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Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle-Chapter 125: The Line They Do Not Cross
The quartet continued playing.
Nothing in the ballroom suggested disruption.
The violins carried the melody in a restrained progression while the cello sustained the lower register beneath it, the rhythm steady beneath the chandelier light. Waitstaff moved between the tables with quiet efficiency, silver trays balanced at shoulder height as glasses were replaced and napkins adjusted without interrupting conversation.
Guests spoke in the same moderated tones that had filled the room since the banquet began, their voices softened by the scale of the space and by the unspoken understanding that this room had hosted too many years of shared history to allow careless volume.
On the surface, nothing had changed.
The Rochefort Anniversary Banquet continued exactly as it had moments earlier.
Angelika walked away from the long table.
Her posture remained upright. Her expression held the same polite composure she had worn since entering the ballroom. Anyone observing from a distance might have assumed the exchange between her and Arianne had been nothing more than a brief conversation between acquaintances—something routine, something forgettable.
But she did not return to the seat she had expected.
When she reached the center portion of the ballroom, where the donor tables had been arranged closest to the stage, she slowed.
Her name card was no longer where it had been.
The change had not been dramatic. The place setting itself remained untouched. The crystal glass stood where it had been placed earlier that evening. The folded linen napkin had not been disturbed.
Only the card had changed.
The small white rectangle that had carried her name had been replaced with another.
Angelika did not touch it.
Her gaze moved slowly across the ballroom.
Nothing appeared to stop.
Gilbert stood several tables away speaking with one of the foundation’s senior patrons, his expression attentive as he listened. Julian remained near the stage, leaning slightly toward a young coordinator who held a clipboard against her chest as they reviewed the evening program. Nate had positioned himself beside two familiar donors whose charity events Angelika had attended for years, the three of them speaking in relaxed conversation.
Franz stood near the long table where the twins remained.
He was not standing beside Arianne. He was not touching her.
But he was positioned near enough that anyone surveying the room would register the connection.
Angelika inhaled slowly and turned from the table. Her reassigned seat had been placed farther along the outer arc of the ballroom.
The relocation was subtle. She remained within the same room, within the same event. Yet the angle of the space changed from that position. The stage appeared more distant, and one of the marble columns now interrupted the direct line of sight toward the central tables.
She sat.
Across the room, Gilbert concluded his conversation and allowed his attention to settle on the man standing to his left.
"I wanted to mention something briefly," Gilbert said.
His tone was quiet, calm enough to blend into the surrounding conversations.
The man inclined his head, waiting.
"I would appreciate it if certain guests avoided speaking to the children this evening."
The sentence carried no accusation.
Gilbert did not look toward Angelika.
The man followed the direction of Gilbert’s attention almost unconsciously, his gaze landing on the long table where Leo and Lily stood near Arianne.
"I understand," he said.
That was the end of the discussion.
He turned back toward the patron beside him and resumed the conversation they had been having about a museum restoration project. The topic shifted smoothly, but the information had already begun to move through the room quietly information always did among people who had known each other long enough to trust implication more than explanation.
Near the stage, Julian finished reviewing the program with the event coordinator.
He studied the page for a moment, the clipped stack resting against the young woman’s palm.
"One adjustment," he said.
She leaned slightly closer.
"After the donor acknowledgment," Julian continued, "move the second photo grouping forward. It will keep the flow cleaner."
The coordinator glanced down.
"That places the Sinclair group later," she said.
"Yes."
She nodded and made the change with a small mark of her pen.
Across the ballroom, Nate stood beside two social patrons who hosted several of the city’s seasonal charity events each year.
Their conversation had been light until that point—something about an upcoming gallery auction—but when the discussion paused naturally, Nate continued in the same even tone.
"There is one small matter," he said.
The woman across from him lifted her glass.
"Yes?"
"You may want to reconsider placing Ms. Sinclair on the guest list for the children’s events this spring."
She blinked.
"Oh?"
Nate’s expression did not change.
"She may not be the best fit," he said.
He did not elaborate.
The man standing beside her nodded slowly.
"I see."
That was enough.
Angelika felt the adjustment before she could identify its origin.
A man who had been approaching her table changed his direction midway across the floor, greeting someone else two tables away. A woman who had glanced toward the empty chair beside Angelika suddenly remembered another conversation near the bar.
No one avoided her directly.
But no one approached her either.
Angelika rested her hands lightly on the table and lowered her gaze to the folded program card in front of her.
The pattern was familiar.
Years ago, when they were younger, she had seen it happen before.
Alex had never argued publicly and neither had Gilbert. Julian had spoken less than all of them, and Nate had rarely raised his voice. Even Arianne had never raised her voice in public, not even when her engagement was broken five years ago.
Someone would say the wrong thing.
Or cross a boundary they did not realize existed.
And then the room would rearrange itself.
Not through confrontation.
Through absence.
Lunch tables filled before someone arrived. Invitations quietly changed hands. Conversations were redirected before they could become damaging to the group.
No announcement was ever made.
But the decision became visible all the same.
Angelika lifted her head.
Across the ballroom, the same structure had formed.
Arianne stood near the long table speaking quietly to Leo, one hand resting against his shoulder. Lily remained beside them, close enough that the red fabric of Arianne’s gown brushed against the child’s sleeve. Franz had repositioned himself a short distance away, close enough that the connection between them was clear even without gesture.
Behind them, Gilbert and Julian had begun speaking with one of the trustees while Nathaniel engaged another group of patrons.
The arrangement was not accidental.
Angelika exhaled slowly.
The program continued.
After several minutes, a member of the event staff approached the musicians and spoke quietly near the edge of the stage. The quartet allowed the final note of their piece to settle before lowering their bows.
Arianne stepped forward.
The motion drew the room’s attention without any formal announcement.
She crossed the distance to the podium with the same controlled composure she had carried throughout the evening. The red of her gown deepened beneath the stage light as she reached the microphone and rested one hand lightly against the edge of the lectern.
The room quieted.
"This anniversary," she said, "is about continuity."
Her voice carried easily through the space.
She did not speak long.
Her remarks acknowledged the foundation’s work, the patrons whose contributions had sustained it, and the history that had allowed the Rochefort name to endure across decades. There was no ornament in the phrasing—no attempt to dramatize the moment.
The speech served its purpose.
While she spoke, Franz moved slightly along the edge of the stage.
He did not stand beside her.
He did not touch her.
But he remained within the same line of sight.
Behind them, Gilbert, Julian, and Nathaniel stood among the guests nearest the stage, their presence forming a quiet alignment that required no explanation.
Angelika watched from her seat.
The realization settled completely.
They had not argued with her.
They had not removed her from the room.
They had simply repositioned the room itself.
And they had done it without needing to speak to one another at all.
When Arianne finished speaking, applause rose briefly from the surrounding tables—measured, respectful, the kind of response expected in a room where restraint had always been valued more than spectacle.
Angelika remained seated until the sound faded.
When she finally lifted her glass, the chandelier light trembled slightly across its surface.
Across the ballroom, Leo still held the stylus in his hand.
The tablet screen remained dark.







