(Joseph’s POV)
I wasn’t looking for her.
That’s the lie I tell myself as I turn the corner near the executive wing, steps slowing instinctively, eyes lifting before my mind can stop them. I tell myself I’m just heading to a eting. That I’m just passing through.
And then I see her.
Yvette is walking down the hallway with Brent at her side, sunlight from the tall windows spilling over them like sothing intentional. She’s talking—really talking—hands moving as she explains sothing, eyes bright, lips curved into a smile so genuine it hits sowhere deep and unguarded.
She laughs.
Not the polite smile she wears in etings. Not the composed curve of her lips when she’s being careful.
This one is unfiltered.
Alive.
My steps slow until I stop entirely, body caught between motion and mory. For a mont, the present blurs, and I’m pulled backward in ti—back to quieter days, simpler days, when her laughter echoed through hallways that felt more like ho than corporate corridors.
There was a ti when I was the reason she smiled like that.
The realization lands heavy in my chest.
Back then, I didn’t have to try. I didn’t have to asure my words or question my presence. I was simply... there. Her big brother. Her shield. The person she ran to with scraped knees and burnt fingers from sneaking into the kitchen when she wasn’t supposed to.
She used to look at like the world made sense as long as I was nearby.
I swallow hard, fingers curling at my sides.
Now, she looks at Brent like that.
Not dependence. Not need.
Comfort.
I feel it then—sharp and unwelco.
Jealousy.
It isn’t the ugly, possessive kind. It’s quieter than that. An ache. A reminder of sothing I lost not because it was taken, but because I let it go.
I watch them pass, their conversation light, unburdened. Yvette tilts her head as she listens, eyes focused, engaged. She looks... happy.
And that should be enough.
I told myself I would give her space. That I would step back and let her grow without my shadow looming over her every step. I promised myself that loving her ant restraint.
So why does it feel like I’m standing still while the world moves on without ?
I don’t follow them.
That decision costs more than I expected.
Instead, I turn away, forcing my feet to carry in the opposite direction. Each step feels deliberate, heavy, as if I’m walking against sothing pulling back.
Distance is discipline, I remind myself.
I made this choice. Not out of fear—but respect. Yvette deserves a life that isn’t shaped by my expectations or my guilt. She deserves room to discover who she is when she isn’t being protected, guided, or unconsciously confined by .
I know this.
And yet—
Distance feels like punishnt when you still love soone.
I press my palm briefly against my chest, exhaling slowly as I step into my office and close the door behind . The quiet inside is imdiate, almost suffocating.
I lean back against the desk, staring at nothing.
Love isn’t possession.
That truth used to feel simple. Black and white. But now it’s complicated by longing and regret and the unbearable awareness that I might be choosing the right thing and still losing sothing irreplaceable.
I think of all the tis I told myself my feelings were inappropriate. That they were confusion, habit, gratitude twisted into affection. It was easier to label them anything but love—because love demanded action. And action ant upheaval.
So I stayed still.
And in that stillness, Yvette learned how to move forward without .
The irony isn’t lost on .
I wanted her to grow.
I just didn’t expect growth to look like this—radiant and independent and just out of my reach.
By the ti evening settles in, the image of Yvette laughing in the hallway hasn’t faded.
If anything, it’s sharper.
I change out of my suit slowly, fingers lingering on my tie before I loosen it, the familiar motion grounding . Tonight matters. Not because I expect anything from it—but because I refuse to keep avoiding what I feel.
Dinner.
A simple word, but it carries weight.
I check my phone. No new ssages. The last thing she said still sits there, warm and steady in my mind.
Dinner.
I straighten my jacket and leave my office. The hallways of the floor is quiet now when everyone had gone ho. As for Yvette, I knew she was still in her office. And so, I navigated the very familiar hallways to where she is.
I’m nervous.
The realization makes huff out a quiet, humorless laugh. I’ve negotiated billion-dollar deals without a tremor in my voice, faced hostile boards and dia storms with composure.
But picking her up for dinner?
My palms are damp inside my pockets.
I turned a corner, heart beating a little faster with every step. When I reach her office door, I pause—just long enough to breathe.
Then I knock.
No answer.
I open the door gently and step inside.
Yvette stands near her desk, facing the mirror, retouching her makeup with careful focus. She’s so absorbed that she doesn’t notice at first.
The sight steals my breath.
Not because she’s dressed up—though she is beautiful—but because of the familiarity of the mont. How many tis have I watched her get ready, fussing over small details, tongue caught lightly between her teeth in concentration?
"Yvette," I say softly.
She startles, hand jerking slightly before she turns, eyes widening.
"Joseph!" she exclaims, then laughs, one hand flying to her chest. "You scared !"
"Sorry," I say, smiling despite myself. "I didn’t an to."
She lowers her hand, cheeks flushed—not just from surprise. "You could’ve announced yourself."
"I did," I reply lightly. "You were just too focused."
She narrows her eyes at . "You’re teasing."
"Only a little," I admit.
My gaze ets hers in the mirror, and the words slip out before I can stop them. "You’re beautiful."
She freezes.
I continue, voice gentle, honest. "You always have been. Even when you were a snotty little kid who thought flour fights were a good idea."
Her face goes crimson.
"Joseph!" she protests, mortified. "Stop that."
I laugh softly, warmth spreading through my chest.
And in that mont—in the way she blushes, in the way her lips curve despite her embarrassnt—I realize sothing that steadies more than any promise ever could.
I can still make her smile.
I still have hope.
Not to reclaim what was—but to be part of what could be.
And for now... that is enough.
We drive to the restaurant in my car. The city lights slowly drifting by the road. the city lights flickering on one by one as the night deepens.
We started small conversations just to break the silence. Normal topics like how’s your day, how’s work, are you doing okay.
We arrived at the restaurant just in ti for the reservations.
The restaurant is quiet in the way only places that value discretion are.
Soft lighting. Tables spaced far enough apart to allow privacy without isolation. No gawking glances, no whispered recognition. Just the low murmur of conversation and the clink of cutlery against porcelain.
I chose it deliberately.
Yvette notices, of course. She always does.
"This place is nice," she says as she takes her seat across from , smoothing her skirt unconsciously. "I didn’t know it existed."
"That’s the point," I reply lightly. "It’s good food without the noise."
She smiles at that, the tension from earlier easing as the waiter pours water and leaves us with nus. For a few monts, we simply sit there, adjusting to the strange familiarity of being alone together like this.
Not siblings.
Not strangers.
Sothing undefined in between.
We talk about small things first—the day, the etings that ran too long, the assistant who kept bringing her coffee she forgot to drink. She laughs when she tells about it, shaking her head at herself.
"You’re working too hard," I tell her.
She lifts a brow. "So are you."
Fair.
When the food arrives, the conversation naturally slows, giving way to a comfortable rhythm of eating and speaking in turns. I find myself watching her more than my plate—how her eyes light up when she tastes sothing she likes, how she hums softly without realizing it.
It’s nostalgic.
Dangerously so.
I don’t intend to bring up Dianne so soon.
But honesty has beco sothing I can no longer postpone.
"There’s sothing I should tell you," I say quietly, setting my fork down.
Yvette looks up at , attentive but calm. "Is everything alright?"
"It’s... resolved," I say. "The situation with Dianne."
Her expression softens—not with satisfaction, but with relief.
"So it’s finally over," she murmurs.
"Yes," I confirm. "Legally and personally."
She exhales slowly, as if she’s been holding her breath without realizing it. "That’s good," she says. "At least now, you can move forward."
The words are gentle. Supportive.
They hurt more than accusation ever could.
"Move forward," I repeat softly.
She nods. "You’ve been carrying that weight for a long ti, Joseph. You deserve to live without it hanging over you."
I study her face, searching for sothing—expectation, perhaps. Fear. Hope.
I find none of it.
Only sincerity.
"And you?" I ask before I can stop myself. "Will you be part of my life... going forward?"
The question hangs between us, fragile and unguarded.
Yvette doesn’t answer imdiately.
She sets her napkin aside, folding her hands together on the table. When she finally speaks, her voice is steady.
"I can’t promise you anything," she says honestly. "Not yet."
My chest tightens, but I don’t interrupt.
"I have plans," she continues. "Things I want to do for myself. I need to focus on becoming soone I’m proud of—without leaning on anyone else."
I nod slowly. "I understand."
"But," she adds, lifting her gaze to et mine, "I’m not closing my doors either. Not to you. Not to... us."
The word sends a quiet shock through .
"I just need to choose myself first," she finishes.
I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding.
"That’s fair," I say. "More than fair."
And I an it.
The drive to her estate is unhurried.
The city lights blur past as we sit in comfortable silence, the earlier tension replaced by sothing softer, sothing that doesn’t demand definition. Occasionally, she points out a familiar landmark or comnts on a street she used to pass every day.
I listen.
Really listen.
When we arrive at the gates, the car slows to a stop. The engine idles, the night stretching around us in quiet anticipation.
"Thank you for dinner," she says, turning toward . "I needed that."
"So did I," I reply.
For a mont, neither of us moves.
The space between us feels charged—not with urgency, but with possibility. I can see it in the way her fingers fidget lightly with her bag strap, in the way her breath catches just slightly when our eyes et.
I lean closer.
She does too.
The mont hovers on the edge of sothing more.
I can feel her warmth, close enough now that I can see the faint freckles across her nose, the familiar curve of her lips. My heart pounds, every instinct urging forward.
But then—
She hesitates.
Not pulling away.
Just... pausing.
I stop too.
We stay like that for a heartbeat longer, close enough to share breath but not crossing the invisible line we both recognize.
Respect.
Trust.
The promise we made without words.
She smiles softly, stepping back first. "Good night, Joseph."
"Good night, Yvette."
She opens the door and steps out, pausing briefly before closing it. "Drive safe."
"I will."
As she walks toward the house, I remain in the car, watching until she disappears inside.
We didn’t move closer.
But we didn’t walk away either.
And for the first ti in a long while, that feels like progress.
Reviews
All reviews (0)