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Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 61: An Irregularity
Franz noticed it during the document review. Nothing had gone wrong. He was certain of that.
The conference room remained unchanged from when the meeting started. The wall-mounted screen refreshed at steady intervals, updating the figures. The projection displayed quarterly projections in tabulated form. Pages shifted softly as the legal team moved through their notes along the far end of the table.
Arianne sat across from him at the long conference table. She had not changed position and did not look up as the discussion progressed. Her hands rested on the open folder centered in front of her, aligned with the table’s edge.
Her pace did not change. Nothing pushed back.
That was what caught Franz’s attention.
Normally, irregularities showed themselves—a pause where there should not be one. A line revisited, then corrected. A slight delay before a response landed.
Arianne never missed details. When she slowed down, there was a reason. When she returned to something, it did not remain untouched.
This time, none of that happened.
Franz observed her closely.
When she reached the end of a page, Arianne paused. Franz could not ignore it anymore.
He knew her habits—her rhythms and the way she moved through material. Repetition without function did not fit her pattern. The change, though minor, did not belong.
Arianne rechecked a line she had already cleared.
Not slowly. Not hesitantly.
Just once more.
Precisely. Unnecessarily.
Others might not have noticed. Franz did.
He waited for the correction that normally followed—a comment or confirmation that required someone else to respond. It did not come.
Arianne turned the page instead and continued the review.
Franz shifted his gaze to his own screen. He did not look up immediately. The pause remained noticeable only because nothing followed it. He considered asking what bothered her, then withheld the question.
Whatever it was, it had not come from a mistake. Arianne had not missed anything. The figures on the screen remained consistent. The projections aligned with prior approvals.
He let the thought run longer than usual, then stopped.
It was not fatigue. When Arianne was tired, her movements slowed. Her hands paused more frequently, allowing her eyes to move ahead of the page.
None of that was happening. Her focus remained intact.
Franz did not interrupt her. Instead, he adjusted his pace to match hers and handled a summary she would normally present.
Arianne noticed. She let it pass without comment.
That confirmed his assumption.
He pushed a folder toward her across the table and asked, "Is this something affecting our timeline?"
The question drew her attention back fully.
She picked up the folder, skimmed the relevant section, and nodded once.
"It should be fine, as long as the project manager keeps an eye on the demands," Arianne replied before returning her attention to the contract in front of her.
Franz leaned back slightly and said, "Let’s take a break."
They had been reviewing contracts for over an hour and had finished only half. Since these agreements were initiated before Alex’s passing, Arianne could not approve them alone. Franz’s signature was required alongside hers.
Franz stepped outside the conference room, leaving Arianne seated at the table.
When he returned, he placed a bottle of apple green tea on the table within her reach. The condensation collected along the plastic surface and pooled near the base.
Arianne raised her head to look at him, assessing briefly.
"Do I need to account for anything new?" Franz asked as he twisted the cap off his own drink.
Arianne held his gaze for a fraction longer than usual, then looked back at the file before her.
"A letter arrived yesterday," she said. "From the Conway family. On my mother’s side. It concerns my mother’s death anniversary and inheritance."
She did not elaborate.
"It concerns inheritance matters that were never resolved," she added.
Franz nodded once.
He didn’t ask who had sent it. Or why now, or what it implied.
He knew who the Conway family was to Arianne. Even without personal context, the name carried weight in Montclair. Their influence extended beyond business into the political sphere.
"Let me know if there’s something I can help you with."
No promise. No pressure. Just availability.
Arianne inclined her head and returned to the documents.
Franz resumed his seat and reopened the contract on his tablet, scrolling back to the section he had paused on earlier. The numbers held. The language remained unchanged. Nothing required immediate adjustment.
The meeting continued.
Across the table, Arianne worked through the remaining pages. She marked a clause here, forwarded another section for confirmation, and closed each file once finalized.
Nothing followed the disclosure.
No one altered course.
The folded letter remained in the folder beside her.
By the time the legal team concluded, the screen dimmed and the folders were stacked at the center of the table. Chairs slid back. Conversations separated into smaller exchanges as people prepared to leave through the side door near the screen.
Franz stood and collected his things. He waited only long enough to confirm no pending signatures required his attention. There were none.
Arianne closed her folder last. She stacked it with the others, rose from her seat, and walked toward the door without hesitation. The bottle of green tea remained half-finished where he had placed it.
Outside the conference room, the corridor remained active. Assistants moved in both directions. Phones rang briefly before falling silent.
Someone approached Arianne just beyond the doorway with a question about the afternoon agenda. She answered without breaking stride and continued down the hall.
Franz watched her for a moment before returning to his office.
Later, at home, the house settled around them. Voices carried from the living area. The twins argued briefly, then quieted.
Dinner plans were discussed and decided. A reminder about the next day’s call was acknowledged.
Franz waited for the earlier tension to resurface. It did not sharpen into anything definable.
He considered asking Gio, then dismissed the thought. Asking would mean intruding on her privacy.
He opened his calendar again before closing it. The adjustment remained where he had placed it. It did not affect the next sequence of meetings.
He noted it.
He was the only one who knew.
For now, that knowledge changed nothing.


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