Ten minutes earlier.
Donovan Tate stood perfectly still behind his boss in the dim corridor of the Elysium club. He watched Adela Richmond's retreating back as she marched toward the exit.
He had seen exactly what happened. Harmon hadn't been stretching his legs. He had deliberately shifted his foot directly into Adela's path the second she rounded the corner.
Harmon had sat on that leather sofa for two hours, nursing a single glass of scotch, waiting for this exact moment.
Harmon stood up. He shot his cuffs, adjusting the silver links with slow, precise movements. The dangerous smirk was gone, replaced by a cold, calculating focus.
"Donovan," Harmon's voice was low, devoid of any warmth.
"Yes, sir," Donovan replied instantly.
"Pull the credit card receipts for Juston Bond's tab in the Peacock Room. Run a full background check on every man sitting at that table. I want leverage on all of them by morning."
"Understood."
"And call the media contacts," Harmon continued, walking slowly down the hall. "Full blackout. If a single word about Adela Richmond and Juston Bond leaks to the press, I will personally bankrupt the publication that prints it."
Donovan nodded, typing furiously on his phone. "I'll handle it. But sir... she just walked out into a storm. Should I bring the car around?"
"Bring the car to the front," Harmon said. "But keep your distance. Wait."
Donovan frowned slightly. "Wait for what, sir?"
Harmon stopped walking. He looked at the glass doors at the end of the hall.
"Juston Bond is a narcissist with a bruised ego," Harmon said, his voice chillingly analytical. "He was just humiliated in front of his sycophants. He won't let her walk away feeling victorious. He's going to text her. He's going to try to destroy her psychologically so she feels she has no choice but to return to him."
Donovan stared at his boss's back. Harmon was dissecting human behavior like a surgeon.
"He's been close to the Richmonds, close to Kayden. If he knows anything about her family's secrets-like the truth about that risotto incident-he'll use it now," Harmon said softly.
Donovan's blood ran cold. He knew about the risotto incident. Harmon had ordered a private investigation into the Richmond family years ago. Harmon knew everything.
"Let her read it," Harmon commanded. "She needs a reason to burn her bridges completely. When she has nothing left to hold onto, pull the car up."
Now, sitting in the driver's seat of the Maybach, Donovan looked in the rearview mirror.
Everything happened exactly as Harmon predicted. Down to the second.
Adela Richmond climbed into the back seat. She was completely soaked. Her expensive dress was clinging to her skin, and she was shivering so violently her teeth were chattering. She looked completely broken.
The heavy door shut, sealing them inside the warm, quiet cabin of the car.
Adela didn't speak. She just stared blankly at the leather seat in front of her, her arms wrapped tightly around herself.
Harmon didn't say a word. He calmly took off his bespoke charcoal suit jacket. He leaned over the center console and draped the heavy, warm fabric over Adela's shaking shoulders.
The jacket swallowed her. It smelled of cedar and bergamot.
Adela flinched slightly at the contact, but she didn't push it away. She pulled the lapels tighter around her neck, burying her face in the fabric like a wounded animal seeking shelter.
Harmon met Donovan's eyes in the rearview mirror and gave a single, sharp nod.
Donovan put the car in drive and pulled smoothly away from the curb, merging into the rainy New York traffic.
Harmon looked at the woman beside him.
"Where to?" Harmon asked, his voice smooth and calm. He let a beat of silence pass before adding, "Or should I have my driver take you back to the Richmond villa on the Upper East Side?"
The words "Richmond villa" hit Adela like a physical strike.
Her body jerked under Harmon's heavy suit jacket. The phantom feeling of her throat swelling shut returned. She saw Kayden's mocking smile. She saw her father's dismissive wave.
That house wasn't a home. It was a slaughterhouse.
Adela slowly lifted her head. She turned to look at Harmon. Her eyes were red and swollen, but the tears had stopped. A terrifying, dead calm had settled over her features.
"Yes," Adela said. Her voice was hoarse, but it didn't shake. "Take me to the villa. I need to get my things."
Harmon didn't ask questions. He didn't offer fake sympathy. He simply held her gaze for a second, a flicker of approval flashing in his cold blue eyes.
He tapped the glass partition. Donovan adjusted the route immediately.
The drive to the Upper East Side was suffocatingly silent. Adela stared out the window at the blurred neon lights, her fingers gripping the edge of Harmon's jacket so tightly her knuckles ached.
When the Maybach pulled up to the massive iron gates of the Richmond estate, the house was blazing with lights.
Adela opened the car door before Donovan could get out. She slipped Harmon's jacket off her shoulders and placed it neatly on the leather seat.
"Thank you," she said softly, not looking back at him.
"Keep it," Harmon said from the shadows of the car. "It's cold. I'll wait here."
Adela paused. Why would he wait? She didn't have the energy to argue. She shut the door and walked up the long, wet driveway toward the massive oak front doors.
She pushed the doors open.
The grand foyer was dead quiet, but voices echoed from the main living room.
Adela walked in.
Her entire family was gathered in the living room. Her father, Warren, stood by the fireplace. Her mother, Beatrice, was pacing. Her eldest brother, Alexzander, sat on the sofa checking his phone. And Kara, her adopted sister, was sitting gracefully in an armchair, sipping tea.
The moment Adela stepped into the room, all eyes snapped to her.
Warren's face instantly twisted in fury. "You finally decided to show up!" he barked, pointing a thick finger at her.
Beatrice rushed forward, grabbing Adela's cold, wet arm. "Addie, you look like a mess. Go upstairs, fix your makeup. The PR team has a statement ready. You are going to call Juston right now and apologize. We will spin this as a lover's quarrel."
Adela stared at her mother's manicured hand on her arm. She felt physically sick.
She violently yanked her arm out of Beatrice's grip.
Alexzander sighed loudly, rubbing his temples. "Adela, stop being so dramatic. Your little stunt tonight jeopardized the real estate merger with the Bond family. You are being incredibly selfish."
"Selfish?" Adela whispered. The word tasted like bile.
Kara set her teacup down. She stood up, smoothing her perfect silk dress, and walked over with a sickeningly sweet look of concern on her face.
"Sister, please don't be mad at Mom and Dad," Kara said, reaching out to touch the center of her own chest as if she were the one in pain. "They just want what's best for you. Juston is a good match. You'll be taken care of."
Adela looked at Kara's perfect, innocent face. It was a mask. It was all a mask.
Warren slammed his hand against the mantle. "You will marry Juston Bond, Adela! We have already initiated contact with the Holland trust's legal advisors tonight. We will be formally petitioning them to allow Kara to fulfill the marriage clause instead of you."
Warren puffed out his chest, asserting his absolute authority. "So you will marry Juston, and you will clear the path for your sister. That is your final duty to this family!"
Beatrice nodded frantically. "Yes, Addie. Kara and Harmon are a much better fit. You... you just need to settle down."
Adela looked at the four of them.
They didn't care that Juston had humiliated her. They didn't care that she was soaked to the bone. They just wanted her out of the way so Kara could have the billionaire, and they could keep the Bond real estate deal.
A laugh bubbled up in Adela's throat.
It started small, but it quickly grew into a loud, sharp, humorless sound that echoed off the high ceilings.
Warren's face turned purple. "Are you insane? Stop laughing!"
Adela stopped. The smile vanished from her face instantly.
"Clear the path?" Adela asked, her voice dropping to a deadly whisper. She took a step toward her father. "Before I clear anything, I have a few questions."
The living room fell dead silent.
Adela turned her cold, empty gaze to her mother.
"Mom," Adela said, her voice eerily calm. "You always taught me to be forgiving. To be graceful. So tell me, where was your grace when Kayden tried to kill me?"
Beatrice recoiled as if she had been slapped. The color drained from her face. "What... what are you talking about? The risotto was a kitchen accident!"
"Was it?" Adela pulled her phone from her wet purse. She held the screen up. "Because Juston just texted me. He planned the menu with Kayden. Kayden specifically ordered the kitchen to put shellfish in my food to 'teach me a lesson.'"
Warren and Alexzander both froze. They slowly turned their heads toward the grand staircase.
Kayden had just walked down the stairs, freezing halfway down when he heard his name.
Kayden's face flushed with guilt, then immediate, defensive rage. "That bastard sold me out!" Kayden yelled, gripping the banister. "I just wanted to scare you! You were acting like you were better than everyone else with your stupid sketches!"
Beatrice gasped, covering her mouth with her hands. She collapsed onto the sofa.
Adela didn't blink. The confirmation from Kayden's own mouth killed whatever tiny, pathetic shred of hope she had left for her brother.
She looked at her father. Warren wouldn't meet her eyes.
"You knew," Adela stated. It wasn't a question. "You all knew."
"It's in the past!" Alexzander snapped, standing up. "You're fine now, aren't you? Why are you bringing up old drama?"
"Fine?" Adela's voice cracked like a whip. "My throat closed up. My heart stopped in the ambulance. If the paramedics were five minutes later, you would have been burying me!"
None of them spoke. Kara looked down at the floor, hiding a small smirk behind her hand.
Adela turned her attention fully to her father. The man who had controlled her entire life.
"I have one more question, Warren," Adela said, dropping the title of 'Dad'.
Warren's head snapped up, his eyes narrowing at the disrespect.
"Five years ago," Adela continued, her voice trembling with a rage she had suppressed for half a decade. "I received an early acceptance letter to the Parsons School of Design. With a full scholarship."
At the mention of Parsons, Kara's hand twitched against her dress.
"I left it on my desk," Adela said, stepping closer to Warren. "The next morning, it was gone. You told me the school made a clerical error. You told me they rescinded it."
Warren puffed out his chest, pointing his finger at her. "They did! You weren't good enough!"
"Stop lying!" Adela screamed, the sound tearing from her throat. "I saw the acceptance letter on your desk that morning. When it vanished, you blamed the school. But a week later, I found a corner of the gold-embossed Parsons seal caught in the teeth of your office shredder, a piece you missed during your hasty cleanup!"
The silence in the room was deafening.
Warren's face contorted with ugly, unapologetic anger. "So what if I did?!" he roared. "I told you, this family does not need a glorified seamstress! Your talent is nothing compared to Kara's! Going to an art school would have made us a laughingstock!"
Alexzander crossed his arms. "Dad is right. Your portfolio was amateur garbage. You should be thanking him for saving you the embarrassment."
Kara stepped forward, touching her chest again. "Sister, please. Dad did it to protect you. Your real value is in supporting the family through marriage."
Adela looked at the three men who shared her blood, and the adopted sister who had stolen her life.
They didn't just ignore her. They actively destroyed her. They suffocated her dreams, mocked her talent, and covered up her attempted murder, all to maintain their perfect image and elevate Kara.
The pain in Adela's chest suddenly vanished.
The heavy, suffocating weight she had carried for twenty-two years evaporated, leaving behind a cold, hollow cavern in her ribs.
She looked at them. She didn't feel anger anymore. She didn't feel sadness. She felt absolutely nothing.
"I understand," Adela whispered.