I’m Pregnant,” the Billionaire CEO Declared After a Drunken Night With a Single Dad—He Froze – PART 15

PART 15:

But in that kitchen at that counter, the two of them had made a decision that was stronger than any of it. They were going to walk into that room together and they were going to tell the truth. The morning of the press conference, Ethan woke up at 5:14 and couldn’t go back to sleep. He lay in the dark at Marcus’s place and stared at the ceiling and did the thing he always did when something enormous was coming.

He went through it. Not the speeches, not the logistics, not what Victoria was going to say or how the cameras were going to react. He went through the people. Ava, Victoria, the child that didn’t have a name yet. The version of his life that existed before a charity gala and a terrace and a woman with an untouched champagne glass.

The version that was coming after. He’d been a man who survived. For 3 years that had been enough survive, the grief survive, the bills survive, the particular loneliness of raising a child alone and loving every second of it and missing another adult in the room with a sharpness that never quite went away.

Surviving was not nothing. He’d been good at it. But somewhere between a kitchen at midnight and a hospital waiting room and a parking garage and a 9-year-old girl saying, “I’m still deciding somewhere in all of that surviving had quietly become something else.” And he was only now in the dark at 5:14 in the morning, fully admitting what that something else was.

He picked up his phone, texted Victoria, “You awake?” The response came in 40 seconds. She’d been awake for a while. Since 3. You five, you nervous. A pause. Longer than usual. I don’t get nervous. I get precise. He smiled at the ceiling. That’s the most Victoria Sterling answer possible.

I’ll take that as a compliment. It was one. He paused, then typed, “You’re going to be extraordinary today.” Another pause. He could feel her deciding how to receive that the particular internal negotiation of a woman who’d spent her life deflecting softness. Don’t make me cry before 7 a.m. Sorry. No, you’re not. No, he typed back.

I’m really not. He was at the meridian by 9:30. The press conference wasn’t until 11:00, but Sandra had asked him to come early. There were logistics positioning a conversation about where he’d stand and what he’d do if anyone put a microphone in his face. He wore the same suit he’d worn to the gala. It seemed right, like completing a circle.

Sandra met him in the lobby. She was small and efficient and had the energy of someone who had been awake since before 3 and considered that a personal victory. She shook his hand and walked him through the plan in under four minutes. Victoria speaks. Sandra said prepared statement. Then three questions.

We’ve pre-selected the journalists. Nothing hostile, but don’t mistake that for soft. They will push. She looked at him. You stand behind her left shoulder. You don’t speak. You don’t react visibly regardless of what’s said. You look like a man who has already decided everything and is completely at peace with it. That’s accurate, he said.

Sandra studied him for a moment. “Good,” she said, like she’d been testing him and he’d passed. Victoria arrived at 10:15. He heard her before he saw her. The particular shift in the energy of the room that happened when she entered a space, the way people reorganized themselves slightly without realizing it.

She came around the corner with two members of her team on either side talking quietly. And then she saw him and stopped talking. She was wearing dark blue professional clean. Exactly. Right. She looked like someone who had made a decision from the inside out. Not dressed for the cameras, but dressed for herself, and the cameras would have to keep up. She crossed to him.

Her team gave them space with the practiced discretion of people well- paid to read a room. “How are you?” she asked quietly. “Good,” he said. “You?” She looked at him for a moment. Terrified, she said. Precise. Both. Both works. Ethan. She said his name the way she did sometimes, like it was something she was making sure of.

Whatever they say in there, whatever angle they come from, I need you to know that what I’m about to say is the most true thing I’ve said in a press conference in 12 years. He held her gaze. I know. I’m not performing this. I know, Victoria. She looked at him one more moment, then she straightened. He watched it happen.

That gathering of everything she was into, the posture that walked into rooms and owned them. But this time underneath it, the real person didn’t disappear. This time they were the same thing. “Let’s go,” she said. The room was full. Every seat cameras lining the back wall, the particular charged silence of a crowd that knows something consequential is about to happen.

Ethan took his position behind her left shoulder and looked out at the faces and thought about nothing except breathing. Victoria walked to this podium. The cameras started immediately the soft mechanical sound of a 100 shutters. The red lights on the video cameras, the absolute focused attention of a room that had spent two weeks speculating and was finally about to hear it directly. She didn’t pause.

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Disclaimer: This story is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

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