Kenia Hayes POV
The penthouse was less a home and more a gilded cage.
Holden had taken my phone, my laptop, and even my shoes.
He left me with nothing but the view of the city I couldn't touch, taunting me behind reinforced glass.
Three days into my imprisonment, a maid smuggled in a burner phone.
She was new. Young. And her eyes held a dangerous amount of pity.
"Mr. Evans," she whispered, her hands trembling as she handed me the device wrapped in a linen napkin. "I saw it on the news. I thought... I thought you should know."
I hid in the bathroom, locked the door, and turned it on.
The headline was the first thing I saw, glaring at me in bold black letters.
*Art Curator Found Dead. Heart Attack Suspected.*
Mr. Evans.
My mentor. The only father figure I had ever known.
My breath hitched, turning into a strangled sob. I scrolled down, desperate for it to be a mistake.
There were rumors of an audit. Money laundering charges brought against his gallery by an anonymous tip.
The Dalton family.
They had squeezed him. They had stressed his old heart until it gave out, just to punish me for the scene at the gala.
I sank to the floor, clutching the phone to my chest as if it contained his heartbeat.
A chime echoed through the silent apartment.
A delivery notification.
The elevator doors in the hallway slid open with a soft whoosh.
I walked out, wiping my face.
A courier was standing there, looking out of place in the opulent foyer, holding a box.
"Package for Ms. Hayes," he said nervously, eyes darting around.
I took it. It was a cake box. White, with a satin ribbon.
I opened it.
It was a red velvet cake.
In perfect, looping crimson icing, it read:
*Sorry for your loss. Maybe next time don't flush the heir.*
There was a little fondant baby in the center.
It was headless.
I dry heaved, the bile rising in my throat.
Estella.
She knew about the abortion. She was mocking the death of my child and the death of my mentor in one sweet, sickly gesture.
The elevator dinged again.
Holden walked in, his stride confident and predatory.
He was followed by Estella and an older woman with hair like steel wool.
Annabella Blake.
The Dalton Matriarch. The true power.
"Look at her," Annabella said, her voice like grinding stones. "A mess."
Holden saw the cake. He didn't look shocked. He looked bored.
"Clean that up," he told the maid, dismissing the cruelty as if it were merely a spill.
"We have business," Annabella said, pointing a cane at me like a weapon. "The wedding is in two days. The press is still talking about your little stunt. We need to fix the narrative."
"I'm not doing anything for you," I spat, my voice shaking with rage.
Annabella stepped closer. She smelled of lavender and rot.
"You will," she said. "Or we will dig up Mr. Evans and plant heroin in his coffin. Do you want his legacy to be that of a drug dealer?"
My blood ran cold. The air left my lungs.
They had no bottom. There was no line they wouldn't cross.
"What do you want?" I asked, defeated.
"You will be a bridesmaid," Estella said, smiling a shark's smile. "You will stand next to me at the altar. You will hold my train. And you will smile. You will show the world that we are one big, happy family and that you accept your place as the lesser woman."
I looked at Holden.
He was checking his watch.
"Do it, Kenia," he said, not even glancing at me. "It's just a few hours. Then you can come back here and... rest."
Rest.
He meant rot.
"Fine," I said, my voice hollow.
"Good," Annabella said. "The fitting is in an hour. Don't be late."
They left, taking the air in the room with them.
I stood alone in the silence. I looked at the smashed cake on the floor.
I wasn't going to be a bridesmaid.
I was going to be a ghost.
I went back to the bathroom and pulled out the burner phone. I dialed the number, my fingers trembling.
"I'm ready," I said.
"Tomorrow," Gael's voice answered, steady and calm. "The wedding. Be at the altar. When the priest asks if anyone objects... run."
"Run where?"
"To the fire," he said.
And then the line went dead.
I looked at my reflection in the mirror.
The Caged Canary was dead.
The Thorny Rose was about to bloom.
Kenia Hayes POV
Compliance is a costume.
It fits tighter than the silk dress Holden forced me to wear for the rehearsal dinner, and it suffocates me just as much.
For forty-eight hours, I have been the perfect, porcelain doll.
I ate when he told me to eat.
I smiled when he made a joke at my expense.
I sat quietly in the corner of the penthouse while he took calls about shipments and territories, acting as if the woman he threw off a cliff wasn't sitting ten feet away, breathing the same recycled air.
He thinks he broke me.
He thinks the silence is submission.
He doesn't know that silence is the whetstone where I sharpen the knife.
The morning of the wedding arrived with a sky the color of a fresh bruise.
Holden was frantic, pacing the living room in his boxers, his phone in one hand and a silk tie in the other.
"Where is the file for the Port Authority?" he snapped, his gaze snapping to me.
I was sitting on the sofa, hands folded demurely in my lap.
"It's on your iPad," I said softly.
He grabbed the device from the coffee table and tapped the screen aggressively.
He frowned.
"It's locked. What's the passcode?"
He looked at me, expecting me to rattle it off like a good little secretary.
"I don't know," I lied. Smooth. Simple.
"You set it up, Kenia. What is it?"
"Try your birthday," I suggested.
He tapped it in.
The screen shook. *Incorrect.*
"Try the day we met," he said, his thumb hovering over the glass.
He paused.
He looked up at me, a flicker of genuine confusion clouding his eyes.
"When was that? June? July?"
He didn't know.
Three years of my life, three years of devotion, and he couldn't place the starting line.
"Try Estella's birthday," I said.
My voice was flat. Dead.
He typed it in.
The iPad unlocked.
He didn't even look ashamed. He didn't even flinch.
He just sighed with relief and started scrolling through documents.
"I have to go," he said, distracted, already mentally halfway out the door. "The car is waiting. Stay here. Don't go near the windows. I'll send someone for you after the ceremony. We can... celebrate."
He walked over and kissed my forehead.
It felt like a brand.
"Be good, Kenia."
The moment the elevator doors slid shut, the doll disintegrated.
I didn't run.
Running attracts attention.
I walked with purpose.
I went to the bedroom and pulled the framed photo of us from the nightstand.
We were smiling in it. I looked happy.
I hated that girl.
I took it to the bathroom sink.
I doused it in his expensive cologne, the scent of sandalwood and arrogance filling the small space.
I struck a match and dropped it.
The flame caught instantly, curling the edges of my smile, turning our memory into ash and black smoke.
I watched it burn until the glass cracked from the heat.
Then I turned and walked out of the penthouse.
The guards at the door nodded, but their bodies shifted to block the exit.
"Mr. Dalton said you stay inside," one of them said, stepping into my path.
"Mr. Dalton forgot his cufflinks," I said, my voice laced with frantic urgency. I held up a small velvet box I had emptied moments ago. "He told me to run them down to the car immediately. Do you want to be the reason he looks sloppy at the altar? Do you want to explain to him why he's not wearing them?"
The guard hesitated.
He looked at his partner, weighing the risk of disobedience against the risk of Holden's temper.
"Five minutes," he grunted.
I stepped into the elevator.
I didn't go to the lobby.
I hit the button for the service level.
I walked out the back exit, past the dumpsters that smelled of rotting flowers and stale champagne.
A black SUV was idling at the curb.
The window rolled down an inch.
Arthur, the man who had driven me to the hospital, was behind the wheel.
"Ms. Hayes," he acknowledged.
"Drive," I said, opening the back door.
I climbed in.
The lock clicked.
I didn't look back at the golden tower.
I pulled out the burner phone and opened the livestream link for the wedding.
I needed to see it.
I needed to see the exact moment his world cracked.