Eleanor had seen it all before.
She understood exactly what was at stake.
Love, once tangled up with money or ambition, lost its purity. It was no better than Isadora staying with Victor just for the Fitzgerald Group’s power and connections.
And Eleanor couldn’t bear the thought of her daughter being belittled like that.
“Isadora, I’d rather be thrown out of the Vaughan family with nothing to my name than see you stoop for the Vaughan Group. Just give those shares back.”
“Mom.”
Isadora’s voice was barely above a whisper.
It had been so long since Eleanor had heard her daughter call her “Mom.” The word caught her off guard, and her eyes stung with tears she tried to hold back.
Isadora’s voice wavered, almost lost in the quiet, and if you listened closely, you could hear the tremor in it.
“I suppose I’m not a good person, and I never really loved Victor all that much. That’s why I could ever agree to treat him like part of a bargain. Someone like me isn’t worth his affection.”
Eleanor let out a long, weary sigh.
*
It was Kemp who told Isadora that Victor’s flight was arriving today.
She drove straight to the airport.
The private terminal was right next to the busy main one, separated only by a row of trees and a high fence.
Isadora arrived early, standing quietly in the shade of the covered walkway near the tarmac.
She hadn’t told Victor she was coming.
She wanted to surprise him.
There was only one week left in their three-month arrangement, and she didn’t want to let any regrets linger. All she wanted now was a little time to simply enjoy being together.
The weather in Capitolion was glorious today—crystal-clear skies that stretched on forever.
A gleaming A780 private jet rolled onto the runway and taxied to a stop.
The cabin door opened, and a tall, broad-shouldered man descended the stairs.
Several sharply dressed assistants followed, each wheeling a suitcase.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Never Again Yours (Isadora and Magnus)
It takes too long to get to the point. Too much unnecessary in between in all of these books. Too many extra characters, the authors lose the plot after a while....