Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 122: Tomorrow

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Chapter 122: Tomorrow

Filming wrapped earlier than anyone expected.

The last scene wasn’t dramatic. It required precision.

Under the bright, clinical lights of the operating room set, Noah moved with steady confidence, delivering his lines with the same quiet authority viewers had come to expect, his gloved hands working in clean, practiced motions across the staged surgical field. Each movement remained controlled, each pause exact.

The director called, "Cut." Then, a moment later, "That’s a wrap."

A low wave of applause rolled through the crew gathered just beyond the camera line. It wasn’t loud, but it carried relief and completion.

Almost immediately, the set began to break down. Cables were coiled, cameras lifted from their marks. Makeup artists stepped forward with wipes and towels, already preparing him for the transition from character back to himself.

A few minutes later, he stood in front of the dressing room mirror, removing the last traces of artificial blood from his hands while the sink ran quietly. The name Noah Hart still hung printed on the laminated tag taped to the mirror’s edge. He studied it briefly, then peeled it away and set it on the counter.

The adhesive left a faint residue on the mirror. He wiped it with his thumb, once, then checked his reflection. The face was the same. Only the name had changed.

Tomorrow, no one in that ballroom would know this man under the lights.

Tomorrow, he would not be Noah.

He would walk in as Franz Rochefort.

The transition did not unsettle him, but it remained real.

He changed into a dark wool coat and exited through the side door, avoiding the front entrance where cameras occasionally lingered. The night air outside the studio was colder than expected, thin and sharp along the lungs as he stepped toward the waiting car. City lights blurred faintly across the windshield once the driver pulled away.

His phone remained quiet during the ride home. No new articles. No renewed speculation. The social push that had simmered all week had fallen silent.

Silence did not always mean safety.

It meant waiting.

The city passed outside the window in fragments—lit windows, empty sidewalks, a man walking a dog at the corner. Ordinary night. He watched it without really seeing.

The house felt warm when he stepped inside, a soft contrast to the cold outside. The faint scent of tea drifted from the kitchen—familiar and steady.

Lily sat on the living room floor with fabric swatches spread in uneven circles—the same ones she had sorted earlier. She studied them with quiet focus, brushing her fingers over the textures as if the choice carried weight.

Leo sat beside her with a tablet balanced across his knees, his shoulder angled slightly toward the sofa. His stylus hovered midair, paused in thought.

Franz removed his coat and stepped fully into the room.

Lily looked up first. "You’re back."

"Yes." He crossed toward them and draped his coat over the arm of the couch.

"Is tomorrow very big?" Lily asked.

"Yes. A lot of people. Don’t go anywhere without Aunt Aria or me."

She nodded solemnly, as if confirming a forecast she had already anticipated.

Leo tapped the tablet screen and turned it toward Franz.

BIG NIGHT

Franz lowered himself onto the sofa beside him. "It will be."

Leo leaned slightly into the warmth without looking up. Just a shift of weight. Franz didn’t react. Didn’t need to.

Leo considered that, then typed again.

LOUD?

"Yes," Franz answered. "It will be loud."

Leo underlined the word once, then set the tablet aside.

Lily gathered one of the red fabric swatches and held it up toward the light. "Aunt Aria is wearing this color," she announced.

Franz’s gaze flicked instinctively toward the staircase, though Arianne had not yet come down.

"She hasn’t chosen yet," he said.

"She did," Lily replied with quiet certainty. "It’s the long red one—the one that looks like the picture from before."

Franz knew which dress she meant. It had been delivered three days ago, tailored quietly, and stored in the upstairs wardrobe. It wasn’t bright crimson; it was darker—closer to deep garnet, the kind of red that held warmth without demanding attention.

Leo picked up his whiteboard this time instead of the tablet.

RED IS GOOD

He paused, then added:

MATCH

Lily turned toward Franz with narrowed eyes. "Are you wearing black?"

"Yes."

"That’s boring," she declared.

"It isn’t," he replied mildly.

She tilted her head. "You should wear red too."

"I don’t have a red suit."

"You could have something red," she insisted, tapping lightly at her collarbone. "A small part."

Leo wrote again.

TIE

Lily nodded emphatically. "Yes. A red tie. That way, when you stand next to her, it looks correct."

"Correct?" he repeated.

"Yes," Lily said, as though the logic were obvious. "If you don’t match, people will think you’re not together."

Franz studied her for a moment longer than necessary.

"People already think things," he said.

"That’s why you match," she replied.

Leo wrote again, slower this time.

LOOK SAME TEAM

Franz almost smiled.

Upstairs, a door closed softly.

The sound shifted the air in the room.

Arianne descended a few minutes later, garment bag in hand. She paused near the bottom when she noticed the fabric pieces spread across the floor.

"What are you doing?" she asked.

"Preparing," Lily answered immediately.

"For what?"

"For how you’ll look."

Arianne’s gaze settled briefly on the red swatch in Lily’s hand before shifting toward Franz. He did not speak.

Leo lifted the whiteboard.

RED

"Yes," Arianne said.

"Will you wear it?" Lily asked.

"Yes."

Lily nodded once, satisfied, then pointed at Franz. "He needs red, too."

Arianne’s gaze shifted toward him again.

"He’s wearing black," Lily continued. "That doesn’t look like the same team."

Franz leaned back slightly. "Black is fine."

"It’s not enough," Lily insisted. "People will look at you. If you don’t match, they’ll think it’s strange."

The simplicity of her logic made it difficult to dismiss.

Arianne stepped further into the room.

"It doesn’t matter what they think," she said.

"It does," Lily countered. "Because they will look."

Leo turned the board toward Arianne.

THEY LOOK AT YOU

She went still for half a second.

"Yes," she said quietly. "They will."

Franz noticed her fingers tighten briefly around the edge of the garment bag before loosening again.

Lily walked toward Franz and examined his collar. "You should wear something red," she repeated.

He looked up at Arianne.

"Do you have a red tie?"

"In the study drawer," he said after a moment.

He rose without further comment.

Behind him, he heard Lily whisper loudly, "It will look better."

In the study, the drawer slid open smoothly. The tie lay folded inside—darker than Lily’s swatch but unmistakably the same color. He picked it up and turned it once between his fingers.

When he returned to the living room, Lily clapped her hands together softly. The tie hung loose in his hand. Lily’s eyes went to it immediately—not the fabric, but the fact that he’d gone to get it. That mattered more.

"Yes," she declared.

Leo gave a small nod of approval.

Arianne watched the exchange with an expression that remained controlled, though something in it had softened slightly.

"It’s only a tie," Franz said.

"It’s important," Lily replied.

"Why?"

"Because when people see you, they should see that you chose it."

Franz adjusted the tie loosely against his shirt collar. "Choose what?"

"So it doesn’t look wrong."

The words were simple.

They were not dramatic.

But they landed.

Arianne looked away first, turning to lift the garment bag from the chair. "Finish your drawing," she told Lily. "It’s getting late."

Lily returned to the floor obediently, though she continued glancing upward to assess the visual effect.

Leo erased something on the board and wrote carefully.

GOOD

He held it up toward Franz.

Franz nodded once.

Later, when the twins had been settled into bed and the house had quieted, Franz found Arianne in the study. The red dress now hung outside the garment bag, draped neatly across the back of a chair near the desk. Under the softer lighting of the room, the fabric appeared deeper, almost like wine under shadow.

She stood beside the desk reviewing the printed program, though her eyes had not moved across the page for several seconds.

He paused at the doorway before entering fully.

"Everything confirmed?" he asked.

"Yes."

"No more changes?"

"No."

He stepped closer, stopping just within arm’s reach. The red fabric drew his attention again.

"You haven’t worn something like that in a while," he said.

"No."

Five years hovered unspoken between them. The clock on the desk ticked once. Neither looked at it. Some silences didn’t need filling.

"It will draw attention," he added.

"That’s the point."

He studied her face more carefully now. There was no fear there. No hesitation. But her fingers rested against the desk with faint pressure, as though grounding herself against the surface.

"You don’t have to prove anything tomorrow," he said.

"I’m not trying to prove anything."

"I know."

She lifted her gaze to his. "This is the first time I’ve walked into a room like that since everything ended."

"Yes."

"I don’t want them to look at the wrong things."

"They will look," he said. "Let them."

A long breath left her, steady but deeper than usual.

"Be there, Franz."

"I will. I’m not going anywhere."

He reached for the tie in his hand and draped it across the back of the chair near the dress.

"It matches," he said.

"Yes."

The house was silent around them. Outside the window, the winter night had settled fully across the city. No traffic noise reached the upper floors—no distant voices carried through the glass.

He stepped closer and adjusted a loose strand of hair near her temple. The gesture was small and instinctive.

She did not move away. Her hand came up briefly—not to stop him, just to rest against his wrist. A heartbeat. Then it fell back to her side.

For a moment, neither of them spoke.

In the dim light, the red fabric caught the faintest glow from the lamp, deep and steady against the dark wood of the study.

Tomorrow, the room would be full.

Tonight, the house remained still.

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