©Novel Buddy
The CEO's Rejected Wife And Secret Heir-Chapter 147: Never stop fighting
Aria pov
"I’ll never stop fighting for us." His eyes were fierce. "Never stop choosing you. Never stop being grateful that you gave me another chance."
The intensity was building between us, that magnetic pull that always seemed to exist. But then our food arrived, breaking the moment, and we both laughed.
"We’re terrible at this," I said. "The light, casual first date thing."
"We’re terrible at casual, period." He served us both pasta. "We’re intense people who had an intense past and are building an intense future. Might as well embrace it."
"As long as we embrace the good parts too," I said. "The laughter and the comfortable silences and the"
"Normalcy?" he suggested. "The boring, wonderful normalcy of just being together?"
"Exactly."
We ate and talked, and somewhere between the main course and dessert, I realized I was having fun. Real, genuine fun. Not the adrenaline-fueled excitement of our usual drama, but the warm, comfortable enjoyment of being with someone I loved.
"What are you smiling about?" Damien asked.
"You." I didn’t hide it. "Us. This. I’m having a really good time."
"Yeah?" His whole face lit up. "Me too. Best first date I’ve ever had."
"How many first dates have you been on?" I asked curiously.
"Honestly? Not many, most women" He paused. "Most women were interested in Damien Blackwood the billionaire. Not Damien the person. So I’d take them to expensive restaurants, flash some money around, and that would be it. Very transactional."
"That sounds lonely."
"It was." He looked down. "I was lonely for a long time, Aria. Even before our wedding fell apart. I’ve been lonely since my mother died, really. Until you."
"You’re not lonely anymore," I said firmly. "You have Noah. You have me. You have—a life, a real one."
"I know." He smiled. "And I’m never taking it for granted."
After dinner, we walked along the waterfront, his jacket around my shoulders because I’d forgotten mine. The city lights reflected on the water, couples strolled past, and everything felt perfectly, wonderfully normal.
"Thank you," I said, tucking myself against his side. "For tonight. For trying. For caring enough to do this right."
"Thank you for letting me." He kissed the top of my head. "And Aria? This is just the beginning. I have so many more dates planned. Museums and concerts and that terrible mini golf place Noah keeps talking about."
"Mini golf?" I laughed. "Really?"
"Family date," he explained. "I have a whole list. Some just us, some with Noah, all designed to create the memories we should have made before."
"I love that." I stopped walking, turning to face him. "I love you."
"I love you too." He cupped my face gently. "More than I ever thought I could love anyone. You and Noah—you’re my whole world."
We stood there under the streetlights, the city alive around us, just looking at each other. The tension built again, that pull toward each other impossible to resist. "Can I kiss you?" he asked softly. "Properly kiss you, like this is our first kiss ever?"
"Yes," I breathed.
He lowered his head slowly, giving me time to change my mind, but I didn’t want to. I wanted this—this sweetness, this romance, this choosing each other deliberately.
When his lips met mine, it was different from all our other kisses. Not desperate or frantic or born from trauma and need. Just—gentle. Loving. A promise of more to come.
When we finally broke apart, we were both smiling. "Best first kiss ever," I said.
"Absolutely." He pulled me close again. "And Aria? I want you to know—I’m going to court you properly. Flowers and dates and romance. I’m going to earn you, not just assume I deserve you because we have history."
"You already have me," I pointed out.
"Then I’m going to keep you." He kissed my forehead. "By being the man you deserve. Every single day."
We walked back to the car hand in hand, and when he drove me home, he walked me to my bedroom door like a perfect gentleman. "Thank you for tonight," he said, still holding my hand. "It was perfect."
"It really was." I leaned against the doorframe. "When’s our next date?"
"Eager?" His eyes danced.
"Very." I pulled him closer by his shirt. "Turns out, I really like dating you."
"Good." He kissed me again, deeper this time, and I felt heat pool low in my belly. "Because I really like dating you too."
When the kiss deepened, his hands sliding into my hair, I had to force myself to pull back.
"We’re taking it slow," I reminded him breathlessly.
"Right. Slow." But his eyes were dark with desire. "Aria, I want you so badly. But I’ll wait until you’re ready. Until we’ve built this foundation properly. Until"
I kissed him again to shut him up, then stepped back before I lost my resolve. "Goodnight, Damien."
"Goodnight, Aria." He backed toward the elevator, his eyes never leaving mine. "Sweet dreams."
"You too."
After he left, I leaned against my door, heart pounding, body aching, but also—happy. So perfectly, wonderfully happy.
This was what dating should feel like. Exciting but comfortable. Passionate but respectful. Building something real instead of rushing toward disaster.
My phone buzzed.
Damien: Already planning our next date. You’re going to love it. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
Me: Can’t wait.
Damien: Sleep well, beautiful. Dream of me.
Me: Always.
I got ready for bed with a smile on my face, already counting down to our next date. To more laughter and conversation and those devastating kisses that left me breathless.
Few Days Later
"Ms. Monroe, there’s Lucas Hayes here to see you." My assistant’s voice came through the intercom, pulling me from the merger documents spread across my desk.
Lucas. I hadn’t seen him since the gala, hadn’t spoken to him since that brief conversation where he’d admitted using me to make Damien jealous. Part of me had been relieved—one less complication in an already complicated situation. But another part wondered if I’d lost a friend in the process."Send him in, please."







