
Chapter 1
The crystal chandeliers of the St. Regis grand ballroom cast a fractured, dazzling light over the elite of New York’s fashion world, but Clara Hayes stood strictly in the shadows.
Tucked behind a massive pillar near the service entrance, Clara adjusted the collar of her simple, unbranded black dress. She didn’t belong in the light. For four years, that had been the golden rule of her existence. She was the ghost, the phantom hands that sketched, draped, and bled over every single garment that carried the Croft Luxury label. And tonight, at the company’s highly anticipated anniversary gala, she was exactly where her husband wanted her: out of sight.
A deafening round of applause echoed through the cavernous room. Clara leaned slightly around the pillar, her breath catching in her throat as she watched Damian Croft take the stage.
Damian looked every inch the billionaire CEO. His tuxedo was impeccably tailored, his jawline sharp, and his charismatic smile was a weapon he wielded with terrifying precision. For a brief, agonizing second, Clara remembered the man who had charmed her in design school, the man who had promised her the world if she would just help him build his empire first.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Damian’s voice boomed through the microphone, smooth as aged bourbon. "Tonight, we celebrate not just the legacy of Croft Luxury, but its future. The 'Ethereal' line has broken every sales record in our company's history. But I cannot take the credit."
Clara’s heart gave a sudden, painful thump. *Is he actually going to do it?* she thought, a foolish, desperate flare of hope rising in her chest. *Is he finally going to acknowledge me?*
Damian extended a hand toward the front row. "The genius behind this collection, the true visionary, and my absolute muse... Vanessa Sterling!"
The spotlight violently swung away from the stage, illuminating a stunning, pampered blonde woman in a cascading gown of silver silk—a gown Clara had spent three sleepless nights sewing by hand until her fingers were raw and bandaged.
Vanessa stood up, feigning a bashful smile, and gracefully glided up the stairs to join Damian. She looked like a goddess, radiating the kind of vain, unearned confidence that only old money could buy.
"Vanessa has brought life to this brand," Damian continued, pulling the socialite against his side. "And she has brought life to me. Which is why, tonight, I have an announcement that goes beyond business."
Clara’s stomach plummeted. The air in the ballroom suddenly felt suffocatingly thin.
Damian reached into his breast pocket and produced a velvet box. The crowd gasped collectively as he dropped to one knee right there on the stage.
"Vanessa," Damian said, his voice dropping to a theatrical, intimate register that was amplified across the room. "Will you do me the ultimate honor of becoming my wife?"
Vanessa covered her mouth with manicured hands, her eyes sparkling with triumphant tears. "Yes! Oh, Damian, yes!"
The ballroom erupted into a standing ovation. Flashbulbs exploded in a blinding frenzy. Clara stood frozen in the dark, her fingernails biting so deeply into her palms that they broke the skin.
He was proposing.
Damian Croft, her legal husband of four years, was publicly proposing to another woman.
A sickening wave of betrayal washed over Clara, quickly replaced by a hot, resilient surge of fury. She had endured the secrecy, the late-night demands, the erasure of her name from her own brilliant designs, all because Damian swore it was the only way to protect the company from his conservative board of directors. *Just a little longer, Clara,* he had always said. *When the time is right, we’ll step into the light together.*
It had all been a lie. She was nothing but a utility to him, a machine to print money while he courted a high-society heiress to elevate his social status.
Clara turned on her heel, navigating the labyrinth of service corridors until she reached the VIP coatroom. She knew Damian’s routine. After a major speech, he always retreated to the coatroom’s private adjoining lounge for a shot of scotch to calm his nerves before facing the press.
She didn't have to wait long. Five minutes later, the heavy oak door swung open, and Damian stepped inside, loosening his bowtie with a satisfied smirk.
"Damian," Clara said, stepping out of the shadows.
He jumped, spilling a drop of his drink, his arrogant features twisting into a scowl. "Clara? What the hell are you doing lurking in here? I told you to stay by the service elevators."
"You proposed," she stated, her voice trembling but laced with a guarded, steely edge. "You just proposed to Vanessa Sterling."
Damian sighed, rolling his eyes as if she were a child throwing a tantrum. "Keep your voice down. We’ve talked about this, Clara. The Sterling family has connections I need. Vanessa is the face the board wants. It’s purely strategic."
"Strategic?" Clara practically spat the word. "You asked her to marry you! We are already married, Damian! Or did you conveniently forget the courthouse ceremony you forced me to keep a secret?"
"It’s just paperwork," Damian dismissed, taking a sip of his scotch. "I have my lawyers drawing up the annulment. We’ll backdate it. No one will ever know we were legally bound, and my engagement to Vanessa proceeds without a hitch. It’s a win-win."
"A win for you," Clara snapped, closing the distance between them. "You stole my work. You stood on that stage and told the world that Vanessa designed the 'Ethereal' line. She doesn't even know how to thread a bobbin!"
"And who is going to believe that?" Damian sneered, his cowardly nature hiding behind a mask of cruel superiority. "You? A nobody from Ohio with zero industry connections? The 'Ethereal' line is trademarked under Croft Luxury. You signed the employment contract, Clara. Everything you create belongs to me."
"I want out," Clara demanded, her resilient spirit flaring brighter than her fear. "I want the divorce papers finalized tonight, and I want out of my employment contract. I'm leaving Croft Luxury."
Damian’s smirk vanished, replaced by a cold, possessive glare. He set his glass down sharply on a mahogany side table. "You're not going anywhere."
"Watch me."
"If you walk out that door, Clara, I will crush you," Damian warned, stepping closer, trying to use his height to intimidate her. "I will blacklist you in every design house in Europe and America. You will never work in fashion again. You’ll be sewing hems at a dry cleaner for minimum wage."
"Better that than being a ghost in your counterfeit empire," Clara shot back, her chin held high despite the tears of frustration burning the corners of her eyes.
"You think you’re so brilliant?" Damian laughed, a harsh, ugly sound. "You’re nothing without my brand backing you. You lack the pedigree, the charm, the presence. You are a tool, Clara. A very useful tool, but a tool nonetheless. You will go back to the studio, you will finish the winter line, and you will keep your mouth shut, or I swear to God I will cut off the medical trust fund for your mother."
Clara physically recoiled, as if he had struck her. "You wouldn't."
"Try me," Damian whispered venomously. "Now, be a good girl and go out through the service exit before someone sees you and gets the wrong idea."
The sheer cruelty of his words shattered the last remaining illusion Clara held about the man she had once loved. The internal wound she carried—the terrifying belief that she was only valuable for what she could produce—ached fiercely in her chest.
"Give me the divorce papers, Damian," she whispered, her voice dangerously quiet. "I won't ask again."
"I’ll give them to you when the winter line is finished. Not a second before," Damian replied, turning his back to her to pour another drink. "Get out of my sight."
Suffocating beneath the weight of his manipulation, Clara spun around and bolted for the heavy oak doors. She pushed through them blindly, her vision swimming with hot, angry tears. She needed air. She needed to get out of this hotel before she shattered completely.
She sprinted down the dimly lit corridor, the muffled sounds of the gala's jazz band feeling like a mocking soundtrack to her ruined life. She looked over her shoulder, terrified Damian might be following her to drag her back to the studio.
Because she was looking back, she didn't see the massive figure stepping out of the VIP elevator.
Clara slammed into what felt like a solid wall of muscle and bespoke tailoring. The impact knocked the breath from her lungs, and she stumbled backward, her high heel catching on the thick carpet. She braced herself for the harsh impact of the floor, squeezing her eyes shut.
It never came.
A large, incredibly strong hand shot out, wrapping around her bare arm with lightning speed. The moment his skin made contact with hers, an intense, electric jolt shocked through Clara’s system, so sharp and undeniable that she gasped aloud.
She was pulled upright effortlessly, colliding once more with a broad chest that smelled of expensive cedarwood, rain, and raw power.
Clara’s eyes flew open.
Standing above her was a man who looked like he had been carved from marble by a very angry god. He was toweringly tall, at least six-foot-three, with a sharp, aristocratic jawline and dark hair perfectly styled. But it was his eyes that froze her in place—piercing, fathomless dark eyes that were currently burning with an intensity that made her knees weak.
He was terrifyingly handsome, radiating a commanding, dangerous aura that made the air around him crackle.
Clara tried to pull away, suddenly hyper-aware of the heat of his hand still gripping her arm. "I-I’m so sorry," she stammered, frantically wiping a tear from her cheek. "I wasn't looking where I was—"
The stranger didn't let go. Instead, his grip shifted, his thumb gently brushing the inside of her wrist where her pulse was racing wildly. He stared down at her, his observant eyes tracking the tear sliding down her face, then dropping to the silver hairpin holding up her messy bun, before snapping back to her eyes.
A strange, unrecognizable emotion flashed across his stoic features. His chest heaved with a sudden, sharp breath.
He leaned down, his face mere inches from hers, and in a voice that was a low, gravelly rumble, he whispered, "Clara?"