Chapter 2

Eleanora ducked her head and slid into the cavernous back seat of the Cadillac SUV.

Devonte collapsed the umbrella in one fluid motion, pulled the heavy door shut, and climbed into the driver's seat. He shifted the car into drive.

The interior of the SUV was dead silent. The thick bulletproof glass completely severed the sound of the pounding rain outside.

Eleanora dropped her soaked canvas bag onto the plush floor mats. She leaned her head back against the soft leather headrest and closed her eyes. Her breathing was shallow, her body shivering slightly from the damp cold.

Devonte glanced at her through the rearview mirror. His jaw tightened. He reached over to the passenger seat, grabbed a dry, folded cashmere towel, and passed it back to her.

Eleanora took it. The fabric was warm.

She pressed the towel against her face, dragging it roughly over her skin. The heavy black eyeliner and dark lipstick smeared onto the expensive cashmere, leaving dark, ugly stains.

When she lowered the towel and opened her eyes, the frightened, apathetic high school student was gone.

Her eyes were clear, sharp, and entirely devoid of warmth. Her pulse, which had been racing, slowed to a steady, calculated rhythm.

"Pull up the Sanders family corporate financial logs," Eleanora ordered. Her voice was steady, cutting through the quiet cabin.

Devonte didn't ask questions. He kept one hand on the steering wheel and used the other to tap the center console screen.

A hidden projector hummed to life. A glowing, encrypted financial spreadsheet appeared on the privacy screen dividing the front and back seats.

Eleanora leaned forward, her eyes scanning the scrolling lines of green data.

Her gaze locked onto a massive spike in the outgoing requests column.

"Stop," she said.

Devonte paused the screen.

Eleanora stared at a multi-million dollar life insurance claim filed directly by Aleta Boyd.

She checked the timestamp. The claim had been submitted exactly two hours after Philip's car crashed. Two hours before the police even called Eleanora.

A harsh, bitter laugh scraped its way out of Eleanora's throat.

Aleta hadn't called her because Aleta was too busy making sure the money was secured before the body was even cold.

"Cut them off," Eleanora said. Her fingers dug into the leather seat. "Sever every single shadow account. Terminate the shell company injections. Now."

Devonte nodded. He tapped his Bluetooth earpiece. "Aegis Financial. Execute protocol zero on the Sanders accounts. Full withdrawal."

Within three seconds, the green lines of data on the screen turned violently red. Three massive offshore accounts that had been secretly keeping the Sanders family business afloat instantly drained to zero.

The Cadillac merged onto the highway, speeding toward the glowing skyline of Manhattan.

Miles behind them, in the Sanders' living room, Aleta sat on the sofa with her iPad resting on her lap.

She tapped the screen, browsing the VIP section of a high-end jewelry retailer. She selected a fifty-thousand-dollar diamond tennis bracelet and hit the checkout button.

The screen loaded for a second. Then, a bright red error message popped up.

Transaction Denied.

Aleta frowned. She clicked her tongue in annoyance, assuming it was a glitch with the terrible estate Wi-Fi. She refreshed the page twice, watching the loading icon spin in agonizing slow motion. When the page finally reloaded, she clicked the checkout button again, only to see the same red text. She opened her digital wallet, selected her premium black card, and tried again.

Transaction Denied. Account Frozen.

Aleta's heart skipped a beat. A cold sweat broke out on the back of her neck.

She grabbed her phone and dialed the bank's VIP concierge line. Her fingers trembled slightly as she pressed the phone to her ear.

"This is Aleta Boyd," she snapped as soon as the line connected. "Why is my card declining?"

The customer service representative's voice was flat. "Mrs. Boyd, your primary corporate investors have executed a total withdrawal. Your accounts are overdrawn by four million dollars. All assets are currently frozen."

Aleta's hand went entirely numb. The phone slipped from her fingers, hitting the carpet with a dull thud.

Upstairs, Cornelia was standing in front of her mirror, holding a black designer dress against her body, completely oblivious to the fact that their world had just collapsed.

The Cadillac pulled into the private underground parking garage of a towering Manhattan skyscraper.

Eleanora stepped out of the car. Her boots clicked against the polished concrete.

She walked into the private elevator. Devonte swiped a black keycard, and the doors slid shut.

The elevator shot upward, stopping at the penthouse.

The doors opened to a massive, open-concept space surrounded by floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. High-tech servers hummed softly in the background.

Eleanora walked straight to the main console desk.

"Show me the police photos from the crash site," she commanded.

Devonte typed on the keyboard. High-resolution images flashed onto the main monitor.

Eleanora leaned in close to the screen. She stared at the close-up photo of the tire marks on the wet asphalt.

Her eyes narrowed. The skid marks didn't curve. They were perfectly straight, accelerating right into the concrete barrier.

Her stomach tightened. Her blood ran cold.

It wasn't an accident.

Chapter 3

The air inside the boardroom at the top of the Vaughan Group headquarters was freezing.

Twenty senior executives sat around the massive circular mahogany table. No one dared to breathe too loudly.

At the head of the table sat Fidel Vaughan.

He rested his elbows on the table, his long, pale fingers pressing brutally hard into his temples. His knuckles were white.

A blinding, white-hot pain pulsed behind his eyes, a physical weight crushing his skull. The chronic nerve damage felt like shattered glass grinding against his brain with every heartbeat.

A middle-aged executive stood at the projector, his voice shaking as he read the quarterly earnings report.

Fidel's jaw ticked. The man's voice sounded like a drill against his eardrums.

Fidel grabbed the heavy crystal water glass in front of him. He slammed it down onto the mahogany wood.

The glass shattered. Water and sharp shards exploded across the table.

The executives flinched in unison, pulling their hands back into their laps.

"You're fired," Fidel said. His voice was a low, gravelly rasp, barely above a whisper, but it carried to every corner of the room. "Get out."

The executive went pale. He didn't argue. He gathered his folders with trembling hands and practically ran out of the boardroom.

Julian Chamberlain, Fidel's executive assistant, stepped forward from the shadows behind Fidel's chair.

Julian pulled a sanitized wet wipe from a foil packet and handed it down.

Fidel took it. He wiped the moisture from his fingers, his face twisted in deep disgust at the feeling of the contaminated water on his skin.

Inside his tailored suit jacket, a private encrypted phone began to vibrate against his ribs.

Fidel pulled it out. The caller ID read: Cornelius Vaughan.

Fidel's stomach churned with irritation. He stood up, towering over the table, and walked toward the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Wall Street.

He swiped to answer. "Grandfather."

"Have you found her yet?" Cornelius's voice barked through the speaker, old but full of iron authority. "The girl from the estate. The one who saved my life five years ago."

Fidel squeezed his eyes shut as another wave of agony ripped through his head. "I have people looking."

"Look harder," Cornelius demanded. "You owe her your life. I want her found, and I want the engagement announced before the end of the year. That is an order, Fidel."

Fidel's teeth ground together. He hated the idea of a forced marriage. He hated being tied down. But his grandfather held the final keys to the family trust.

"Fine," Fidel gritted out. He ended the call and shoved the phone back into his pocket.

He turned to Julian. "Go to Long Island. The Sanders house. See if the girl is there."

Julian nodded, his face impassive. "Right away, sir."

An hour later, a black Maybach with tinted windows rolled to a stop in front of the Sanders residence.

Julian stepped out. He adjusted his custom-tailored suit jacket and walked up the driveway. He pressed the doorbell.

Inside, Cornelia was screaming at Aleta because her credit card had just been declined online for a designer mourning veil.

Hearing the bell, Cornelia stomped to the front door and yanked it open, ready to yell at whoever was interrupting her tantrum.

The words died in her throat.

She stared at Julian. She took in the impeccable suit, the expensive watch on his wrist, and the gleaming Maybach parked at the curb.

Her posture instantly changed. She straightened her spine, smoothed her hair, and forced a sweet, polite smile onto her face.

"Can I help you?" Cornelia asked, her voice dropping an octave.

Julian studied her face for a second. He had only a heavily degraded security still from that night-a blurry profile of a girl covered in ash and soot. Cornelia matched the general height and build, but he needed to be certain.

"We have conflicting reports about the young woman's name at this residence," Julian probed smoothly, his eyes narrowing slightly as he observed her micro-expressions. "Could you clarify?"

Cornelia's heart slammed against her ribs.

She knew exactly what he was talking about. Eleanora had gone to that estate. Eleanora had come back with burn marks on her hands.

Cornelia's eyes darted to the gold pin on Julian's lapel-the Vaughan family crest.

Greed, hot and heavy, flooded her veins. Eleanora was gone. Kicked out. Nobody knew where she was.

Cornelia looked Julian right in the eye. "That would be me," she lied smoothly. "I'm the only daughter here. My name is Cornelia Sanders."

Julian analyzed her steady gaze and confident posture. The lie was seamless enough to pass his initial scrutiny. He reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a thick, gold-embossed envelope. He held it out to her.

"Miss Sanders," Julian said, his tone shifting to one of deep respect. "On behalf of the Vaughan family, I am here to formally invite you to meet with Mr. Fidel Vaughan. You are to be his future wife."

Cornelia's breath hitched. Her fingers shook as she reached out and took the envelope. The thick paper felt heavy in her hands.

"Thank you," she whispered, fighting to keep the manic grin off her face.

Julian bowed his head slightly, turned around, and walked back to the Maybach.

Cornelia stood in the doorway, clutching the envelope to her chest, watching the car drive away.

Chapter 4

Cornelia slammed the front door shut and locked it.

She sprinted into the living room, her bare feet slapping against the hardwood floor.

"Mom!" Cornelia shrieked, waving the gold-embossed envelope in the air.

Aleta looked up from her phone, her face pale and drawn from the bank's phone call. "What are you yelling about?"

Cornelia threw the envelope onto the coffee table. "Look at the crest. It's the Vaughans. They think I'm the girl who saved their precious heir five years ago. They want me to marry him!"

Aleta's eyes widened. She dropped her phone. She reached out and traced the gold foil of the Vaughan crest.

The panic over their frozen bank accounts vanished, replaced by a sudden, vicious surge of hope.

"If you marry Fidel Vaughan," Aleta whispered, her voice trembling with excitement, "we will never have to worry about money again. You'll be a billionaire."

Cornelia grabbed her laptop from the side table and flipped it open. She typed Fidel Vaughan's name into the search bar.

Images flooded the screen. Fidel on the cover of Forbes. Fidel stepping out of a private jet. His face was sharp, cold, and devastatingly handsome.

Cornelia's mouth went dry. Her fingers traced his image on the screen. She wanted him. She wanted the power.

Her cell phone rang. The caller ID was an unknown number.

She answered it. "Hello?"

"Miss Sanders," Julian's voice came through the speaker, crisp and professional. "This is Julian Chamberlain again. I am conducting the final background verification. I just need you to confirm a few details about the night of the fire at the estate."

Cornelia's stomach dropped into her shoes. A cold sweat broke out across her forehead.

She didn't know anything about the fire. She wasn't there.

"Um," Cornelia stammered, her mind racing. "I'm sorry, the connection is really bad. Can you hold on for one second?"

She pressed the mute button and tossed the phone onto the sofa.

She ran up the stairs, taking them two at a time. She sprinted down the hallway and threw open the door to the tiny storage room Eleanora had used as a bedroom.

Cornelia dropped to her knees. She shoved Eleanora's thin mattress off the bed frame.

She clawed at the wooden floorboards until she found the loose one. She ripped it up.

Inside the hidden compartment lay an old, offline digital tablet with a cracked screen. Beside it was a folded piece of paper with a simple numeric passcode.

Cornelia snatched it up, powered it on, and punched in the passcode. The screen unlocked to a sparse digital journal. Her eyes scanned Eleanora's sterile, precise text entries.

August 14th. The fire started in the west wing. I used the plum-blossom needle to stabilize his pulse before dragging him through the servant's corridor.

Cornelia memorized the words. She ran back downstairs, snatched her phone off the sofa, and unmuted the call.

"Sorry about that," Cornelia said, her voice steady. "You were asking about the fire? I remember the west wing burning. I had to use a plum-blossom needle to keep his pulse steady while we escaped through the servant's corridor."

There was a brief pause on the line.

"Perfect," Julian said. The tension in his voice vanished. "The details match perfectly. Mr. Vaughan is very pleased and has prepared a significant gift for you. He would like to present it to you in person. However, as he is currently indisposed, he has authorized an initial comfort transfer of one million dollars to your account as a gesture of good faith, effective immediately. We will be in touch to arrange the formal meeting and discuss the engagement."

"Thank you," Cornelia breathed.

She hung up the phone.

She looked down at Eleanora's tablet in her hand. This was the only piece of evidence that could expose her.

Cornelia walked into the kitchen. she grabbed a long silver lighter from the drawer.

She placed the tablet on the floor, raised her foot, and smashed the screen with the heel of her shoe until the glass splintered into a spiderweb of ruin. She then tossed the shattered device into the fireplace, flicked the lighter, and set the surrounding kindling on fire.

She watched the flames eat the plastic and circuitry, turning Eleanora's digital footprint into unrecognizable black slag.

Back at the Vaughan Group tower, Julian walked into the president's office.

Fidel was leaning back in his leather chair, his eyes closed. A row of prescription painkiller bottles sat untouched on his desk.

"Sir," Julian said softly. "The background check is complete. Cornelia Sanders knew the exact details of the medical intervention. It's her."

Fidel didn't open his eyes. His chest rose and fell in a slow, pained rhythm.

"Send her the money," Fidel rasped, his voice dripping with exhaustion and disgust. "And delay the meeting. Tell her I'm busy. I don't want to see her."

Julian hesitated. "Sir, she seemed... very eager about the financial transfer."

Fidel let out a harsh, bitter laugh. "They always are. Let her buy whatever she wants. Just keep her away from me."

Two hours later, Cornelia's phone buzzed with a bank notification. One million dollars had cleared into her personal checking account.

She grabbed Aleta's arm. "Mom. Get your coat. We're going to Manhattan."

They walked into a high-end luxury boutique on Fifth Avenue.

Cornelia pointed a finger at a glass display case. "I want that limited-edition bag."

The sales associate looked at Cornelia's cheap, rain-spotted shoes and frowned. "Miss, that bag is forty thousand dollars."

Cornelia pulled out her phone, opened her banking app, and shoved the screen with the million-dollar balance into the associate's face.

The associate's eyes went wide. Her posture instantly folded into a deep bow. "Right away, Miss Sanders. Would you like champagne while you wait?"

Cornelia looked at herself in the floor-to-ceiling mirror. She smiled. She was untouchable.

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