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Revelation
Ethan POV
Ethan watched Stephanie’s face as she processed his words. Her eyes widened, her lips parted slightly, and he could almost see the gears turning in her mind. He had known this moment would come, but he hadn’t expected the tightness in his chest as he said it out loud. A secret son. The words felt heavy, like stones dropping into still water, rippling through the quiet room.
He had spent years burying the fragments of William’s past, the whispers of a life left behind in London. But now, with William gone and the weight of Fiore Enterprises pressing down, the truth couldn’t stay hidden. Not anymore.
Stephanie’s voice trembled as she asked, “Are you saying you have a half-brother out there?”
Ethan clenched his jaw. The question echoed his own doubts. Was this stranger a brother? A rival? A ghost from William’s mistakes? He leaned against the edge of the desk, the cool wood grounding him. “Maybe. Or maybe we both have a secret we never knew existed,” he said, his voice low. He hated the bitterness in his tone, but it was unavoidable. William’s secrets were a poison, infecting everything.
Stephanie stepped closer, her arms crossed tightly over her chest. “What kind of secret?”
Ethan looked away, staring at the framed photo of William on the wall. The old man’s stern gaze seemed to mock him. “Before he left London,” Ethan began, “there was a woman. And a son. He never talked about them. Not to me, not to anyone. But there was a fight… something that made him leave.”
He didn’t mention the nights he’d overheard his mother crying, the way she’d shut down whenever he asked about his father. William’s absence had been a shadow over their lives, a void filled with silence and resentment.
Stephanie’s breath hitched. “Did he ever try to contact them?”
“No.” The answer came too quickly, sharp as a knife. Ethan ran a hand through his hair, frustration simmering. “He built Fiore here like none of it mattered. Like they didn’t exist.”
The room fell silent. Ethan could hear the faint hum of the city outside, the distant rush of traffic. Stephanie sank into a chair, her fingers gripping the armrests. “Do you know who she was? The woman?”
Ethan hesitated. A name hovered at the edge of his memory, something William had muttered once in anger. “I’m not sure,” he admitted. “But I’ll find out.”
Stephanie’s eyes met his, and for a moment, he saw the same uncertainty he felt. They were both adrift, tethered to a legacy they didn’t fully understand. “What if this brother has a claim to the company?” she asked quietly.
Ethan’s spine stiffened. The idea of a stranger threatening Fiore—his company—ignited a cold fury. “We’ll handle it,” he said, his voice steady. “William wanted us to protect Fiore. That’s what matters now.”
But Stephanie wasn’t done. “And what about us, Ethan? What did William really want for us?”
The question hung in the air, sharp and unexpected. Ethan turned to face her, his guard slipping for just a second. She looked vulnerable, her usual confidence softened by doubt. He’d spent weeks dismissing their marriage as a business deal, a means to secure shares and stabilize the company. But now, staring at her, he couldn’t ignore the flicker of something deeper.
“Maybe,” he said slowly, choosing his words carefully, “he wanted us to fix what he broke. To make the Fiore name mean something… real.”
Stephanie’s gaze didn’t waver. “Or maybe he wanted us to find the family he lost.”
Ethan looked away, his throat tight. Family. The word felt foreign. His childhood had been lonely, marked by his mother’s quiet sadness and William’s cold ambition. The idea of a brother—someone who shared his blood but not his history—left him unsettled.
Later, as they pored over old documents in William’s study, Stephanie pulled a faded envelope from her bag. “He gave me this,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper. “Before he died.”
Ethan took the envelope, his fingers brushing hers. The paper was thin, yellowed with age. Inside, he found photographs—a young William standing beside a woman with dark curls and a bright smile. A child, no older than three, played at their feet.
At the bottom of the stack was a passport. Ethan froze. The name printed there—Arthur Hartley—sent a jolt through him. William’s alias. And tucked behind it, a letter addressed to Stephanie.
“If you’re reading this, I’ve failed to tell you the truth myself. Find Arthur. He deserves to know who he is.”
Ethan’s hands shook. Arthur Hartley. The half-brother he’d never met. The missing piece of William’s double life.
Stephanie leaned over his shoulder, her warmth a stark contrast to the chill spreading through him. “We have to find him,” she said softly.
Ethan nodded, but dread pooled in his stomach. What would this mean for Fiore? For them? He glanced at Stephanie, her determination mirroring his own. For the first time, he didn’t feel alone in this.
The wedding preparations continued, a whirlwind of suits and flowers and flashing cameras. Reporters shouted questions about their “fairytale romance,” and Ethan played his part, smiling tightly as Stephanie laughed beside him. But behind closed doors, they were detectives, piecing together William’s past.
Late one night, Ethan found Stephanie asleep at the desk, her head resting on a stack of old letters. He hesitated, then draped his jacket over her shoulders. She stirred, blinking up at him.
“You should rest,” he said, his voice softer than he intended.
She rubbed her eyes. “I can’t. Not until we figure this out.”
Ethan sat across from her, the dim light casting shadows on her face. “Why do you care so much?” he asked. “This isn’t your mess.”
Stephanie’s gaze hardened. “William was my grandfather too. And you’re…” She trailed off, shaking her head. “We’re in this together, Ethan. Like it or not.”
He didn’t reply, but her words lingered in his mind. Together. It was a concept he’d avoided, built walls against. Yet here she was, stubbornly breaking them down.
The morning of the wedding arrived, sunlight streaming through the windows of the chapel. Ethan adjusted his tie, his reflection in the mirror a stranger in a tailored suit. A knock at the door made him turn.
Stephanie stood there, radiant in a simple white dress, her hair loose around her shoulders. For a moment, Ethan forgot to breathe.
“Ready?” she asked, offering a small smile.
He nodded, offering his arm. As they walked down the aisle, cameras clicking like a storm around them, Ethan’s mind raced. This marriage was supposed to be a transaction. But when Stephanie squeezed his hand, her touch firm and steady, he wondered if it could be something else.
After the vows, they stood on the chapel steps, waves of applause washing over them. Stephanie leaned close, her lips brushing his ear. “We’ll find him, Ethan. Arthur… and the truth.”
He believed her.
That night, in the quiet of their shared suite, Ethan opened the letter again. Arthur Hartley. A name, a face in a photograph, a life intertwined with his own. He didn’t know if this man would be a friend or a foe. But with Stephanie beside him, digging through files and making calls, he felt a flicker of hope.
Maybe William’s secrets didn’t have to define them. Maybe they could build something new—something real.
As Stephanie slept, her head resting against his shoulder, Ethan stared out at the city lights. For the first time in years, the future didn’t feel like a burden. It felt like a chance.