we fra this as a mutual, mature decision. Privately, we prepare legal safeguards—DNA testing after birth, clear custody terms, and financial arrangents that protect both parties."

I nodded, though my thoughts were drifting.

"What about my... personal life?" he asked quietly. "If I choose to be with soone else?"

Brent studied him carefully.

"As long as it is handled discreetly and respectfully," he said, "there is no legal obstacle. Only optics."

Optics.

I closed his eyes briefly.

The eting continued for another hour—details, scenarios, clauses. Each solution was logical. Clean. Efficient.

Yet with every word, I felt more exhausted.

When it was finally over, the lawyers gathered their files and stood.

"We’ll draft preliminary docunts and send them by tonight," Brent said. "For now, I suggest you rest."

I managed a nod.

Once the room was empty, I remained seated.

The silence returned—but this ti, it was suffocating.

I leaned back, one arm draped over his eyes.

Pregnant.

The word still felt unreal.

My mind betrayed , drifting backward.

My relationship with Dianne had been... complicated. At so point, affection had turned into habit. Expectations. Pressure—from families, from business partners, from the future everyone else had already planned for him.

They hadn’t been innocent.

I knew that.

There had been nights when boundaries blurred—not out of love, but out of familiarity. Out of convenience.

But I was careful, I thought.

Always.

I had never crossed that final line—not completely. Always cautious. Always controlled. There wasn’t any protection but I never finished inside.

So how—

My brow furrowed.

It didn’t make sense.

Then I rember a docuntary about human reproduction and why so thods such as withdrawal is not an effective way of contraception.

My chest tightened.

What would Yvette think?

The question struck him harder than anything else that day.

If she found out—

Her expression flashed in my mind. Calm. Gentle. That quiet strength she carried now, so different from before.

Would she look at differently?

Would she be disappointed?

Worse—would she pull away?

I sat up slowly, hands dropping to his lap.

Then, unbidden, another image surfaced.

A dream.

A small boy standing in sunlight.

Dark eyes—his eyes.

Soft features—undeniably Yvette’s.

The child had laughed, calling Father, tiny hands clutching his sleeve.

My throat tightened.

I didn’t know where that dream ca from. I had told myself it was stress. Guilt. Imagination.

But the feeling it left behind was real.

The warmth. The ache.

I pressed a hand to his chest.

If I had a son...

If it were with Yvette...

The thought blood before he could stop it.

I imagined it—teaching a child to walk, hearing laughter fill the halls of a ho that felt warm, not hollow. A child loved not out of obligation, but out of choice.

My jaw clenched.

That was the future he wanted.

Not one born from sches or fear.

Not one forged by lies.

I leaned forward, elbows on his knees, staring at the floor.

Whatever Dianne was planning—whatever truth or lie stood behind that ultrasound—I would face it.

Responsibly.

But I would not sacrifice the future he had finally seen clearly.

Not anymore.

Slowly, I straightened.

The exhaustion was still there—but beneath it was resolve.

This ti, I would choose right.

Even if the road there was ssy.

Even if it cost him everything except the one thing that mattered most.

Yvette.

(Yvette’s POV)

I hadn’t planned to go to Joseph’s office.

Not today.

I stood by the front gate of my manor for a long mont, Joseph’s phone still in my hand, weighing the decision. I could have asked Brent to return it. I could have sent it through Gregory.

But I didn’t.

Maybe it was responsibility.

Maybe it was curiosity.

Or maybe—if I was being honest—it was because so part of didn’t want to leave things half-finished anymore.

I got into the car and gave the address quietly.

As the city passed by, my thoughts stayed calm. Surprisingly calm. The night we spent at the hotel had untangled sothing inside . I wasn’t anxious. I wasn’t afraid of what I might see or hear.

I was steady.

My phone vibrated in my other hand.

I frowned.

That was odd. I hadn’t received anything all morning.

Then I rembered.

I wasn’t holding my phone.

I was holding his.

The screen lit up.

Brent Dawson

I didn’t an to look.

Truly, I didn’t.

But the preview banner slid down just enough for the first few lines to appear before I could react.

We need to proceed assuming the pregnancy claim is valid for now.

Key points: public acknowledgnt of responsibility without confirmation of marriage, preparation for DNA testing post-birth, and drafting a co-parenting frawork to minimize reputational backlash.

My breath caught.

Pregnancy?

Claim?

My fingers went cold.

I locked the screen imdiately, heart pounding—not from jealousy, not from fear, but from the sheer weight of what I had just glimpsed.

So this is what he’s dealing with.

By the ti I arrived at the Hamilton head office, my thoughts had settled into sothing quiet and resolute.

No assumptions.

No accusations.

Just truth.

Gregory looked surprised when he saw but ushered in without question.

Joseph’s office door was half-open.

I knocked once.

"Co in," his voice answered.

Joseph looked up—and froze.

"Yvette?"

I stepped inside and held up the phone. "I think you’re missing this."

His eyes widened. "My phone?"

"Yes. And I believe you have mine."

He stood up imdiately, moving toward his desk, then stopped short when he noticed the device in my hand—how naturally I held it, how familiar it already felt.

"Oh," he said softly. "That explains a lot."

He reached into his pocket and handed my phone.

Our fingers brushed briefly in the exchange.

Neither of us pulled away too quickly.

"By the way," he added, rubbing the back of his neck, "I saw the wallpaper."

I blinked. "The teddy bear? You saw that?"

His lips curved into a small, embarrassed smile. "You still use that?"

"I’ve never changed it," I admitted.

"You said it was ugly when I gave it to you—but you hugged it every night for a year." he smiled with the mory.

I smiled faintly. "It was precious. Still is."

Sothing softened in his expression—but it vanished just as quickly.

I hesitated.

Then I took a breath.

"Joseph," I said quietly, "I need to apologize."

He frowned. "For what?"

"I saw a ssage preview," I admitted. "From Brent. It wasn’t intentional, but... I read the first few lines."

His shoulders tensed.

"I shouldn’t have," I continued, "but now that I have... I want to know what’s going on. If you’re willing to tell ."

I t his gaze steadily. "I don’t want secrets between us."

Joseph was silent for a long mont.

Then he exhaled—slow, heavy—and gestured toward the sofa.

"Sit," he said. "I’ll tell you everything."

We sat opposite each other, the space between us deliberate.

"Dianne claims she’s pregnant," he said bluntly.

I didn’t flinch.

"Six weeks," he continued. "She showed an ultrasound during our eting."

My hands folded neatly in my lap. "And?"

"And I asked my lawyers what my options were," he said. "Not because I want to stay engaged—but because I won’t run from responsibility."

He looked at then, really looked at .

"I was always careful," he said quietly. "We were... intimate before. Not often. But I never crossed that final line."

His jaw clenched. "So, this doesn’t make sense to ."

I studied his face.

There was no pride there. No deflection.

Only exhaustion.

"I plan to verify everything legally," he continued. "DNA testing later. Public responsibility now. Ending the engagent carefully, not impulsively."

Then, softer:

"I didn’t want you to hear it from anyone else."

Sothing warm and aching settled in my chest.

"Thank you for telling ," I said.

"You’re not angry?" he asked.

"No," I replied honestly. "I’m... relieved."

He blinked.

"Relieved that you didn’t hide it," I clarified. "And that you’re facing it with integrity."

I stood, slipping my phone into my bag.

"Whatever the truth is," I added gently, "you’ll handle it. And I’ll walk my own path—just like we promised."

His shoulders loosened slightly.

As I turned to leave, he spoke again.

"Yvette."

"Yes?"

"I don’t know how this will end," he said. "But I won’t lie to you. Not anymore."

I nodded.

"That’s all I ask."

When I stepped back into the hallway, my heart felt steady.

Not because the road ahead was easy.

But because, for the first ti—

Nothing important was being hidden in the dark.

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