Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 160: That Expression
The studio Aurelle used for campaign preparation sat on the upper floor of a renovated warehouse several blocks from the city center. From the outside the building looked ordinary—brick walls, tall windows, a modest sign near the entrance. Nothing about it suggested the kind of work that happened inside. That was intentional. Luxury campaigns depended as much on control as they did on creativity.
Inside, the space had been transformed into a quiet production environment. Soft lighting hung from adjustable rigs above the floor. Garment racks lined one wall, each filled with carefully selected suits sealed inside black garment bags.
Along another table, velvet trays held several pieces from Aurelle’s upcoming collection. Bracelets. Rings. Necklaces. Each one arranged under directed lighting so the stones caught the light without overwhelming it.
Wendy Collins stood near the center of the room reviewing a tablet while two members of her creative team adjusted a concept board mounted against the wall. Daryll stood nearby with his arms folded, watching everything with the cautious patience of someone responsible for protecting a very public career.
The elevator doors opened. Franz stepped out.
In this space, he wasn’t Franz Rochefort. He was Noah Hart.
The difference was subtle, but visible. The relaxed ease he carried at the Rochefort residence was replaced by something more controlled. His posture remained calm, but the quiet confidence he carried now was the version the public recognized—the actor who had spent years standing under studio lights and camera lenses.
He thought about Arianne as the elevator doors closed behind him. She was at the office this morning. Meetings. Calls. The usual rhythm of her day. She didn’t know he was here yet. He hadn’t told her the schedule was confirmed.
Daryll noticed him first. "Morning."
Franz nodded once. "Morning."
Wendy looked up a moment later. A small smile crossed her face. "Right on time."
Franz stepped into the studio.
The environment was quiet compared to the noise of most film sets. Only a handful of people moved through the space—wardrobe staff organizing suits, a lighting technician adjusting reflectors, and a photographer reviewing camera settings near the far wall. Everything had been kept deliberately small. Controlled.
Daryll glanced toward the door behind Franz. "No one followed you?"
"No."
"Good."
Wendy closed the tablet and approached.
"We’ll keep the team limited today," she said. "Everyone present has already signed the confidentiality agreements."
Franz nodded. "That was expected."
Wendy gestured toward the concept board along the wall. "Come take a look."
Several large photographs had been pinned to the board. They weren’t final images—only reference material. A long hotel corridor with soft evening lighting. A mirrored elevator interior reflecting shadows and silhouettes. A private lounge table where two people sat across from each other, the woman’s face carefully hidden by the camera angle.
Franz studied the images without speaking. The corridor reminded him of something. A hotel, years ago. Before the wedding. Before anything. He had watched her walk down a hallway like that. He had stood in a doorway and watched her leave.
Wendy stood beside him.
"The concept is simple," she said. "A love that belongs to someone else."
Franz’s gaze moved from one photograph to the next. "You’ve mentioned that before."
"Yes." Wendy folded her arms. "But now we start turning it into something people can see."
Daryll stepped closer, scanning the board.
"Let’s repeat the most important rule," he said.
Wendy nodded. "The woman’s face must never appear."
One of the creative assistants adjusted a photograph on the board.
"The camera will always frame her indirectly," Wendy continued. "From behind. Reflections. Partial silhouettes." She pointed toward one of the concept sketches. "Sometimes only her hands."
Daryll watched the board carefully. "If the internet identifies her, the entire campaign collapses."
"They won’t," Wendy said.
Franz remained silent for a moment before speaking. "They’ll try."
Wendy smiled faintly. "That’s part of the appeal."
Franz thought about the last campaign. The ring. The jewelry forum. The speculation that had followed for weeks. They would try again. They would look harder this time.
He said nothing.
She stepped toward the wardrobe racks. "Let’s start with the wardrobe tests."
The stylist approached immediately, carrying two suits from the rack. Both were dark. One charcoal. One black. The tailoring was sharp but understated.
Franz took the first jacket and slipped it on while the stylist adjusted the shoulders.
Wendy watched carefully. "You understand why Noah Hart works for this concept."
Franz glanced at her. "I assume you’re about to explain."
"The audience already believes you’re in love with someone."
Franz said nothing.
Wendy continued. "You carry that expression naturally."
Daryll leaned against the nearby table. "Years of dramatic roles."
Wendy shook her head slightly. "No." Her gaze returned to Franz. "It’s not acting."
Franz buttoned the jacket and adjusted the cuffs. "That’s convenient."
He didn’t look at her. But he knew she was right. It wasn’t acting. It had never been acting. Every campaign. Every interview. Every photograph. He was thinking of her. He was always thinking of her.
The photographer stepped forward. "Let’s try a quick test shot."
Franz moved to the marked position beneath the lighting rig. The light shifted as the technician adjusted the reflector.
Behind the camera, the photographer raised the lens. "Just stand naturally."
Franz did.
He thought about the hotel corridor. Watching her walk away. The way she hadn’t looked back. He thought about the photograph from the last campaign. Her hand in the frame. The ring. The way the light had caught it.
The camera shutter clicked. Once. Twice.
Wendy studied the monitor connected to the camera. "Good."
The image showed Franz standing in a softly lit corridor set. His posture was relaxed but attentive. As if someone had just walked past him. Someone he had been watching.
Daryll glanced at the screen. "Not bad."
Wendy tapped the edge of the monitor. "That expression is exactly what we need."
Franz stepped away from the camera while the stylist handed him the second jacket.
Across the room, one of the assistants began setting up the jewelry trays for the next sequence.
Wendy turned back toward Franz. "The scenes involving the woman will be filmed separately."
Daryll looked up. "Explain."
"Different arrival times. Different dressing rooms." Wendy gestured toward the studio layout. "She won’t appear on set until we’re ready for the specific shots we need."
"Minimal crew?"
"Five people maximum."
Daryll nodded slowly. "That reduces the risk."
Franz slipped into the second jacket while listening. He thought about Arianne. Standing in a studio like this. Under lights. In front of a camera. The last time, she had walked in off the street. This time, she would walk in knowing what she was agreeing to.
He wondered if she was thinking about it too. If she was sitting in her office, looking at her calendar, knowing the date was coming.
Wendy lowered her voice slightly. "I assume she understands the attention this campaign will attract."
Franz looked at her. "She does."
Wendy studied him for a moment. "That’s why this will work."
The stylist finished adjusting the jacket and stepped back.
The photographer lifted the camera again.
Franz returned to the marked position beneath the lights. The light was soft. Controlled. Exactly where the technician had placed it.
Behind him, the concept board remained visible. One of the sketches showed the outline of a woman standing near an elevator mirror. Her posture was elegant. Her identity hidden.
He thought about the way Arianne stood. The line of her back. The way she held herself when she didn’t know anyone was watching.
The photographer focused the lens. "Ready."
The camera shutter clicked.
And the Aurelle campaign quietly began.
Franz stood beneath the lights. His face was Noah Hart’s face. Calm. Controlled. The expression the public knew.
But his mind was elsewhere. In a hotel corridor, years ago. In a studio, weeks ago. In a kitchen this morning, her hand in his beneath the table.
He was thinking about her. He was always thinking about her.
The photographer clicked again.
Wendy watched the monitor. "Good. That’s the one."
Franz looked at the screen. The image showed him standing in a corridor set. His posture was relaxed. His expression was attentive. He looked like a man waiting for someone.
He looked like himself.







