PART 2: The billionaire I secretly loved walked into the wrong room and found me half-dressed,-002
PART 2
For a moment, Ethan said nothing.
The applause from the ballroom rose through the floor beneath us, softened by walls, velvet carpeting, and several stories of polished stone. It sounded far away, almost unreal, as if it belonged to another building entirely.
Down there, people were lifting champagne glasses beneath crystal chandeliers. They were admiring floral arrangements and congratulating themselves for attending an event that would save children’s lives.
Up here, Ethan Carter stood in a narrow dressing room and looked at me as though the world had shifted beneath his feet.
“Adrian?” he asked.
He did not say Dr. Vaughn.
He said Adrian’s name the way someone might repeat a word in a foreign language, testing its meaning and finding it impossible to accept.
I glanced at the open door behind him. Anyone could come down the corridor. A member of the event staff. A reporter. One of Adrian’s hospital colleagues.
“Please lower your voice.”
Ethan stepped into the room and closed the door, but he did not lock it.
That small choice mattered.
Even now, with anger tightening every line of his face, he was careful not to make me feel trapped.
“How long?” he asked.
I stared at my reflection.
My hair was pinned neatly at the back of my head. My makeup had been repaired after I cried in the parking garage. The clean blouse hid most of what Ethan had seen, and the black tailored jacket hanging beside the mirror would hide the rest.
From a distance, I looked composed.
I had become very good at looking composed.
“Ava.”
“I don’t know.”
“You don’t know when it started?”
“I don’t know which answer you want.”
“The truth.”
A laugh escaped me, but there was no humor in it.
“The truth is complicated.”
“It shouldn’t be.”
“It is when everyone loves him.”
Ethan went still.
I picked up my jacket and pushed one arm into the sleeve.
“He’s kind to nurses. He remembers patients’ birthdays. He pays for experimental treatments when families can’t afford them. He stayed at the hospital for thirty-six hours during the winter storm because two other surgeons couldn’t get through the roads.”
My hand shook as I reached for the second sleeve.
“He saved Senator Collins’s grandson. He performed surgery on the daughter of one of your board members. He volunteers at the free clinic twice a month, and the hospital’s new pediatric wing is being named after his late mother.”
Ethan took the jacket from me.
I flinched.
He froze immediately.
Not because he had moved quickly. He hadn’t. But my body had reacted before my mind could remind it that this was Ethan, not Adrian.
Something changed in Ethan’s expression.
The anger did not disappear. It settled deeper.
He held the jacket open without coming closer.
I slid my arms into it.
“Thank you,” I whispered.
“What did he tell you would happen if you spoke?”
My eyes lifted to his.
Ethan had always been observant. It was one of the qualities that made him difficult to work for and impossible not to admire. He noticed errors buried in hundred-page contracts. He remembered what people said months earlier and recognized when their stories shifted.
He knew fear had architecture.
He was trying to understand mine.
“He didn’t have to tell me much,” I said. “Adrian knows how the world works.”
“So do I.”
“That’s exactly why I can’t let you go downstairs and confront him.”
“You think that’s what I’m going to do?”
“I saw your face.”
“You saw me trying not to put my fist through a wall.”
“That isn’t reassuring.”
A shadow of regret crossed his features.
“You’re right.”
He took a slow breath and looked toward the door.
“I’m not going to confront him.”
“You mean that?”
“Yes.”
The certainty in his voice frightened me more than shouting would have.
“What are you going to do?”
“First, I’m going to make sure you don’t have to stand beside him tonight.”
“I do.”
“No.”
“He’ll know something is wrong.”
“Something is wrong.”
“And when we leave, I’ll have to answer for it.”
The words slipped out before I could soften them.
Ethan’s gaze sharpened.
“When you leave?”
I looked away.
The silence between us became unbearable.
I walked to the small table where I had left my phone, evening bag, and the printed schedule for the gala. My phone screen was dark, but I could imagine the messages waiting behind it.
Where are you?
You said seven.
Don’t embarrass me tonight.
Adrian rarely needed to write more than a sentence. I had learned to hear the rest.
Ethan moved to the opposite side of the table, keeping several feet between us.
“Are you living with him?”
“Not officially.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means I still have my apartment, but I’m hardly there.”
“Does he have a key?”
“Yes.”
“Does he know where your family lives?”
“My mother is in Vermont. My sister lives in Chicago.”
“Does he contact them?”
“Sometimes.”
“Does he control your money?”
The question made me look up.
Ethan noticed.
“Ava.”
“My salary goes into my account.”
“That wasn’t what I asked.”
I folded the event schedule once, then again.
“He monitors the statements.”
“How?”
“He says couples shouldn’t keep secrets.”
“But he does.”
I said nothing.
Ethan leaned his palms against the edge of the table. His cuff links were missing, his bow tie was still untied, and one side of his jacket collar had folded inward. I had never seen him walk into a major event looking less than immaculate.
In another life, I might have laughed and fixed his collar.
Instead, I watched him struggle with the fact that there was no efficient solution to what he had discovered.
No acquisition to negotiate. No contract to terminate. No hostile board to outmaneuver.
Only me.
And a secret I was not ready to surrender.
“We need to get you somewhere safe,” he said.
“I am safe.”
“You’re covered in bruises.”
“They look worse than they are.”
His jaw tightened.
“I know,” I said quickly. “That sounded ridiculous.”
“It sounded rehearsed.”
I swallowed.
“Adrian is expecting me.”
“Let him expect.”
“You don’t understand.”
“Then help me understand.”
“I can’t simply disappear tonight. Not from this event. There are cameras everywhere. He’ll be asked where I am. The hospital board will notice. Reporters will notice.”
“I don’t care what reporters notice.”
“I do.”
“Why?”
“Because if he thinks I’ve told someone, he’ll change the story before I ever get the chance to tell mine.”
Ethan studied me.
That, more than anything else, made him pause.
I reached for my phone.
Seven missed calls.
All from Adrian.
The newest message had arrived less than a minute earlier.
Come downstairs now. We need to talk before the presentation.
My chest tightened.
Ethan did not try to read the screen, but he saw the change in my face.
“Is that him?”
“Yes.”
“Don’t answer.”
“He’ll come looking for me.”
“Then he’ll find me.”
“No.”
The word came out sharper than I intended.
Ethan straightened.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “But you promised not to confront him.”
“I promised not to go downstairs and make a scene.”
“That is not the same thing.”
“No, it isn’t.”
I closed my eyes.
This was exactly what I had feared.
Not Ethan’s anger. His concern.
Anger could be dismissed. Concern demanded decisions.
And decisions required courage I wasn’t sure I had.
A soft knock sounded at the door.
I nearly dropped my phone.
“Ms. Bennett?” called a woman from the corridor. “Mr. Carter? Five minutes until the opening remarks.”
It was Claire Mason, the foundation’s event director.
Ethan looked at me.
I forced my voice to remain steady.
“We’ll be right there.”
“Thank you,” Claire replied. “Also, Dr. Vaughn is asking for Ms. Bennett.”
I felt the blood leave my face.
Ethan’s expression did not change.
“Tell Dr. Vaughn she’s reviewing the final program with me,” he called.
A pause.
“Of course.”
Claire’s footsteps faded down the corridor.
I stared at him.
“That bought us three minutes,” he said.
“You shouldn’t have said that.”
“It was true.”
“It makes it sound like I’m here with you.”
“You are here with me.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Yes.”
His tone softened.
“I do.”
For eleven months, Ethan and I had worked side by side in hotel conference rooms, private aircraft cabins, hospital offices, construction sites, and boardrooms. We had survived delayed flights, failed mergers, a data breach, two shareholder revolts, and a week in Tokyo during which neither of us slept more than four hours.
Never once had he given anyone reason to question the nature of our relationship.
Neither had I.
But secrets had a way of turning innocent moments into dangerous evidence.
The late-night phone calls about work.
The forgotten scarf in his office.
The dinners left on his desk.
The way his voice changed when he said my name.
Adrian had noticed more than I realized.
“What happened tonight?” Ethan asked.
I tightened my grip on the phone.
“Nothing.”
“The stain on your blouse.”
“Wine.”
“Ava.”
I looked toward the mirror again.
“I told Adrian I didn’t want to attend.”
“Why?”
“Because I knew the award was happening.”
“You arranged half the event.”
“I didn’t know at first. The hospital board selected him privately. By the time I found out, invitations had gone out.”
“And you didn’t want to be here when he received it.”
“No.”
“Why?”
Because I knew what he would say.
Because I knew he would dedicate the award to me and call me the calm center of his life.
Because he would look into the cameras with that gentle expression and speak about compassion while the marks of his fingers darkened beneath my sleeves.
I sank into the chair beside the mirror.
“He wanted me onstage with him,” I said. “I told him I didn’t feel well.”
“What did he do?”
“He drove me here.”
“That isn’t what I asked.”
I pressed my lips together.
Ethan lowered himself into the chair across from me.
He did not look like a billionaire then.
He looked tired. Human. Frightened, though he was trying not to show it.
“He grabbed my arm in the parking garage,” I said. “When I pulled away, I hit the side of the car.”
“The bruise on your ribs?”
“No. That was last week.”
“What happened last week?”
“I disagreed with him.”
“About what?”
The question seemed almost absurd.
As if the subject of the argument could explain the result.
“I wanted to visit my sister.”
Ethan looked down at his hands.
When he spoke again, his voice was controlled.
“Do you need medical attention?”
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
“Did he ever strike your head? Have you had dizziness, nausea, blurred vision?”
I stared at him.
“I sit on the hospital foundation’s safety committee,” he explained. “I’ve heard doctors discuss warning signs.”
Doctors.
For a moment, I saw Adrian in our kitchen three months earlier, calmly filling a glass with water after shoving me against the pantry door.
You’re fine, Ava. I know what serious injuries look like.
He had sounded almost offended by my fear.
“No,” I told Ethan. “Nothing like that.”
He nodded, but I could tell he was filing the answer away rather than accepting it as the end of the subject.
Another message appeared on my phone.
Two minutes.
I stood.
“I have to go.”
Ethan stood too.
“You don’t have to do anything.”
“That sounds comforting when you’re the one saying it.”
“And impossible when you’re the one hearing it.”
“Yes.”
I slipped my phone into my evening bag.
“What would happen,” he asked carefully, “if you didn’t stand beside him tonight?”
I pictured Adrian’s smile tightening for the cameras.
I pictured the silent ride home.
The locked apartment door.
The questions delivered in that measured voice.
Where were you?
What did you tell Carter?
Why were you alone with him?
“I don’t know,” I lied.
Ethan looked at me for a long time.
Then he reached into his jacket and removed his phone.
“I’m changing the program.”
My heart began to pound.
“No.”
“Not dramatically. The hospital presentation will proceed. Vaughn will receive the award. But there won’t be a partner introduction, and you won’t be called to the stage.”
“He’ll know.”
“He can blame me.”
“He already does.”
Ethan’s thumb stilled above the screen.
“What does that mean?”
I had said too much.
“Nothing.”
“Ava.”
“He thinks I care about you.”
The room became very quiet.
It was the first time either of us had spoken the truth aloud, even indirectly.
Ethan looked at me, and I knew he was choosing every word before he said it.
“Do you?”
I should have lied.
I had lied about the bruises. The exhaustion. The missed lunches. The way I avoided going home after late meetings. The reason I sometimes sat in my parked car for twenty minutes before turning the engine off.
One more lie should have been easy.
“Yes,” I said.
His eyes closed for half a second.
“As my employer,” I added quickly.
A sad smile touched his mouth.
“Of course.”
“And my friend.”
His expression changed at that.
Not hope.
Something gentler.
Something more painful.
“I’m your friend?” he asked.
“You were.”
“Were?”
“Before tonight.”
“What am I now?”
“The only person who knows.”
Ethan put his phone away.
“Then I’m still your friend.”
“You don’t know what that will cost.”
“No,” he said. “But I know what pretending I didn’t see would cost me.”
The opening music began below us.
The gala was starting.
I moved toward the door, but Ethan stepped sideways—not blocking me, only forcing me to stop and look at him.
“I won’t make decisions for you,” he said. “I won’t call the police unless you ask me to. I won’t confront Adrian unless there is an immediate danger. I won’t use my position to turn this into a spectacle.”
I searched his face for the familiar certainty of powerful men who believed every problem belonged to them.
It wasn’t there.
“What will you do?” I asked.
“I’ll stand beside you while you decide.”
My eyes burned.
I looked down before he could see.
“That may be harder.”
“I know.”
“No, you don’t.”
“You’re right.” He opened the door. “But I can learn.”
We walked down the corridor together.
At the elevator, Ethan finally noticed he was still missing his cuff links.
I opened my evening bag and took out a small velvet box.
He stared at it.
“You had them?”
“Claire gave them to me twenty minutes ago.”
“Why were they in the dressing room?”
“I was supposed to bring them to your suite.”
“And then?”
“Adrian called.”
The elevator doors opened.
We stepped inside.
As the doors slid shut, Ethan held out his hand. I placed the box in his palm.
He opened it and frowned.
“These aren’t mine.”
“What?”
Inside lay a pair of silver cuff links engraved with a small crest.
I had seen Ethan’s cuff links many times. They were simple black onyx, a gift from his father. He wore them at every foundation event.
These belonged to someone else.
“I thought they were yours,” I said. “The box has your initials.”
It did.
E.C. embossed in gold across the velvet lid.
Ethan turned one cuff link over.
A tiny line of letters was engraved on the back.
A.V.
My throat tightened.
“Adrian Vaughn,” I whispered.
The elevator descended in silence.
“Where did Claire get these?” Ethan asked.
“She said someone from the hospital left them at registration and told her they were yours.”
“Who?”
“She didn’t say.”
The doors opened onto the ballroom level before we could continue.
Warm light spilled across the corridor. Music swelled from behind the carved double doors. Members of the foundation staff hurried past carrying tablets and radio earpieces, unaware that anything had changed.
Claire stood beside the entrance, checking names on her screen.
When she saw Ethan, relief crossed her face.
“Thirty seconds,” she said. “The teleprompter is ready, and Senator Collins has been seated.”
Her eyes moved to me.
“Dr. Vaughn is near the stage. He seemed concerned.”
“I’m fine,” I said automatically.
Claire gave me the same polite smile she gave donors and board members, but her gaze lingered on my face.
“You don’t look fine.”
“I spilled wine on my blouse.”
“I meant you look pale.”
Before I could answer, Ethan closed the velvet box and handed it to her.
“Where did these come from?”
Claire looked confused.
“Your cuff links?”
“They aren’t mine.”
She opened the box.
“I’m sorry. A hospital volunteer brought them to me. He said they were found in one of the private offices.”
“Which office?”
“I’m not sure.”
“Find out.”
She nodded, recognizing the tone that meant Ethan was asking as chairman of the foundation, not as an anxious guest.