AMELIA didn’t return to the office immediately after leaving the café. She instead asked the chauffeur to take the longer route, the one that wound through the quieter part of the city, where traffic thinned and her thoughts could stretch without interruption. They were headed to the boutique. She sat back, her face composed, her posture relaxed, anyone watching her would casually think it had been just another pleasant afternoon for her.
But inside, every word Shantel had spoken replayed with surgical clarity.
By the time the car pulled into the parking lot of her boutique building, Amelia had already sorted what mattered from what didn’t. She alighted and briskly walked straight to her office, nonchalantly responding to her staff's greetings over her shoulder.
Ryan was waiting.
He always was these days.
He stood when she walked in, tablet tucked under his arm, his expression neutral but attentive. Ryan had worked with Amelia long enough to recognize the difference between her calm moods and her dangerous ones. This… this was neither.
“Good afternoon, ma’am,” he said.
“Good afternoon, Ryan,” Amelia replied, setting her bag down as she walked past him toward her desk. “Did anything urgent come in while I was out?”
“Nothing that couldn’t wait,” he answered. Then, after a slight pause, “But I did flag something.”
She stopped at her desk, unbuttoned her blazer, and looked at him.
“Go on.”
Ryan activated his tablet.
“A name crossed one of our monitoring filters this afternoon. Not a direct hit, but close enough to trigger a soft alert.”
Amelia lowered herself into her chair.
“Which name?”
“Shantel Moore.”
Ryan watched her carefully.
Amelia didn’t blink.
She simply crossed her legs and reached for the glass of water on her desk.
“What about her?”
“She has been making inquiries,” Ryan continued. “Nothing illegal. Nothing aggressive. Just… curious movements. Background checks. Social circles. She has just been mapping patterns.”
Amelia took a slow sip of water, then set the glass down with deliberate care.
“And?”
“And today,” Ryan said, “she was at the resort café.”
A lesser woman would have reacted, asked questions, demanded details. Amelia didn’t.
“Yes,” she said calmly. “She introduced herself.”
Ryan’s brows lifted before he could stop himself.
“You knew?”
Amelia smiled faintly.
“I know most things before you do.”
Ryan hesitated.
“Do you want me to escalate the surveillance?”
“No.”
The answer came too quickly for it to be casual.
Ryan studied her.
“Ma’am… with respect, this woman has a history connected to Charles.”
Amelia leaned back in her chair.
“I’m aware.”
Silence settled between them.
Ryan slowly lowered himself into the chair opposite her. This was getting interesting than he had anticipated.
“How long?”
Amelia glanced toward the glass wall of her office, where the city stretched endlessly beyond.
“Long enough to know she didn’t come here out of admiration.”
Ryan exhaled.
“Then why allow the meeting?”
Amelia turned back to him, her gaze sharp now, all softness gone.
“Because people are most honest when they think they are winning.”
Ryan nodded slowly.
“Do you want me to dig deeper into her past? Financials, connections—”
“I already did,” Amelia interrupted, her tone even.
Ryan froze. Now his boss was beginning to mesmerize him.
She continued, unbothered.
“What I need from you is not discovery. It is confirmation.”
“Confirmation of what?”
“Timelines,” Amelia said. “Patterns and consistency.”
Ryan tapped his tablet nervously.
“And Charles?”
Amelia’s lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a smile.
“Charles will continue doing exactly what he thinks he has been doing successfully… he is still my fiancé,” a senile smile played on her lips as she mentioned the word ‘fiancé’.
Ryan understood then. Fully.
“You are letting this play out,” he said quietly.
“I’m allowing it to reveal itself,” Amelia corrected. “There is a difference.”
He leaned forward.
“Ma’am… when this breaks, it won’t be gentle.”
“I’m not aiming for gentle.”
Another pause followed.
Ryan cleared his throat.
“What about Hazel?”
For the first time, Amelia’s expression shifted. Not weakness, but something closer to resolve.
“She is perceptive,” Amelia said. “Too perceptive for her own peace. That is why she is angry. That is why she would be attending a weekly boarding school.”
Ryan gasped lowly.


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