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The Billionaire CEO Betrays his Wife: He wants her back-Chapter 151: One Perfect dance
Chapter 151: One Perfect dance
What she didn’t know was that Rafael had returned a few moments ago. He’d entered quietly, not wanting to interrupt the call. But as he paused near the hallway, Mara’s voice drifted to him.
He froze.
Her words weren’t dramatic or grand. They weren’t declarations. But they were honest. Warm. Real.
"He holds a special place in my heart." And just like that, something shifted in him.
He hadn’t meant to eavesdrop, but what he heard made the late-night pharmacy run, the half-spilled cookies, and all the sleepless hours worth it.
In the living room, Mara still hadn’t noticed him. "I’m not ready to define anything," she continued. "But I’m not afraid anymore either."
Behind her, Rafael leaned on the doorway with a soft smile and a heartbeat that felt just a little steadier than it had yesterday.
Steve spotted him first.
"Ohhh... someone just caught that, didn’t he?" he sang-songed like a middle-schooler.
Mara turned and froze. Rafael raised a brow. "So... I hold a special place?" Mara went red, but smiled. "You weren’t supposed to hear that."
"Well," he shrugged, walking in, "I’ll try not to let it go to my head. Or do I get upgraded to ’moderately special’ if I bring you your favorite cookies?"
The brothers collectively howled in the background. "Alright," Mara groaned, burying her face in a pillow. "I’m ending the call now. Bye you guys,"
The call ended with laughter, and they waved goodnight. Mara looked up at Rafael, who now stood in front of her, holding a paper bag.
"Tea. Cookies. One chocolate-covered almond because I know you’ll say you don’t want sweets and then steal mine."
She smiled. "You really listen." He nodded, and then quietly added, "Always."
And for the first time in a long time, she let herself feel it, the quiet, undeniable warmth of a new beginning.
--
The apartment had settled into a peaceful quiet after the call. Audrey was asleep, the nanny had retired, and the soft hum of the city below filtered in through the open balcony doors. The air was still warm with a touch of midnight breeze.
Rafael returned from the kitchen, two mugs in hand. He placed one gently in front of Mara, who was curled into the couch, her legs tucked under her and hair slightly tousled.
"Thank you," she said softly, wrapping her hands around the mug.
He sat beside her, but instead of sipping his tea, he studied her for a moment the way her eyes followed the lights of the skyline, the quiet peace on her face, like a storm had finally passed.
Then, with a teasing tilt of his head, he asked, "Stef... do you want to dance?"
She blinked, caught off guard. "Now?"
He nodded. "Right now."
"In the middle of the living room?"
"There’s no wrong place for a good dance," he grinned. "Besides... I always imagine dancing with you when you pretended you didn’t like me."
Mara chuckled. "That wasn’t true."
"Well dance with me then," he added with a wink.
She hesitated only a second longer, then placed her mug down. "Fine. But if you dip me and I fall, I’m never forgiving you."
"Noted," he said, standing up and offering his hand with the exaggerated formality of a ballroom gentleman. "May I have this dance, my lady?"
Mara laughed, slipping her hand into his. "You’re ridiculous."
"I’ve been called worse." He pulled her in gently, placing a hand on her waist. With no music, just the quiet hum of the night, they started to sway.
It was awkward for all of three seconds.
Then her body melted into the rhythm of his, and something about the silence made it feel more intimate than any symphony could’ve managed. The room was dim, golden light spilling from a corner lamp, casting soft shadows across their faces.
Mara rested her head lightly against his chest.
"I used to imagine this," Rafael murmured, "when everything was chaos... I’d imagine dancing with you. No noise. No fear. Just us."
She closed her eyes, breathing in the faint scent of his cologne, her fingers curling slightly at his shoulder. "You imagined it?" she whispered.
"More times than I’ll admit without a lawyer present." She gave a breathy laugh. "You’re really not what I expected."
"Good unexpected, or call-the-police unexpected?" She tilted her head up to look at him, eyes dancing with amusement and something softer beneath.
"The kind that makes it hard to remember how we got here."
He smiled, but didn’t press her, just gently spun her once before pulling her back into his arms.
And there, in the middle of her living room with her past behind her and something new unfolding right in front of her, Mara danced. Not for anyone else, not for a plan or vengeance or survival.
Just for herself. And for the first time in what felt like forever, it felt good to be held.
----
The cold air in the Anderson estate was sharp, sterile. The marble floors gleamed under the clinical white lights as Ethan paced back and forth in his home office, his jaw clenched, fingers running through his already disheveled hair.
Something wasn’t adding up.
Andrew had been fussy, yes. A little warm, sure. But the diagnosis Lucy and her doctor had pushed on him? A bone marrow transplant? Start making another child? It reeked of manipulation. He should’ve seen it sooner.
He wasn’t a fool. He had just been... tired. Broken. Missing Mara. Grieving Audrey’s twin. Staring at the baby boy who’d kept him breathing when everything else crumbled.
But he wasn’t tired anymore.
And today, he’d called in his doctors. The ones he trusted. The best pediatric team in the country. And now they stood before him. "Well?" Ethan demanded, arms folded, his stare as cold as ice.
Dr. Loma, a gray-haired woman with gentle eyes, exchanged a glance with her colleague, then stepped forward.
"Mr. Anderson, we’ve completed a full exam and run all necessary tests. Your son... is fine. He has a mild cold. No blood irregularities. No indications of the condition, Dr. Sorel, Miss Lucy’s physician claimed."
Ethan’s face didn’t change immediately. It stayed still. Too still.
"Are you saying..." he said slowly, dangerously, "that my son is not sick?"
Dr. Loma nodded. "He just needs rest, fluids, and a few nights with less screen time and more cuddles."
Ethan’s fist clenched at his side.
A door creaked.
Lucy peeked in, her hair slightly tousled, eyes lined with forced concern. "Is everything alright? What are these doctors doing here?"
Ethan turned.
Silent.
Terrifying.
He walked toward her with measured steps.
"You lied to me again," he said, voice calm, too calm. "You made me believe my son was dying."
"Ethan, please, I just wanted us to—"
"You used Andrew," he snapped, stepping closer, his voice rising now, fury finally cracking through his composure. "You used a baby to manipulate me into your bed. Into marrying you. You told me we needed another child, another child! for a disease he doesn’t even have!"
Tears began to gather in Lucy’s eyes. "I didn’t mean— I thought— Maybe he was sick—"
"Don’t." He held up a hand. "Don’t insult my intelligence, Lucy. You knew exactly what you were doing. And you’re not just heartless, you’re a dangerous monster."
Lucy’s legs gave out as she dropped to her knees, hands clasped, crying now, mascara streaking down her cheeks.
"Please, Ethan... I did everything for us! I loved you! I carried your child! I fought and stayed with you when she left you! I deserve to be your wife! I gained it, I gave you a son!"
Ethan looked down at her, no pity left in his heart.
"You don’t deserve anything. And you’re done here."
He turned to the butler, who had been standing quietly in the hall, watching with wide eyes.
"Make sure she’s out of this house tonight. And make it very clear she’s not to set foot back in again. Ever."
Lucy sobbed harder, crawling forward. "Ethan, please, please don’t do this to me! I have no one else!"
"I have put up with your games far enough," Ethan snapped. "You gambled with my son’s life and lost."
He didn’t wait for her reply. He turned and walked back inside, where Andrew sat on a blanket in the living room, holding a stuffed elephant and babbling softly.
Ethan knelt beside him, lifting the baby gently into his arms.
"You’re okay," he whispered, kissing his son’s forehead. "Daddy’s got you."
And as Lucy was dragged out of the house by security, kicking, screaming, begging, the doors closed behind her like a judge’s gavel.
This time, Ethan wouldn’t be fooled again. "I will take my son with me!" She yelled as if that was to threaten him.
—
The afternoon sun poured golden light into the cozy rooftop garden of the penthouse. The gentle breeze tugged at the gauzy curtains, and baby Audrey’s giggles floated through the air like music.
She was sitting on a soft picnic blanket, surrounded by an army of stuffed animals, tiny blocks, and the world’s most dramatic pink sunhat, which she had somehow managed to wear backwards.
Mara lounged barefoot beside her, dressed in a simple cotton dress, her hair tied up in a lazy bun. Rafael sat opposite them, pretending to drink invisible tea from a plastic cup the size of his thumb.
"May I say, this is the finest invisible tea I’ve ever had," he said, sipping with great drama. "Tell your teddy bear chef he’s truly a visionary."
Mara snorted with laughter. "He only makes it for very important guests."
"Well, I’m honored," Rafael said with a bow. "I’ll have you know I traveled far and wide for this very meeting."
Audrey squealed and clapped her hands, then promptly threw her teacup at Rafael, who caught it just in time.
"Hostile negotiations," he said, eyes twinkling.
"She’s not impressed with your accent," Mara teased.
"I was going for aristocratic. Maybe I landed somewhere between pirate and tourist?" Mara smirked. "You landed somewhere."