©WebNovelPub
The CEO's Regret: You made me your lie, I become your Loss-Chapter 74: Stay
Amara didn’t pull away, she simply nodded, though the movement was robotic, devoid of her usual spirit. Julian shifted, his hand moving to the inner pocket of his suit jacket.
He withdrew a small, velvet-covered box. He knew the timing wasn’t ideal the air was still thick with the news of Elara but he felt an urgent need to anchor her to him, to remind her that while the world was crumbling, his devotion remained an immovable pillar.
"I realized you misplaced the ring I gave you," he began softly, his thumbs grazing the edges of the box. "It must have gotten lost in the chaos of everything. So, I got you a new one."
He clicked the box open, revealing a ring that caught the low, ambient light of the parlor.
"I know you said you were not ready," Julian continued, his eyes searching hers for any sign of retreat, "and I told you I would wait. I still will. I just... I want you to keep it with you. As a promise, nothing more."
Amara looked down at the ring, then slowly raised her hand to touch his face. Her fingers were trembling, tracing the sharp line of his jaw as if to ensure he was actually there, solid and real amidst the ghost of the day’s tragedies.
"Why are you so good to me?" she whispered, her voice cracking. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
Julian leaned into her touch, his eyes closing for a fleeting second as if her proximity were the only oxygen he needed. "You are too good for me," he replied, his voice thick with unvarnished honesty.
"You are perfect," Amara murmured. As she looked back at him, the dam finally broke. Tears welled in her eyes, blurring the edges of the room until only Julian’s face remained in focus. She reached for his hand, her fingers steadying over the ring.
"You should put it on me," she said.
The air in the room shifted instantly. Madam Pedro, who had been watching from the shadows of the doorway, let out a sharp, audible gasp of joy, her hands flying to her mouth to stifle a sob of relief. It was a small victory, a flicker of light in a dark week, but for everyone in that room, it felt like the first breath of spring after a long, cruel winter.
Julian didn’t hesitate. With the reverence of a man handling a sacred relic, he slid the ring onto her finger, sealing the moment in the silence of the grand foyer.
The ring slid onto her finger with a soft, metallic click, a tiny, definitive sound that seemed to rewrite the atmosphere of the room.
For a heartbeat, no one breathed. Madam Pedro, still standing in the periphery, had pressed a handkerchief to her lips, her eyes shining. This wasn’t just jewelry; it was a desperate, beautiful anchor in a sea of turbulence.
Amara looked down at her hand, the diamond catching the dim light. She didn’t pull away. Instead, she curled her fingers into Julian’s palm, as if the ring were a tether keeping her from drifting back into the dark thoughts of the hospital and the ghost of Elara’s final moments.
"I thought I had lost everything," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the rhythmic ticking of the foyer clock. "I felt like... like I was standing on the edge of that cliff again, just waiting for the wind to take me."
Julian tightened his hold, pulling her flush against his chest so she could feel the steady, reassuring thrum of his heart.
"You aren’t on that cliff anymore, Amara," Julian said, his voice firm, leaving no room for her to argue. "I am the ground beneath your feet now. And I am not going anywhere."
Amara tilted her head back, her eyes still shimmering with unshed tears. The bravado she had worn earlier, the need to save everyone, to fix everything, was gone, replaced by a raw, naked vulnerability.
"Julian," she began, then hesitated. "Does it ever stop? The feeling that I have to pay for every ounce of happiness I feel? That I have to suffer just so I can breathe?"
Julian traced the line of her cheekbone with his thumb, his gaze unyielding.
"That is the trauma talking, Amara," he said gently. "That is the voice of people who didn’t deserve you. You aren’t taking happiness from anyone. You are simply choosing to survive, and for the first time, you are choosing to do it with me."
Madam Pedro stepped forward then, her presence finally filling the space she had vacated moments ago. She didn’t say a word, but her hand rested briefly on Amara’s shoulder, a silent, powerful blessing of their union.
"Rest now," Julian urged, his tone shifting from intense protector to tender caretaker. "The world will still be there in the morning, but for tonight, you belong only to this room. Only to us."
Amara let out a long, shuddering breath, her head finally resting against his shoulder. The weight of the day began to recede, not because the problems had vanished, but because the isolation had finally been broken.
Julian didn’t wait for her to walk. He stood, keeping her cradled against his chest as if she were made of glass, and began the slow, measured ascent up the grand staircase.
Madam Pedro watched them go, a silent sentinel of their fragile new peace, before retreating to the shadows to let them have their sanctuary. The house was quiet now, the aggressive hum of the evening’s tension fading into a softer, more rhythmic pulse.
He carried her into the master suite, the room illuminated only by the faint, silvery glow of the moon filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows. He set her down on the edge of the bed with such profound care that Amara felt a fresh sting of tears.
"Julian," she whispered, her hands gripping the lapels of his jacket, refusing to let him step away. "Stay."
He knelt before her, his height suddenly brought level with hers. He didn’t need to be asked; he was never going to leave. He caught her hands, his thumbs tracing the ring, the new promise that now sat on her finger.
"I’m not going anywhere, Amara. Not tonight. Not ever."







