I sat across from Sterling at a quiet, candlelit table in an upscale SoHo restaurant. Rain tapped gently against the dark glass. It was our first official dinner since he gave me the London project.
Sterling loosened his silk tie and let out a soft, ragged sigh. He rubbed the back of his neck. His dark eyes met mine, looking incredibly tired but devastatingly handsome.
"Long day?" I asked, taking a sip of my wine.
He gave a weak, self-deprecating smile. "The board is relentless. My father expects absolute perfection. Sometimes, I feel like I'm just a machine built to run an empire. They don't see me as a person."
I paused, my wine glass hovering in the air. I recognized the tactic instantly. It was the classic damsel in distress move. Playing the victim to pull on my heartstrings. Skyla used to do this to Andrew all the time with her fake panic attacks.
But when Skyla did it, her goal was to push me out. When Sterling did it, he just wanted to pull me closer.
He reached across the white tablecloth. His large, warm hand covered mine. "Being with you is the only time I can actually breathe, Charlotte," he murmured softly. His thumb stroked my knuckles. "You're kind of my savior."
My chest did a stupid, happy flip. I knew exactly what he was doing. He was weaponizing his vulnerability. But I didn't pull my hand away. I just smiled. "Drink your wine, Sterling."
He grinned, the exhaustion vanishing from his face in a split second. His eyes sparkled with pure, dominant triumph.
Saturday morning, Sterling picked me up in his black SUV. He wouldn't tell me where we were going. "Just trust me," he said.
We pulled up to a brick building in Queens. An animal rescue shelter. My breath hitched. For seven years, I had begged Andrew for a dog. He always said no. He hated pet hair. He said a dog would ruin the aesthetic of his sterile, minimalist Brooklyn apartment.
We walked inside. The barking was loud, but Sterling led me straight to the back row of cages. A clumsy, golden furball threw himself against the chain-link gate. It was a Golden Retriever mix. His tail wagged so hard his entire body vibrated.
"He was found abandoned in the snow," Sterling said quietly, watching my face. "I thought he might need a warm home. If you want him."
I dropped to my knees. The dog licked my fingers through the wire, whining softly. Tears pricked my eyes. "I want him."
We named him Buster. That night, we sat on the plush rug of Sterling's penthouse. Buster was fast asleep, his heavy, warm head resting on my lap. Sterling sat beside me, gently stroking the dog's golden ears. The room was warm, filled with soft jazz and the smell of cedar. It felt like a real home.
Monday evening, Sterling walked me down to the office lobby. His hand rested comfortably on the small of my back. The elevator doors slid open, and my stomach instantly dropped.
Andrew was pacing wildly by the security desk. He looked awful. His designer suit was badly wrinkled. He had dark, heavy bags under his bloodshot eyes. He looked up, and his frantic gaze locked onto me.
"Char!" he shouted. He lunged forward.
Sterling’s grip on my waist tightened. He smoothly stepped half an inch in front of me, becoming a massive, silent shield. His jaw set into hard stone.
Andrew stopped a few feet away, panting. He looked at Sterling, then at me. "Char, please. I've been calling for weeks. You blocked me. I found the ring and the pie. I'm so sorry. I don't even know where you live!"
"That was the point, Andrew," I said. My voice was completely flat. No anger. No tears. Just ice.
"I made a mistake!" he begged, his hands shaking. "Aspen was a mistake. Skyla... she just needed me, but I need you! The apartment is empty. I can't sleep. Please, just come home. I'll change!"
He was actually crying. The man who left me freezing in a blizzard to hold another woman's hand was crying over an empty apartment. He didn't miss me. He missed his safe, obedient backup plan.
"My home isn't with you," I said calmly. "It never was. You just liked having me on a shelf."
"That's not true!" he choked out, reaching for my arm.
Sterling caught Andrew's wrist mid-air. The movement was a blur of violence and grace. Sterling didn't yell. He just squeezed. Andrew let out a sharp gasp of pain, his face turning completely white.
"Don't touch her," Sterling whispered. His tone was lethal. "If you come near my building again, I will ruin you. Do you understand?"
Andrew backed away, trembling, cradling his wrist. He looked pathetic.
I didn't feel a single ounce of pity. I looked right through him. "Have a nice life, Andrew."
I turned and walked out the glass doors into the warm evening air. Sterling was right beside me, his hand back on my waist. I didn't look back once.
Tuesday morning, I stopped at a high-end cafe near my office. The air smelled of roasted espresso and warm pastries. I was standing by the counter, waiting for my iced matcha latte. Suddenly, a familiar, sickly-sweet perfume hit my nose. Vanilla and cheap floral.
Skyla.
"Charlotte," she said softly.
I turned around. She wore a loose, white cashmere sweater. She held her hands delicately over her flat stomach. Her eyes were wide, playing the innocent victim as always.
"What do you want, Skyla?" I asked. My voice was completely flat.
She sighed and reached into her designer purse. "I didn't want you to hear it from someone else. I know you're hurting." She slid a glossy square of paper across the small marble table.
I looked down. It was a sonogram.
"Andrew and I are having a baby," she whispered. Her lips twitched into a smug, victorious smile. "He's so excited. We're getting married next month."
For seven years, this woman made my life a living hell. She ruined my Thanksgiving proposal. She stole my suite in Aspen. She expected me to cry right now. She wanted me to break.
I looked at the black-and-white printout, then back at her. I felt absolutely nothing. No heartbreak. No anger. Just pure, cold clarity.
"Congratulations," I said evenly. I picked up my drink from the counter.
Skyla frowned. My calm reaction clearly annoyed her. She stepped closer, dropping the sweet act. "You don't have to pretend, Charlotte. It's sad, really. You wasted your youth on him. And now... you have nothing. I won."
I set my cup down. I didn't yell. I didn't argue. I just raised my right hand and swung.
*Smack.*
The sharp sound cracked through the quiet cafe like a whip. Skyla gasped and stumbled back. Her hand flew to her bright red cheek. Tears instantly sprang to her eyes. The barista stopped wiping the counter. People turned to look at us.
"Keep him," I said softly. My voice was as cold as the Aspen snow. "You two parasites deserve exactly what you get."
I picked up my latte and walked out the glass doors.
The morning air hit my face. I took a deep breath, feeling incredibly light. But my peace didn't last long.
"Char!"
I stopped. Andrew stepped out from behind a parked car. He looked worse than he did in the lobby last week. His hair was greasy. His expensive suit was wrinkled. He looked like a man drowning.
"I saw that," he panted, pointing a shaking finger toward the cafe window. "I saw what she did. I know she's pushing it. I'm sorry."
"Leave me alone, Andrew."
He grabbed my arm. His grip was weak and clammy. "Listen to me! I don't want to marry her. I don't!"
I stared at him in pure disgust. "She's pregnant with your child."
"I don't care!" he begged. His eyes were wide and frantic. "I'll call off the wedding right now. I'll just pay child support. I don't have to see her. I just want you back. Please, Char. You're the only good thing I ever had. I'll do anything!"
My stomach violently turned. This was the man I almost married. A man who would abandon his pregnant fiancé at the drop of a hat just to save his own skin. He had absolutely no loyalty to anyone. He never cared about my nut allergy. He never cared about my feelings. He only cared about his own comfort.
I yanked my arm away. "You are disgusting," I whispered. "Don't ever speak to me again."
I left him standing on the sidewalk, entirely broken and alone.
When I got back to the penthouse that evening, Buster trotted up to greet me. I knelt down and rubbed his golden ears.
"Rough day?" a deep voice asked.
Sterling walked into the foyer. He wore dark sweatpants and a plain white t-shirt. He looked incredibly handsome. He held a thick, cream-colored envelope in his hand.
"What's that?" I asked, standing up.
His jaw tightened. The muscles in his neck jumped. "It arrived by courier an hour ago."
He handed it to me. I broke the gold wax seal. It was a VIP wedding invitation. Heavy cardstock. Elegant cursive letters. *Andrew Miller and Skyla Rose.* Skyla had deliberately tracked down my new address just to twist the knife.
I let out a dry laugh and tossed it onto the kitchen island. "Throw it away."
Sterling stepped closer. He wrapped his strong arms around my waist from behind. His broad chest pressed against my back. He smelled like cedar and safety. He rested his chin on my shoulder, looking down at the invitation.
"No," he murmured. His voice was a low, dangerous rumble. "We're not throwing it away."
I turned my head to look at him. His dark eyes were completely cold. The playful, sweet man was gone. This was the ruthless billionaire CEO.
"We're going to that wedding, Charlotte," he promised softly, his thumb gently tracing my jawline. "She wanted your attention. We are going to give it to her. And I am going to burn their entire world to the ground."
A shiver of pure anticipation ran down my spine. I leaned back against his solid chest and smiled. "Okay."