He Made Her Queen, Then Took Her Crown
He Made Her Queen, Then Took Her Crown
Author: Nathan Emorey
Chapter 1: 'Dead Weight'
Author: Nathan Emorey
last update2025-04-23 17:23:39

 THE smell of burnt rubber still hung in the air when Rowan Kane stepped outside.

 It wasn’t the smell that made him pause—it was the car.

 Low-slung. Pearl white. Chrome accents gleaming like a fresh cut. It hadn’t been there this morning. His breath hitched as he eyed the logo: Asterion V9. A luxury model, only five of which existed in the country. 

 Only five!

 And one was parked in his driveway. His driveway. How?

 Inside the house, laughter floated out from the hallway—her laugh. Lena Aston. His wife. The woman he’d bled himself dry to support through every late-night pitch, every dead-end meeting, every ugly corporate rejection.

 He pushed the door open, the hinges groaning like they were as tired as he was. The air hit him first—new leather, expensive perfume, a whiff of something citrusy that didn’t belong in their cramped two-room world.

 Lena stood in the middle of the lounge, twirling a set of keys around her finger, definitely the key to the car parked outside. But again, how?

 Lena’s heels clicked on the scuffed lino. A sleek black handbag—probably worth his year’s rent—spilled out tissue paper and receipts. Behind her, a pile of glossy shopping bags leaned against the sagging sofa, names he’d only seen in ads: Gucci, Prada, some French nonsense he couldn’t pronounce.

 “Bloody hell,” Rowan said, wiping rain from his brow. His voice rasped, rough from a day hauling crates at the warehouse. “You hit the jackpot or what?”

 She didn’t answer.

 Instead, Lena dropped her bags on the Italian marble floor and pulled out her phone. Her perfectly manicured nails clicked across the screen like she was scratching the surface of a new world she’d stepped into without him.

 “You bought a car?” he asked, softer this time, stepping forward.

 Still no response.

 He saw it then—the faint flicker of annoyance behind her lashes, like his voice was static interrupting a symphony, like an annoying child crying into the ear of a misopedist. She wanted him to leave already. There was disgust clearly written on her pretty face, smeared with makeup.

 “I um… I saw it outside,” he added quickly, trying not to sound like a man grasping at straws. “That Asterion—babe, that’s not just a car, that’s an—”

 “It’s leased,” she cut in coldly. “Through the company.”

 Her tone slapped more than her words did.

 “Oh,” Rowan murmured softly.

 Silence fell again, stretched thin by the distance between them. She walked past him like he was just another wall in the house she no longer saw.

 He followed, slow, careful. “So, things are um… going well, then? I guess?”

 Lena turned, just slightly, raising a single sculpted brow. “I landed the Obsidian Tech contract. Full backing. Media rights. Seven figures. Signed it this morning. So yes, things are going well.”

 Rowan blinked. “That’s… that’s incredible.” He stepped forward with a faint smile, reaching out to touch her arm, maybe hold her hand. “Why didn’t you tell me? I would’ve opened some wine, celebrated—”

 She flinched. Just barely. Like his touch was something cold she didn’t want on her skin anymore.

 “Rowan,” she sighed, tired already. “Can we not do this right now? Please?”

 He froze.

 “Do what?” he asked, voice tight.

 “This... ‘aww honey, congrats’ shit. You don’t get it. You’ve never been in those rooms. You don’t know what it takes to land something like this.” Her voice wasn’t angry—it was pitying. Somehow, that cut deeper. “I don’t need a celebration from you. All I want from you is to give me some space to sleep. My–head–hurts.” she added.

 Rowan shook his head and let out a soft sigh.

 “I was with you every night you practiced those pitches,” he said, a quiet thunder in his throat. “I printed your proposals, edited your decks, ran your mock interviews. I was in the room, Lena. Just not the one with the glass walls.”

 She looked down at her phone again.

 He stepped back, his eyes dull. “Right.”

 Her eyes snapped up. “Look, I appreciate everything you’ve done, I really do. But I’m at a level now where... I need more. I need someone who gets it.”

 “Gets what?”

 “This.. this life.” She gestured vaguely around the minimalist living room. “Power. Deals. Reputation. You—you’re still... chasing little hardware gigs. Freelance repairs? Working in a goddamn warehouse? Come on, Ro. You’re better than that.”

 He stared at her like she’d grown another face.

 “I fix things, Lena,” he said flatly. “That’s what I do. Including when your laptop crashed before that Everhart pitch. Remember that?”

 She waved a hand. “Look, let’s not live in the past.”

 He looked at her differently now. Like he was seeing her reflection instead of her face. All shine. No warmth.

 “I still remember the day you walked in crying because no one would take a chance on you,” he said quietly. “I told you to hold on. That your time would come.”

 Her jaw tightened. “Yeah, well. My time came. And I made it on my own.”

 “Did you?” he asked. The words were flat, but something behind his eyes cracked. “Guess I was never really here then.”

 He felt it then—something inside folding in on itself. Not anger. Not jealousy. Just exhaustion, disappointment. The kind that didn’t come from the body, but from the soul.

 She scoffed. “Rowan, stop making this so dramatic. You act like you're gonna walk out the door or something. I’m the only person you have. You can barely even survive on those pennies you make off of your menial jobs.”

 He didn’t answer. Just turned away slowly, like the weight of staying finally outweighed the pain of leaving.

 He walked to the hallway, picked up his old jacket—the one with the ripped lining and grease stains from years of hard, invisible work—and slid it on without a word.

 “Where are you going?” she asked, mildly annoyed, not even looking up from her phone.

 He opened the door. Evening air brushed against his face like a quiet goodbye.

 “I don’t know yet,” he said. “But not here.” He stepped out. And closed the door behind him. 

 Lena stared at the door for a long second, lips curled in mild amusement. “He’ll be back,” she said to herself with a smirk. “He always does.”

 She had no idea…That this time, Rowan Kane wasn’t just walking out.

 He was never coming back

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  • Chapter 10: Shadows Behind the Spotlight

    The sudden burst of activity in Lena's office had its own rhythm. Emails flooded in, calls stacked one after another, and for the first time in days, the air felt breathable and the Air Conditioning seemed to cool her off. She leaned back in her chair, watching the phone screen buzz with the kind of energy she hadn't seen in weeks—green lights, responses, follow-ups. Movement. Dominic strolled in with that devil-may-care smile of his, a portfolio tucked under his arm. He set it down gently in front of her. "Asset recovery from the Morgenthal proposal. They agreed to revisit the terms," he said. “And the tech sector wing of Dorne Ventures just confirmed their pitch appointment. You’re on fire, Lena.” She didn’t smile. Just nodded, thumbing through the paperwork. “This doesn’t mean we’ve won,” she said. Dominic chuckled. “No, but it means we’re not bleeding anymore.” A soft knock came at the door. Her assistant peeked in, holding a sealed envelope and a coffee. “From Mr. Granger

  • Chapter 9: The Weight Of Silence

    The elevator doors slid open with a dull chime, and Lena stepped out, her heels clicking against the polished floor of Obsidian Tech’s headquarters. The morning light filtering through the tall windows did nothing to soften the pounding in her head. She adjusted her coat, forcing her spine to straighten, smoothing away any trace of the mess she felt inside. There was no room for weakness here. Not today. Especially not now. The office buzzed with the usual Monday morning rhythm — phones ringing, keyboards clattering, voices weaving together in muted conversations — but to Lena, it all sounded like static. Background noise. Her world was unraveling too fast for her to care about anyone else’s deadlines. She walked into her corner office, shut the glass door behind her, and slumped into the chair. The city skyline stared back at her, indifferent. She reached for her phone and began dialing — no time for pride, no room for fear. She was not ready to be a failure. The praises from her

  • Chapter 8: A White-Collar Strumpet

    The following morning, Lena was up early. She dashed into the bathroom quickly, water cascading down her body, and then she dressed in the most exquisite dress she had in her wardrobe. “Looks like someone is about to kick some ass this morning.” a voice from her bed echoed in her ear. She quickly startled in extreme shock. “Who.. who’s that?” she asked, almost stammering. The guy rose up. Naked. His abs and muscles all over the place. It was Dominic. For a moment, Lena was quickly drawn in and enticed by his build, his muscles, and most especially, his big black wood, staring right at her with a smug, knowing glint. “You don’t remember, do you?” Dominic stretched, his voice smooth as silk, but laced with mischief. “You were a mess last night. One too many glasses, a cab ride home... and well, here we are.” Lena’s heart raced, her mind scrambling through the blurry fragments of the night before. Bits and pieces came rushing back — the drinks, the humiliation, the silent drive

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    The moment hung in the air, as cold as ice, after Megan’s challenge. Her words, sharp and defiant, echoed through the whispers of the crowd. "I dare you," she had said, looking Rowan up and down like he was just another loser, an insignificant nobody. But Rowan didn’t flinch. His eyes, dark and calm, never left hers. His smile was faint, like a shadow of something sinister, something deeper than the facade she so arrogantly assumed she understood. But before he could respond, the announcer’s voice sliced through the tension, the loudspeaker crackling with authority. "Ladies and gentlemen, the program is about to begin! Please take your seats." The buzz of the crowd shifted, and people began to move toward the ballroom, the grand event unfolding in full swing. Rowan stood there for a moment, letting the noise of the crowd wash over him. There was something about this moment that felt... surreal. Like it was only the beginning of something far bigger than anyone realized. With a s

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  • Chapter 3: The Crack Beneath The Crown

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