The CEO's Regret: You made me your lie, I become your Loss-Chapter 89: I will marry you
The grand high-ceilinged hallways of the hospital felt colder than the gala. Julian walked with his arm firmly around Amara, his expression etched with a mix of exhaustion and overprotective vigilance.
"I don’t know, Julian. I’m really OK. It’s just tiredness," Amara murmured, leaning her head against his shoulder. "Whatever you say... but I think I just need a long sleep."
"The doctor said your vitals were spiked after the incident," Julian insisted, his voice low and firm. "Tiredness is one thing, but a collapse is another. I’m not taking any chances with you."
As they turned the corner toward the exit, a distraught wail echoed through the surgical waiting area. A woman sat crumpled on a plastic chair, Mrs. Creed, the once-haughty matriarch who had lived a life of untouchable luxury. Now, her designer clothes were wrinkled, and her face was a mask of sheer desperation.
"Doctor, please! Save my son!" she sobbed, clutching the white coat of a weary surgeon. "He’s still so young. He can’t be left paralyzed... I’ll find a way to pay for the treatment!"
The surgeon sighed, looking down at his clipboard. "We’ll do our best, Mrs. Creed. But with his condition, the poisoning, and the spinal trauma, he’s going to face huge medical bills. You need to be prepared for that."
"The company’s gone!" she cried, her voice breaking. "Everything is gone. Where am I supposed to get the money?"
Amara froze, watching the scene. She and Julian had quietly settled the initial emergency bills weeks ago as a final act of closure, but they hadn’t realized the extent of Sebastian’s permanent injuries or the total financial ruin of the Creed family.
Amara looked at the broken woman, then up at Julian. She didn’t even have to speak. Julian was already looking at her, his dark eyes reading the conflict in her soul, the battle between the pain Seb had caused and the mercy she still held for a man who had ultimately died a thousand times to save her.
"Julian... can you do me a favor?" Amara whispered.
Julian smiled, a small, knowing glint in his eyes. He didn’t hesitate. "Sure. I’ll return Creed Corporation to Seb for you."
Amara’s jaw dropped. She blinked, stunned by how effortlessly he had read her mind. "How did you know I wanted to give the company back to him?"
Julian leaned down, pressing a lingering kiss to her forehead before pulling her closer into his side. "That’s because I’m your husband-to-be, Amara. I know that your heart is too big to let a man rot in a hospital bed without a future, even if he was the one who hurt you."
Julian signaled to his assistant, who was waiting near the elevators. "Start the paperwork for the restoration of the Creed assets. Transfer the primary holdings back to Sebastian Creed under a blind trust. And tell the hospital... the Vale foundation will be covering all rehabilitation costs indefinitely."
Amara watched as Julian handled the logistics with the same lethal efficiency he used to build his own empire. She realized that by giving Seb his company back, they weren’t just giving him money; they were giving him a reason to fight for his recovery, and they were finally cutting the last tether of guilt that bound the two families together.
"Thank you, Julian," she whispered.
"Don’t thank me yet," Julian teased, steering her toward the exit where his car was waiting. "You still have to marry me. And I’m much more demanding than a corporate merger."
As they stepped out into the night, the weight of the past finally felt like it had lifted. Behind them, in the sterile white rooms, a broken man was being given a second chance, but ahead of them, under the moonlight, was a life that belonged only to them.
The night felt... different. Cool. Clean. Like the world had been washed and left to breathe.
Amara drew it in slowly, the scent of rain clinging to the pavement, soft and grounding...so unlike the sterile, suffocating air they had just left behind. For the first time in hours, her lungs didn’t feel tight.
Beside her, Julian’s hand held hers firm, steady, warm in a way that anchored her to something real. Something certain. They walked in silence.
Not an empty silence.. But one that lingered. Stretched. Settled between them like something waiting to be acknowledged.
The car came into view. Julian reached for the door. And that’s when she stopped him. Not abruptly. Not with panic. Just... a quiet pause. His hand stilled on the handle.
For a second, he didn’t turn. As if he felt it, whatever this was, before he even saw her face.
Then slowly... he looked at her. Amara had already turned.
There was something in her eyes now, something new, something that hadn’t been there before. Not fear. No hesitation.
Clarity. It burned softly, but steadily. Like a flame that had finally found its shape.
"Julian..."
His name left her gently, but it carried weight. Enough to pull his full attention, to still whatever thought had been forming in his mind. "I’m ready."
The words hung between them. Simple. But not light.
A faint crease formed between his brows, not doubt, but something deeper. Careful. Cautious.
Amara took a small step closer, her fingers tightening slightly around his, as if grounding herself in the contact.
"I don’t want to wait," she continued, her voice quiet but unwavering. "Not for a grand gala... not for the perfect season... not for anything else to fall into place."
The night seemed to listen. Even the distant city noise felt softer.
Like the world was giving her space to speak. Her gaze didn’t waver from his. Not even for a second.
"I will marry you today..." A breath passed between them.
"...if you agree." Julian didn’t move. Not at first.
His hand remained on the door, fingers curled loosely around the handle, but the rest of him had gone completely still. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝐰𝚎𝕓𝐧𝚘𝘃𝗲𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝕞
His eyes searched hers. Carefully. Thoroughly.
As if he were looking for cracks. For doubt. For anything that might tell him this was exhaustion, fear, the aftermath of everything they had just survived.
But there was nothing to find.
No hesitation. No uncertainty. Just her. Steady. Certain. Waiting. And something inside him shifted.
A slow, dazzling smile broke across his face, the kind of genuine, unbridled joy he usually kept hidden behind his CEO persona. He swept her up, spinning her once in the quiet parking lot.
"Great,"







