Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 166: Mommy
Lily walked ahead, already moving on from the sweater debate. The small shopping bag in her hand swung against her leg as she walked.
"I really think the blue one looked nicer," she said. "Leo just didn’t like it because it had a zipper."
Leo remained close beside Arianne, one hand holding the sleeve of her coat as he watched the crowd. His gaze moved from one passerby to another, taking in everything without speaking. Every few steps, he glanced up at Arianne as if confirming she was there.
Audrey walked on Arianne’s other side, adjusting the strap of her handbag.
"Zippers can be difficult," she said mildly. "Perhaps your brother simply prefers buttons."
"That’s what I told him," Lily replied with satisfaction.
They had only walked a short distance from the restaurant when Arianne stopped.
Not slowed. Not hesitated.
Stopped.
Leo’s hand tightened instantly on her sleeve. He had felt it before she moved—the change in her body, the way her breathing altered. He looked up at her face and saw something he rarely saw there.
Not the calm kind of motionlessness. The kind that came before something important.
Audrey noticed it too. She followed Arianne’s gaze down the corridor.
A woman stood near one of the large display windows overlooking the mall’s central atrium. She was bending to adjust the scarf around the neck of a small boy standing beside her. The boy moved his feet impatiently while she straightened the knot beneath his chin.
Then the woman straightened.
And turned.
Arianne had prepared for this moment. Not consciously—she would never have admitted to such preparation. But over five years, her mind had constructed countless versions of this encounter. In some she walked past without acknowledgment. In others she stopped and spoke, cool and collected, letting Diana see that she remained unaffected.
In none of them had she felt like this.
Her heart had not accelerated. Her breathing remained steady. Those were the things people expected—the observable signs of agitation, the ones that could be read across a room.
What they could not see was the silence inside her.
The silence of five years of questions she had never allowed herself to ask. The silence of watching Dominic move on while she rebuilt herself from pieces she had not chosen to break. The silence of a wedding that never happened, a future that never arrived, a betrayal packaged as inevitability and served to her cold.
Diana Reid. No—Diana Blackwood stood thirty feet away.
And beside her, holding her hand, was the proof of everything that had been taken.
The boy.
Nicholas.
He looked younger than Leo by perhaps a few months. His small gloved hands were tucked into the pockets of his coat as he studied the movement of the crowd with calm curiosity. He had Dominic’s eyes—the shape unmistakable, the same tilt, the same watchful attention that had once made Arianne believe she was seeing something that belonged only to her.
She had been wrong about that.
She had spent five years understanding exactly how wrong.
About many things.
Leo’s hand pressed harder against her sleeve.
Arianne looked down at him without meaning to. His dark eyes studied her face with an intensity that made her wonder, for a moment, how much he understood. He could not speak, but he saw everything. He always had.
She exhaled.
Then she stepped forward.
Diana looked up at the same moment.
Recognition crossed her face. For one unguarded second, the polished mask slipped—and Arianne saw something she had never expected to see.
Fear.
Not guilt. Not discomfort. Actual fear.
It was there and gone in an instant, but Arianne had spent too many years reading people to miss it. Diana, who had taken everything from her, was afraid.
The thought settled somewhere deep and cold.
Then Diana steadied herself and began walking toward them.
"Miss Summers," Diana said.
Her voice carried the smooth politeness of someone accustomed to formal introductions, but the effort behind it was audible.
Arianne inclined her head once.
"Mrs. Blackwood."
The greeting was brief. Controlled. She gave nothing.
Diana’s attention moved toward the children. Leo had drawn closer without realizing it, his shoulder brushing against Arianne’s coat. Lily stood on her other side, watching Diana with the open curiosity children never bother to hide.
Diana studied them both for a long moment.
"Children," she said lightly. "I didn’t realize you were traveling with company."
"They’re Alex’s twins," Arianne replied.
Recognition moved across Diana’s face. "Of course. I remember hearing about them when they were born. I simply never had the chance to meet them."
Nicholas leaned forward beside her, clearly interested in the other children. He took a small step toward Leo. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
Diana’s hand closed around his shoulder like a trap.
"Stay here," she said, her voice low.
Nicholas paused and stepped back. But his attention stayed fixed on the twins—on Leo particularly, as if he recognized something in the other boy’s particular calm that mirrored his own.
Arianne watched the interaction without comment.
Diana returned her gaze. "It has been quite some time since anyone saw you in Montclair," she said. "Five years, if I remember correctly."
"Something like that."
The answer came easily. Too easily, perhaps—but Diana would not know the difference.
Diana watched her for a moment longer. "Montclair tends to notice when someone disappears. Especially someone people expected to see often."
People. She meant Dominic.
Arianne felt the silence inside her deepen.
"I had other priorities."
The words were simple. Delivered without hesitation. But beneath them lay everything she had built in those five years—the life that had nothing to do with the one that had been stolen from her.
For a moment Diana’s polite smile tightened.
"Yes," she said. "I imagine you did."
Leo drew closer to Arianne again.
Diana noticed the movement.
"You seem very comfortable with them," she said. "Almost like family."
"They spend a great deal of time with me," Arianne replied.
The answer left no room for interpretation. Diana’s gaze lingered on the way Leo remained pressed against Arianne’s side—the trust in that small body, the way he had chosen her without reservation.
Something moved behind Diana’s eyes. A calculation. A reassessment.
She looked at Leo. Then at Lily. Then back at Leo.
Her expression changed almost imperceptibly.
"How old are they?" she asked.
The question was casual. Too casual.
Arianne understood immediately what was happening behind those neutral eyes.
Diana was counting.
Lily had been watching the adults. She did not understand the history between them, but she understood tension. She understood when someone was threatening the person she loved.
She stepped closer to Arianne.
Then she wrapped both arms around her waist and pressed her face against her coat.
"Mommy, can we go now?"
The words rang through the corridor like a bell.
Diana’s hand tightened on Nicholas’s shoulder hard enough to make him flinch. The boy looked up at her in surprise, his small face crumpling with confusion.
Diana’s eyes flew to Arianne’s face.
"What did she just—"
The question died halfway through.
The damage was done. Everyone had heard it. Everyone knew what it meant.
For a moment the corridor seemed to hold its breath.
Arianne looked down at Lily.
Lily had done this deliberately. Arianne could see it in the way the child’s arms had tightened, the way she had pressed her face against the coat before she even spoke. A four-year-old’s logic was uncomplicated and absolute: someone had threatened her person, and she had responded with the only weapon available to her.
She had claimed her.
Arianne had never been claimed before. Not like this—without condition, without strategy, without anything asked in return. Just a child’s arms and six words that rearranged something she hadn’t known could be moved.
She rested a hand on Lily’s shoulder.
She did not correct her.
She simply stood there, one hand on the child who had called her mother, the other held by the child who could not speak, and let Diana see exactly what five years had built.
Diana’s face had gone pale.
Her eyes moved from Lily to Leo and back again. Counting. Calculating. Reassessing everything she had assumed for the past five years.
Nicholas was four. The timeline was clear. Documented. Safe.
But these children—
Leo was smaller than Nicholas. More contained. But ages could be fudged. Stories could be manufactured. And Arianne had disappeared for five years.
Diana had always assumed the twins were Alex’s children. The best friend’s children, taken in after the accident. Tragic. Noble. Above board.
But what if the story was convenient? What if Arianne had not disappeared alone?
Her gaze locked on Leo.
The boy had Dominic’s eyes.
No. That was impossible. Nicholas had Dominic’s eyes. Everyone said so.
But looking at this child now, standing so close to Arianne, holding her hand with the kind of trust that could not be faked—
Diana felt the floor move beneath her.
If Arianne had Dominic’s child, everything changed. Nicholas’s position. Her position. The inheritance. The future she had built on the ruins of someone else’s life.
Diana’s hand was on Nicholas’s shoulder. She realized she was gripping him too hard. She forced herself to relax, to breathe, to reassemble the mask that had slipped so dangerously.
"How sweet," she said at last.
Her voice had regained its polished tone. The crack was there—wider now, impossible to fully conceal from anyone paying attention.
"It’s good to see that life moves forward for everyone, Miss Summers."
Arianne regarded her without expression. "It usually does."
Diana held her gaze for another second. Something passed between them—not understanding, not resolution. Just acknowledgment. The recognition that they would never be anything to each other except this: two women on opposite sides of a choice that had been made for them both.
Then Diana inclined her head.
"Well," she said. "It was unexpected seeing you again."
She guided Nicholas away by the shoulder, her grip firm enough to discourage any backward glances. But the boy looked anyway. He looked at Leo, at Lily, at the woman standing between them—and then he was gone, swallowed by the crowd.
For several seconds none of them spoke.
Audrey exhaled beside them. She had witnessed the entire exchange without a word, and her face carried the weight of someone who understood exactly what had just happened.
"Well," she said, her voice low. "That was—"
She did not finish the sentence. There was no need.
Lily held onto Arianne’s coat.
Leo remained beside her, his hand resting against her sleeve.
Arianne looked down at them.
"You know what to call me, Lily," she said.
Her voice was calm. Steady. The same voice she used in boardrooms, in negotiations, in moments when everything depended on appearing unaffected.
But something beneath it had moved.
Lily looked up at her.
"I know," she replied. "But I don’t like that woman, Aunt Aria."
She did not explain further. She didn’t need to.
Arianne’s hand tightened on her shoulder.
Then she straightened and looked down the corridor where Diana had disappeared.
The crowd had already closed around her. There was nothing left to see.
But Arianne stood there for a long moment anyway, letting the silence inside her settle into something she could carry.
She had not expected to feel this. She had expected the old cold—the managed distance she had learned to place between herself and anything that could reach her. What she felt instead was something closer to clarity. Diana’s fear had told her more than five years of absence had.
Diana was not certain.
And an uncertain Diana was a different kind of problem entirely. Not a smaller one. The kind that moved underground—through assumption, through calculation, through the particular damage that frightened people caused when they had something to protect and enough resources to act on it.
Arianne filed that away.
She would think about it later. Not here, not now, not with two children watching her face for signs of what to feel.
Leo’s hand pressed against hers.
She looked down at him.
His dark eyes held hers with the same attention he gave everything, and in them she saw what she always saw: acceptance. Trust. The unshakable certainty that she was exactly where she belonged.
She drew a breath.
Then she let it out.
"Come on," Arianne said.
She didn’t look back.
They walked on.







