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Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 113: Winter Glass
The newsroom felt quieter in winter, not because there were fewer stories but because the light changed. The glass walls let in a soft gray light that blurred the edges of desks and screens. Even the noise from the financial terminals dulled in this light.
Audrey Sawyer liked mornings like this. The market hadn’t settled yet. Analysts were still adjusting forecasts, arguing quietly over numbers that would change again by noon. Nothing had sped up. Not yet.
Her desk faced the east windows, where frost covered the lower corners of the glass in uneven lines that would vanish by noon. She arrived before most of her colleagues, with her coat neatly folded over the back of her chair and a ceramic cup cooling next to her keyboard.
On her screen, the Rochefort Group’s quarterly recovery figures were compared to projections from eight months ago. The difference was small. Steady enough. No spikes on the curve. It held.
Arianne Summers’ name showed up in three areas: board restructuring, cross-holding adjustments, and interim leadership performance metrics. Audrey looked through the data carefully. She had learned that taking her time helped her understand better. Five years ago, she would have skimmed for key points. Now, she focused on how the information was organized.
Before she vanished from the public eye, Arianne Summers was seen as one of the most disciplined young leaders in finance. She never tried to be charming. Control mattered more.
At twenty-three, she built up Summers Corporation by addressing conflicts that most boards would let go unresolved for years. By twenty-five, she changed its leadership team to eliminate even family influence. At the time, people described her as cold, but the market viewed her as effective.
Audrey was a junior correspondent then, responsible for summarizing shareholders’ views and providing background information. She recalled the photographs from those years: Arianne in black-and-white suits, her face showing little emotion and rarely captured in mid-action. The comments about her were predictable. People said she was too young, too serious, and too ambitious. The criticism often reflected the uneven sharing of power.
Then began the Dominic Blackwood period. Audrey did not need to dig up old notes to see the pattern. There were connections she hadn’t trusted, money moving in the wrong direction, tension inside departments that used to run smoothly.
Within a year, Summers’ position in the market had weakened more than analysts expected. Arianne stepped back from her leadership role soon after. At that time, everyone agreed quickly and confidently. She had made a miscalculation. She had taken on too much. She had lost.
Audrey recalled the tone of those articles. It was firm and almost pleased. Markets liked being proven right. They rarely admitted it that plainly.
Five years later, the data no longer matched the earlier beliefs. Summers had changed quietly. When Alexander Rochefort died at thirty-five, most analysts expected Rochefort to wobble. Eight months ago, when leadership shifted, they expected it again. Instead, the recovery graph showed stability. No sharp increase. No panic either. Just a quiet readjustment.
Audrey adjusted the window to show Franz Rochefort’s involvement in operations. Though he was better known for his work in entertainment, his name appeared more often in corporate filings than it had a year ago. The changes weren’t dramatic, but they didn’t stop either. One adjustment, then another. Audrey avoided speculating on personal relationships, as such thoughts don’t last. Instead, she noted his presence and the timing of his activities.
Audrey sat at her desk as the newsroom filled up. Chairs rolled across the shiny floor. Someone laughed near the central desk. Her editor, Park, stopped at the end of her row and leaned on the partition. "You’re already in it," he said, looking at her screen.
"I’ve been working on it for a week," Audrey replied without turning. "The recovery is going better than we expected."
Park turned to face her screen fully. He looked patient, someone who preferred clear stories. "There’s an anniversary banquet next month. Rochefort hasn’t done a proper interview since Alexander’s death."
"They don’t need to," Audrey replied. "They’re not losing money." She didn’t look up.
"That’s why it’s important." He stood up straight. "Get the interview. Focus on the profile, not gossip."
Audrey closed one of the tabs and opened a blank document. She had predicted his suggestion before he made it. The Rochefort Anniversary Banquet was thirty days away. Business families would attend. Political figures. Investors who preferred steadiness to spectacle. They would already be measuring the room. Watching who stood where. Who looked certain. An article published before the event wouldn’t need to push. It would just need to sit in the right place.
"Who?" Park asked, though he already knew.
"Arianne Summers," Audrey said. "Interim CEO."
He nodded once. "Make it clear."
Audrey wrote the request formally. Rochefort preferred distance. She mentioned the anniversary as a time of change without showing any weakness. She presented the interview as a look at governance after consolidation, rather than sharing personal stories. She did not address the recent rumors in minor society columns about a connection between Arianne and Gilbert Pemberton, which suggested that being close to someone was suspicious.
Audrey had read those articles. They were designed to suggest something without directly saying it. Arianne and Gilbert had been seen together at industry events, investment meetings, policy discussions. Their families’ businesses had been connected for many years. In these circles, being close to one another was common. However, rumors spread faster than facts.
She did not want to give it more attention. There were clearer issues to explore.
Before sending the request, she paused. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
Five years ago, when she dated Gilbert Pemberton, she realized that being close to a CEO comes with challenges. At twenty-five, she was ambitious and inexperienced, so she didn’t see how quickly her credibility could fade just by being associated with someone in power. Gilbert ended it directly. No drama. He said the imbalance wouldn’t be seen well. She didn’t argue. She understood, even if she hadn’t liked the timing.
They hadn’t spoken since. No messages. No accidental meetings. Their work crossed paths often enough, but never at the same table. Now, as a senior correspondent, she had access to different areas. The lack of contact did not turn into anger. Instead, it became a closed Chapter that didn’t need to be changed.
She sent the email.
The reply came before noon. Rochefort Group’s communications office confirmed that Arianne Summers would do a one-hour interview at their headquarters later that week. They included security protocols in a separate document.
Audrey read the response twice, not because it was difficult to understand, but because its quickness suggested something more than courtesy. Under pressure, organizations usually stall. Rochefort hadn’t this time.
She leaned back in her chair, listening to the busy sounds of the newsroom. Park walked by again and noticed her face. "Well?"
"They agreed."
He smiled slightly. "Good. Don’t let them rehearse you."
Audrey closed her laptop and put on her coat. The frost had melted from the windows, revealing the usual traffic of a winter afternoon. Outside, the cold air quickly chilled her skin. Rochefort Tower stood across the river, its upper floors reflecting the dull sky.
As she walked toward the subway entrance, she thought about the building. Alexander Rochefort had been a well-known figure associated with it for more than ten years. His death was called unexpected, but in private discussions, the term often meant it was not an accident. It simply meant it was sudden in public knowledge.
The original group of executives formed during their younger years—Alexander, Arianne, Gilbert, and later Julian Monreau and Nathaniel Jacobs—developed a strong bond that went beyond just social connections. Over time, even though they worked at different companies, they coordinated their actions.
Audrey noticed this during board appointments and acquisition timings. It wasn’t collaboration. Not exactly. It was something older than that. An understanding they never announced because they didn’t need to.
Franz Rochefort was not part of that original group. However, his rising visibility in recent months was noticeable. Gaining trust in that circle took time. Years, sometimes. It wasn’t something they handed out because someone asked.
On the subway platform, Audrey thought about her article outline. She would start with Summers. Move through the instability without lingering too long. End with Rochefort as it stood now. Keep it steady. No theatrics. She planned to mention the anniversary as background, not as a big event. She wanted to avoid overly sentimental language. There were already too many articles that turned leadership changes into emotional stories.
The train arrived with a metallic sound. Inside, she found a seat by the window and watched the city pass by in quick glimpses. Her phone vibrated once with an alert from a smaller outlet she followed for updates.
The headline mentioned "centralized influence" among older industrial families. The wording was vague enough to apply to many people, but also raised questions. As she skimmed the article, she saw it lacked strong evidence. It was the kind of piece that made a lot of noise without providing real facts.
She turned her phone face down on her lap. Noise had its uses. It didn’t need her help.







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