Chapter 2

The Maybach took a sharp turn onto the highway ramp. Imogen's core muscles, weakened by years of poor nutrition and confinement, failed to brace her.

She slid across the smooth leather, her shoulder bumping into Ford's arm.

Ford recoiled. He shifted his body toward the driver's side door, pressing himself against the panel as if she were contagious.

Imogen scrambled back to her side, her face burning.

She frantically smoothed her messy, chopped-short hair. "Sorry. My leg... it's not strong."

"Did you learn nothing in there?" Ford asked. His voice was calm, conversational, which made it terrifying. "Or are you still playing the victim? Is this part of the act you'll be putting on for the board?"

Imogen stared at his profile. This was the man she had agreed to marry. The man she had protected by keeping her mouth shut during the trial. Protecting him, and by extension, the stability clause that was her only leverage to ensure Leo was safe.

"I was hurt inside, Ford," she said, her voice trembling slightly, a carefully calibrated tremor. "There were women... they were paid to hurt me. Someone paid the other inmates to target me."

Ford didn't blink. He checked the rearview mirror. "I know."

The air left Imogen's lungs. "You... know?"

"I authorized the payments," he said.

The world stopped. The hum of the tires, the heater, the radio-it all faded into a high-pitched ring in Imogen's ears.

"You?" she whispered.

Imogen looked down at her hands. She remembered the nights. The pillowcase filled with bars of soap. The kicks to her ribs. The boot that had crushed her knee.

Every blow had been an authorized corporate expense, signed off on by her fiancé.

Bile rose in her throat, hot and acidic. She clamped a hand over her mouth, gagging.

Ford hit the button for her window. The glass slid down. "Don't you dare throw up in my car."

The freezing wind roared into the cabin, whipping Imogen's hair across her face. She gulped down the fresh air, fighting the nausea, fighting the realization that her life hadn't been waiting for her. It had been liquidated.

They entered the city limits. Skyscrapers loomed overhead, gray monoliths against the gray sky.

Ford's phone buzzed on the console. The screen lit up: Bella.

His entire demeanor shifted. The tension in his shoulders dropped. He tapped the speakerphone button.

"Ford?" Bella's voice filled the car, sweet and airy, like spun sugar. "Did you get her? Is she okay?"

"I have her," Ford said. His voice was soft. Gentle. A tone Imogen hadn't heard in years. "Don't worry. I'll bring her in through the service elevator so the press doesn't swarm her."

"Oh, good," Bella sighed. "I just want her to be safe. I'm so nervous, Ford."

"You're doing great, Bella. I'll be there soon."

He hung up. The softness vanished instantly. He glanced at Imogen. "Bella is trying to protect you. She doesn't want you eaten alive by the reporters. She's too kind for her own good."

Imogen bit her lip so hard she tasted copper.

Kind. Bella wanted her in the service elevator so she wouldn't be seen entering the front door like a human being. Like a Willis. Like a shareholder.

The car descended into the underground garage of the Crawford building, where Ford kept his penthouse. He parked and killed the engine.

He got out without a word, walking toward the elevator bank.

Imogen fumbled with the door handle, her frozen fingers clumsy. She pushed the heavy door open and swung her legs out.

Her bad knee buckled when her foot hit the concrete, and she stumbled, catching herself on the car frame.

Ford was already at the elevator, holding the button. He tapped his foot.

"Move," he said. "You look like a beggar. It's embarrassing."

Imogen straightened her spine. It was the only thing she had left. She limped toward him, her chin held high, dragging her damaged leg.

She stepped into the elevator. The walls were mirrored.

For the first time, she saw them together.

Ford, in his bespoke suit, glowing with health and power.

And her. Gaunt. Pale. Her coat stained and wrinkled. Her eyes hollowed out dark circles.

"Don't speak tonight," Ford said, looking at her reflection instead of her. "Don't embarrass me."

Imogen met his eyes in the glass. The love she had held onto was dying, cell by cell.

In its place, something cold and hard was growing. Something that felt like strength.

"I won't," she said. Her voice was dead.

The elevator chimed. The doors slid open to the penthouse.

Chapter 3

Ford didn't invite her to sit. He pointed down the hall toward the guest suite.

"Go wash. There are clothes on the bed." He checked his Rolex. "We leave in forty minutes."

He turned and walked into the master bedroom, closing the door firmly.

Imogen walked into the guest bathroom and locked the door. Her legs gave out, and she slid down the marble wall until she hit the heated tile floor.

The luxury was overwhelming. The gold fixtures, the plush towels, the scent of lavender soap.

It was a violent contrast to the stainless steel toilet and concrete floor she had known for 1,095 days. She took a steadying breath, reminding herself this was just a different kind of prison, with softer walls.

She stood up on shaking legs and peeled off the trench coat. It fell to the floor in a heap. She pulled off the gray thermal shirt she had been released in.

She stood before the floor-to-ceiling mirror.

Imogen gasped.

She hadn't seen her full back in three years.

It was a map of pain. A jagged, pink scar ran from her left shoulder blade down to her ribs-a gift from a broken bed frame spring wielded by an inmate who wanted Ford's money.

Cigarette burns dotted her lower back like constellations.

Her right knee was swollen, a grotesque lump of bone and fluid.

She turned on the shower. She made it hot. Scalding.

She stepped in, biting back a scream as the water hit her raw skin. She grabbed a loofah and scrubbed.

She scrubbed until her skin turned angry red. She scrubbed to get the prison off. She scrubbed to get Ford's money off.

She stepped out, dripping, and wrapped herself in a towel. She walked into the bedroom.

Lying on the bed was a dress.

It was silver silk. Floor-length. Halter neck.

Imogen picked it up. The fabric was light as water. She held it up.

It was backless. Completely backless. The cut dipped dangerously low, exposing everything from the neck to the dimples of the lower back.

Imogen let out a dry, humorless laugh.

Bella. This was Bella's choice. She knew. She didn't know the extent of the scars, perhaps, but she knew Imogen had been hurt. This was a humiliation tactic. Show the world the damaged goods.

Imogen looked around. There were no other clothes. Her prison clothes were in a pile of filth in the bathroom.

She had no choice.

She dropped the towel and stepped into the dress. The silk felt like ice against her heated skin. She pulled it up and tied the halter behind her neck.

She turned to the mirror.

It was worse than she thought. The silver fabric shimmered, making the jagged, raised scars on her back look even more violent, more grotesque. Her short, choppy hair exposed her neck completely. There was nowhere to hide.

Imogen stared at herself. Fear rose in her throat, choking her. Then, slowly, it receded.

You already died, she told her reflection. You died in that cell. This is just the ghost. And ghosts have nothing to fear.

She found a tube of red lipstick on the vanity. It was old, dried out, but she scraped some onto her finger and pressed it to her lips. The crimson slash made her pale skin look porcelain, not sickly.

She looked like a warrior who had already lost the war but refused to lie down.

Footsteps echoed in the hall. Heavy. Impatient.

"Imogen!" Ford barked.

She took a deep breath. She opened the door.

Steam billowed out around her as she stepped into the hallway.

Ford was adjusting his cufflinks. He looked up, annoyance etched on his face. "About ti-"

His voice died in his throat.

His eyes went wide. He stared at her. First at the dress, clinging to her emaciated frame. Then, as she turned slightly to close the door, his gaze locked onto her back.

He saw the map. The burns. The jagged lines.

For a second, the mask slipped. Horror. Pure, unadulterated horror flashed in his eyes.

Chapter 4

Ford swallowed hard. His Adam's apple bobbed.

He took an involuntary step forward, his hand reaching out as if to trace the long, pink scar that bisected her shoulder blade.

"What..." he started, his voice rough.

Imogen flinched. She slammed her back against the wall, her eyes wide and feral, like a cornered animal.

"Don't," she hissed.

Ford stopped. His hand hovered in the air for a second before he snatched it back, shoving it into his pocket.

The horror in his eyes hardened instantly into something colder. Defense. Denial.

"Looks like you played rough in there," he sneered, his voice dripping with disdain to cover his discomfort. "Is that your badge of honor?"

Imogen felt a sharp pain in her chest, but it wasn't her heart. It was the death of the last illusion.

"That," she said, her voice steady, "is the receipt for every 'risk mitigation expense' you signed, Ford."

Ford's face darkened,A flush of anger crept up his neck.

He stepped in close, invading her space, looming over her. He smelled of expensive scotch and aggression.

"Don't try to manipulate me," he growled, leaning down so his face was inches from hers. "Don't try to leverage this with a sob story or... whatever this is. I don't deal with damaged goods."

"Leverage this?" Imogen looked him dead in the eye. "I just want to stay away from you."

He grabbed her chin, his fingers digging into her jaw. "Remember who you are. You're here to atone. You're not a victim. You're a criminal."

Imogen jerked her face away from his grip. "I served three years. If that's not enough atonement, what do you want? My blood?"

They stared at each other. The air crackled with hatred.

Ford's phone buzzed again. He broke eye contact, checking the screen.

"Bella is waiting," he said, his voice instantly losing its edge. He walked to a hallway closet and pulled out a heavy, white faux-fur stole.

He tossed it at her. It hit her in the chest.

"Put it on," he ordered. "Cover that up. Don't scare the guests."

Imogen caught the fur. It was soft. Warm. It was a muzzle.

She draped it over her shoulders, pulling it tight. The scars disappeared. The warrior disappeared. She looked small again.

"Let's go," Ford said, turning his back on her. "And remember: stay away from Bella. Don't touch her."

Imogen followed him to the elevator. She watched his broad back. She felt nothing. No love. No hate. Just a cold, empty void. Inside, she ran through her checklist. Her son, Leo. Was he safe? The last coded message from her contact inside said he was. She had to trust that for now.

The car ride to the estate was in a stretch limo this time. Ford poured himself a glass of champagne and didn't offer her one.

"If you behave tonight," he said, looking out the window at the passing trees of the estate driveway, "I might consider a monthly allowance. Enough for a studio apartment in Queens."

Imogen didn't look at him. "I don't want your money. I want an independent audit of the Willis Trust."

Ford laughed. It was a sharp, barking sound. "An audit? You think the board will let a felon anywhere near the books? You're delusional."

"The bylaws state my shares grant me that right," she said simply.

"We'll see."

The limo slowed. Through the tinted windows, Imogen saw the flashes. Hundreds of them. The paparazzi were swarming the gates of the Willis estate like locusts.

"Showtime," Ford muttered. "Don't trip."

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