NovelLamp

Font: Big Medium Small
Dark Eye-protection
NovelLamp > The $18 billion wife he abandoned > 18 year 55

18 year 55

    Book 2 Blindside Hit


    im


    <b>Book </b><b>2 </b>Blindside Hit


    “Boston’s Hockey Princess: Having It All or Having a Breakdown?”


    Emma stared at the magazine headline disyed prominently at the airport newsstand, her blood pressure rising with each inmmatory line of the subtitle: “Emma Mitchell–Volkov’s juggling act between boardroom and nursery raises questions about women in sports leadership.”


    “Don’t read it,” Alek advised, steering her away from the newsstand. “Lisa warned us it wasing.”


    “Toote,” Emma muttered, fishing coins from her purse. “I need to know what they’re saying.”


    The article, when she skimmed it during their flight to the league owners‘ meeting, proved even worse than the headline suggested. Anonymous sources–clearly other owners‘ wives- questioned whether Emma could effectively lead a franchise while caring for two infants. The piece dissected everything from her maternity leave duration to her decision to bring babies to the Seattle hospital visit with Jack.


    “Sources close to the organization suggest Mitchell–Volkov’s attention has been divided since bing a mother,” Emma read aloud with disgust. “Her recent absence from key league functions raises concerns about the des‘ leadership stability.”


    ?


    “Garbage journalism,” Alek said firmly. “Everyone knows you’ve been handling your responsibilities perfectly.”


    “Have I though?” Emma set the magazine aside, self–doubt creeping into her voice. “When was thest time I attended a full board meeting? Or stayedte to review contract


    negotiations?”


    “When was thest time any owner with a newborn did those things?” Alek countered. “This is sexist nonsense, Emma. They’d never question a male owner’smitment for taking paternity leave.”


    Emma knew he was right, but the article’s implications stung nheless. She’d worked years to establish credibility in the male–dominated hockey world. Now, six months after bing a mother, critics were already questioning her dedication.


    Her phone rang–Veronica’s ringtone.


    “Emma? I hope you don’t mind me calling.” Veronica’s voice carried unusual tension. “I read that awful article about you, and I’m furious on your behalf.”


    < Book 2 Blindside Hit


    “Thank you,” Emma replied, surprised by the solidarity. “How’s Jack doing?”


    im


    “Much better. The castes off next week.” Veronica paused. “Actually, that’s partly why I’m calling. I need advice about something.”


    Emma waited, sensing deeper conversationing.


    “I’ve been offered an incredible modeling contract,” Veronica continued. “A year–long campaign for a major European designer. It would mean traveling extensively–Mn, Paris, London. The money is life–changing.”


    “That sounds amazing,” Emma said carefully, hearing the ‘but‘ in Veronica’s tone.


    “It would mean leaving Jack and the baby for weeks at a time,” Veronica admitted. “The shoots can’t be scheduled around family life. It’s all or nothing.”


    Emma understood immediately. “And you’re torn.”


    “Completely.” Veronica’s voice cracked slightly. “This is the opportunity I’ve worked toward my entire career. But leaving my eighteen–month–old son for that long… I don’t know if I can do


    it.”


    The irony wasn’t lost on Emma–being asked for career–versus–motherhood advice while facing simr criticism herself.


    “What does Jack think?” Emma asked.


    “He says it’s my decision entirely,” Veronica replied. “Which is helpful and terrifying at the


    same time.”


    Emma smiled despite her own worries. “That sounds like Jack. Supportive but not directive.”


    “Exactly.” Veronica sighed. “I keep thinking about what you’ve managed–running a hockey franchise while having two babies. How do you make those impossible choices?”


    The question hit Emma harder than expected. Was she managing well, or was the magazine article more urate than she wanted to admit?


    “Honestly?” Emma said. “I don’t think there are perfect choices. Just choices that feel right for your family at specific moments.”


    “But how do you know which choice is right?”


    Emma looked across the airne aisle at Alek, who was reviewing yer statistics while simultaneously rocking Charlotte’s carrier with his foot. Bnce in action, even on a ne.


    “I think,” Emma said slowly, “you have to decide what you can live with long–term. Not just


    :


    < Book 2 Blindside Hit


    financially, but emotionally.”


    im


    After ending the call, Emma reflected on her own advice. The magazine article had shaken her confidence, but watching Alek seamlessly blend professional responsibilities with infant care reminded her that their approach–however unconventional–was working. <fndec4> ???? ????s? ???????s ?? FindN0vel</fndec4>


    The league meeting proved surprisingly supportive. Fellow owners, many parents themselves, dismissed the magazine article as sensationalist garbage designed to generate


    controversy.


    “Anyone questioning yourmitment clearly hasn’t seen your quarterly reports,” the Calgary ownermented during lunch. “Best rookie owner performance I’ve seen in years.”


    “Besides,” added the Minnesota owner, “half of us have raised children while running


    franchises. It’s called being an adult.”


    The validation helped, but Emma couldn’t shake the feeling that expectations for her were different–higher, more scrutinized–than for her male counterparts.


    During the afternoon session, she participated in discussions about sry cap management and yoff format changes, proving to herself as much as others that new motherhood


    hadn’t diminished her business acumen.


    “You were brilliant in there,” Alek said as they returned to their hotel suite that evening. “The expansion proposal was genius.”


    “Thank you.” Emma copsed into a chair, exhaustion hitting her as adrenaline faded. “Some days I feel like I’m proving myself all over again.”


    “To whom?” Alek asked, settling Charlotte into her portable crib while Emma began feeding


    Frankie.


    “Everyone. The league, the media, other mothers, myself.” Emma shifted the baby to a morefortable position. “That article made me question everything.”


    “The article was written by someone who’s never tried to bnce anything more challenging than dinner reservations,” Alek replied with conviction. “You’re raising two babies while running a professional sports franchise. That’s not just impressive–it’s heroic.”


    Emma smiled at his fierce defense. “Heroic might be overstating it.”


    “Is it?” Alek challenged. “Name one other person doing what you’re doing right now.”


    Emma considered this. While other female executives had children, she couldn’t think of any


    < Book 2 Blindside Hit


    managing professional sports teams while caring for infants this young.


    “I suppose it is unusual,” she admitted.


    im


    “It’s unprecedented,” Alek corrected. “You’re not just breaking barriers, Emma–you’re creating entirely new models for what’s possible.”


    That evening, as they settled into their hotel routine with the babies, Emma called Veronica


    back.


    “I’ve been thinking about our conversation,” she began. “About impossible choices.”


    “And?” Veronica prompted.


    “Maybe the real question isn’t whether you can have it all,” Emma said, “but whether you want everything you’re being offered. Some opportunitiese at the right time, others don’t.”


    “You mean timing matters more than the opportunity itself?”


    “Sometimes.” Emma watched Alek efficiently manage Charlotte’s bedtime routine, his natural parenting instincts now finely tuned. “I turned down opportunities after the babies were born -speaking engagements, board positions, even expansion talks. Not because I couldn’t handle them, but because they didn’t align with what our family needed right now.”


    “Did you regret those decisions?” Veronica asked.


    Emma considered this carefully. “No regrets. Just recognition that choices have seasons. What I choose now doesn’t limit what I might chooseter.”


    “That’s actually really helpful,” Veronica said with audible relief. “Thank you for being honest about theplexity.”


    After hanging up, Emma reflected on her own words. The magazine article had made her feel defensive about her choices, but perhaps the real measure wasn’t external validation but internal peace with the decisions she and Alek were making together.


    “Good advice?” Alek asked, having overheard part of the conversation.


    “I hope so,” Emma replied. “For both of us.”


    The next morning brought another surprising phone call–this time from the journalist who’d written the controversial article.


    “Ms. Mitchell–Volkov? This is Sarah Chen from Sports Business Weekly. I’d like to offer you the opportunity to respond to my recent piece.”


    Emma’s first instinct was to decline, but something in the journalist’s tone–genuine rather


    :


    < Book 2 Blindside Hit


    than confrontational–made her reconsider.


    “What kind of response?” she asked carefully.


    im


    “A feature interview,” Sarah exined. “To present your perspective on bncing leadership responsibilities with new motherhood. The piece would focus on your approach rather than others‘ opinions about it.”


    Emma looked at Alek, who nodded encouragingly.


    “I’ll consider it,” Emma decided. “Send me the proposed format and questions.”


    As they packed for their return flight to Boston, Emma felt something she hadn’t expected- excitement about the interview opportunity. Rather than defending her choices, she could share practical insights about modern parenthood in high–pressure careers.


    Like recovering from a blindside hit in hockey, the initial shock of criticism had given way to determination to control her own narrative. She wasn’t just surviving the intersection of motherhood and leadership–she was pioneering it.


    <i>And </i>maybe that perspective was worth sharing, for other women facing simr impossible


    choices.


    218
『Add To Library for easy reading』
Popular recommendations
Shadow Slave Is It Bad That the Main Character&#x2019;s a Roleplayer? The Survival of the Third-rate Villain The Return of the Legendary All-Master Infinite Evolution: My Idle Evolution System NTR: Minor Villain Wants to Be the Main Villain