Chapter 2

The master bedroom was a cavern of silk and velvet, designed to impress rather than to comfort. Seraphina didn't turn on the lights. The moonlight filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows was enough.

She walked past the bed and entered the walk-in closet. She ignored the rows of designer dresses Harrison insisted she wear-dresses that were always a size too small, as if he wanted to physically constrain her-and went to the very back, behind the winter coats.

She knelt down and pulled out an old, scuffed violin case. It wasn't her performance case; it was a storage relic she had brought from her father's house, one Harrison had deemed "too ugly" to be seen.

Her fingers trembled as she opened the latches. Inside, the velvet was worn. She didn't reach for the instrument. Instead, she pried up the false bottom of the case with her fingernail.

Beneath the lining lay a small stack of cash, her passport, and a burner phone she had bought six months ago during a moment of panic she hadn't understood until now.

She pulled out the phone and dialed a number from memory.

Kate?

It's midnight, Sera, Kate's voice was groggy, then instantly alert. "Did he forget the anniversary? I swear to God, if he-"

I need the file, Seraphina interrupted, her voice steady, void of tears. "The draft you wrote up for me last year. The one I told you to burn."

There was a pause on the other end. Then, a sharp intake of breath. "I didn't burn it. I kept it. Just in case. I can email it to you, or-"

Email it to the secure account. Now.

Done. Are you okay? Do you need me to come get you?

No. I need to do this alone.

Headlights swept across the bedroom ceiling, slicing through the darkness.

The roar of an Aston Martin engine cut through the night air outside. The gravel in the driveway crunched under tires.

He's home, Seraphina whispered. "I have to go."

She hung up and shoved the phone into her pajama pocket. She pushed the violin case back into the depths of the closet, obscuring it with a heavy fur coat.

She heard the heavy front door open downstairs. Then, footsteps. Not the measured, confident strides of the businessman she married, but the slightly heavier, looser steps of a man who had consumed a bottle of vintage Bordeaux.

The bedroom door swung open.

Harrison Vanderbilt stood in the doorway. He was loosening his tie, his silhouette framed by the hallway light.

And then it hit her. The scent.

It wasn't wine. It was Chanel No. 5. Powdery, floral, and unmistakable. It clung to his suit jacket like a second skin. It was Tiffany's signature scent.

Seraphina felt bile rise in her throat, burning and bitter. She swallowed it down. She wouldn't give him the satisfaction of seeing her sick.

Why are you still up? Harrison asked. His voice was rough, annoyed. He didn't look at her; he walked straight toward the bathroom, discarding his jacket on the chaise lounge.

Seraphina stood up. She smoothed the front of her silk pajamas.

We need to talk.

Harrison scoffed. He stopped at the bathroom door, hand on the frame. "Not tonight, Seraphina. I'm exhausted. The Japanese investors were draining."

There were no investors, she said.

Harrison froze. He turned slowly, his eyes narrowing. In the moonlight, his handsome face looked sharp, predatory. "Excuse me?"

I know where you were. I know who you were with.

He stared at her for a long moment, then laughed. It was a dark, condescending sound. He took a step toward her, closing the distance until he was looming over her. He smelled of alcohol and another woman, a toxic cocktail.

Stop the drama, he said, his voice low. "You're imagining things. You've been paranoid lately. Is this about the baby thing again? Because we discussed that. You aren't fit to be a mother right now."

The cruelty took her breath away. He was using the lie he had manufactured-the lie that she was mentally unstable-to dismiss her reality.

I want a divorce, she said. The words were quiet, but they landed like stones in a pond.

Harrison blinked. The amusement vanished from his face. He reached out and grabbed her chin. His grip wasn't painful, but it was controlling. He tilted her face up to his.

Divorce? He whispered the word like it was a dirty joke. "You want to leave me?"

Yes.

He laughed again, but this time there was no humor in it. "Seraphina, look around you. The Sterling family is bankrupt. Your father left you nothing but debt. Your brother is a drunk who can barely hold down a job."

He leaned closer, his breath hot on her face.

You leave this house, you have nothing. No money. No connections. No home. You are nothing without me.

Seraphina looked into his eyes-eyes she used to think held the stars. Now, she only saw a black hole.

She pulled her face away from his grip.

I'd rather be nothing than be yours, she said.

Harrison's jaw tightened. His ego, fragile and massive, had been pricked. He turned his back to her, dismissing her as if she were a servant who had spoken out of turn.

Go to sleep, Seraphina. We'll discuss your 'tantrum' in the morning when you're rational.

He walked into the bathroom and slammed the door. The shower turned on.

Seraphina stood in the dark. She didn't cry. She walked to the closet, pulled out a small overnight bag, and began to pack only the essentials.

Chapter 3

The morning sun hit the marble countertops of the kitchen, but it brought no warmth. Seraphina sat on a stool, staring into a mug of black coffee. She hadn't slept. Her small bag was hidden in the foyer closet.

Her phone rang. A private number.

She answered immediately. "Hello?"

Ms. Sterling? A professional, clipped voice. "This is the emergency department at Lenox Hill Hospital. We have your brother, Sebastian Sterling, here."

The mug slipped from her fingers. It shattered on the floor, ceramic shards exploding like shrapnel. Coffee splashed onto her bare feet, burning her skin, but she didn't flinch.

Is he... is he alive?

He's stable. Alcohol poisoning. His blood alcohol level was near lethal. He was brought in by a Mr. Thomas Sloan.

Sloan.

The name was a curse. Thomas Sloan, Tiffany's brother. The man who had systematically dismantled her father's company alongside Harrison.

I'm coming.

She grabbed her keys, but then remembered-Harrison had taken the second set of keys to her sedan "for maintenance" last week and never returned them. Her car was effectively hostage in the garage.

Dammit, she hissed. She opened her ride-sharing app, her fingers flying across the screen. Confirm Pickup.

The ride to the Upper East Side was a blur of honking horns and red lights she barely saw from the back of the Toyota Camry. Her hands gripped her knees so hard her injured wrist began to throb, a rhythmic pulse of agony that matched her heartbeat.

She ran into the lobby.

Sebastian Sterling, she gasped at the reception desk.

VIP Wing. Room 402.

VIP Wing? That didn't make sense. The Sterlings were broke. Sebastian barely had health insurance.

She took the elevator up, her foot tapping incessantly against the floor. When the doors opened, she rushed down the pristine, quiet hallway.

She saw him before she reached the room. Thomas Sloan was leaning against the wall outside Room 402, checking his watch. He looked up as she approached, a smirk playing on his lips.

He couldn't handle his liquor, little girl, Thomas said, his voice oily.

Seraphina stopped in front of him. She was shaking, not with fear, but with a rage so pure it felt like fire. "You did this. You spiked him."

I bought him a drink to celebrate a... potential investment, Thomas shrugged. "Not my fault he has no tolerance."

Get out of my way.

She pushed past him. But as she turned the corner to enter the room, she froze.

There was a bench outside the door. Sitting on it was Harrison.

And he wasn't alone.

He was holding a woman's hand. Tiffany Sloan.

Tiffany was dressed in a pale pink cashmere sweater that made her look fragile, angelic. She was dabbing at dry eyes with a lace handkerchief. She leaned into Harrison, her head resting on his shoulder.

Harrison looked down at her with an expression of tender concern-a look he hadn't given Seraphina in years. He was rubbing Tiffany's back, whispering something soothing.

The sound of Seraphina's heels clicking on the linoleum acted like a gunshot.

Harrison looked up. His eyes didn't widen in surprise; they narrowed in annoyance. He stood up, but he didn't let go of Tiffany's hand immediately.

Did you follow me? he asked, his voice low and accusing.

The audacity of the question made her dizzy.

My brother is in that room, she said, her voice trembling. "Dying. Because of her brother." She pointed a shaking finger at Tiffany.

Tiffany let out a dramatic gasp. Her hand flew to her chest, clutching the fabric of her sweater. "Oh no... my heart... it's palpitating again..."

She slumped forward. It was a performance worthy of an Oscar.

Tiffany! Harrison caught her. His attention snapped away from his wife instantly. "Easy, easy. Do you have your pills? Where are the beta-blockers?"

In... my bag, Tiffany wheezed, casting a glance at Seraphina through her lashes-a glance of pure, triumphant malice.

Seraphina watched her husband fuss over his mistress. She watched him panic over a theatrical fainting spell while her own brother lay unconscious ten feet away.

The absurdity of it broke something inside her. The last thread of hope, the last lingering wish that he might still be the man she loved, snapped.

She laughed. It was a dry, hollow sound.

You are pathetic, Harrison, she said aloud.

Harrison looked up, his face flushing with anger as he fished a pill bottle from Tiffany's purse. "My god, Seraphina. Have some compassion. She's fragile."

She's a liar, Seraphina said coldly. "And you're a fool."

She turned her back on them and walked into Room 402, slamming the heavy door shut behind her.

Chapter 4

The silence inside the hospital room was broken only by the rhythmic beeping of the heart monitor. Sebastian lay in the bed, his skin the color of ash, tubes running into his arms like translucent veins.

Seraphina rushed to his side, grabbing his cold hand. "Seb? Can you hear me?"

His eyelids fluttered but didn't open.

The door behind her burst open. It hit the wall with a loud bang.

Harrison marched in. He looked annoyed, straightening his tie as if the hospital room were a boardroom.

You nearly gave Tiffany a coronary with your aggression out there, he hissed. "She's sensitive, Seraphina. You know about her condition."

Seraphina didn't turn around. She kept her eyes on her brother. "Her brother poisoned mine. And you're worried about her performance?"

Thomas said Sebastian drank willingly to close a deal, Harrison said, his voice taking on that lecturing tone she hated. "Stop blaming the Sloans for your family's incompetence. Sebastian has always been reckless."

Seraphina felt a vein pulse in her temple. She stood up slowly and turned to face him.

Get out, she said. "This is a family room. You aren't family."

Harrison stopped. He looked genuinely shocked. For three years, she had been docile. She had been the "yes" wife. This new version of her was alien to him.

I am your husband, he said, stepping closer. "I paid for this room. I pulled strings to get him into the VIP wing. You should be thanking me."

I don't want your money. I don't want your help.

You need my help. You can't afford a band-aid without me.

On the bed, Sebastian stirred. The heart monitor beeped faster. Beep-beep-beep.

His eyes opened. They were glassy, weak, but as they focused on Harrison, they sharpened into a glare of pure hatred.

Harrison noticed. He stepped toward the bed, putting on his "benevolent benefactor" mask. "Sebastian, you're awake. We need to talk about your drinking-"

Seraphina moved. She stepped between Harrison and the bed. She placed her hands on Harrison's chest and shoved him. Hard.

Don't come near him.

Harrison's reflex was instant. He grabbed her wrist to stop her from pushing him again.

He grabbed the right wrist.

Seraphina cried out. It wasn't a protest; it was a sound of pure, physiological distress. The nerves in her damaged wrist ignited like gasoline. The pain blinded her for a second. Her knees buckled.

Harrison let go immediately, looking at his own hand, then at her, confused.

I barely touched you, he said, defensive. "Stop acting."

Seraphina cradled her wrist against her chest, breathing in shallow gasps. The pain was a white noise in her ears.

You're hysterical, Harrison concluded, adjusting his cuffs. "I can't deal with this right now. Tiffany needs to go home."

A nurse poked her head in. "Please, keep it down."

Harrison nodded at the nurse, charming and composed. Then he looked at Seraphina with cold eyes.

I'm taking Tiffany home. She needs rest. He paused. "Don't expect the driver. He's busy with me."

He turned and walked out.

Seraphina stood trembling in the center of the room. She waited until his footsteps faded down the hall.

Then, a weak hand tugged at her sleeve.

She turned back to the bed. Sebastian was looking at her. His voice was a rasp, barely a whisper, but the steel in it was unmistakable.

Divorce him, Sebastian croaked. "Now."

Seraphina wiped a tear she hadn't realized had fallen. "I am, Seb. I am."

Sebastian squeezed her hand. A small, cryptic smile touched his pale lips.

Good, he whispered, his eyes drifting shut again. "The accounts are secured. It's time to wake the giant."

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