Mia's POV
The coffee had gone cold two hours ago. I picked up the cup anyway.
Camille sat across from me at the conference table, her laptop open, her fingers hovering over the keyboard. Waiting.
"The structural engineer confirmed the foundation work?" I asked.
"Tuesday. He'll be on-site at seven."
"And the permits?"
"Filed yesterday. Should clear by Friday."
I nodded. Made a note on the blueprint spread across the table.
The lines blurred.
Just slightly. Like someone had smudged them.
I blinked. Hard. Once. Twice.
The lines came back into focus.
My hand moved across the paper. The pencil felt wrong. Too light. Or maybe my hand was too heavy.
"Mia."
I looked up. Camille's face had that soft edge around it. That halo you get when you've been staring at blueprints too long and your eyes don't remember how to see regular things anymore.
I blinked again. The halo disappeared.
"What?" I asked.
She was watching me. "How many hours did you work yesterday?"
"I don't know. Normal amount."
"Mia, I saw your car in the parking lot when I left at eleven PM. And it was still there when I came in this morning at seven."
I looked back down at the blueprints. I didn't answer.
"You're seeing double."
My head snapped up. "I'm not—"
"I've been watching you for the last ten minutes. You keep blinking. Hard. Like you're trying to clear something from your vision."
Shit.
"I am okay, Camile." I said. The blueprints looked back at me. Clean lines. Precise measurements. Every wall where it should be. Every window placed for maximum light.
I erased a line. Redrew it half an inch to the left.
"The HVAC contractor needs an answer about the ductwork," Camille said. "Today."
"Tell him to go with the split system. More expensive but better airflow."
She typed. "Done. And the interior designer wants to know about finishes. She's asking for mood boards by Monday."
"I'll have them ready."
"Mia."
I looked up.
Camille's face was tight.
"What?"
"Nothing. I just—" She stopped. Started again. "I...You've been working like this for two weeks. Sixteen-hour days. Sometimes more. I'm just worried."
"I'm fine."
"Mia—"
"I'm fine." I looked at her. Met her eyes. "I just want this house gets finished on schedule."
She nodded. Didn't look convinced but didn't push.
Her fingers moved across the keyboard. Typing something. Probably notes about the contractors.
I watched her for a moment. "Camille."
She looked up.
"After this project wraps," I said. "Everyone gets two weeks off. Paid."
She blinked. "What?"
"Two weeks. Full pay. Everyone in the studio. Including you and me."
"Mia, that's—" She stopped. "That's a lot of money."
"I know."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes." I leaned back in my chair. "Everyone's been working insane hours. You. The junior architects. Even the interns. We all need a break."
Her face did something. Softened. "Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet. You still have to send the email."
She smiled. Actually smiled. "I'll do it right now."
Her fingers moved across the keyboard. Fast. Efficient.
Then her laptop pinged.
Alexander appeared from the hallway wearing his dress pants and a t-shirt with a dinosaur on it.
"Mama!" He launched himself at me. "You're home! Guess what!"
"What?"
"The person getting married today is named Alexander too!" His face was bright. "Just like me!"
"That's right," I said. "Morton's brother."
"Is he my age?"
"No, buddy. He's a grown-up Alexander."
"Oh." He processed this. "But we have the same name. That's still cool. Right?"
"Very cool."
"Do you think he likes dinosaurs?"
"I don't know."
"He should. Alexander is a good name for someone who likes dinosaurs." He held up his clip-on tie. "Look! I can tie my own tie now!"
"That's not tying," Ethan said from the couch. He was already fully dressed. Pants pressed. Shirt tucked. Hair combed. "That's clipping."
"It's still a tie."
"But you didn't tie it. Someone at the factory tied it. You just attached it."
"So? It's on my neck. That's what matters."
"The skill is in the tying, not the wearing."
Alexander's face scrunched up. "You're being annoying."
"I'm being accurate."
"Accurate is annoying."
"Maybe the other Alexander will teach me how to tie a real tie," Alexander said. "Since we have the same name. That's what Alexanders do. We help each other."
"That's not how names work," Ethan said.
"How do you know? You're not named Alexander."
"I know because that's not logical."
"You're not logical."
"Boys," my mother said without looking at them. "Not now."
.

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins (Mia and Kyle)
I’m so annoyed on how she treats him...
Chapters 500 and 501 are blank...
Chapter 499 is not there!!!!...
I'm so in love with this story. Is this the only place to read it for free? I feel I'm missing pieces, and chapters are skipping around, and I feel things are missing? I seriously cannot get enough of these two!...
More, please more, I need more!!!...
Can we please have the ending!! Torture waiting...
I just love reading about Mia and Kyle! I need more of them 😍...
Pure torture waiting for all the chapters!! Please finish the book...
I cried and laughed reading this. More please. And please do not kill Kyle...for the kids....
Missing page 456...