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Chapter 5 - CHAPTER FOUR: ASHES AND AMBITION

The morning after Wallace Walker's proposal, the city felt different.

It wasn't quieter — Lagos never is — but the noise didn't reach me anymore. I'd woken up with something I hadn't felt in months.

Purpose.

I brewed my own coffee, sat by the window of my tiny apartment, and opened my laptop. For hours, I stared at the blank page. The cursor blinked like a heartbeat — steady, patient, waiting for the new me to speak.

When I finally began typing, it wasn't just business plans. It was redemption in motion.

Project Phoenix.

The name came to me like fire in the dark. A new tech-creative hybrid brand built on innovation, sustainability, and art. Everything I'd once dreamed of building with James — but this time, it would be mine. Mine alone.

I didn't tell anyone yet.

Not Valerie. Not even Wallace.

Some things are too sacred to speak until they're strong enough to survive outside your head.

---

By noon, my phone buzzed with notifications. My name — trending again.

But not for anything good.

> "Diana Hattaway Crashes Walker Foundation Gala — Desperate Comeback Attempt?"

"Has-Been Star Tries to Seduce Billionaire for Relevance."

I almost laughed.

Once upon a time, those headlines would've shattered me. Now, they amused me. The world always underestimates a woman who's rebuilding quietly.

I clicked my phone off and whispered to my reflection, "You can't shame a woman who's already walked through fire."

Still, my pulse raced. Pain is a strange thing — even when you're strong, it still burns.

That's when the call came.

Wallace.

> "You've seen the press?" he asked, voice smooth but edged.

> "Oh, you mean the masterpiece of recycled gossip and bad journalism?" I replied. "Yes, I've read the poetry."

He chuckled softly. "You're handling it well."

> "I've learned to bleed gracefully."

There was a pause — one that felt heavier than words.

> "Let them talk, Diana. The louder they get, the closer you are to proving them wrong," he said. "Now, about your proposal… when do we begin?"

That question — those words — changed everything.

---

Two days later, I walked into the gleaming Walker Innovations Tower.

It felt surreal, stepping back into the world of boardrooms and billion-dollar ideas after being written off as yesterday's news.

But the moment I entered that glass elevator, I felt the old Diana stir again — the visionary, the strategist, the fire.

When the doors opened, Wallace was there, hands in his pockets, eyes calm and assessing.

> "Welcome to your new beginning," he said.

His words wrapped around me like a promise — or a challenge.

The meeting room was filled with his top executives. All of them men, all of them skeptical. I could feel the weight of their stares — whispers of Isn't that the woman who— silenced only when I began to speak.

I presented Project Phoenix.

Every word, every slide, every strategy was my heartbeat made visible.

At first, they doubted. Then they leaned in. Then, one by one, they nodded.

When I finished, Wallace smiled — that rare, slow smile that said, I knew you could.

> "Gentlemen," he said, turning to the board, "that's the future. And her name is Diana Hattaway."

Applause followed — hesitant, but real.

For the first time in forever, I didn't feel like a scandal.

I felt like a force.

---

But victory never comes without a price.

That night, as I stepped out of the building, flashes exploded.

Paparazzi again.

> "Diana! Is it true you're dating Wallace Walker?"

"Are you using him for a comeback?"

"James Hudson says you stole his company designs!"

That last one froze me.

James.

He was back — already poisoning the narrative.

Wallace appeared at my side, shielding me from the cameras. "Ignore them," he said quietly.

But I couldn't. Because I knew James.

If he was resurfacing, it meant war.

---

Later, in the quiet of my apartment, I stared at the city lights again — the same ones that had watched me fall.

This time, I wasn't the broken woman staring at her ruins.

I was the architect of a new empire — one they couldn't take from me again.

I raised my glass to my reflection.

"To ashes," I said softly, "and the ambition that rises from them."

And somewhere in the distance, my phone buzzed again — a message from Wallace:

> Wallace: "Tomorrow, we rise."

And I knew he meant it.

But what neither of us knew was that the higher we climbed, the hotter the fire waiting ahead would burn.

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