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The Billionaire's Silent Wife No More Novel Cover

The Billionaire's Silent Wife No More

Sarah Miller spent three years as Jason Vanguard’s invisible wife, hiding her status as a global heiress to prove her devotion. Despite her sacrifices, the billionaire treated her with cold indifference. After he publicly humiliated her on their anniversary, Sarah finally chose herself. She signed the divorce papers and reclaimed her role as the powerful CEO of the Miller Group. Now a boardroom queen, she is the rival Jason never saw coming.
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Chapter 6

I didn't sleep much.

I lay in that hotel room for what felt like the whole night just staring at the ceiling, the city outside doing its quiet late night thing, and my mind refusing to stop turning everything over. The Miller Group. The board. My father's face when he said let's begin. Jason's face in that precinct.

Eventually the dark outside the window started going grey. And then my body just decided we were done lying there.

I was up before the alarm.

I hadn't set one but my body woke itself at five thirty the way it always did when something important was coming. That specific alertness that arrives before your mind has fully caught up with why. I lay there for a moment staring at the ceiling listening to the city outside and then I remembered and the weight of it settled over me all at once.

Today I walked into the Miller Group.

I got up and went to the window. The city was still mostly dark, that particular early morning grey where the streets are quiet and the light hasn't decided what it wants to be yet. A few taxis. A delivery truck. A woman walking a dog with the focused efficiency of someone who had somewhere to be after this.

I stood there for a while just looking.

I thought about the last time I had woken up with somewhere important to be. Really important. Not one of Jason's dinners or one of his events where important meant remembering which fork went where and which wives belonged to which husbands and making sure I didn't say anything that reflected badly on him. I mean somewhere that was mine. Something that was for me.

I couldn't remember. That was the honest answer. I couldn't remember the last time I had woken up and the day ahead belonged to me.

I showered and dressed carefully. I didn't put on the red dress. The red dress had done its job yesterday. Today needed something different. Something that said I was paying attention. I found a simple dark blazer and trousers in the suitcase, things I had packed without thinking, and put them on and looked at myself in the mirror.

I looked like someone who was about to walk into a boardroom.

I had never walked into a boardroom in my life.

The thought should have scared me. Strangely it didn't.

The car was outside at seven exactly. A different car from yesterday. Longer. Darker. A driver who didn't make small talk which I appreciated. I sat in the back and watched the city wake up properly as we moved through the morning traffic and tried to organise my thoughts into something useful.

My father had said three board members had Vanguard loyalties. He had said it was already being handled but he hadn't told me what that meant. He had told me about the intelligence firm and the shipping routes and the sixty three billion and then he had stopped and told me to sleep and said the rest was tomorrow's conversation.

Tomorrow was now.

Julian was waiting outside the Miller Group building when we pulled up.

I hadn't expected that. He was standing on the pavement in a dark coat with two coffees and the particular expression of a man who had been awake for a long time and had made peace with it. He opened the car door before the driver could.

"You slept," he said, looking at my face.

"A little."

"Better than nothing." He handed me one of the coffees. "Your father is already upstairs. He wants to walk you through the building before the staff arrive."

I looked up at the building. It was tall and clean and modern with the Miller name in simple silver letters above the entrance. I had driven past it before. Twice, maybe three times over the years. I had never gone in. My father had never invited me and I had never pushed.

Looking at it now I felt something strange move through me. Not pride exactly. Something quieter than pride. Something that felt like recognition. Like seeing a place you have never been but somehow already know.

"Ready?" Julian said.

"Stop asking me that," I said.

He almost smiled. Almost. He held the door open and I walked in.

The lobby was quiet at this hour. Marble floors. High ceilings. A long reception desk that was currently unmanned. The Miller name again on the wall behind it in the same simple silver. Everything clean and deliberate and understated in the way that things are when they don't need to try.

My father was standing near the elevator. He was dressed sharply, more sharply than last night, and he looked like a different version of himself in this building. More certain. More contained. This was his element in the way that the study had been a place for honesty and this was a place for precision.

He looked at me when I walked in and something moved across his face briefly before he put it away.

"Good morning," he said.

"Good morning," I said.

We took the elevator to the top floor. My father walked me through it himself. His office first, a large corner room with a view of the city that made the view from Jason's house look modest. Then the boardroom, long table, twenty chairs, a screen at the far end. Then the smaller offices that lined the corridor. Then the open plan floor below where the analysts and the assistants worked.

He told me about each department as we walked. Not lecturing. Just talking, the way you talk when you know something very well and you want someone else to know it too. I listened carefully and asked questions when I had them and he answered without making me feel like the questions were small.

By the time we had done the full tour the building was starting to fill up. I could hear the elevator arriving and departing. Voices in the corridor. The ordinary morning sounds of a large company beginning its day.

We went back to his office and sat down.

"The board meeting is at nine," my father said. "There are eleven members. Eight of them are fully aligned with the transition. Three are not."

"The Vanguard loyalists," I said.

"Yes. Richard Vanguard placed them on the board four years ago as a condition of the merger agreement. They've been manageable until now but with Jason's situation becoming public they'll be looking to protect themselves. They'll push back on the transition."

"How hard."

"Hard enough to be inconvenient. Not hard enough to stop it." My father folded his hands on the desk. "The evidence we have on Jason's account diversion implicates all three of them. They signed off on two of the transfers. When that becomes clear to them this morning they will have a choice between loyalty to the Vanguards and self preservation."

"And people like that always choose self preservation," I said.

My father looked at me. "Yes," he said simply. "They do."

I thought about Jason. About the way he had stood in that bedroom adjusting his tie. About the way he had said Elena is waiting in the car without even lowering his voice. He had never once considered that there might be consequences. He had spent his whole life in a world where men like him didn't face consequences.

That world was about to get a lot smaller.

"What do you need me to do in the meeting," I said.

"For today just be present. Sit beside me. Let them see you. Let them understand that the transition is real and it's happening and the time for manoeuvring around it is over." My father paused. "You don't need to say much. Your presence will say most of it."

"And after today."

"After today we begin the formal handover process. It takes time. There are legal structures to move through and announcements to manage and staff to brief. But the direction will be clear from this morning." He looked at me steadily. "The Miller Group will have a new chairperson. And her name will not be a surprise to anyone in this building by the end of the week."

I sat with that for a moment.

A knock at the door. Julian leaned in. "Board members are arriving."

My father stood. He straightened his jacket and looked at me.

"Ready?" he said.

"You as well," I said.

He paused. Then he laughed. A short real sound that I hadn't heard from him in so long it took me a second to recognise it.

We walked to the boardroom together.

The eleven board members were already seated when we entered. Eight of them looked up with expressions that ranged from welcoming to carefully neutral. Three of them, the ones I had already decided to watch, looked at me with the specific assessment of people calculating how much of a problem something is going to be.

I looked back at all of them without rushing and without looking away.

My father sat at the head of the table. I sat to his right. Julian stood near the door, present and quiet, the way he always was.

"Good morning," my father said, his voice filling the room easily. "Thank you all for coming. I'll keep the introduction brief because I think most of you already understand what this morning is about." He paused. "I'd like to introduce my daughter Sarah Miller. As of this morning she begins the formal process of transitioning into the role of Chairperson of the Miller Group."

The room was quiet.

One of the three, a man with silver hair and a tight expression, leaned forward. "Arthur, with respect, this is rather sudden. The board would expect a formal proposal and a vote before any transition of this magnitude."

"Of course," my father said pleasantly. "And you'll have both. The formal proposal documents are in front of you. The vote will take place at the end of this meeting." He smiled. "I'm confident in the outcome."

The silver haired man looked at me. I looked back at him.

I didn't smile. I didn't shift in my seat. I just looked at him the way my father had looked at me last night when I said I wanted all of it. Steady and patient and completely certain.

He looked away first.

I picked up the proposal document in front of me and opened it and began to read. Around the table I could feel the energy in the room adjusting. Recalibrating. The way energy does when something that was uncertain becomes inevitable.

Under the table my hands were completely still.

I was going to be fine.

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