Divorcing the Heiress by Mistake
t Con
ia's
with a glance-a quiet and a lingering look into the eyes
e called him friend, lover and family. And m
painful. He lay in that stark white hospital room, machines beepi
ted and feared. Now b
, I do walked past Williams' room. It wasn't curiosity that mad
out the window like he was wait
had lost everything li
t to deliver flowers-leftovers from my father's bouquet tha
as if I were anothe
the window op
e. But I opened it anywa
could be called that at all. I'd greet him quiet
st listened to the rustle of the IV l
e day,
always
suse, but clear. I looked
" I asked, of
dn't
t ask f
ined unconscious too, caught in his silent war between life and d
es-about the book I was reading, or the odd nurse who always wore mismatched socks. Occasi
I wasn
ared the connection migh
I brought him
I set the pieces between
r a long time before reac
hen I guess
d in silence and sometimes he b
ff from months of disuse, but I notic
Like everything in him r
made on the boar
led everything-only to lose it
he asked one day, his to
, my fingers hove
t bothe
underst
and perfection, still bore traces of the man he had been. Cheekbo
had been replaced w
"because you remind me tha
bli
ed my
he
his silence hurt more than my father's lifelessness. Because he
him. Needed to be the one person who di
began t
o me as I helped fold clean sheets in the lounge. "He ha
I didn't want to invade.
ted CEO of Williams Hol
ent-details of which were whispered in rumors. A car cra
: his world had tur
hours, I slipped back into hi
, staring at
ter and too strong," I whisp
at it, t
took
ed in s
name?" he a
phi
ast n
tod
a corner of his lip twitched in what could'
ing foolish, falling fo
point came
asped in his sleep, sheets kicked away. I rushed
lli
, wild and lost. T
phi
was something in it. A r
ng, sitting beside his bed, m
I had cros
were no lo
an he used to be, but the man
f me that was aching for conne
fear
hat my father-the man lying just two doors down in another hospit
ilent war, and I had been raised to co
ere I
fee and smiles like they w
his voice steadier than usual
ight. He was stronger now. He could sit without
to d
h... or keep hidi
, "because I know what it f
that moment, I knew
st enough to make the sile
bition. Ours was born from silence, from wounds neither of u
ow where it
new one
walk away
t
not just the woman who brought cof
idn't know m
e