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My Accidental Billionaire Husband (Katia and Julian) novel Chapter 72

What Delia Pound

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What Della Found

~Delia~

I had been in the West Wing twice before, and both times Julian had been home.

This was the third time. He was in Tokyo. Three days, which his assistant had confirmed through the household calendar that Delia KensingtonWindsor was apparently permitted to view but not modify, a distinction that felt like its own kind of message. The estate was quiet in the way it only got when Julian was genuinely gone, not the tight, managed quiet of his presence behind a closed door but the looser, emptier quiet of a house that had stopped holding its breath.

I had been holding mine for eight months.

I stood outside his study door for a full minute before I opened it.

Not because I was afraid of what I would find. I had already decided what I was looking for, and I had already decided I was going to look for it. The minute outside the door was something else, the last moment before knowing something you couldn’t unknow, the pause before you stepped off a ledge you had been standing at the edge of for longer than you wanted to admit.

I opened the door.

The study smelled like him. Leather and something expensive and the particular quality of focused silence that accumulated in rooms where serious thinking happened. I had stood in this doorway before, with flowers and a photograph, and been turned away with the polite finality of a man who had decided I did not belong in this space.

He wasn’t here now.

I sat down at his desk.

The laptop was locked, which I had expected. Julian was thorough. He locked everything, his study, his car, his expression, his life. But thorough people had systems, and systems had exceptions, and exceptions were where you found the things people thought they had hidden.

I had been listening for eight months. I had been watching. I had heard things through old walls and around halfclosed doors and in the pauses between sentences when Julian thought I had already left the room. I had heard Zane say the passkey in a conversation about the server backup six weeks ago, and I had heard Julian say grandmother’s birthday in the same sentence, and I had filed that away the way I had been filing everything away since I realized that my husband was a man who kept secrets the way other people kept furniture permanently without apology, as a fundamental feature of how he lived.

I typed the date.

The laptop opened.

I sat very still for a moment, looking at the desktop. Then I opened the file directory and looked for what I had come to find.

It took eleven minutes. Julian was organized, which meant the files were labelled, which meant once I understood his system and his system was logical, almost elegant, I could navigate it. Personal files, nested three levels deep, behind a folder labelled Archive inside a folder labelled Legal inside a folder labelled WEG Private.

The subfolder was simply labelled K.

I opened it.

The folder was deep. Years of it, search records, investigator reports, legal correspondence, and scanned documents. I read slowly and methodically, the way I had learned to read things I needed to understand completely rather than quickly.

Julian had been looking for someone. A woman. Six years of looking, from the earliest documents dated the year before our engagement through every year since, consistent and unrelenting and entirely private.

Her name, in the documents, was Kat.

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What Delia Pound

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Just Kat. No surname. The investigators had tried to fitid a surname and failed every time, which told me the surname had been either withheld or genuinely unknown. Given how thorough Julian’s team was, I suspected the latter.

Six years. He had been searching for a woman named Kat for six years. Before we were engaged. Through the engagement. Through the wedding. Through eight months of a marriage that had never once felt like a marriage.

I kept reading.

The investigator reports were detailed and repetitive in the way that unsuccessful searches always were the same dead ends circled from different angles, the same lack of a surname, and the same trail that went cold at the same point every time. Whoever Kat was, she was very good at not being found. Or she simply didn’t know anyone was looking.

I found the marriage certificate forty minutes in.

It was a scanned official Las Vegas document, the kind that got filed in county records and mostly forgotten. Two names. Two first names only, no surnames on either line. Jules and Kat. Witnessed by two people I didn’t recognize. Dated six years ago, the same year the search records began.

I stared at it for a long time.

Jules. I didn’t know anyone named Jules. The name meant nothing to me, not a family connection, not a business associate, not anyone in the Windsor circle I had been carefully mapping since the day I arrived at this estate. Julian had never mentioned a Jules. Nobody had.

And Kat. The same name that ran through six years of search records. The same woman Julian had been paying investigators to find since before he ever agreed to marry me.

The certificate was real; I could see that from the official seal, the registration number, and the formatting. A genuine Las Vegas marriage. But it wasn’t Julian’s name. It was Jules. And I didn’t know who Jules was.

I sat with the confusion of it. The document was in Julian’s private encrypted files. That meant it mattered to him. That meant Jules and Kat mattered to him. But I couldn’t see the shape of it yet, I couldn’t see how it connected to me or to our marriage or to the specific cold distance my husband maintained with someone who had decided, long before I arrived, that I was never going

to be let in.

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