We arrived in Aspen for our pre-wedding ski trip. I was exhausted but happy. The snow looked magical through the cab window. I thought this week would just be me and Andrew. Seven years together, and we finally had time to ourselves before the wedding.
Then I walked into the resort lobby.
Skyla was sitting by the roaring stone fireplace. She held a mug of hot cocoa with both hands. She wore a pristine white snow bunny outfit that made her look tiny and fragile.
My stomach dropped. The familiar, suffocating weight settled in my chest.
"Andrew!" she called out in her high, breathy voice. She ran over and hugged him tight, burying her face in his coat. "I'm so glad you guys made it. My anxiety was acting up flying alone."
Andrew hugged her back. He didn't look surprised at all. "You made it okay, Sky?"
I stared at him, my fingernails biting into my palms. "What is she doing here, Andrew?"
Andrew sighed. He gave me that tired, condescending look. The one that said I was being difficult again. "Char, her pipes burst at home. She was stressed. I told her she could catch a flight and hang out. It's not a big deal."
It was our pre-wedding trip. But before I could argue, the front desk clerk called us over.
"Mr. Miller? We have a slight issue," the clerk said, looking uncomfortable. "Ms. Rose checked in earlier. She said she was part of your party and took the luxury suite you booked. We only have one standard room left on the ground floor."
I looked at Skyla. She bit her lip and looked down, playing with her mittens. "I'm so sorry, Charlotte. My altitude sickness kicked in so fast. I just needed to lie down, and the suite was ready. You don't mind, do you?"
Andrew squeezed my shoulder. His grip was firm, a silent command to behave. "Let her have it, Char. She's delicate with the altitude. We'll be fine in the standard room."
I swallowed the bitter taste in my mouth. I nodded. Just like I always did.
By nightfall, a massive blizzard hit the mountain. The wind howled against the thin glass of our ground-floor window, rattling the frame.
The standard room was a freezing nightmare. The heater was completely broken. I sat on the edge of the stiff mattress, wrapped in my heavy winter coat. My breath plumed in the icy air. My fingers and toes were completely numb.
Andrew's phone buzzed on the nightstand. He picked it up, and his annoyed expression instantly softened.
"Sky? What's wrong?" he asked gently.
I closed my eyes. I knew what was coming. The script never changed.
"Okay, okay. Just breathe. I'll be right there," he said softly.
He hung up and grabbed his jacket from the chair.
"Where are you going?" I asked. My voice sounded hollow, barely carrying over the howling wind outside.
"Skyla had a nightmare," he said, zipping his coat. "The storm is scaring her. And her altitude sickness is getting worse. I just need to go soothe her."
"Andrew, it's freezing in here," I said. My teeth chattered so hard my jaw ached. "The heater is broken. We called maintenance two hours ago. They aren't coming."
He paused at the door. He looked at me with pure irritation. "Charlotte, put on another sweater. Skyla is having a real panic attack. You're strong, you can handle a little cold. Stop being so selfish."
Selfish. The word felt like a slap.
"I'll be back when she falls asleep," he said.
The door clicked shut.
I sat there in the dark. The wind screamed outside. But inside my chest, something finally snapped. It wasn't a loud break. It was quiet. Final.
Seven years. Seven years of standing on the sidelines of my own relationship. I thought about the Thanksgiving pie last month. He bought pecan. Skyla's favorite. He completely forgot my severe nut allergy. I thought about the ruined proposals, the cancelled dates, the endless excuses. He always chose her. He kept me around because I was safe. Because I was obedient.
I wasn't a fiancé. I was a backup plan.
I stood up. My legs felt stiff from the cold, but my mind was perfectly clear.
I didn't cry. The tears were completely gone. I just felt done.
I pulled my suitcase from the corner. I threw my clothes inside. I didn't bother folding them. I zipped the bag shut with a sharp, loud scrape that echoed in the quiet room.
I pulled out my phone. My fingers were stiff, but I typed the words quickly.
*The engagement is over. Have a nice life with Skyla.*
I hit send. I didn't wait for a reply. I blocked his number. Then I blocked his social media. I erased him from my life in less than a minute.
I grabbed my suitcase and walked out of the room.
The lobby was dim and empty. The front desk clerk was asleep in the back office. I pushed through the heavy glass doors and stepped out into the blizzard.
The Colorado snowstorm hit me like a wall of ice. The wind whipped my hair across my face, stinging my cheeks. The snow soaked through my boots instantly. It was freezing, blinding, and dangerous.
But as I dragged my suitcase through the heavy snow toward the taxi stand, I took a deep breath. The icy air filled my lungs, waking me up.
For the first time in seven years, I felt completely warm.
The flight from Aspen to New York was a blur. I didn't shed a single tear. When I landed, I didn't go straight home. I took a cab to an upscale Manhattan lounge. I needed loud music. I needed to wash the freezing cold of that Colorado standard room off my skin.
The lounge was dark and crowded. The air smelled of expensive gin and melted wax. I sat at the marble bar and ordered a dirty martini. The icy liquid burned my throat, but it felt amazing. It felt like freedom.
I looked down at my hands. They were finally warm.
Then, I saw him.
He was sitting two stools away. He was young. Maybe a few years younger than me. And he was devastatingly handsome. He wore a crisp, tailored black shirt, unbuttoned at the collar. His jawline could cut glass. But it was his eyes that caught me. Dark, intense, and fixed entirely on me.
He wasn't looking at his phone. He wasn't looking around the room. He was just watching me. His lips curved into a slow, knowing smile.
Seven years of being invisible to Andrew. Seven years of being pushed aside for Skyla. And now, this gorgeous stranger was looking at me like I was the only person in the room.
I didn't think. I just moved. I slid off my stool. The heavy bass of the music vibrated up my legs. I walked right up to him. He smelled like cedar wood and expensive spice.
"Hi," I breathed.
"Hello," he replied. His voice was a low, smooth rumble that sent a shiver down my spine. "I'm Sterling."
I didn't give him my name. I just reached out. My fingers curled into his collar. I pulled him down and kissed him.
It was reckless. But I didn't care. His lips were incredibly warm. For a second, he froze. His body went completely rigid from the shock. Then, his large hands clamped onto my waist. He pulled me flush against his hard chest. He kissed me back with a fierce, consuming heat. He groaned softly, his grip tightening like he never wanted to let me go. It erased everything. It erased Aspen. It erased Andrew.
Sunlight stabbed my eyes. I blinked and groaned. My head pounded from the martinis. I was tangled in heavy silk sheets. Floor-to-ceiling windows showed the bright New York skyline. This was a penthouse.
A harsh buzzing sound drilled into my ears. My phone. It was vibrating violently on the glass nightstand.
"It's been doing that for an hour," a voice murmured.
I turned my head. Sterling was sitting up beside me. He was shirtless. His chest was tanned and heavily muscled. He looked perfectly relaxed, sipping a cup of black coffee.
I squinted at my screen. *Andrew - 50 Missed Calls.*
My stomach tightened on instinct. But before I could reach for the phone, Sterling picked it up. His dark eyes flashed with amusement. He swiped the screen to answer.
"Hello?" Sterling said. His voice was thick with morning gravel.
Andrew's frantic voice blasted through the speaker. "Who the hell is this? Where is Charlotte? Put her on the phone right now! Char, are you there?"
Sterling took a slow sip of his coffee. He didn't look intimidated at all. He looked utterly dominant.
"She’s a little tied up right now," Sterling said smoothly. He leaned back against the headboard, a mocking smirk on his face. "And from the looks of it, she’s moved on. Stop calling."
"What? Who are you? Listen to me, you piece of—"
Sterling ended the call. He tossed the phone onto the mattress. He looked down at me, his eyes softening instantly. "Morning," he whispered, brushing a stray hair from my cheek.
An hour later, I left the penthouse. My body hummed with a strange, electric energy. I took a cab straight to Brooklyn to pack up my life.
The apartment I shared with Andrew was dead quiet. It felt sterile and cold. There were no pets. No bright colors. Just his boring, minimalist furniture. It never really felt like my home.
I dragged my remaining suitcases from the closet. I packed fast and ruthless. I threw my clothes, my books, and my shoes into the bags. I didn't bother folding anything. My phone kept lighting up with Andrew's texts.
*Char, please. Let's talk.*
*That guy on the phone is a joke, right? You're just mad about Aspen.*
*I'm sorry, okay? Skyla had a panic attack. You know how she gets.*
I rolled my eyes. The exact same script. It didn't work anymore. I felt absolutely nothing for him.
Before I left, I stopped at the kitchen island. On my cab ride over, I had stopped at a bakery and bought a small pecan pie. I set the box on the counter and opened it. The glazed nuts gleamed under the lights.
I looked down at my left hand. The diamond engagement ring felt like a shackle. I pulled it off my finger. It slid off easily.
I placed the silver ring right next to the pecan pie. A perfect pair. He loved pecan. He never cared that a single bite could send me to the hospital.
I picked up my phone. I opened Andrew's contact and pressed *Block*.
I grabbed my bags and walked out the door. The lock clicked shut behind me. I didn't look back once.
I walked into the office on Monday morning. My left hand felt incredibly light without the diamond ring. Leaving that pecan pie on the counter next to it felt like shedding a heavy, suffocating skin.
I was finally free. But the moment I reached my cubicle, reality hit back.
Brenda, my department manager, was leaning against my desk. She wore a smug smile and held a massive stack of thick manila folders.
"Rough weekend in Aspen, Charlotte?" she sneered. She dropped the heavy files onto my keyboard with a loud, aggressive thud. "Andrew told me everything. You threw a massive tantrum because Skyla got a little altitude sickness. Honestly, you’re so dramatic."
My jaw tightened. Brenda always sucked up to Andrew's wealthy circle. She used me as her personal assistant for years just to stay in his good graces.
"These need to be processed by noon," Brenda ordered, tapping her manicured nails on the folders. "And don't mess them up. I have a charity gala with Andrew's mother this weekend, and I don't have time to fix your careless mistakes."
I looked at the mountain of files. Then I looked right into her eyes.
"No," I said calmly.
Brenda blinked. Her fake smile vanished. "Excuse me?"
"That's your project. Not mine," I replied, keeping my voice perfectly steady. "I'm not doing your work anymore, Brenda."
Before she could scream at me, a sudden hush fell over the open floor. The heavy glass doors of the lobby swung open.
A group of senior executives rushed in, looking panicked and out of breath. In the center of them walked a man in a sharp, custom-tailored navy suit.
My breath hitched in my throat. It was Sterling.
The guy from the lounge. The guy who answered my phone in his penthouse. He looked completely different now. The playful, rumpled look from yesterday morning was gone. His face was cold, sharp, and utterly dominant. He moved with a quiet, terrifying power.
"Everyone, gather around," the Head of HR announced nervously, clapping his hands. "Please welcome the new CEO of Cunningham Holdings, Mr. Sterling Cunningham."
Billionaire heir. My stomach did a wild flip. He caught my eye across the crowded room. A tiny, secret smile tugged at the corner of his mouth before vanishing completely.
Brenda instantly smoothed her skirt. She shoved me aside with her shoulder to get to the front of the crowd. "Mr. Cunningham! Welcome! I'm Brenda Vance, the department manager. We are so thrilled to have you here."
Sterling looked down at her. His dark eyes were like ice.
"Brenda Vance," he repeated. His voice was a low, chilling rumble that echoed across the silent floor. "I reviewed the quarterly reports this morning."
Brenda beamed, puffing out her chest. "Yes! My department has been working very hard."
"Charlotte Howell’s name is on all the raw data files," Sterling said smoothly, slipping one hand into his pocket. "But your name is on the final presentations. You've been passing off her work as your own for three years."
Brenda's face went completely pale. The smugness drained out of her in a second. "Sir, I—I can explain—"
"And I overheard you dumping your current workload on her just now," he continued. He stepped closer. Brenda shrank back, her hands trembling. "I don't tolerate incompetence, Ms. Vance. And I certainly don't tolerate parasites in my company."
The office was dead silent. You could hear a pin drop.
"Pack your desk," Sterling commanded. "You're fired."
Brenda gasped. Her mouth opened and closed like a fish. She looked around for help, but no one moved. Bursting into tears, she turned and ran toward the elevators in total humiliation.
Sterling turned his gaze back to me. The ice in his eyes melted instantly. "Ms. Howell," he said, his voice dropping into a softer register. "My office. Five minutes."
The next few weeks were a whirlwind. With Brenda gone, I finally had room to breathe. I didn't just survive at work; I thrived.
Sterling was a ruthless CEO to everyone else, but to me, he was a brilliant, patient mentor. We spent hours in his glass-walled office. He challenged my ideas and forced me to defend my strategies. Underneath his sharp business mind, I saw the fierce devotion he hid from the rest of the world. He brought me coffee exactly how I liked it. He noticed when I was tired. He never missed a single detail.
One rainy Tuesday afternoon, I handed him my final proposal for our European expansion.
He read through the pages in silence. The only sound was the rain hitting the glass. He closed the folder, set it down, and looked at me.
"It's flawless," he said quietly.
Heat rushed to my cheeks. "Thank you."
"I mean it, Charlotte. You have a brilliant mind." He leaned across the mahogany desk. His dark eyes locked onto mine, intense and warm. "I'm launching a major international project in London next month. I want you to spearhead it."
My heart hammered against my ribs. London. A massive promotion. "Me? Are you sure?"
"I don't mix business with pleasure," he murmured, his voice dropping low and husky. "You earned this entirely on your own merits. You don't need anyone to hold your hand. But..." He reached out, gently brushing his warm knuckles against my cheek. "If you ever want me to, I always will."
I looked at him. Seven years of being a backup plan faded away completely. I wasn't just seen. I was valued.
"I'll take the project," I smiled.