The door closed with a sound like a vault sealing.
Ellsworth's hand moved from her elbow to her wrist, then to her shoulder, steering her past his desk to the seating area by the window. The Manhattan skyline stretched behind him, indifferent to the drama unfolding sixty-eight floors below its clouds.
"Sit," he said.
Claire sat. The leather sighed beneath her. She kept her back straight, her hands folded in her lap, her gaze fixed on a point between his shoulder blades.
Ellsworth moved to a cabinet she hadn't known existed, recessed into the wall paneling. He returned with a metal case, medical grade, the kind with a red cross on the lid. He sat beside her-too close, his knee brushing hers-and opened it.
The ice pack was small, disposable, activated by squeezing. He wrapped it in a hand towel from the case and reached for her face.
Claire flinched. She couldn't help it.
His hand paused. His eyes met hers. Something flickered there-irritation, maybe, or the ghost of that expression she'd seen when he first saw the mark on her cheek.
"This will hurt," he said. "Don't make a sound."
He pressed the pack against her cheekbone.
The cold was shocking. It bit through the towel, through her skin, into the damaged tissue underneath. Claire's eyes watered. Her vision blurred. She didn't make a sound.
Ellsworth held the pack in place with one hand. With the other, he retrieved his phone from his pocket. He dialed without looking at the screen.
"Gerald. I need tomorrow's headlines. All of them." His thumb traced the edge of the ice pack, adjusting the pressure. "Buy them. Every gossip rag in Manhattan. I want Ashton Stark's party photos. The ones from Ibiza. The ones with the white powder and the married men. Front page. Above the fold."
Claire's breath caught. She turned her head, dislodging the pack, staring at him with wide, horrified eyes.
"Don't," she said. Her voice cracked. "You don't need to-this isn't-it's over. The transaction is complete. I took the money. I'll sign whatever you want. But this-" She gestured between them, at the ice pack, at his hand still hovering near her face. "This isn't part of it."
Ellsworth's expression shifted. The temperature in the room dropped another ten degrees.
"Transaction," he repeated. He set the ice pack on the table between them. He reached into his breast pocket and withdrew a folded document, heavy cream paper, legal weight. "You think one million dollars buys a night. You think it buys silence. You think it buys your freedom to walk away."
He dropped the document in her lap. It fell open, pages spreading like wings.
"Read it," he said. "Every word."
Claire's hands moved automatically, flipping pages. Her eyes tracked the dense legal text, the numbered clauses, the subsections and addenda. Her breath came faster. Her fingers began to shake.
Non-compete. Non-disclosure. Personal services agreement. The term was twenty-four months. The penalty for early termination was a liquidated damages clause for fifty million dollars, guaranteed and collateralized against all future earnings. The penalty for disclosure was even worse: any disclosure would be treated as corporate espionage against Mosley Holdings, and our legal department will pursue all available civil and criminal remedies to the fullest extent of the law.
"You can't," she whispered. "This isn't-this isn't legal. This is-"
"Consult the third page," he said. His voice was gentle now. Terrifying in its gentleness. "The jurisdiction clause. Any dispute will be settled in Delaware Chancery Court. My court, Claire. My judges."
She looked up at him. Her face was white, her eyes too large, the mark on her cheek livid against her pallor. She looked, he thought with a satisfaction that burned like acid in his chest, like a woman who had finally understood the nature of her predicament.
"You wanted to play," he said. He reached out and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. His fingers lingered against her temple, tracing the pulse that hammered there. "You wanted to walk into my world and take what you thought you deserved. But you didn't read the rules, little girl. You didn't understand who you were hunting."
He leaned closer. His breath warmed her ear, her throat, the place where his mark still hid beneath her makeup.
"You're mine now," he whispered. "Every hour. Every day. Until I say otherwise. And Claire?" His teeth closed on her earlobe, not hard enough to hurt, hard enough to promise. "I never say otherwise."
The rain started at 7:15 PM.
Claire stood on the corner of Fifth and Fifty-Seventh, her camel coat pulled tight against a wind that cut through the wool like it was nothing. The Mosley Tower loomed behind her, its lights burning in the gathering dark, and she thought of the contract in her bag, the weight of it pulling her shoulder down.
She took a step toward the subway entrance. Her hip seized. A sharp, tearing sensation that made her gasp and grab for the traffic light pole, her fingers finding the cold metal, the flaking paint, the rivets that held it to the concrete.
She leaned there, breathing through her mouth, while the rain began in earnest. It wasn't the dramatic downpour of movies. It was worse-a steady, soaking drizzle that found every gap in her clothing, every place where the fabric had grown thin from washing.
Across the street, a family walked past the window of a steakhouse. Father, mother, daughter in a yellow raincoat. The girl was laughing, pointing at something in the window, and her father lifted her onto his shoulders so she could see better. The mother held an umbrella over all three of them, tilting it to keep the rain from the child's face.
Claire watched them until they turned the corner.
She was ten years old again. The rain had been harder that night, a September storm that had turned the streets to rivers. She'd been asleep in the back seat, her mother's sweater pillowed under her cheek, when the world had ended with a scream of metal and the sickening crunch of impact.
She remembered the smell. Gasoline and blood and the particular sweetness of antifreeze. She remembered her father's hand, still reaching toward the back seat, his fingers curled like he was trying to touch her one last time. She remembered the way her mother's eyes had stayed open, staring at the dashboard, the rain falling through the shattered windshield onto her face.
She remembered the funeral. The small coffins, side by side, because her parents had wanted to be buried together even in death. She remembered Adan Tyler's hand on her shoulder, heavy and damp, and the way Brenda had looked at her from the balcony of the mansion, not bothering to hide her disgust at the stray her husband had dragged home.
She remembered Jerrad, two years older, holding her mother's necklace-the thin gold chain with the small pearl, the only thing she'd had left-over the storm drain. "Oops," he'd said, and let it fall.
The pain in her abdomen brought her back. She was doubled over, her forehead pressed against the traffic pole, her breath coming in short, panicked gasps. She couldn't do this. She couldn't walk to the subway. She couldn't climb the stairs to her apartment.
She fumbled for her phone. Her fingers were numb, clumsy. She typed "private gynecologist upper east side confidential" into the search bar. The first result was a brick building on East Seventy-Second, no sign, by appointment only.
She raised her hand. A yellow cab swerved to the curb, the light on its roof glowing amber through the rain.
"East Seventy-Second," she said. "Between Madison and Park."
The driver looked at her in the rearview mirror. His eyes were kind, worried. "You sure you don't need the ER, miss? You don't look so good."
Claire shook her head. She pressed both hands against her stomach and closed her eyes.
The city moved past her windows, a blur of neon and rain-streaked glass. Times Square. Columbus Circle. The park, dark and empty. When the cab stopped, she paid with cash from the emergency fund she kept in her coat pocket-twenty-three dollars, enough for the fare and a small tip.
The building was exactly as the website had promised. Red brick, four stories, no identifying marks except a small brass plaque that read "Medical Offices" in letters so small she had to squint to read them. She found the side entrance, the one the website said to use, and pressed the intercom button.
"Yes?"
"Jane Doe," Claire said. Her voice was barely audible. "I have an appointment."
The lock buzzed. She pushed through into warmth, into light, into the smell of antiseptic and expensive carpet.
A nurse in pink scrubs met her in the hallway. She took one look at Claire's face and reached for a wheelchair that folded against the wall.
"Sweetheart," she said. "Let's get you to a room."
The examination table was cold through the thin paper gown.
Claire lay back, her knees bent, her feet in the stirrups that the nurse had adjusted with practiced efficiency. The overhead light was too bright. She raised her arm to shield her eyes, and the position made her feel more exposed, more vulnerable, more like a specimen than she already did.
Dr. Anya Sharma was Indian, middle-aged, with kind eyes and hands that moved with the confidence of someone who had done this ten thousand times. She snapped on a glove, applied gel that warmed slightly before contact, and began the examination.
She stopped. Her eyebrows drew together. She made a small sound-not quite a gasp, more a sharp intake of breath that she tried to hide.
"Ms. Doe," she said. She removed her hand, stripped off the glove, and moved to Claire's side, looking down at her with an expression that managed to be both professional and deeply concerned. "I'm going to ask you a question, and I need you to answer honestly. Are you in danger? Has someone hurt you?"
Claire's face burned. She shook her head, not trusting her voice.
"This is not-" Dr. Sharma paused, choosing her words. "These are not normal injuries. There is significant tearing. Soft tissue damage. You need to understand that this was not a minor incident."
"I understand," Claire whispered.
Dr. Sharma studied her for a long moment. Then she sighed, a sound of resignation and something else-pity, maybe, or the exhaustion of someone who had seen too many women make too many excuses.
"I am prescribing antibiotics. Pain management. And I need you to listen carefully." She held Claire's gaze, refusing to let her look away. "No sexual activity. None. For a minimum of two weeks. If you ignore this, you risk permanent damage. Scarring. Fertility issues. Do you understand?"
Claire nodded. She understood. She understood that her revenge had cost her something she hadn't known she was gambling with.
She dressed in the small changing room, moving slowly, carefully, like she was made of glass. The nurse had left a paper bag on the counter-prescriptions, instructions, a sample of the antibiotic. Claire tucked it into her purse, behind her wallet, where no one would see.
The reception area was empty when she emerged. She crossed to the desk, her credit card ready, her eyes on the floor.
The door opened behind her.
"-completely overreacting, it's probably just a rash, you know how these things-"
The voice cut off. Claire's heart stopped. She turned, slowly, knowing before she saw him exactly who it would be.
Pierce Huxley-Davenport stood in the doorway, his arm around a woman in a dress that left nothing to imagination, his expression shifting from annoyed to surprised to something far more dangerous.
Recognition dawned. His eyes widened. His mouth curved into a smile that showed too many teeth.
"Well," he said. "Well, well, well. If it isn't the Ice Queen herself."
He disengaged from his companion and crossed the room in three long strides. He was tall, lean, dressed in a suit that cost more than Claire's monthly rent, with the particular tan that came from winter weekends in St. Barts. He smelled of money and bad decisions.
"Claire Page," he said, drawing out each syllable like he was tasting it. "Ellsworth's little robot. His perfect assistant. What on earth brings you to a place like this?"
"Annual exam," Claire said. Her voice was frost, was steel, was everything she'd learned to project in seventeen years of being looked through. "If you'll excuse me."
She turned back to the receptionist. Her hands were shaking. She pressed them flat against the counter.
Pierce didn't move. She could feel his eyes on her back, on her posture, on the way she was standing-too straight, too careful, like any movement might break her.
"Annual exam," he repeated. "At eight-thirty on a Tuesday night. In the rain." He laughed, a sound like breaking glass. He moved to the counter, leaning his elbows on the marble, positioning himself between Claire and the exit. His gaze swept over her, taking in her pallor, the subtle tremor in her hands, the almost imperceptible stiffness in her walk. "Darling, I'm not stupid. I'm just curious."
He smiled at the receptionist, a woman in her fifties with dyed blonde hair and the hard eyes of someone who had seen every kind of human behavior.
"Margaret, sweetheart," he said. His voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. "What's wrong with my friend here? Is it serious? Should I be worried?"
The receptionist-Margaret-shook her head firmly. "Mr. Huxley-Davenport, you know I can't disclose patient information. It's against the law."
"Of course, of course." He reached into his breast pocket and withdrew his wallet. It was alligator, monogrammed, disgusting. He counted out five hundred-dollar bills, folded them neatly, and slid them across the counter. "For your trouble. And your memory."
Margaret pushed the money back toward him. "I'm sorry, sir. My job is worth more than that."
Pierce's smile tightened. Frustrated, his eyes darted around the desk and caught a glimpse of a patient file left slightly ajar. A string of diagnostic codes was visible on the top sheet. He didn't know what they meant, but he memorized the sequence. He looked back at Claire, a new, predatory gleam in his eye. He saw the prescription bag in her hand, the way she clutched it like a lifeline.
"Fine," he said, his voice turning silky and dangerous. "Keep your secrets." He leaned closer to Claire. "But whatever happened, it looks like it hurt. A lot."
Claire walked out. She didn't run-running would confirm everything, would make her the story he was already writing in his head. She walked, her heels clicking on the marble, through the door, into the rain, into the dark.
She didn't see him pull out his phone. She didn't see him type the diagnostic codes into a medical search engine. She didn't see the results that made his eyes widen with vicious delight. She didn't hear him dial. "Ellsworth? We need to talk. Now."