[BL] Oops! I Seduced My Sister's Fiance (And Now I'm Pregnant)

Chapter 107: Leverage

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Chapter 107: Chapter 107: Leverage

I’m in the middle of reviewing Elliot’s density calculations when Mrs. Wen knocks on the study door.

"Young Master," she says, opening it slightly. "Madam Wuchen would like to see you in the sitting room."

Not a request. The phrasing makes that clear.

I save my work and close the laptop.

"Now?"

"Yes, Young Master."

I stand, smooth down my shirt even though it doesn’t need it, and follow her downstairs.

The sitting room is on the east side of the house, the one Grandmother prefers for private conversations. Formal enough to establish hierarchy, comfortable enough not to feel punitive.

She’s already seated when I enter, tea set on the low table in front of her, posture perfect, expression calm.

Like she hasn’t been waiting, like she simply exists in this space and I’ve arrived at the correct time.

"Grandmother," I say, bowing slightly.

"Runze. Sit."

I sit across from her.

She pours tea into a second cup, sets it in front of me with precise movements.

"I understand congratulations are in order," she says. "Second place in the Dingshan competition."

Bael must have told her.

Obviously.

I don’t know when... probably sometime in the past few days while I’ve been locked in my room avoiding him... but the information clearly made its way to her.

"Thank you," I say.

"It’s an acceptable result," she continues, taking a sip of her tea. "Given the level of competition and the standards expected of this family."

Not praise or dismissal, just... acknowledgment.

Measured and controlled.

"The collaboration begins this week, I assume?" she asks.

"It started yesterday. Monday and Thursday sessions for the next two months."

"Good." She sets her cup down. "And you’re managing the workload appropriately? Given your condition?"

Her gaze flickers briefly to my stomach, the bump is visible now even through my shirt.

Impossible to hide at four months.

"I’m managing," I say. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

"Both the pregnancy and the professional work, without either compromising the other?"

"Yes."

She nods once, like that’s the answer she expected.

"The family has certain standards," she says. "Capability is valued. Results are valued. The fact that you’re carrying a child doesn’t excuse you from maintaining those standards, but it also doesn’t disqualify you from opportunities to demonstrate competence."

I’m not entirely sure where this is going.

"I understand," I say carefully.

She reaches for a folder sitting on the side table, and passes it across to me.

"This is a development project under the family’s holdings," she says. "A smaller property on the outskirts of the city. Currently underdeveloped, zoned for mixed-use residential and commercial. The family acquired it two years ago but hasn’t prioritized its development."

I open the folder.

Site plans, zoning documents, environmental assessments, preliminary feasibility studies.

All official, all recent, all real.

"I’m giving you access to this project," Grandmother continues. "You may use it as you see fit. Develop a proposal, coordinate with contractors if your design merits implementation, manage the process from concept to completion if you’re capable."

I look up from the documents.

"Why?"

"Because second place in a competition demonstrates competence in theory," she says. "But theory alone doesn’t build anything. If you want to establish yourself as more than Bael’s spouse, more than the person who happened to place well in one competition, you need to demonstrate that you can deliver results consistently."

The words are blunt, not cruel, just factual.

"This project is real," she continues. "Small enough that failure won’t damage the family’s primary holdings. Large enough that success will mean something. What you do with it will reflect on the Wuchen name. Manage it well, and it becomes proof of capability. Manage it poorly, and it demonstrates that the competition result was an outlier."

I look down at the folder again.

This isn’t just a gift.

It’s a test.

"I understand," I say.

"Do you?" She picks up her tea again. "Because accepting this means accepting the expectations that come with it. The family name carries weight. Using family resources... even for a small project means your results become a reflection of that name. This isn’t yours to fail at quietly."

"I understand," I repeat, firmer this time.

She studies me for a moment, then nods.

"Good. The project manager’s contact information is in the file. Coordinate with him directly for site access and feasibility constraints. Beyond that, the approach is yours to determine."

She sets down her cup with a soft clink.

"You may go."

Not dismissed warmly.

Just... released.

The conversation is over.

I stand, bow slightly, and leave with the folder.

***

Back in the study, I close the door and sit down at the desk.

Set the folder in front of me and stare at it for a long moment before opening it again.

The site is real.

Fifteen thousand square meters on the eastern outskirts, currently vacant except for an old warehouse structure scheduled for demolition.

Zoned for mixed-use development with specific height and density restrictions, environmental clearance already obtained, utilities accessible.

This is...

This is exactly the kind of opportunity I couldn’t access on my own. The kind of thing that requires capital, connections, institutional backing. The kind of thing that separates theoretical designers from people who actually build things.

And Grandmother just handed it to me.

Not as a favor.

As leverage.

Prove yourself or prove you can’t.

I flip through the documents slowly.

Site surveys, soil reports, zoning variance applications, utility maps.

Everything I’d need to develop an actual proposal.

Something real and tangible, something that could get built if I do this right.

I flip back one page, then another, slower this time. There’s already a timeline attached at the back of the feasibility report.

Six months for preliminary design approval. Twelve for full execution if it proceeds smoothly. A demolition schedule is already tentatively set for next quarter. That means this isn’t waiting for me to decide if it exists. It already exists.

A contractor name is listed in one of the appendices. Someone I don’t recognize, but clearly already under the family’s network. Which means coordination has already been initiated at some level. Not from me, but around me. The project isn’t starting when I choose to start it. It’s only waiting for me to step into it.

I close the folder again, a little slower this time.

This isn’t theoretical. It’s not like a competition brief or an academic exercise. If I open this fully, people will start acting on it, budgets will move, planning permissions will be adjusted around decisions I make. Mistakes will not sit quietly on a grading sheet. They will exist in physical space.

I press my fingers lightly against the edge of the folder.

It doesn’t feel like pressure from Grandmother anymore. It feels like weight from reality itself.

And that’s the difference.

The thought sits strangely.

The Dingshan collaboration is significant.... second place in a competitive process, working with the first-place winner, potential implementation by a major development company.

But it’s shared, structured and supervised.

This...

This would be mine.

Entirely mine.

My design, my decisions, my responsibility.

But also hers. Grandmother’s. The family’s. Using family resources means family expectations, family standards, family consequences if I fail.

I close the folder and lean back in my chair.

Thursday I have the Dingshan session with the structural consultant.

I need to be prepared for that, need to have the circulation load analysis finalized, the preliminary canopy designs ready, the integration plan clear enough to present professionally.

That’s the priority.

This project... Grandmother’s project, can wait.

A week, maybe two.

Until after the Dingshan collaboration is more established, until I have bandwidth to take on something this significant without compromising the work I’ve already committed to.

I set the folder aside.

Not dismissing it, just... deferring.

Prioritizing.

The Dingshan project is something I earned on my own merit.

This project is something I’ve been given access to because of the family name.

Both matter.

Both have weight.

But right now, proving I can deliver on what I earned matters more than proving I can deliver on what I was given.

I open my laptop again.

Pull up the circulation analysis and return to the work I was doing before Mrs. Wen interrupted.

The numbers are the same as they were twenty minutes ago, the variables haven’t changed.

But something feels different.

Not worse, but... heavier.

Because now there are two projects sitting in front of me, two opportunities, two sets of expectations, two ways to prove... or fail to prove, that I’m more than just Bael Wuchen’s pregnant spouse.

I run the next set of calculations.

Focus on the work, on what I can control, on what matters right now, today, this week.

The other project sits in its folder on the corner of my desk.

Waiting.

A reminder that opportunities come with strings attached, that access to resources means accepting the weight of expectations, that nothing in this family is ever given freely.

But also...

Also a reminder that I have options now.

That I’m not just surviving in this marriage.

I’m building something. Multiple somethings.

And if I handle them right, they could become the foundation for something that’s actually mine.

Not dependent on Bael or contingent on this marriage lasting.

Just... mine.

I save my work and check the time.

Almost seven.

Dinner will be soon if Grandmother requires it. If not, I’ll eat here and keep working.

Either way, I have two days until Thursday, to finalize the Dingshan analysis, to prepare for the structural consultant, and prove that second place wasn’t a fluke.

The folder sits on the corner of my desk.

Patient, waiting.

I’ll get to it.

Just not yet.

Right now, I have other things to prove.

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