Home / Urban / THE RETURN OF THE TRILLIONAIRE HEIR / Chapter One Hundred and Forty -Seven
Chapter One Hundred and Forty -Seven
Author: Aura Lyr
last update2026-01-19 15:21:38
The moment she stepped into Rico’s office, she froze.

It wasn’t hesitation. Not really. It was a physical reaction, a catch of her breath, a sudden awareness that she was no longer in control. Her eyes roamed the room, and she felt a faint, unfamiliar tightness in her chest. Everything about the office screamed quiet authority: the dark wood of the floor, the polished surfaces, the floor-to-ceiling windows framing the city below like it belonged to him. The space wasn’t loud, wasn’t decorated
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  • Chapter One Hundred and Sixty

    The patriarch came downstairs slowly, not because age demanded it, but because control did. Each step was measured, deliberate, his hand resting lightly on the polished banister as though the house itself belonged to him in ways no document could ever capture. Morning light filtered in through the tall windows, cutting pale lines across the marble floor, yet none of it softened the hard set of his face or the sharp awareness in his eyes. Damian and his wife, Helena, were already waiting in the foyer. They had been there longer than either of them cared to admit, standing too close to the door as though escape might suddenly become necessary, yet not daring to move away either, because leaving would have looked like guilt. Helena’s fingers were clasped together so tightly that she no longer felt them, her shoulders drawn in despite the warmth of the house, while Damian stood rigid beside her, his spine straight but tense, the way a man stood when he knew he was about to be questione

  • Chapter One Hundred and Fifty - Nine

    Rico’s wrists throbbed where the rope bit into his skin, coarse fibers sawing deeper with every involuntary twitch of his fingers. The pain was constant, dull and burning all at once, but he refused to give it the satisfaction of a sound. Pain was familiar. Pain was manageable. Silence, however, was not. It pressed in on him, thick and suffocating, clinging to the room like a living thing. The hum of distant traffic seeped faintly through the walls, mocking him with reminders of a world that was still moving while he remained trapped. Every breath he took sounded too loud in his own ears, each exhale a reminder of how exposed he was. He leaned back in the chair anyway. The movement sent a sharp jolt through his shoulders, numbness crawling up his arms as pins and needles sparked along his nerves. His jaw tightened, but he lifted his head slowly, deliberately, refusing to bow. His gaze locked onto the man standing across from him, and for a moment, the room felt smaller—as if the

  • Chapter One Hundred and Fifty- Eight

    Sonia got home later than she usually did. The West family estate stood as imposing as ever, its gates opening smoothly as the car approached, the guards nodding in recognition without a word. Everything looked exactly the same—perfect, orderly, untouched by the chaos brewing inside her. That contrast unsettled her more than she cared to admit. She stepped out of the car before the driver could fully open her door, murmuring a distracted thank-you as she moved toward the entrance. Her body felt heavier than normal, her head dull and tight, as though she had been carrying tension for too long without rest. She told herself it was exhaustion. It was easier than admitting it might be something else. Inside the house, the silence greeted her like a familiar warning. The staff noticed her arrival, but no one spoke. They never did unless spoken to first. Sonia moved past them without looking up, her heels clicking softly against the marble floor as she headed straight for the staircase

  • Chapter One Hundred and Fifty - Seven

    Melinda got home just as the last light of evening drained from the sky, leaving the world outside washed in grey and shadow. She didn’t bother closing the door properly. It swung shut behind her with a dull click, the sound echoing through the quiet house. She stood there for a moment, unmoving, her bag still slung over her shoulder like a weight she couldn’t shake off. Her chest felt tight, each breath shallow and uneven, as though her body had forgotten how to inhale properly. She slid the bag off and let it drop to the floor. The sound it made was soft, but final—like punctuation at the end of a sentence she hadn’t wanted to finish. Her legs carried her to the sofa without thought. The moment she sat down, something inside her gave way. Her shoulders slumped, her spine curved, and she folded inward as if she’d been holding herself together by sheer force of will all day and it had finally run out. Her palms pressed into her thighs, fingers digging into the fabric as she stare

  • Chapter One Hundred and Fifty- Six

    Rico had learned long ago that fear didn’t always announce itself the way people expected. It didn’t always come with shaking hands or frantic breaths. Sometimes it arrived quietly—slipping under the skin, settling into the chest like a slow, suffocating weight. That was how it felt now. Heavy. Persistent. Impossible to ignore. “You think you can fire me from Silverline and nothing is going to happen?” The voice echoed through the dim space, low and deliberate, cutting through the muffled sounds of his own breathing. Rico’s pulse jumped—not because of the threat itself, but because of the familiarity. He had heard that voice before. Too many times. In boardrooms. On late-night calls. Barking orders down hallways that once belonged to him. His stomach tightened. The voice came closer, footsteps measured, unhurried. Whoever it was wasn’t afraid. That alone told Rico more than he wanted to know. “Remove the mask,” the voice said. Hands grabbed his head roughly. The fabric

  • Chapter One Hundred and Fifty -Five

    After Melinda left, Sonia stayed where she was for a moment longer than necessary, her eyes lingering on the empty space beside her. The stool Melinda had been sitting on was still slightly turned, her drink untouched, condensation sliding slowly down the glass. It took a few seconds for the absence to register properly, for Sonia’s brain—dulled by alcohol and noise—to accept that Melinda wasn’t just stepping away briefly. She felt an odd flicker in her chest, a discomfort she couldn’t immediately name. Not fear. Not worry. Just something slightly off. Sonia exhaled sharply and clapped her hands once, the sound cutting through the chatter and music around them. It felt good to do something decisive, to pull the moment back under control. “Alright,” she said, forcing a casual tone that didn’t quite match how warm her face felt. “We need to leave.” Judith looked up slowly, blinking as if the words had to travel a long distance before reaching her. “Leave?” she asked. “Already?” “Y

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