Chapter 106: Regrets
The moment her thumb hit send, Eliana stared at the screen, waiting—hoping—for the familiar buzz of a reply. But the silence stretched, cold and merciless. Her chest tightened. The quiet felt like rejection, like an answer in itself, and she couldn’t bear it. With trembling fingers, she opened a new message, her thoughts spilling faster than she could control them.
"Rafael, please... I need you to understand. The day I left, Mirabel came after me when you went to work—I didn’t think straight at first. I was terrified, lost in everything I’d learnt about my own mother. Those three days I disappeared... it wasn’t because I didn’t care. It was because I didn’t know how to face you, how to face us. I ran because I was scared, but I should have stayed. I see that now. Forgive me?"
Her vision blurred again, tears splashing onto the screen, smudging the words as if even her phone struggled to hold the weight of them. For a heartbeat she hovered over the glowing ’send’
button, her heart pounding in her throat—then pressed it.The message disappeared into the void, leaving her in the suffocating quiet of the penthouse. All she could do now was wait... and hope that forgiveness might still find its way back to her.
In the study, Rafael’s phone chimed repeatedly, each notification a thorn in his side. James eyed it warily. "Sir, those texts... maybe you should at least glance at them. What if she’s trying to tell you the truth?"
Rafael’s eyes flashed with anger. "Truth? From the woman who vanished for days, only to reappear with excuses? No." He snatched the phone, scrolled briefly without reading, then blocked her number with a decisive tap. "There. Done. And James—if you mention her name again, you’re out. I mean it. Never. Again."
James bowed his head slightly, his stoic face masking disappointment. "Understood, sir."
Eliana’s phone dinged with a failure notice—message not delivered. She tried calling once more, but it went straight to a disconnected tone. "He... he blocked me?" Her voice rose in disbelief, then shattered into sobs that echoed off the high ceilings. "Oh God, what have I done? I shouldn’t have run away from his house. Those three days... I was just so overwhelmed, thinking about the baby, about us. If I’d stayed and talked to him then, maybe none of this would have happened." She rocked back and forth, clutching her stomach as if to shield the life inside from her turmoil.
Henry knelt in front of her, his warm eyes pleading. "Eliana, stop. Please, you’re going to hurt yourself—and the baby. Crying like this isn’t good for either of you. Take a breath. In and out."
She gasped through her tears, trying to comply, but the waves kept coming. "It hurts so much, Henry. Like my heart’s been ripped out. I thought what I felt for him was just gratitude but now I know, I can feel it, it was love, it was something real."
"I know, I know," he murmured, pulling her into a gentle hug. His ambition as an aspiring doctor kicked in, his voice turning clinical yet kind. "But stress like this can raise your blood pressure, affect the little one. Let’s think practically. What if I take you to his company tomorrow? You can try to see him there, explain in person. It’s public, safer."
Eliana pulled back, her expressive eyes widening. "The company? Wouldn’t it be better to go back to his house? I know the staff; maybe they’d let me in. I could wait for him there."
Henry shook his head firmly, his reserved nature giving way to protectiveness. "No way. From what you told me, the way he threatened you... he’s hurting bad, Eliana. People do stupid things when they’re in pain. At the house, it’s isolated—he could have security toss you out, or worse. But at Vexley Enterprises? It’s buzzing with employees, cameras everywhere. Safer ground to approach him. Trust me on this."
She frowned, wiping her eyes with her sleeve, her modest blouse now tear-stained and rumpled. "Rafael would never hurt me. Not really. That was just anger talking. He’s not like that."
Henry chuckled softly, trying to lighten the mood with a touch of humor. "Oh yeah? The billionaire recluse who has exceptional skills at trapping his enemies? Sounds like a guy who’d bake cookies and chat over tea. Come on, Eliana—you’re too trusting, remember? That’s your charm, but right now, it’s a risk. Company it is. I’ll drive you myself, stand by if needed."
She argued a bit more, her quiet strength surfacing in a passionate plea. "But Henry, his house is our home—or was. If I show up there, it might remind him of what we had. The company feels so... cold, impersonal."
"And that’s exactly why it’s safer," Henry countered, his ambition shining through in his logical tone. "Impersonal means no rash decisions. Plus, if he’s there, you catch him off guard in his element. Begging won’t work; logic will. And hey, if he sees you waltzing into his empire, maybe it’ll jog that stubborn brain of his."
Eliana sighed, her emotional resilience cracking under the weight but holding just enough. After a long pause, she nodded reluctantly. "Fine. The company. But only because you’re being so stubborn about it. And... thank you, Henry. For everything."
He smiled, relief washing over his features. "Anytime. Now, let’s get you some rest. Tomorrow’s a new battle."
As the evening sun bled across the city, streaks of molten gold cutting through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse. The light stretched long across the polished floors, warm yet distant, as if mocking the heaviness in Eliana’s chest. She lay on the guest bed, staring at the ceiling, though her thoughts were far from still. Regret clung to her like a second skin—thick, suffocating—yet beneath it pulsed something else. Hope. Fragile, stubborn, and unwilling to die.
Every breath carried the weight of what had been left unsaid, of truths twisted into misunderstandings that had built walls between them. The silence of the room seemed to hum with unfinished sentences, words she should have spoken but hadn’t. And yet... there was that unshakable pull, that sense that confrontation was inevitable, necessary.
It wasn’t fear that made her heart race. It was the promise of finally facing him. The storm was coming, and instead of hiding, Eliana found herself leaning toward it—aching for the spark in the darkness that might either burn her down or light her way.