©Novel Buddy
The Heiress Gambit-Chapter 69- Airport
PAIGE
The car was a silent, temperature-controlled bubble, a world away from the chaos of the last twenty-four hours. Sunlight, bright and bold for a noon in late fall, streamed through the tinted windows, painting warm stripes across the butter-soft leather seats.
I was curled in my corner, my phone pressed to my ear, listening to the one familiar sound that could still make me feel normal.
"So, let me get this straight," Leon’s voice came through, his humor intact but laced with a concern I knew all too well. "You went to war with a billionaire, declared a truce, and then just... never came home? I was two seconds away from filing a missing person’s report, P. I had a whole speech prepared for the cops about your weird obsession with organizing my spice rack."
A real, genuine laugh bubbled out of me. It felt foreign and wonderful. "Consider the spice rack safe. For now."
"Okay, but seriously. Are you okay? The radio silence was... loud."
I took a deep breath. Where did I even begin? How did you sum up the earthquake that had reshaped your entire world?
"I’m... more than okay, Leon," I started, my voice softer than I intended. "I’m... a lot of things." I closed my eyes, leaning my head against the cool glass. "Remember the shopping trip with Suzume? It was an ambush. A brilliantly executed, designer-clad intervention. She dragged me right to the gates of Daki Tech and shoved me through."
I could almost hear his eyebrows shooting up. "No."
"Yes. I walked into his office, ready to... I don’t know, throw a stapler at his head. And he... he just..." The words felt too big, too sacred for the inside of a car. But this was Leon. He deserved the truth. "He told me he loved me. That he’d loved me since we were kids in Tokyo. That all of this... the empire, everything... it was all for me."
The line was so quiet I thought we’d been disconnected. "Leon?"
"I’m here," he said, his voice uncharacteristically quiet. "I’m just... processing. The great Reomen Daki has a heart. And it belongs to my best friend. Holy shit, Paige."
"That’s not all," I whispered, the memory sending a fresh wave of dizzying warmth through me. "He... he asked me to marry him."
This time, the silence was absolute. Then, a low, drawn-out whistle. "Okay. Now you’re just messing with me. He proposed? When? How? Was there a ring? Was there a flash mob? Don’t tell me there was a flash mob, I’ll vomit."
I smiled, a watery, overwhelmed smile. "No flash mob. It was just us. In his office. Right after he told me he loved me for the first time. It was... it was perfect."
I was so lost in the memory, in the sound of Leon’s stunned but happy sputtering, that I didn’t notice the car door opening. The world outside rushed in for a second—the sound of traffic, a distant siren—and then he was there.
Reomen.
He slid into the seat beside me, a solid, calming presence that immediately changed the atmosphere in the car. He was all effortless power in a simple black sweater and dark jeans, his sunglasses hiding his eyes but not the slight, possessive tilt of his head as he looked at me. He didn’t say a word, just reached over and took my free hand, lacing his fingers through mine. His grip was firm, warm, a silent I’m here.
"Leon, I have to go," I said, my eyes locked with Reomen’s hidden ones. "We’re... we’re heading to the airport."
"The airport? Where the hell are you going? Is this some kind of billionaire impromptu revenge-moon?"
"Japan," I said, the word feeling heavy and significant on my tongue. Home. Not home. The heart of the beast. "We have business to finish. I’ll explain everything when I get back. I promise."
"You better. And Paige?" His voice turned serious. "Be careful. And... congratulations. Seriously. If he makes you happy, then I’m happy."
Tears pricked the back of my eyes. "Thanks, Leon. For everything."
I ended the call and let the phone drop into my lap. The silence in the car was different now. It was full. His thumb was stroking slow, absent circles on the back of my hand, a rhythm that was quickly becoming my new heartbeat.
I watched as his driver finished loading our suitcases into the trunk—a matched set of sleek, dark Tumi luggage that had appeared this morning as if by magic. My whole life, condensed into a few bags, heading to Japan. The surrealness of it all was a physical hum under my skin.
As the car pulled away from the curb, merging seamlessly into the flow of midday Manhattan, Reomen finally spoke, his voice a low rumble.
"We’re meeting Kenji at the airport," he said, his tone all business, but his thumb never stopping its gentle motion. "We’re taking his jet."
I just nodded, my throat tight. Of course we were. We weren’t flying commercial. We were flying on the private jet of the man who was part guardian angel, part ruthless strategist.
The man who had seen the broken boy in Reomen and helped forge him into the king he was. It felt right. This entire journey was because of the family we’d built, not the one I was born into. We were going to war surrounded by our own.
I looked out the window, watching my city—the city I had fought so hard to claim as my own—slide past. The bustling streets, the familiar landmarks, all blurring into a stream of light and motion.
I wasn’t leaving as a runaway this time. I wasn’t scared and alone. I was leaving as Paige Isumi Daki, fiancée. I was leaving with my king, to reclaim a kingdom.
Reomen’s hand tightened on mine, as if he could read the whirlwind in my mind. I turned my head from the window to look at him. He had taken his sunglasses off, and his dark eyes were steady on me, full of a fierce, unshakable certainty.
There were no more words. None were needed. The car sped on, carrying us toward the airport, toward Japan, toward the final, terrifying, and exhilarating Chapter of our story. And for the first time, I wasn’t just ready. I was eager.
– – –
AUTHOR
The private hangar was a cathedral of wealth and silence, a vast, echoing space that smelled of jet fuel and polished concrete. In the center of it all, bathed in a sharp beam of midday light from the high windows, stood a Gulfstream G700, a sleek, white predator poised for flight.
And leaning against its retractable stairs, looking as if he’d just rolled out of bed and onto the most expensive aircraft in the world, was Kenji Araki.
He was a study in deliberate nonchalance. While Reomen was the picture of dark, tailored elegance, Kenji was his polar opposite in faded board shorts and a thin, grey cotton t-shirt that had seen better days. A single, worn leather duffel bag sat at his feet like an afterthought.
He sipped from a paper cup of coffee, looking more like a surf instructor waiting for his students than a genius billionaire-mentor about to embark on a corporate war.
Reomen’s sharp eyes swept over him as they approached, a slow, deeply unimpressed smirk curling his lips.
"I see you dressed for the occasion," Reomen drawled, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "Tell me, did you have to fight your way through a swarm of paparazzi, or was the walk from your car particularly taxing for that... ensemble?"
Kenji didn’t even look up from his coffee. He took a slow, deliberate sip before his lazy gaze flicked from Reomen to Paige and back again.
"Unlike some people, Reo-chan, I don’t need a five-thousand-dollar suit to feel powerful," he retorted, his voice a lazy counterpoint to Reomen’s sharpness. "My genius travels light. But you... you look different." His eyes, sharp and perceptive, lingered on Paige for a moment, a genuine, knowing smile touching his lips. It wasn’t the smirk he reserved for Reomen. This was softer. Acknowledging. "Less like a storm cloud about to rain on everyone’s parade. It seems having your favorite accessory back has improved your general ambiance."
The comment was barbed, but the meaning was clear. Kenji saw it. The rigid tension that had been a permanent part of Reomen’s posture for weeks was gone. The cold, empty fury in his eyes had been replaced by a focused, living intensity.
He wasn’t just surviving the days anymore, grinding through them with grim determination. He was living again. Planning, breathing, feeling. And it was all because the woman standing beside him, her shoulder brushing his arm, had come back.
Reomen rolled his eyes, a familiar, long-suffering gesture. "My ’ambiance’ was just fine. And she’s not an accessory."
"Semantics," Kenji waved a dismissive hand. "The point is, the world’s most insufferable man is slightly less insufferable today. It’s a public service, really. I should be thanked."
Paige watched the exchange, a small, incredulous smile playing on her own lips. This was their language. A bizarre, coded dance of insults that was, in its own twisted way, a testament to a bond thicker than blood. It was comforting, this normalcy amidst the insanity.
Yet, after several minutes of this back-and-forth, with the pilot visibly waiting in the cockpit and the ground crew standing by, no one had moved toward the plane.
She finally broke the rhythm. "Not that this isn’t a fascinating display of masculine bonding," she interjected, her voice dry, "but is there a reason we’re just standing here admiring the tarmac? I thought we were in a hurry."
Reomen let out a short, exasperated sigh, the sound laced with fond annoyance. He shot a glare at Kenji. "Our resident blabbermouth here," he said, jerking his head toward his mentor, "told Suzume about our ’little trip.’ She insisted on tagging along."
Kenji had the decency to look only mildly chastised, his expression shifting to one of pure, unadulterated appreciation as he looked past them. "In my defense," he said, his voice dropping to a murmur, "I didn’t think she’d take it as a personal invitation. And I certainly didn’t expect... this."
This was Suzume Yokimura, cutting a path across the hangar floor like a supermodel late for her own cover shoot. She was a vision in a short, sleeveless black gown that hugged every one of her curves, the fabric so sleek it seemed to drink the light. 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺
Her heels clicked a sharp, decisive rhythm on the concrete, and a small, elegant suitcase trailed behind her. Her arrival was an event.
Kenji’s casual posture solidified into something more focused. His gaze, usually so full of lazy amusement, was now fixed, tracking her with an intensity that went far beyond polite interest. He was staring, and he wasn’t trying very hard to hide it.
Suzume ignored him, for the moment, her eyes landing on Paige and Reomen. A brilliant, knowing smile spread across her perfectly painted lips.
"Don’t look so thrilled, Reomen," she said, her voice a silken purr. "I was itching for a travel, and Japan wasn’t my first choice, but..." She shrugged one elegant shoulder, her gaze sweeping over the private jet with approval. "How do they say it? ’There’s no place like home,’ right?" Her eyes then met Paige’s, and the smile softened, becoming a shared, secret look. I told you so. Look at you now. She was taking in the way Paige stood with Reomen—not behind him, not in front of him, but with him. A united front.
She finally deigned to acknowledge Kenji, her eyes sliding to him with theatrical slowness. "Kenji. I see you dressed for the occasion." She delivered the line with the exact same sarcastic inflection Reomen had used moments before.
Kenji, for his part, just grinned, utterly unrepentant. He pushed off the stairs, his eyes still locked on her. "Someone has to bring the casual elegance to this party. You’ve clearly got the ’elegance’ covered. I’m handling the ’casual’."
The party was now complete. The strategist, the king, the queen, and the wildcard. The final piece had slid into place, and as they stood there in the humming silence of the hangar, the air crackled not just with the tension of the mission ahead, but with the complicated, vibrant energy of the four of them together.
The game was moving to its home turf, and they were all, for their own reasons, ready to play.







