The man who emerged from the limousine was undeniably handsome. Tall, broad-shouldered, with perfectly coiffed dark hair and eyes that held a certain arrogant charm. He was the kind of man who commanded attention, even if, to me, his presence felt like a tightening noose. A part of me, the part that still remembered the naive girl who once hoped for a genuine connection, felt a pang of something akin to regret. He was so aesthetically pleasing, his expensive suit perfectly tailored to his athletic frame.
"Chadwick!" Isa shrieked, her voice hoarse, scrambling to her feet and limping towards him, her face a mask of tears and indignation. She threw herself into his arms, clinging to him like a terrified child. "She attacked me! She stole my purchase! She' s crazy, Chadwick, you have to do something!"
Chadwick' s eyes, a steely blue, found mine. They were cold, devoid of any warmth. My heart sank, the brief flicker of regret extinguished by the familiar chill radiating from him. He couldn't possibly be that oblivious, could he?
I took a deep breath, trying to compose myself. Despite everything, I still held onto a sliver of hope, a desperate wish that he would at least acknowledge our shared history, our families' intertwined futures. "Chadwick," I said, my voice as calm as I could make it. "It's Kelsey. Your fiancée. There's been a misunderstanding."
A small part of me, a very foolish part, even felt a fleeting sense of satisfaction. My mother had chosen him, after all, and if she, with her impeccable taste and ruthless business acumen, had deemed him worthy, perhaps there was something there I had overlooked. He was good-looking, yes, and charismatic. Maybe he was a good strategic match for our families, despite his flaws.
A wave of whispers rippled through the onlookers. "Fiancée?" someone breathed. "Steele's fiancée? I thought that was Isa Jordan!"
"No, no, that' s Kelsey Black, Frederica Mooney' s daughter," another voice corrected, lower, laden with awe. "The Nexus heiress. But Isa… Isa is always with Chadwick."
"Which one is it, then?" a third person muttered. "It all depends on who Chadwick chooses to stand by, doesn' t it? That' s where the real power lies."
Chadwick' s gaze hardened. He gently, but firmly, pushed Isa slightly behind him, though his arm remained protectively around her waist. He stepped forward, his eyes fixed on me, and then he spoke, his voice chillingly devoid of emotion. "My fiancée?" He scoffed, a short, bitter sound. "I have no fiancée. Not anymore. And certainly not you."
The words were a physical blow, worse than any punch. They stole the air from my lungs.
"This… arrangement," he continued, his voice dripping with disdain, "was forced upon me by my father. A relic of an outdated era. I never agreed to it. And I certainly never agreed to marry someone so… utterly unsuited for me."
Isa, emboldened by his words, snuggled closer to his side, her head resting on his shoulder. She looked at me, a triumphant, venomous gleam in her eyes, a silent declaration of victory. Then she spoke, her voice still a little shaky, but full of renewed malice. "Honestly, Chadwick, just look at her. Those clothes, that hair… She looks like she just rolled out of bed, not like someone who belongs by your side. She' s an embarrassment."
A chorus of agreement, soft but clear, rose from the crowd. "She really doesn' t look the part." "Isa always looks so glamorous, so put-together." "No wonder he chose Isa. Look at the difference."
Their words, their judgment, felt like stones thrown at my face. I looked down at my simple, comfortable outfit. It was me. It was functional. It allowed me to work, to think, to create without distraction. Why did they see it as a flaw, a sign of inferiority? Why did my worth suddenly depend on the cut of my dress or the brand of my shoes?
But the sting of their words was nothing compared to the cold, hard realization that settled in my gut. He never saw me. He never would. The arranged engagement, the facade, it was all hollow. My heart, which had been clinging to a fragile hope, finally fractured.
I looked at Chadwick, at Isa, at the judging faces in the crowd. A sudden, fierce clarity washed over me. This was it. The public humiliation, the outright dismissal, the betrayal. It was the breaking point.
"Fine," I said, my voice surprisingly steady, even to myself. I pulled a small, delicate ring from my finger-a simple silver band, a placeholder for a diamond that had never materialized. I held it out, letting it drop to the floor, where it glinted dully on the polished marble. "Consider it done, Chadwick. Our engagement, our families' merger, everything. It' s over. And honestly? You' re not even worth the regret."
My gaze swept over them one last time, a cold, dismissive flicker in my eyes. The fight was far from over, but the terms had just changed.
A small, grim satisfaction settled in my stomach. I pictured Cornel Steele, Chadwick' s father, receiving the news. The arranged engagement, the carefully constructed alliance between our families' tech empires, shattered by his son' s blatant disregard. Cornel, a man who understood the delicate balance of power in Silicon Valley, would be seething. His empire, built on my mother' s investments, was now vulnerable. The thought was a tiny, cold comfort.
I turned on my heel, ready to walk away and put this pathetic display behind me. There was no point in standing here, enduring more of their poisonous words. I had made my statement.
"Oh no, you don' t!" Isa shrieked, her voice shrill with revived fury. She lunged, blocking my path, her eyes wild. "You think you can just drop an empty threat and walk away? Chadwick is here now! He' ll protect me!" She clung to Chadwick' s arm, her eyes wide and demanding.
"You attacked me! You stole my purchase!" Isa repeated, her voice rising to a hysterical pitch. "And now you' re trying to run? Not a chance, you little thief!"
I paused, looking at her, then at Chadwick, who merely scowled at me. "What is it you want, Isa?" I asked, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. "Do you want to continue this charade, or are you just here to prove how desperate you are for attention?"
She scoffed, misinterpreting my calm as fear. "Desperate? I' m going to make you pay for humiliating me! Chadwick will stand by me, won' t you, darling?" She looked up at him, her eyes pleading for affirmation. Chadwick, ever the peacock, puffed out his chest a little, a possessive hand settling on her waist.
"You' re going to regret crossing Isa," Chadwick growled, his voice low and menacing.
Isa took that as her cue. She snatched her hand from Chadwick' s arm, her frustration boiling over. "I' m going to teach you a lesson, you pathetic little bitch!" she snarled, her hand raised, ready to strike. "I' m going to make you scream! I' m going to hit you until I feel good about myself!"
Her hand shot out, but this time, I was ready. My vision narrowed, focusing only on her outstretched arm. My hand moved like lightning, catching her wrist in mid-air. Her momentum, her intent to strike, was instantly halted.
Isa gasped, her eyes widening in shock. She struggled, trying to pull her arm free, but my grip was like steel. A cold, hard resolve had settled over me. She wanted a fight? She had one.
Without a second thought, I twisted her wrist, not with brute force, but with precise, calculated pressure on a joint. A sharp crack echoed in the suddenly silent mall. Isa let out a choked cry, her face contorting in agony. Her hand instinctively went limp, paralyzed by the sudden, excruciating pain.
"That' s for calling me a bitch," I said, my voice dangerously low.
Before she could fully process the first strike, I released her wrist only to grab her other arm, twisting it behind her back. Another sharp crack, followed by another scream, this one louder, more visceral. Her body arched, her eyes bulging with pain and disbelief.
"And that," I continued, my voice still unnervingly calm, "is for trying to hit me." I held her there, twisted and vulnerable. "Is that enough, Isa? Or do you want to keep going?"
Her face, once a mask of arrogant triumph, was now a crumpled mess of tears and snot. Her perfectly styled hair was disheveled, her expensive clothes askew. Her boasts of family power, her threats against the sales associate, all dissolved into whimpers of pain. She wasn' t looking at me with anger anymore, but with sheer terror.
She pulled away, stumbling backward, desperately seeking refuge behind Chadwick. She hid herself, trembling, her face buried in his expensive suit jacket.
Chadwick, his face a thundercloud of fury, stepped forward, shielding Isa with his body. He glared at me, his eyes promising retribution. "You psychotic bitch!" he roared. "You think you can get away with this? You just assaulted my fiancée! I will make sure you never work in this industry again! I will make sure you regret the day you were born!"
He gestured to the two burly men in dark suits who had emerged from the limousine' s front seats, his personal security detail. "Grab her! Teach her a lesson she' ll never forget!"
The two men, built like brick walls, moved with a terrifying efficiency. My heart pounded, but my resolve remained. I had unleashed the beast, and now, I had to face the consequences.