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Too Late Mr Cole
img img Too Late Mr Cole img Chapter 2 Elena's POV
2 Chapters
Chapter 6 Elena's POV img
Chapter 7 Elena's POV img
Chapter 8 Damien's POV img
Chapter 9 Elena's POV img
Chapter 10 Damien's POV img
Chapter 11 Elena's POV img
Chapter 12 DAMIEN'S POV img
Chapter 13 ELENA'S POV img
Chapter 14 RICHARD'S POV img
Chapter 15 ELENA'S POV img
Chapter 16 DAMIEN'S POV img
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Chapter 2 Elena's POV

"How did you get this number?"

It was the first thing that came out of my mouth. Not who are you or what do you want. Those answers were already sitting in my chest like stones I had swallowed. What I needed to know was how deeply this had already reached into my life without my knowledge.

"I've had your number for three weeks," Victor Shao said. "I wanted to be sure before I called. I needed to confirm everything independently before I brought this to you."

"Confirm what independently?"

"That you are who the file says you are. That the adoption was real. That the trail leads where I believe it leads." He paused. "Miss Marsh, my brother had a daughter. She was taken from the family records when she was less than a month old through a private arrangement that was never supposed to be traceable. I have spent eleven years trying to find her."

I stood on that pavement in the cold and said nothing.

"The DNA profile you submitted to the genetics lab was flagged against a search I had running in that system," he continued. "I know that sounds invasive. I'll explain everything in person. But I need you to understand that I am not guessing. The results are conclusive. You are my brother's daughter, Miss Marsh. You are a Shao."

The city kept moving around me. A couple walked past laughing about something. A delivery bike cut through the intersection. Everything was completely normal and completely absurd at the same time.

"I just signed my divorce papers twenty minutes ago," I said. I don't know why I told him that. It just came out.

He was quiet for a moment. "I know. I'm sorry."

"You know about my marriage?"

"I know about a great many things that concern you. Some of them are going to be difficult to hear." His voice was steady but there was something underneath it. Not pity. Something more careful than that. "I don't want to do this over the phone. I'm in the city. I'd like to meet you tomorrow morning if you're willing."

I looked back at the building one more time. The windows of the fourteenth floor were lit. My old life was still up there going on without me and already it felt like something that had happened to someone else entirely.

"Send me the address," I said. "I'll be there."

I found Clara's apartment an hour later with my bag on her couch and her standing in her kitchen making tea she knew I wouldn't drink. Clara Wei had been my best friend since university. She was sharp and direct and she had never once pretended to like Damien, which at the time annoyed me and in hindsight was the most loving thing she ever did.

"Tell me everything," she said, putting the mug in front of me anyway.

I told her about the papers. About the apartment. About the way he stood there with his jacket on like he was dropping off a package. Clara listened without interrupting, which was unusual for her, and when I finished she sat back and looked at me with an expression that was equal parts fury and relief.

"Good," she said. "You're out. That's the only thing that matters right now."

"There's something else."

I told her about the DNA results. About the Shao name. About the call. Clara's expression changed completely. She leaned forward and stared at me for a long moment like she was recalculating everything she thought she knew.

"Victor Shao called you directly," she said slowly. "Tonight. Of all the nights."

"I know."

"Elena, Shao Industries is worth more than everything the Cole family has combined. If this is real-"

"It's real," I said. "I've read the report four times. I didn't submit that sample hoping for a result like this. I submitted it because something never added up about my childhood and I needed to know the truth. I wasn't looking for an empire."

"The empire found you anyway," Clara said quietly.

I barely slept that night. I lay on Clara's couch and stared at the ceiling and thought about my mother. About the way she flinched that one time when she mentioned my eyes. About the small gaps in my childhood that I had always filled in with reasonable explanations because the alternative was too large to sit with. My father's journals that mentioned a promise he made to someone whose name was always blacked out. The envelope I found once in his drawer disappeared before I could open it.

None of it had seemed connected before. Now it felt like a map I had been holding upside down my entire life.

I arrived at the Shao building the next morning at exactly nine. It was the kind of building that made you aware of your posture just by looking at it. Glass and steel and the quiet authority of old serious money. A woman met me in the lobby and took me up to the thirty second floor without a word.

Victor Shao was already standing when I walked in. He was in his sixties, lean, with the kind of stillness that came from decades of being the most powerful person in every room he entered. He looked at me the way you look at something you have been searching for long enough that seeing it finally feels almost impossible.

"You have your father's eyes," he said. "I noticed it the first time I saw a photograph of you."

I sat down across from him and kept my voice even. "You said there were things that would be difficult to hear."

"Yes." He folded his hands on the desk. "The adoption wasn't random, Elena. Someone specifically arranged for you to disappear from this family. Someone who knew exactly who you were and what you would one day be worth." He held my gaze. "That person has been part of your life this entire time."

I felt the air shift.

"Who?" I asked.

He said the name without hesitation.

"Richard Cole."

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