Rejected by Three, I Chose Revenge Chapter 13
The call came at 3:47 AM, jarring me from restless sleep.
“Hazel” Caleb’s voice was tight, controlled, but I could hear the strain beneath his usual composure. “There’s been an accident
My heart stopped. “Are you hurt?”
“I’m fine. Mostly.” A pause, heavy with meaning. “My car rolled on Highway 35 outside Dallas. The armored plating saved my life, but the wheelchair was destroyed in the crash.”
I was already reaching for my clothes, phone pressed to my ear. “I’m coming to Texas.”
“Hazel, you don’t need to-”
“Don’t.” The word came out sharper than I intended. “Just don’t. Where are you?”
Six hours later, I walked into the temporary command center Caleb had established in a Dallas hotel suite, my heart hammering against my ribs. What I saw stopped me cold.
Caleb sat in a basic hospital wheelchair-the kind they loan to patients, with worn vinyl seats and squeaky wheels. His usually immaculate appearance was disheveled, a bandage visible at his temple, his shirt wrinkled from the night’s ordeal. But his gray eyes were sharp as ever, focused intently on three massive
monitors displaying cascading data streams.
“The entire Southwest grid is compromised,” he was saying into his headset, his voice carrying absolute authority despite his circumstances. “Reroute all traffic through the Phoenix backup servers and activate the emergency cooling protocols.”
Lucas stood beside him, tablet in hand, coordinating with a team of engineers who had flown in from Silicon Valley. The room buzzed with controlled urgency-millions of dollars and thousands of clients hanging in the balance.
“Sir, we’re seeing cascading failures in the backup systems,” one of the engineers reported, sweat beading on his forehead.
Caleb’s jaw tightened, but his voice remained steady. “Then we go to contingency plan Delta. Contact our partners in Denver and Seattle. We’ll distribute the load across the entire western seaboard if we have to.”
I watched him work, this man who had been thrown from an armored vehicle just hours ago, now orchestrating a technological ballet that would save his company millions. The cheap hospital wheelchair didn’t diminish his presence-if anything, it seemed to amplify it. Here was raw power, intellect functioning at its peak despite physical limitations.
Something shifted inside my chest, a warmth spreading through me like sunrise. This wasn’t the calculated respect I’d felt for Caleb’s strategic mind, or the physical attraction I’d tried to suppress. This was something deeper, more dangerous.
This was love.
The realization hit me like a physical blow. I pressed my hand to my chest, feeling my pulse race as I watched Caleb coordinate crisis management with the same precision he brought to everything else. The way he commanded respect without raising his voice, the way his mind cut through chaos to find solutions-I was falling for the man, not just the alliance.
“Hazel’ Lucas appeared at my elbow, his voice low. “He’s been running on adrenaline and coffee for eight hours. Maybe you can convince him to take a
break.
I nodded, not trusting my voice. When Caleb finally ended his call and noticed me standing there, something flickered across his face-surprise, then
something warmer.
“You came,” he said simply.
“Of course I came.” The words felt inadequate for the storm of emotions churning inside me. “Are you really okay?”
He gestured to the bandage on his temple with dark humor. “Define okay. The doctors say I’m lucky to be alive. The car rolled three times before hitting a guardrail.”
“Jesus, Caleb.” I moved closer, my hands hovering uncertainly near his shoulders. “What happened?”
“Brake failure on a mountain curve His eyes hardened “Very convenient timing, considering our recent activities
The implication hung between us like a blade. Someone had tried to kill him-tried to kill us both, really, since I was supposed to be in that car for the original
trip
‘Richard? Or Vivian?” I asked.
“Does it matter?” Caleb’s voice carried cold fury. “They’ve escalated beyond business warfare. This was attempted murder
I knelt beside his wheelchair, bringing us to eye level. Up close, I could see the exhaustion etched in the lines around his eyes, the way his hands trembled slightly from adrenaline crash.
“We’ll make them pay,” I said fiercely. “All of them.”
Something shifted in his expression, the hard mask slipping to reveal something vulnerable underneath. “When I was trapped in that car, upside down and bleeding, you want to know what I thought about?”
I waited, my heart hammering.
“Not the company. Not the deals or the revenge or any of it.” His voice dropped to a whisper. “I thought about never seeing you again. Never hearing you laugh at one of my dry observations. Never watching you destroy our enemies with that brilliant mind of yours.”
The air between us crackled with tension, with words that had been building for months.
“Caleb…
“I know this complicates everything,” he said quickly, as if afraid I’d stop him. “I know we agreed this was business, that emotions were a liability. But lying there in that wreckage, I realized I’d rather be vulnerable with you than invincible without you.”
The last of my defenses crumbled. I reached up, cupping his face in my hands, feeling the roughness of stubble against my palms.
“You’re not the only one who’s been lying to themselves,” I whispered. “Watching you handle this crisis, seeing you refuse to let anything break you… I’m in love with you, Caleb. Not the alliance, not the power, not the revenge. You.”
His eyes searched mine, looking for doubt or deception and finding none. Then he was kissing me, one hand tangled in my hair, the other pulling me closer. it wasn’t the calculated kiss of our wedding day or the strategic touches we’d shared in public. This was desperate, honest, real.
When we finally broke apart, both of us breathing slightly harder than before, Caleb’s eyes held mine with an intensity that made my heart race.
This doesn’t change our objectives,” he said quietly.
“No, I agreed, touching my lips where his had been. “But it changes everything else.”
Three days later, we returned to Los Angeles as a united front. Lucas met us at the private airstrip, his expression grave as he helped transfer Caleb to his custom wheelchair.
“Mrs. Vance,” he said quietly as Caleb was settling in, “we’ve received intelligence that Miss Whitman has accelerated her timeline. She’s planning to present her case against your father at the next board meeting-five days from now.”
I felt Caleb’s hand find mine as we exchanged a look of silent understanding.
‘She’s making her move,” I said softly.
“‘Yes, Lucas confirmed. “And she’s not working alone.”

