Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 104: Family Business
The café was neither trendy nor in disrepair. It sat on a quieter stretch of the business district, where afternoon traffic thinned out. The windows looked toward the river, but in winter, one could see only part of the water between buildings and bare trees. The tables were spaced to suggest privacy, not guarantee it.
Gio arrived first.
He picked a table against the wall where he could see the entrance clearly. From here, he could see the door and anyone who lingered too long. He set his phone on the table next to his coffee and left it locked.
He had not ordered anything elaborate—black coffee. No sugar.
The message that called him had been short: "We should talk."
It came from a number he recognized but hadn’t answered in months. Gio considered ignoring it, but instead suggested a public place and a time during business hours.
The door opened five minutes past the agreed time. His half-brother walked in easily, as if he owned the door. He removed his gloves while scanning the room before spotting Gio. Then he approached without expression.
He did not embrace him.
"You’ve been difficult to reach," he said as he sat.
Gio did not respond to the implied accusation. "You asked to talk."
His half-brother put his gloves on the table and signaled the barista. Then he turned back to Gio. They looked alike, but their features were not identical. Same jaw shape. The rest from different backgrounds.
"It won’t take long," his half-brother said. "I assume you’ve been watching the news."
"I don’t make assumptions," Gio replied.
The other man gave a small, humorless smile and reached for his phone. He unlocked it, swiped once, then placed it flat on the table between them, angled toward Gio.
The image on the screen was clear enough.
A dark vehicle parked near a temporary barrier. A man stepping into it, part of his profile visible. The angle made it look far away and slightly compressed. Inside, a woman sat with her face turned slightly away—but anyone who knew her would recognize her.
The shot was tight. No crew in frame. No context.
Gio did not pick up the phone. He leaned forward slightly to examine it without changing expression.
"You know how this looks," his half-brother said.
Gio kept his eyes on the phone. "It looks like a photograph."
The other man took a soft breath.
"A celebrity leaves a private filming area through a side door. Gets into a private car. This happens often. With the same woman."
He paused.
"She’s not unknown," he added after a beat.
Gio met his gaze. "No."
The barista set a cappuccino down carefully at the edge of the table. The two men didn’t acknowledge the interruption. Steam rose between them, briefly blocking the phone screen’s reflection.
"Entertainment press is predictable," his half-brother said. "They like hidden relationships. They like exposing them even more."
He took a slow sip before finishing.
"And when they start looking at her, they won’t just stop at her name."
Arianne Summers wasn’t just a socialite. Her name carried weight.
"If they look into her family," his half-brother said, "they’ll find you."
Gio stayed quiet.
"They’ll ask questions. About Fairchild. About the timeline. About her father’s affairs."
Gio looked back at the image. The timestamp in the corner, small but clear. A faint watermark showed a freelance photographer took it. Not an internal leak. Not personal betrayal. The distance flattened the image.
"What do you actually have?" Gio asked.
His half-brother leaned back and studied him. "Enough."
"That’s not an answer."
"It doesn’t need to be." He shrugged. "There are other angles."
He didn’t show more images.
Gio understood.
He’d known this moment would come. Not this man, not this photo—but someone, sometime. The question was never if. It was when. And what he’d do when it arrived.
The café door opened again. Two office workers came in, talking quietly. Background noise shifted but didn’t interfere.
"What do you want?" Gio asked.
The amount mentioned was not high. That was the plan. Monthly payments. Small enough to accept. Large enough to bind.
"We don’t want trouble," his half-brother said. "We want stability. You’ve done well. You can help your family."
The word family did not soften the request.
Gio looked at him a long moment before responding. "I’m not paying you."
He didn’t raise his voice.
His half-brother’s expression tightened. "Think carefully."
"I have."
"You’re the easiest thread to pull," the other man said. "If someone decides to look closely."
He picked up the phone and locked the screen. The image vanished, showing his reflection briefly before the display went dark.
"This doesn’t have to be public," he said. "That’s the point."
Gio reached for his coffee and took a slow sip. It had cooled enough to drink without wincing.
"You think I’m the only one who can trace a photograph," he said.
His half-brother smiled slightly. "Are you threatening me?"
"No."
They held each other’s gaze. Nothing escalated.
"You’ve changed," the other man said finally.
"That happens." Gio agreed. He had learned early.
He didn’t say what he’d learned, or from whom. Some lessons came from surviving. Others came from watching someone who survived better. Arianne had taught him that—how to hold still until the threat passed.
His brother finished his cappuccino and stood without waiting for further response.
"You have my number," he said. "For now."
He left without looking back.
Gio remained seated.
He unlocked his phone and reopened the image from that morning. Zooming in, he studied the pixellation along the edges, the faint watermark. He took a screenshot, sent it to a secure address, and left the original message untouched. He looked at the image again. The angle showed it was taken from behind the first barricade—outside the secure area. The distance blurred the details. The image lost weight.
He decreased the brightness on his screen and locked it.
The river flowed slowly in its narrow channel, surface dark under the late afternoon sky. The café windows reflected the inside more than the view. People came and went. No one noticed him.
He finished his coffee and stood, leaving exact change on the table next to the cup. He did not rush.
He stepped outside into the cold, adjusted his coat collar, and walked toward the parking structure. At the corner, he paused and looked back through the café window.
His phone vibrated once in his pocket. He didn’t check it. Not yet. There was one message from the same number. Think about it. He did not reply. He placed the phone face down on the passenger seat and started the engine.
The wind pushed lightly against the vehicle as he left the parking garage and merged into traffic. He saw the river in the rearview mirror for a few seconds before buildings blocked the view.
By the time he reached the main road, it was getting dark. The photo stayed saved on his device.
For now, it was only a photograph.
The phone stayed dark in his pocket. The car moved with traffic. Red lights, green lights, ordinary evening. None of them knew what he carried. That was the point. For now, it stayed with him. Alone.







