The elevator ride to the 40th floor of the Sterling Tower took exactly 45 seconds. Vivian counted every one of them to keep her heart rate under 70 beats per minute.
When the doors opened, she stepped into the chaos that was the Design Department.
It was a sea of panic. The original S.W. team was huddled in corners, clutching their coffee cups like life rafts. The Sterling HR team was moving through the space like sharks, dropping policy manuals on desks with loud thuds.
"Vivian!"
Winnie, the intern, came running over. She was a tiny girl with glasses too big for her face-a painful reminder of Vivian's own disguise.
"Are you okay?" Winnie whispered. "They fired three people already. They say the new standards are impossible."
Vivian squeezed Winnie's shoulder. "Breathe, Win. It's just corporate posturing. They need us."
"Attention!" A sharp voice cut through the room.
A woman in a severe grey suit stood on a platform. "I am Mrs. Gable, Head of HR. From this moment on, all creative IP belongs to Sterling Group. No freelance work. No side projects. And..." She scanned the room, her eyes landing on Vivian. "Miss Sullivans. Mr. Ford-Sterling expects you in the penthouse immediately."
The room went silent. Xavier, the former Creative Director of Sterling who had been demoted to merge with S.W., smirked from his desk.
"Looks like someone's in trouble," he sneered.
Vivian ignored him. She smoothed her skirt, lifted her chin, and walked back to the elevator.
The ride to the penthouse was silent. When the doors opened, Gavin was waiting. He did a double-take when he saw her.
"You..." he stammered. "The crash."
"Is he in?" Vivian asked, breezing past him.
"Yes, but..."
Vivian pushed open the double mahogany doors.
Julian was sitting behind a desk that looked like it had been carved from the hull of a pirate ship. He was reading a file. He didn't look up.
"Sit."
Vivian sat. The chair was low, forcing her to look up at him. A classic power move.
Julian closed the file and looked at her. Recognition flickered in his eyes-not of his wife, but of the woman from the street.
"So," he said, leaning back. "Vivian Sullivans. The woman who destroys my cars and my acquisitions."
"I didn't destroy the acquisition," Vivian said evenly. "You bought it. Hostilely."
"And you came with the furniture." Julian picked up a pen. "I've reviewed your portfolio. The work under the alias 'Rose'. It's... adequate."
Vivian felt a vein in her temple throb. "Adequate?" Her designs had won awards in Milan under that name. "It is exceptional."
"It shows potential," Julian corrected, though his eyes betrayed him. He had spent the last hour marveling at the blueprints, wondering how a ghost could design with such life. But he wouldn't give her the satisfaction. Negotiation 101: never let the asset know their value. "Confidence," Julian mused. "I like that. But here at Sterling, we require obedience." He slid a document across the desk. "This is a supplementary contract. It binds you to the 'Rose' identity exclusively for Sterling. And it increases the penalty clause."
Vivian read it. It was a golden cage.
"Why?" she asked. "Why do you want Rose so badly?"
Julian stood up and walked to the window. "Because my ex-wife," he said, the word dripping with disdain, "had zero taste. She filled my life with beige. Rose... Rose understands passion. Color. Life. I want that energy in this company to wash away the stench of mediocrity."
Vivian gripped the armrests of the chair. He was talking about her. He was insulting her to her face, praising her alter ego to replace the memory of her real self.
The irony was so thick she could choke on it.
"Your ex-wife," Vivian said, testing the waters. "She must have been terrible."
Julian laughed, a harsh sound. "She was a ghost. A contractual obligation. She had no spine, no fire. Unlike you." He turned to face her. "You have fire, Miss Sullivans. I saw it in the street."
Vivian stared at him. "Maybe she just didn't show it to you because you never looked."
Julian's eyes narrowed. The air in the room grew heavy. He walked around the desk until he was leaning against the front of it, inches from her knees.
"Are you married, Miss Sullivans?"
"Divorced," she said quickly. "Recently."
"Good," Julian said. "Then you know that marriage is a trap. Work... work is honest." He tapped the contract. "Sign it. Or pay the fifty million."
Vivian picked up the pen. Her hand shook, just once. She signed.
Vivian Sullivans.
"Welcome to the team," Julian said. He reached out a hand.
Vivian took it. His skin was warm, calloused. A shock of electricity shot up her arm, just like in the hotel room.
Julian pulled his hand back sharply, as if he had been burned. He looked at her hand, then her face, confusion clouding his eyes.
"That's all," he dismissed her, turning his back.
Vivian stood up and walked to the door. Before she left, she turned.
"Mr. Sterling?"
"What?"
"Beige is a very calming color. Maybe you just needed peace."
She slammed the door before he could respond.
Julian stared at the closed door. He rubbed his hand where he had touched her.
"Who the hell is she?" he whispered.
Vivian returned to the Design Department to find a war zone.
Xavier had moved his things onto the desk by the window-the desk designated for the Lead Designer. He was leaning back, feet up, holding court with a group of sycophants.
"So I told Julian," Xavier was saying loudly, "that this 'Rose' character is just a gimmick. Probably some fat housewife in Ohio using a computer program."
Vivian walked straight up to the desk.
"Move," she said.
Xavier laughed. He was a man who wore scarves indoors and thought arrogance was a substitute for talent. "Excuse me? This is the Lead's desk. You're just the acquisition."
"Read the org chart, Xavier," Vivian said, dropping her bag on his legs. "I am the Lead Designer for S.W. Studios. I speak for Rose. I execute Rose's vision. And this is my desk."
Xavier shoved her bag off. "Listen, sweetheart. You might have impressed the boss with your little car accident stunt-yes, we heard-but here, seniority rules."
Vivian didn't argue. She moved faster than anyone in the room could process. She grabbed the back of the chair, spun it around, and dumped Xavier onto the floor.
It wasn't a violent dump. It was a precise, physics-based removal.
The room gasped.
Xavier scrambled up, his face red. "You bitch! I'll have you fired!"
"Try it," Vivian said, sitting down and pulling her laptop open. "But before you do, you might want to explain why your last three designs were direct rip-offs of a 2018 IKEA catalog."
Xavier went pale. "How did you..."
"I have eyes," Vivian said. "Now, get to work. We have a deadline."
Winnie hurried over with a coffee, her eyes shining with hero worship. "That was... amazing."
"It was necessary," Vivian muttered, typing her password.
Two hours later, the double doors swung open. Julian walked in, flanked by Gavin and Mrs. Gable. The atmosphere in the room shifted instantly from low-level panic to terror.
Julian walked through the rows of desks, critiquing everything. "Too dark. Too derivative. Garbage."
He stopped at Vivian's desk.
She was sketching by hand, charcoal on paper. He watched her hand move-confident, sweeping strokes.
"Let me see," he commanded.
Vivian slid the sketch over. It was a concept for the new Tech Center. It was organic, flowing, integrating nature with steel.
Julian stared at it. It was exactly what he had envisioned but couldn't articulate. It was... perfect.
"It's structurally unsound," he said.
Vivian looked up. "Excuse me?"
"Here," he pointed to a cantilevered section. "The load-bearing ratio is off. It will collapse."
Vivian grabbed a red marker. She didn't hesitate. She drew three lines, adding a tension cable system that not only supported the weight but added to the aesthetic.
"Fixed," she said. "And now it generates its own wind energy."
Julian looked at the red lines. He looked at her. A slow, reluctant smile tugged at his lips.
"Not bad," he admitted.
"Julian!"
A high-pitched voice shattered the moment. Lana Vane pranced into the office, holding a tray of cupcakes. She was wearing pink. So much pink.
She bypassed security, bypassed the staff, and latched onto Julian's arm like a barnacle.
"I brought treats for the team!" she announced, though she only looked at Julian.
Julian stiffened. He looked at Vivian, who was watching this display with an expression of mild nausea.
"Lana, I'm working," Julian said, trying to untangle his arm.
"I know, silly. But you need a break." Lana looked at Vivian's sketch. She wrinkled her nose. "Ew. Why is it so... jagged? Can't we make it softer? Maybe gold?"
Vivian capped her marker. The sound was like a gunshot.
"This is a technology center, Miss Vane," Vivian said coldly. "Not a dollhouse."
Lana's eyes snapped to Vivian. She recognized her-the woman from the elevator, the one Julian had been holding.
"Julian," Lana whined, pressing her chest against his arm. "She's being mean to me."
Julian looked between the two women. On one side, the brilliant, infuriating designer. On the other, the "safe" PR strategy.
He sighed. "Vivian, be polite. Lana has... unique tastes."
"That's one word for it," Vivian muttered.
Lana's eyes narrowed. She saw the necklace around her own neck in the reflection of the window. She fingered it, a subconscious gesture of dominance.
Vivian saw the movement. Her eyes locked onto the silver chain.
Her breath hitched.
There it is.
The proof. The theft. The lie.
Vivian stood up slowly. She walked around the desk until she was standing right in front of Lana.
"That's a beautiful necklace," Vivian said, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "Vintage?"
Lana flinched, covering it with her hand. "Yes. Julian gave it to me."
Vivian looked at Julian. "Did you?"
Julian looked at the necklace. He frowned. He remembered the dark room. He remembered the chain. "Yes," he said, though his voice lacked conviction. "I did."
Vivian smiled. It was a terrifying smile.
"It's exquisite," Vivian said softly. "Especially the engraving. Most people don't know that specific silversmith always hid a signature inside the casing. You have to press a hidden pin to see it. Have you seen it, Lana?"
Lana froze. Her hand clutched the metal tighter. She had no idea what Vivian was talking about. She had never opened it.
"I... of course," Lana stammered, sweat breaking out on her forehead.
"Good," Vivian said, stepping back. "I'd hate for you to miss the details."
Lana took a step back, genuinely frightened by the intensity in Vivian's eyes.
"Julian, let's go," Lana squeaked.
Julian pulled away from Lana. "You go. I have work."
He watched Vivian as Lana scurried away. Vivian sat back down and picked up her charcoal, dismissing him entirely.
Julian felt a strange tightening in his chest. He wanted to shake her. He wanted to kiss her.
He settled for barking orders at Xavier and storming out.