His expression cracked.

For one brief second, Lena saw the man behind the empire. The man who had held her during thunderstorms. The man who had learned her grandmother’s chicken soup recipe when she had the flu. The man who had once looked at her like she was not a possession, but a miracle.

Then the mask returned.

“Sit down,” he said. “We need to talk.”

“No.”

She grabbed her purse. The cheap strap twisted in her fingers.

“I came here to sign papers. Have Henderson send them to my lawyer.”

She made it three steps before Adrian caught her wrist.

Gently.

That hurt more than force would have.

“Please,” he said.

Lena closed her eyes.

Eight months of hunger, fear, loneliness, and exhaustion rose inside her. Eight months of wanting to call him and knowing she could not. Eight months of hating him for making her run and hating herself for missing him.

“Let me go,” she whispered.

“I can’t.”

His other hand touched her cheek, tender enough to break her.

“I spent eight months looking for you,” he said. “Eight months wondering if you were alive. If you were safe. If you ever thought about me.”

The truth slipped out before she could stop it.

“Every day,” she said. “I thought about you every day, and I hated myself for it.”

Something in his face broke open.

Then Lena felt the world tilt.

A wave of dizziness rolled through her. She gripped his arm.

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