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Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 21: A Narrowing Field
The shift was subtle at first, but already within Arianne’s expectations.
Arianne saw that reports were arriving later than usual. Their summaries were more cautious. Updates that used to end with clear information now closed with phrases like "pending further clarification" or "awaiting confirmation."
No one said her name. No one needed to.
They were waiting.
She skimmed through the files she received from Gio without comment. Her fingers were steady as she closed one folder and opened the next one. Around the table, conversation moved more carefully, as if everyone were aware that the room no longer operated on momentum alone.
"Several approvals have slowed," a manager said. "Nothing critical. Just... hesitation."
Arianne looked up. "Where?"
The answer came with a pause. "Across departments."
She nodded once and said nothing more.
That was the problem.
Alexander’s silence had once steadied rooms like this. Arianne’s unsettled them.
Later that afternoon, Lucas requested a brief meeting with her.
It wasn’t urgent and wasn’t framed as a concern. The tone was professional, even deferential.
"We’ve noticed your continued involvement, Ms. Summers," Lucas began. "Your input has been effective."
Arianne listened without reacting.
The way Lucas was looking at her was as if he were assessing her.
"But," he continued, "There’s increasing visibility around your role. Franz might be signing the papers, but the final decisions were always based on your input."
She remained silent, but her focus remained on him.
"Ms. Summers, when someone has influence but no clear title, it can cause confusion," he said carefully. "It’s manageable for now, but it will be harder as decisions pile up."
Arianne understood what he wasn’t saying.
"If you remained involved," he added. "Others would ask for clarity."
Arianne inclined her head in understanding.
She neither resisted nor reassured Lucas. She simply acknowledged what he’d said.
When the meeting ended, her phone vibrated once.
A missed call.
She didn’t need to check the name.
Arianne slipped the phone back into her pocket and continued finishing her workload for the day.
By evening, Franz appeared in her office. He looked stressed, but felt immediately relieved when he saw Arianne.
"You are still here?" he asked, taking a seat across from her table.
He eyed the stack of papers she was reviewing and frowned.
"Lucas dropped by earlier," Arianne said, her focus remaining on the document she was reading prior to his arrival.
"Finn mentioned." Franz sighed. "I wanted to give you a heads up, but it seems I was late."
Arianne merely hummed.
"The investors are asking questions, Aria," Franz continued.
She glanced at him this time. "They should. They wouldn’t want to be left in the dark."
Franz nodded.
"They want direction, Aria," he clarified. "From you."
Arianne straightened her back and clasped her hands together.
She didn’t deny his claim.
Investors wanted results—results she had been providing—but stakeholders were a different matter.
"I’m aware, Franz."
Franz fell silent, pondering what the best path was for them to take.
"I’ll respect whatever you choose, Aria," he finally said after a long silence between them.
"If you think you can’t handle the pressure, I would understand if you choose to leave."
He met her gaze, searching for something she didn’t offer.
Arianne had always been like this.
These were the rare times that Franz envied his older brother for being able to read her through silence.
Even when she was younger, silence had been her shield. It kept her from reacting too quickly, from choosing before the board was clear. It had protected her from mistakes and from people who mistook decisiveness for strength.
She looked down at the document in front of her and turned a page.
"If I leave," Arianne said at last, her voice calm, "the pressure doesn’t disappear."
Franz frowned. Of course, he knew.
The pressure was for him to bear anyway. It was his decision that had drawn Arianne into the situation.
He understood what she meant. Without her, the burden would surely fall squarely on him and on the systems that were already straining under uncertainty.
"But if you stay," Franz said, "they might expect more from you, Aria."
Arianne set the paper aside and met his gaze. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
"They already do, Franz."
Her tone was neither bitter nor proud. She was merely stating the facts.
Franz exhaled slowly and leaned back in his chair. He could feel another headache coming his way.
"They are already asking whether you’re temporary," he admitted. "Or whether this is something else."
Arianne didn’t answer immediately.
She had accepted Franz’s offer to protect what Alex had built. Protecting the company also meant protecting the twins’ future.
Although she trusted that Alex and Layla had set up trust funds for their children, the legacy of the Rochefort Group would keep them afloat until they reached the legal age.
"Uncertainty makes people impatient," she said.
"Yes," Franz replied, "And impatience makes people commit mistakes."
Arianne allowed silence settle between them.
"Which is why they want clarity from me." She finally said.
Franz nodded and didn’t explain further. He trusted that Arianne understood the situation better than him.
Arianne rose from her seat and walked to the window, folding her arms loosely as she looked out.
For years, clarity had been her weapon. Titles, authority, lines drawn cleanly and publicly. When she spoke, people and systems moved. When she decided, outcomes followed.
She had walked away from that life for a reason.
Silence had been her way of staying close without stepping back into that storm.
But storms had a way of forming themselves around empty spaces.
Behind her, Franz remained seated, waiting, not pressing, not pleading. It was one of the reasons she trusted him.
"I won’t make a decision tonight," Arianne said.
"I didn’t expect you to," Franz replied.
"But I won’t pretend anymore that waiting doesn’t affect anyone else."
He accepted that without comment.
When Franz finally stood to leave, he paused at the door.
"For what it’s worth," he said, "the board isn’t afraid of you stepping in."
Arianne turned slightly. "They should be afraid of instability," she replied. "Not me."
A corner of Franz’s mouth lifted. "That sounds like you."
After he left, she was given alone time to sort out her thoughts.
Arianne gathered her things and shut down her computer, movements unhurried. As she picked up her phone, the screen lit up again.
No new messages.
She held it for a moment longer than necessary, then slipped it back into her bag.
Silence had once given her control.
Now, it was demanding a price.
And Arianne knew that the longer she delayed, the fewer options would remain untouched.







