Chapter Seven

Sarah

The satisfying pop of a champagne cork echoed through the living room.

Julian poured the golden liquid into two crystal flutes, the bubbles rushing to the rim.

He set the bottle down on the coffee table and handed one to Sarah before settling next to her on the leather sofa.

He didn't just look at her; he looked into her, his hazel eyes filled with a profound, unmasked pride that made her breath catch.

"To the most terrifyingly brilliant woman I know," Julian said, his voice a warm, low rumble in the quiet house. He raised his glass. "May Ryan Sinclair weep when he realizes exactly how much talent just walked out of his doors."

Sarah laughed, a bright, unburdened sound that felt completely foreign to her own ears. The heavy, suffocating weight she had carried was gone. "He won't weep. He'll just aggressively reorganize the spreadsheets. But thank you."

She clinked her flute against his and took a sip.

The champagne was cold and crisp, but it was the adrenaline still humming in her veins that made her feel intoxicated.

She looked at Julian—at the man who had stood between her and her nightmares, the man who had driven her to a glasshouse just so she could breathe.

She set her glass down on the coffee table with a decisive clink.

Julian barely had time to register the movement before Sarah shifted her weight, sliding across the cushions. She reached out, taking his glass from his hand and placing it next to hers, before framing his face with both hands.

"Thank you," she whispered fiercely.

And then she kissed him.

It wasn't a hesitant or questioning kiss.

It was a collision of overwhelming gratitude, raw relief, and absolute, burning desire.

Julian let out a rough groan, instantly wrapping his hands around her waist and hauling her flush against his chest. He took over the kiss, his mouth slanting over hers with a heavy, demanding heat.

She tasted the champagne on his tongue, crisp and intoxicating.

Sarah’s fingers tangled in the thick hair at the nape of his neck, anchoring herself as he deepened the kiss.

His thumbs swept along her jawline, his touch sparking a wildfire that raced straight down her spine.

The tension of the morning, the confrontation with Ryan, the sheer terrifying reality of quitting her job—it all melted away, consumed by the desperate, perfect friction of his mouth against hers.

They kissed until Sarah’s lungs were burning, until she was completely breathless and her lips were swollen, entirely lost in the absolute safety and strength of his hold.

When they finally broke apart, the air in the living room was thick and heavy. Sarah rested her forehead against his, her chest heaving, a triumphant smile curving her lips.

Julian let out a ragged breath, his eyes dark with heat. "If that’s how you celebrate unemployment, I should have helped you quit a while ago."

Sarah laughed softly, pulling back just enough to look him in the eye. "It’s not just unemployment, Julian. It’s freedom. And I know exactly what I'm doing next."

She reached for the legal pad sitting on the coffee table. She had spent the entire afternoon sketching frantically, the adrenaline of her resignation fueling a wave of clarity.

"So," Julian shifted toward her, resting his arm across the back of the sofa, his expression shifting from lover to fiercely supportive partner. "What's the plan, Ms. Bennett? You have the talent to walk into any top-tier firm in the Midwest. I could make three phone calls right now—"

"No more firms," Sarah interrupted gently. Her pulse picked up with a thrilling kind of nervous energy. "I want to start an independent architectural consulting firm. Boutique. High-end. I want to cut out the corporate middlemen entirely."

Julian’s eyebrows rose in impressed surprise. He nodded slowly. "I love it. The market is desperate for exactly that. But starting a consulting firm requires capital, Sarah. Office space, licensing, marketing, insurance. It’s a heavy lift."

He paused, his expression turning serious. "I can front the capital. Consider it a business loan. Keystone can back you until you're profitable—"

"Julian, stop," Sarah said softly, placing her hand over his. Her heart swelled at his immediate willingness to catch her, but her resolve was absolute. "No. Thank you, truly, but no."

Julian frowned slightly. "Sarah, I believe in you. It’s a smart investment. You don't have to do this the hard way."

"It's not about the money." Sarah explained, her voice steady and completely certain.

"For five years, I let Harrison dictate my worth.

For three years, I let Ryan dictate my career and take credit for my designs.

If I do this, it has to be entirely on my own.

No safety nets. No lifelines. If I fail, it's on me. But if I succeed, it's mine."

Julian studied her face for a long moment, reading the fierce, unwavering determination in her eyes. The frown melted into a look of absolute reverence. "Okay. No loans. But how are you going to fund it?"

Sarah took a deep breath. She looked at the gorgeous, asymmetrical shelves they had built together. She looked at the warm walls she had painted to cover the ghosts of her marriage.

"I'm selling the house," she said quietly.

Julian went perfectly still. "Sarah... you bled for this house. You just finished reclaiming it."

"I did," she agreed, a peaceful smile touching her lips.

"I needed to fix this house to prove to myself that the wreckage couldn't break me.

It was my hospital. But I'm healed now, Julian.

I don't need to live in the museum of my recovery. The equity in this property is exactly what I need to launch the firm. It’s time to let it go. "

Julian didn't argue. He pulled her across the cushions, wrapping her in a tight, overwhelmingly supportive embrace, pressing a kiss to the top of her head. "Then we'll find you an incredible realtor."

***

The next morning, the air in the bustling downtown café smelled of roasted espresso and fresh pastries. Sarah sat at a corner table, tapping her pen against her notebook, waiting.

"Sorry, sorry, I'm late!"

Lily dropped her oversized leather tote onto the chair, unwinding a thick scarf from her neck. She looked significantly better than she had on Friday. The dark circles under her eyes were fading, replaced by a restless, caffeinated energy.

"You're fine," Sarah smiled, pushing a steaming oat milk latte across the table. "I already ordered your usual."

"You are an actual angel," Lily groaned, wrapping her hands around the warm mug. She took a long sip and let out a happy sigh. "Okay. Update me. You texted me that you quit? Tell me you set Ryan's desk on fire."

"I left it intact, but the ego damage was severe," Sarah laughed.

For the next twenty minutes, Sarah walked Lily through the entire timeline—the gala, the horrifying realization about Emily and Ryan's baby, Julian stepping in, and the icy resignation she had delivered yesterday morning.

Lily sat with her mouth slightly open, completely appalled. "I am going to fly to London, hire a pub brawler, bring him back here, and have both Ryan and Emily thrown into Lake Michigan."

"As tempting as that sounds, I have a better idea for revenge," Sarah said, her eyes gleaming. She turned her notebook around, sliding it across the table. The top of the page read: Bennett Architectural Consulting.

"I'm starting my own firm," Sarah announced. "I'm selling the house to fund it. I'm going to consult on major commercial projects and take Ryan's clients right out from under him."

Lily stared at the notebook, her eyes scanning the bulleted lists of business plans, target demographics, and initial budgeting.

"Sarah, this is brilliant. This is exactly what you should be doing.

But..." she tapped a perfectly manicured fingernail against a blank section on the page.

"Your branding plan is nonexistent. Your visual identity is completely blank.

Sarah, you can't walk into a room and ask luxury developers for a two-million-dollar contract by handing them a generic business card. "

Sarah sighed, leaning back in her chair. "I know. I can design a structural grid that can withstand a hurricane, but I don't know the first thing about typography or client acquisition. I was going to look for a freelance graphic designer once the house sells."

Lily went very quiet. She looked down at her latte, then up at Sarah. The restless, adrift energy she had been carrying since she got back suddenly focused into a sharp, terrifyingly bright laser beam.

"Sarah," Lily said slowly. "I was an art director for three years in London. I ran entire branding campaigns for multimillion-dollar firms. I know how to make a company look expensive, exclusive, and necessary."

Sarah blinked. "I know you do. You're amazing at it."

"I'm currently unemployed," Lily continued, leaning forward, her eyes lighting up with the thrill of a idea.

"I came back to the States to run away from Ethan, but I have absolutely no idea what I'm doing next.

I don't want to go back to a corporate agency.

I want to build something from the ground up. "

The realization hit Sarah like a lightning bolt. She sat up straight, her heart hammering against her ribs. "Lily... are you saying what I think you're saying?"

"We both just had our entire foundations kicked out from under us," Lily said fiercely, reaching across the table to grab Sarah’s hands.

"We both got betrayed by the people we trusted most. So let's use it.

Make me a partner. You handle the architecture, the zoning, the structural brilliance.

I handle the branding, the visual identity, the website, and the client acquisition.

We pitch ourselves as a full-package consulting duo. "

Sarah looked at her best friend. They had survived terrible bridesmaid dresses, terrible men, and the absolute destruction of their personal lives.

The thought of stepping out onto this terrifying ledge alone had been daunting.

But doing it with Lily? Building a business together suddenly felt like the most natural, bulletproof idea in the world.

Sarah picked up her coffee mug, holding it out over the center of the table.

"Fifty-fifty split," Sarah said, a massive, unstoppable smile taking over her face. "We launch next month."

Lily clinked her mug against Sarah's, the ceramic ringing out like a bell. "Let's go build an empire."

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