Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 179: Married For A Long Time
Arianne moved through the room at an even pace, neither rushed nor slow. She adjusted the curtain to let in more light, then glanced toward the twins without making it obvious. Leo sat on the floor with his tablet, while Lily leaned against the sofa, her legs stretched out. They looked better—no longer flushed, more alert—but they hadn’t regained their usual energy yet.
"You’re not tired?" Arianne asked, setting a fresh glass of water within reach. She remained standing as she spoke, her tone steady.
Lily shook her head, a beat too late.
"Not really. Just a little," she said, moving against the sofa. Her eyes flicked toward Leo, as if checking whether he would disagree.
Leo typed, then turned the screen toward Arianne.
Okay now.
Arianne read it, then gave a small nod.
"That’s good," she said. "Tell me if you need anything."
Her hand hovered near Lily’s shoulder before she withdrew it and turned toward the kitchen.
The windows held a chill from outside, the kind that stayed even after the cold had eased. When she opened the cabinet, the sound of dishes was clearer than usual in the stillness. She set the plates down in order, then reached for the utensils without pausing, continuing as if the rhythm of the house would follow her lead.
The doorbell rang just as she finished arranging the table.
It wasn’t loud, but it cut cleanly through the calm, and Lily pushed herself upright almost immediately, her earlier fatigue forgotten.
"I’ll get it," she said, already halfway off the sofa before Arianne could respond.
"Slowly," Arianne added, not raising her voice, and Lily slowed just enough to make it seem intentional.
When the door opened, a cold breeze came in first. Then, familiar voices were heard overlapping each other. They took off their shoes and jackets, and the house filled with activity again.
Samantha entered first carrying a small bag in one hand that she handed off without ceremony.
"You didn’t have to prepare everything," she said, stepping inside as if she had been there the day before.
Her gaze moved quickly across the room, assessing, then settled on the twins.
"You both look alive again. That’s a good sign."
"We were always alive," Lily replied, a little more defensive than necessary, though she smiled as she said it. 𝚏𝕣𝐞𝗲𝐰𝕖𝐛𝐧𝕠𝕧𝚎𝚕.𝐜𝚘𝗺
"Barely," Sam said, not unkindly, and she reached out to brush Lily’s hair back from her face before moving further inside.
Behind her, Gilbert stepped in, his movement steady, followed by Audrey. She didn’t hesitate at the threshold, didn’t pause to read the room before entering. She simply stepped in beside him, closing the door behind them with a soft click that sealed the warmth back into the house.
Arianne’s attention moved toward them, and for a moment there was a pause—not a break in movement, but a small recalibration. Then she moved forward, her posture easing almost imperceptibly as she approached.
"Thank you for coming," she said, and her gaze settled briefly on Audrey, acknowledging her presence directly before moving back to include both of them.
Audrey nodded, her expression calm.
"We brought something small," she said, lifting the container, though it didn’t seem like she expected it to matter.
Before Arianne could respond, Sam stepped in beside her, already reaching for the container.
"I’ll take that," she said, her tone warm, as if the exchange had been prearranged.
She glanced at Audrey, then added, with a small shake of her head, "You’ll have to excuse my brother. It only took him five years to correct a very obvious mistake."
There was no sharpness in her voice, only a kind of familiar exasperation that didn’t carry weight.
Gilbert didn’t react immediately. He set his coat aside, his movements unhurried, then glanced toward Sam.
"You’re exaggerating," he said, though there was no effort to argue beyond that.
"Not really," Sam replied, already turning toward the kitchen. "I remember very clearly."
Audrey didn’t withdraw from the exchange. If anything, she remained where she was, her shoulders relaxed, her gaze steady. There was a small movement at the corner of her mouth, not quite a smile, but not resistance either.
Arianne watched the interaction for a moment before turning back to the table. The room felt different now. It was subtle, but the space seemed less restrictive. Conversations flowed into each other more easily, and the atmosphere felt more relaxed. As she finished setting the last of the dishes, she did so with less focus than before.
Julian and Nate arrived, and the entryway got crowded for a moment before everyone spread out. Some moved to the living room, others to the kitchen, and the house welcomed them all without difficulty.
The door opened again a few minutes later.
Franz stepped inside, shutting the door behind him. The cold air that followed him was sharp. It felt like winter was starting to fade, but it hadn’t completely left yet. The sound of the door closing marked a clear boundary in the room.
Arianne did not turn immediately.
She stood by the table, adjusting a plate that didn’t need it. Her fingers touched the edge briefly, noticing a change in the room before she straightened up. The movement was small—almost unnoticeable unless someone was paying attention—but it shifted her focus.
Franz quickly took off his coat and set it aside before moving farther in. He greeted the others with a nod and a low voice that didn’t draw attention. Then he walked straight to Arianne, as if he already knew he would.
He grabbed the stack of bowls next to her before she could and placed them in a straight line on the table. They didn’t speak; there was no need. Their actions showed a silent understanding, practiced in a way that went unnoticed.
Arianne moved to give him space, though not away from him. When she reached for the utensils again, her hand brushed against his wrist. Neither of them reacted to it. The contact registered and passed without interruption, folded into the movement of the task.
Across the room, Nate leaned back and looked between them before turning his head toward Julian and Gilbert.
"They act like they’ve been married for years," he said quietly so only their group could hear. He paused and added, "Not months."
Julian followed Nate’s gaze. His expression stayed the same, but he looked a little longer than necessary.
"It’s consistent," he said, noting a pattern.
Gilbert took a moment before responding. He glanced at Audrey, then back at Franz and Arianne.
"It’s stable," he said, his tone calm.
Near the sofa, Lily tilted her head, her attention caught by the lowered voices even if the meaning didn’t fully reach her. She leaned closer to Leo, nudging his arm.
"What did they say?" she whispered, her voice careful, as if she wasn’t supposed to be asking.
Leo tapped on his tablet, slower than before, his brows pulling together as he processed. He turned the screen toward her.
Married long time.
Lily frowned, looking back toward Franz and Arianne. They were still by the table, moving around each other without bumping, without stopping. Nothing about it looked special to her.
"That’s not right," she said, shaking her head. "They’re not doing anything."
Leo looked again, then typed.
No big progress.
Lily nodded more firmly this time, settling into her conclusion.
"Yeah. It still looks like practice," she said, her voice soft but certain, as if she had solved something important.
Lily didn’t understand what the adults saw. To her, Uncle Franz and Aunt Aria just moved—around the table, past each other, through the room. No big moments. No obvious signs. But practice meant they were trying. Practice meant they might get it right. That was enough for her.
Franz picked up the last glass and set it down in front of Arianne before sitting beside her. Their shoulders lined up closely, and there was no gap between them. He didn’t look at her when he sat, but his hand rested near hers on the edge of the table, close but not touching.
For a moment, everything else in the room felt still.
Arianne reached for her glass, her fingers brushing against his before she held it. She paused for a second, then continued as if nothing had happened, keeping her posture the same.
She noticed it.
That was what she couldn’t ignore—not the contact, not the closeness, but how natural it all felt now. There was a time when she would have noticed every small movement and kept her distance. Now, she felt aware of it only after, and it was softer and less disruptive.
It felt normal.
The thought came without permission, and for a moment, she recognized it for what it was.
She had stopped treating this as temporary.
Her gaze moved toward Franz, though not enough to draw attention, and then away again as the conversation at the table picked up around them.
Dinner ended without a clear point.
Plates emptied, conversation thinned, and people began to move without being told. Chairs shifted back. Someone carried dishes. Someone else cleared space on the table.
Arianne stood first, gathering plates.
The others followed.
The room divided naturally after that.
Arianne, Audrey, and Sam remained closer to the living room, their conversation quieter, contained. The twins hovered nearby, moving between them without settling.
The rest drifted toward the kitchen.
Franz ended up there.
Nate stepped closer, lowering his voice slightly.
"You might want to get used to that," he said, glancing toward Audrey.
Franz followed the look, then returned his gaze.
"We might be seeing her more often," he said.
Nate shook his head once.
"Unlikely. Partners don’t usually join our group sessions."
Franz made a small gesture toward himself.
Nate caught it immediately.
"You’re an exception," he said. "You were already in before any of that. Your marriage to Arianne came second."
There was a brief pause.
"And we don’t interfere," Nate added. "If something goes wrong between you and Arianne, that’s yours to deal with."
Julian didn’t comment. Gilbert’s attention shifted once toward Audrey, then back.
Across the room, Lily leaned closer again.
"They’re talking about them," she whispered.
Leo typed.
Don’t understand.
Across from them, Lily was still watching.
She leaned closer to Leo again, lowering her voice like it made her conclusions more serious.
"We have to help them," she said, with determination. "They’re too slow."
Leo looked at her, then back at the table. After a moment, he typed again.
New Plan?
Lily nodded, satisfied.
"After dinner," she said.
And this time, when she looked back at Franz and Arianne, she was already thinking about where to put them.







