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CEO’s Regret After I Divorced (Serena and Ryan) novel Chapter 256

Chapter 256: Chapter 256 New Friend

Serena’s POV

As the late afternoon sunlight filtered through the curtains, I watched my daughter sleep in her hospital-grade crib beside my bed.

The bedroom door opened quietly, and Ryan stepped in, his eyes immediately softening when they landed on our daughter.

"Maya’s been discharged and she’s doing well," he said, settling into the chair beside my bed. "She wanted me to tell you not to worry about her. Once she gets caught up at the studio, she’ll be by to see you."

The memory of Maya shielding me during our fall made my chest tight with emotion. Knowing she was safe lifted a weight I hadn’t realized I’d been carrying. But there was still one shadow hanging over us—the man who’d orchestrated it all.

"What about Kane Blackwood?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. "Where is he now?"

"Kane’s been dealt with," he said, his voice low as he took the chair beside my bed. "Permanently."

I felt a cold satisfaction wash over me. "Good. Did he suffer?" The venom in my voice surprised even me, but I couldn’t help it. That man had tried to kill not just me, but my innocent child.

"People don’t try to harm what’s mine without consequences," Ryan replied, his eyes turning glacial for a moment before warming again as he looked at me. "You don’t need to know the details. Just know he won’t ever be a threat again."

"People shouldn’t mess with me and live to tell about it," I said fiercely, unable to keep the emotion from my voice. "After everything he did—he deserved whatever he got!"

Ryan reached for my hand, his thumb brushing over my knuckles in a soothing gesture. "Hey, it’s over now. Let’s not waste another breath on him." He nodded toward our sleeping daughter. "We have more important things to focus on."

I felt myself calm under his touch, my attention drawn back to Vivian’s peaceful face.

"Have you decided on a name yet?" Ryan asked, his gaze still on our daughter.

I smiled, the first genuine smile in what felt like forever. "Vivian," I said softly. "Vivian Blackwood."

"Vivian," Ryan repeated, testing the name. His lips curved into a rare smile that transformed his entire face. "It’s perfect."

He surprised me then, reaching out to stroke a gentle finger down our daughter’s cheek. "She’ll grow up happy and loved, just like you wanted. She’ll never know fear or pain if I have anything to say about it."

My family stayed in New York much longer than planned, unwilling to leave until they were certain I was recovering well. Two weeks after giving birth, I was finally cleared to go home—not that the hospital room hadn’t been luxurious, but I longed for some semblance of normalcy.

Ryan had been meticulous about security arrangements. Every staff member at the Blackwood estate had been thoroughly vetted, background checks run multiple times, references contacted. The incident with Kane had made him paranoid—though perhaps justifiably so.

"I’ve personally interviewed every person who will have access to you or Vivian," he told me as we settled into our wing of the mansion. "No one gets near either of you without my approval."

My first day home was peaceful until the doorbell rang in the afternoon.

"Mrs. Blackwood, there’s a visitor for you. She says she’s an old friend from university," the housekeeper announced.

When the woman walked in, I had to blink twice. The years had changed her—gone was the studious girl with glasses and ponytail, replaced by a polished, sophisticated woman with designer clothes and perfect makeup.

"Serena!" she exclaimed, arms outstretched. "It’s me, Olivia! Olivia Wilson!"

I nodded, forcing a smile. "Olivia, of course. It’s just been so long..."

"Yes, she was," I confirmed, suddenly feeling exhausted.

"Funny how she never helped look for you when you went missing, but now she can’t wait to be your bestie again," Eleanor remarked acidly.

I frowned at my sister’s unusually hostile tone. "El, she probably had her own life going on. It’s been years."

Eleanor pursed her lips but dropped the subject as Ryan returned to help me upstairs for my afternoon rest.

After Zoe and Ethan returned to London—both reluctantly, citing urgent business matters—Eleanor stayed behind.

Over the next few days, Olivia became a constant presence in my life, if not physically then through endless phone calls. Each conversation inevitably steered toward nostalgic reminiscences of university days—oddly specific memories that sometimes felt just slightly off, though I couldn’t pinpoint exactly why.

"Serena, would it be alright if I came by this evening?" Olivia asked during our third call that week.

"Of course," I replied, too polite to refuse. "Stay for dinner. I’ll have the staff prepare something special."

After hanging up, I instructed the housekeeper to set an extra place for dinner. Eleanor, who’d been working on her laptop nearby, closed it with a decisive snap.

"Are you and this Olivia really that close?" she asked bluntly. "You’ve been on the phone with her constantly."

I shrugged, adjusting Vivian in my arms. "We were friends in college. I guess time apart hasn’t changed that."

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