Chapter 368
Ex-Husband’s Regret
Chapter 0368
Prologue.
Gabe.
| sit in my office, my mind reeling. Worry for my brother consumes me day and night. Itâs been a couple of months since
everything went south with Emma and since he informed us that he married Ava because heâd gotten her pregnant.
Since then, since he lost Emma, he hasnât been the same. Itâs like something inside him broke. Like he was only half living.
Travis told me that Emma wasnât doing any better, but as much as | treasure her, she wasnât my main concern. My loyalties will
always lie with Rowan, no matter what he did.
| pull my drawer open and retrieve a packet of cigarettes. Lighting one up, | drag it in, feeling myself calm down just a little bit. |
know itâs a bad habit, but I just canât stop. Not when itâs the only thing apart from sex that is able to make me relax.
Standing up from my chair, | eye my office. | was interning at our familyâs company. Itâs been there for generations and has
always been run by the men in our family. We arenât sexists or anything like that; itâs just that there haven't been any females
born in generations. For some reason, the men in our family only produce males. Once, there was hope when my mom got
pregnant after Rowan and me, but she miscarried at five months. The baby had been a girl.
My door opens, but | donât turn around. Iâve fucked her enough times to immediately recognize her perfume.
âGabe, thereâs a man here to see you.â
Even when sheâs delivering such mundane news, her voice is sultry and sexy. Apart from her looks and sex appeal, it was the
other thing that attracted me to her. Her voice alone can make you fantasize about how she sounds when you're buried deep
inside her.
âDoes he have an appointment?â | asked, finally turning around.
Damn, her curves never cease to distract me. It isnât once or twice Iâve called her in for a quickie. Sheâs the distraction | need
when my brain canât stop thinking and worrying about Rowan.
âNo, but he said itâs urgent and that he has something important to tell you.â
âOkay, let him in.â
She leaves and seconds later she ushers a man in. He has dark hair slicked back, sharp, cunning green eyes, and heâs leaning
against a cane.
I stare at him; he looks to be in his late twenties or early thirties. Tool young to be needing a cane to walk, but then again, there
are people in our social status that use it as a prop.
âWho are you, and what do you want?â | ask, not beating around the bush.
The more | look at him, the more familiar he looks. | just donât know where Iâve seen him before.
âI'm Andrew Beckett; Iâm sure youâve heard of me,â he replies smoothly, before crossing the room and then sitting down.
I smirk. Impressed with his confidence. Not many people have that when theyâre dealing with me. Though, the moment his name
hits my ears, the smirk disappears,
The Beckett family was once prominent. You can even say they rivaled ours. About fifteen years ago, though, the CEO at that
time, Andrew's grandfather, died and left his legacy to his son-in-law. Itâs said that he wanted to leave it to his only child,
Andrewsâs mother, but she begged him to leave the position to her husband because heâd worked there since they married and
has always desired to lead the company.
It turns out that that was the single worst decision he ever made. My dad always said that Andrew's dad wasnât made to be a
leader. That he wasnât meant to be CEO, and thatâs why the company began failing. By the time Andrew was old enough to take
over the company, it was beyond help. The Beckettâs legacy finally went down about five years ago, and they lost their social
standing.
âHow can | help you, Andrew? If it's a merger or some shit you want, let me just inform you that Iâm not in the position to help
you,â | tell him, lying my facts down.