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The silence in the hospital corridor was more deafening than any scream. Adrian stood between the two most powerful n in his life, yet he had never looked more singular, more alone. The "heavy smoke" of his pain seed to physically thicken, a suffocating shroud that made the sterile air of the hospital feel impossible to breathe.

​"You owe nothing, Alexander. Don’t apologize," Adrian said, his voice terrifyingly level.

​He turned his gaze back to the empty Room 412. The sight of the bare mattress was an assault, a physical blow to his chest that he absorbed with a frightening, glassy-eyed stillness. He took a slow, deep breath, the kind a person takes before stepping off a ledge.

​He turned back to the two n, his grey eyes void of the spark Alexander loved or the fire Sebastian feared.

​"It’s been an adventure with you two," Adrian said, the irony cutting through the air like a scalpel. "Can’t say it was fun."

​He looked Alexander squarely in the eyes. The CEO looked like he was vibrating with the need to reach out, to pull Adrian into his arms and weather this storm together. But Adrian’s gaze was a barrier of ice.

​"Thank you for the divorce, Alexander," Adrian continued, a ghost of a bitter smile touching his lips. "Truly. It would have been really difficult dealing with all the pretense in my situation. You’ve made the exit much cleaner than I expected."

​Alexander took a frantic step forward, his hand outstretched. "Adrian, please. I didn’t an those words at the press conference, I was—"

​"It’s alright," Adrian interrupted, his voice gaining a sharp, final edge. "Don’t feel pity for . You did nothing wrong. You reacted to the lie I told. But now, I can finally walk away. From you, from Sebastian, and from all the drama surrounding your nas."

​Adrian began to move. He didn’t look at the floor; he looked straight ahead, past the wreckage of his life.

​"Don’t look for , Alexander," he warned, his tone final. He then shifted his gaze to Sebastian, whose face was a mask of pale, stuttering regret. "And you better not, Mr. Vale. You have done enough. You have both done enough."

​Adrian walked. He passed Alexander, ensuring there wasn’t even a graze of fabric against fabric. The rejection was total. He vanished through the double doors, a ghost in a smart-casual suit, leaving behind the suffocating smoke of a heart that had simply decided to stop feeling.

​The silence lasted only as long as it took for the doors to hiss shut behind Adrian.

​Sebastian made a frantic move to follow, his hand reaching for the door handle. "Adrian! Wait, I can explain—"

​A hand like a vice clamped onto Sebastian’s shoulder, spinning him around with such violence that he slamd back against the hospital wall. Alexander stood over him, his face no longer showing grief, but a cold, lethal promise of destruction.

​"You and I have so serious conversation to hold, Mr. Vale," Alexander growled, his voice vibrating in his chest.

​"Let go of , Devereux!" Sebastian hissed, struggling against the grip. "He’s grieving! He needs soone—"

​"He needs to be away from you," Alexander barked, shoving Sebastian harder against the wall. "You took him to Greece. You blackmailed him. You kept him away while his mother was taking her last breaths. You used his love for her as a weapon, and now she’s gone."

​Alexander leaned in, his eyes inches from Sebastian’s. "I don’t care about the ’Adrienne’ secret anymore. I don’t care about the Board. I have lost the only thing that made any of this worth it. Which ans I have absolutely nothing left to lose. Do you understand what that makes , Sebastian?"

​Sebastian stopped struggling, the sheer darkness in Alexander’s expression finally registering through his own panic.

​"It makes the man who is going to systematically dismantle your life," Alexander whispered. "I will buy your debt. I will liquidate your holdings. I will make sure the na ’Vale’ is synonymous with ’bankrupt’ by the end of the week. And if you ever—ever—breathe the sa air as Adrian again, I won’t use the law. Do I make myself clear?"

​Alexander let go, and Sebastian slumped against the wall, breathless and broken.

​Alexander didn’t look back. He turned toward the exit Adrian had taken. His heart was screaming to run, to chase the car, to find the small apartnt where Adrian would surely go to mourn. But he rembered the look in Adrian’s eyes—the utter exhaustion.

​Adrian didn’t just want to be away from the lie; he wanted to be away from the weight of Alexander Devereux.

​Alexander pulled out his phone, his fingers steady now with a grim, singular purpose.

​"Marcus," he said when the line picked up. "Follow him. Discreetly. Don’t let him see you. Protect him from a distance. If he goes to a hotel, pay the bill. If he goes to a restaurant, buy the building. But do not—under any circumstances—let him know we are there. He wants to be alone. Give him that. But don’t let him fall."

​Alexander stood in the rain outside the hospital, watching the taillights of a cab disappear into the New York fog. He had his divorce. He had his company. And he was the richest, loneliest man in the world.

The silence in the small apartnt was absolute, a stark contrast to the buzzing caras of the Gala or the roaring engines of private jets. The air felt stale, slling of dust and the faint, lingering scent of his mother’s favorite lavender detergent from the last ti he’d been ho—a lifeti ago.

​Adrian sat on the hardwood floor, his back against the sofa, knees drawn to his chest. In his trembling hands, he held a frad photo: a candid shot from three years ago. His mother was laughing, her face healthy and bright, her arm looped through his.

​A single tear traced a path down his cheek, dripping onto the glass.

___

​The guilt was a physical weight, a phantom hand crushing his lungs. He didn’t just feel sad; he felt responsible. Every choice he had made in the last year passed before his eyes like a condemning reel of film:

​The Contract: He had signed away his identity to pay for her care.

​The Persona: He had spent months as Adrienne, suffocating his own soul to keep the money flowing.

​The Flight to Greece: He had allowed Sebastian to whisk him away, leaving his mother to face the end with only nurses and a billionaire’s bank account for company.

​"All for nothing," he whispered, his voice cracking in the empty room.

​The irony was a jagged blade. He had beco a ghost—Adrienne—to save her life, only to lose her while he was wearing a dead woman’s face. The pretense, the trauma of the kidnapping, the dizzying highs of Alexander’s touch... it was all ash.

​He looked around the room. There were no gowns here. No $10,000 skincare routines. No whispers of "Mr. Devereux" or "Madam." There was just Adrian Cole, a man who had sold his soul to buy ti, only to have the clock run out while he wasn’t looking.

​The thought of Alexander made his stomach churn—not with hatred, but with a profound, weary exhaustion. Alexander represented the world that had swallowed him whole. Every kiss, every "baby" murmured in the dark, every public display of "Adrienne" now felt like part of the machine that had kept him from his mother’s bedside.

​He was done.

​Done with the lies.

​Done with the Devereux na.

​Done with the concept of love.

​Love had been the hook that Sebastian used to ruin him. Love was the reason Alexander’s divorce announcent felt like a death blow. If love led to this—this hollow, echoing room and a funeral he had to plan alone—he wanted no part of it.

​A soft knock at the door broke the silence.

​Adrian didn’t move. He didn’t want to see Alexander. He didn’t want to see Sebastian. He didn’t even want to see the sympathetic eyes of his neighbors.

​The person on the other side didn’t knock again. Instead, a small envelope was slid under the door. It was heavy, cream-colored cardstock—the kind used only by the highest echelons of New York society.

​Adrian stared at it for a long ti before crawling across the floor to pick it up. He expected a legal threat or a plea from Alexander.

​Instead, it was a simple, handwritten note in elegant, sharp script:

​The service is arranged for Friday at 10:00 AM. St. Jude’s. It is private. No press. No Devereuxs. Just her. I know you said not to look for you, but she deserves a son who doesn’t have to worry about the bill one last ti.

​— M.D.

​It was from Mrs. Devereux. Not Alexander.

​Adrian leaned his head against the door, the paper fluttering in his hand. Even in his isolation, the world he tried to leave behind was reaching out, refusing to let him go.

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