Aurora spent the day in Corbin's library, a vast, two-story room filled with first editions and priceless art. It felt more like a museum than a home. She wasn't reading. She was searching. Her profession as an antique restorer had trained her to see what others missed-the subtle forgery, the hidden compartment, the hairline fracture that betrayed a fatal weakness.
She ran her fingers over the spine of a leather-bound book, her eyes scanning the shelves. She wasn't just looking at the objects; she was analyzing Corbin's choices. A Roman bust with questionable provenance sat next to a flawless Ming vase. It told her he valued the appearance of power over authentic history. He was a collector of symbols.
Her attention landed on a large, ornate Louis XVI desk. She circled it, her trained eye picking up on a slight discoloration in the wood near the base of a leg. A masterful repair, almost invisible. But she saw it. As she knelt to examine it, she heard the door open. Heavy footsteps on the Persian rug.
"Appreciating the decor?" a deep voice said.
Aurora stood up quickly, turning to face him. Corbin was standing there, watching her. He was wearing a dark suit, crisp and expensive.
"This desk," Aurora said, her voice regaining its composure. "It's a fake. A very good one, from the late 19th century, but the joinery is wrong for the period."
Corbin's expression didn't change, but a new light entered his eyes. He walked over to the desk, running a hand over the surface she had indicated.
"My father bought it at auction for seven figures," he said.
"Then your father was swindled," Aurora stated plainly. She was in her element now, her fear replaced by professional confidence. "The man who made this was a genius, but he used a type of wood glue that wasn't invented until a hundred years after Louis XVI was dead."
He stared at her, the silence stretching. He wasn't angry. He was intrigued.
"You are full of surprises, Ms. Paul."
"You should have it appraised," she said, turning to leave.
"I don't need to," he said, stopping her. "I already know." His hand shot out, not to touch her, but to block her path. "Just like I know about the appointment you had with Dr. Alistair Finch three weeks ago. The top obstetrician in the city."
The confidence drained out of her, replaced by ice. His PI had been thorough.
"I had a consultation," she said, her voice tight.
"You had an ultrasound," he corrected. He held up his phone. On the screen was a copy of her medical file. Illegally obtained, no doubt. "A confirmation of a viable, single-fetus pregnancy. Conception date estimated to be mid-January."
He pocketed the phone, his eyes never leaving her face. He took a step closer, backing her up against the fake desk.
"That night in Davos," he murmured, his voice a low vibration that resonated in her chest. "Was a mistake for both of us. But mistakes have consequences."
His hand moved, and for a terrifying second, she thought he would touch her. Instead, he picked up a heavy, leather-bound legal folio from the desk. He dropped it into her hands. It was heavy.
"This is a pre-nuptial agreement," he said. "And a custody contract. My lawyers drew it up this morning."
Aurora stared at the document, then up at him, horrified. "You're insane."
"I am pragmatic," he corrected. "The Heath board is pressuring me to settle down, to present a more stable image. A wife and an heir would solve that problem. You need protection and financial security. This is a merger, Aurora. Your freedom in exchange for my name. And my child."
He wasn't proposing. He was executing a hostile takeover.
He leaned in, his voice dropping to a whisper. "That child is a Heath asset now. And I will control it."
He stepped back, leaving her trapped between the desk and the crushing weight of the contract in her hands.
Corbin sat behind the massive mahogany desk in his office at Heath Tower. The city was a sprawling grid of lights below him, but his focus was entirely on the manila folder in front of him.
The Private Investigator stood nervously on the other side of the desk.
"The timeline is solid, Mr. Heath," the PI said. "She was at the Steigenberger Grandhotel in Davos from January 15th to the 20th. You were there the same dates. The blizzard closed the roads on the 18th."
Corbin flipped the page. A crystal-clear image of the ultrasound from her medical file. The date of conception estimation lined up perfectly with the 18th.
He looked at the background check on Preston Sterling. "Sterling was in London that week," Corbin muttered.
He closed the file. The sound was like a gunshot in the quiet room.
"Get the car," Corbin said into the intercom. "We're going home."
Aurora was standing by the floor-to-ceiling windows when he arrived, the unsigned contract on the coffee table. She hadn't packed. She knew there was nowhere to run.
Corbin walked in. He looked at the contract, then at her. A cold smile touched his lips.
"Have you reviewed the terms?"
"I won't sign this," Aurora said, her voice shaking with rage. "I am not your broodmare."
Corbin walked past her and poured himself a scotch. "It is a generous offer. It provides for you completely. It guarantees your father's legal defense."
"It strips me of everything," she countered, turning to face him. "It gives you sole custody."
"Sit down, Aurora."
"No."
"Sit. Down." His voice didn't rise, but the command was absolute.
Aurora remained standing, gripping the back of a chair.
Corbin took a sip of his drink. "Let's be clear. You have two options. You sign that contract, we get married, and you provide me with an heir. In return, you live a life of unimaginable luxury, and your father gets the best defense money can buy."
"And option two?" she whispered.
"Option two," he said, setting the glass down, "is you refuse. I leak the information on this flash drive myself, but I frame your father as the sole architect. I have a dozen employees who will testify to it. He will die in prison. Your assets will remain frozen. You will be homeless. And when that baby is born, I will sue you for custody. With your record of 'mental instability,' as your dear friend Kendall is so happy to provide, and your lack of any financial means, which court in this country do you think will side with you?"
Tears stung her eyes, but she refused to let them fall. This was a war, and she couldn't afford to show weakness.
She took a deep breath, her fear solidifying into a cold, hard resolve. She had to change the terms of engagement.
"You're assuming you'll get a healthy heir," she said, her voice devoid of emotion. Corbin paused, his hand halfway to his glass. She had his attention.
"What does that mean?" he asked, his eyes narrowing.
"It means that a pregnancy is a delicate thing," Aurora said, meeting his gaze without flinching. "Stress is very bad for a developing fetus. And I am under an incredible amount of stress. If you want this 'asset' to make it to term, healthy and whole, then we are going to renegotiate that contract."
Corbin studied her face, looking for the bluff, the tell. He found none. He saw only the icy resolve of a cornered animal willing to chew off its own leg to escape a trap.
"If you think for one second I will let you harm that child-"
"I would never harm it," Aurora interrupted smoothly. "But my body might. A miscarriage is a tragic, unforeseen event. It happens all the time. Unless, of course, the mother is happy. Secure. Respected." She picked up the contract and a pen. "I want joint custody. And I want a seat on the board of the Heath Family Trust. Not as your wife. As the mother of your heir."
The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees.
Corbin's face went blank. A terrifying, empty mask. He was calculating, assessing the new risk. She wasn't threatening the baby. She was threatening his legacy with a loophole he couldn't legally close.
He walked toward her, stopping inches away. He was furious, but his voice was dangerously calm.
"You are playing a very dangerous game."
"I learned from the best," Aurora said, holding his gaze. "You have until tomorrow morning to send over a revised contract. Otherwise, I might just take a long, stressful walk to a hostel in Queens."
She held his gaze for a long moment, then turned and walked to her room, the door clicking shut behind her, leaving him alone in the silent, cavernous room. She didn't know if she had won, but she had changed the battlefield.
The city was damp and cold. Aurora hadn't gone to a hostel. She had gone to the one place she thought might be safe, a small studio she kept under a corporate LLC, a secret escape pod from her family life.
The key card didn't work. The light blinked red.
The building's superintendent, a kind man named George, saw her from the lobby. "Ms. Paul? I'm sorry. The unit was sold this morning. New owners changed the locks."
"Sold?" Aurora asked, her blood running cold. "That's impossible. I own it."
"The LLC was dissolved, something about unpaid taxes," George said, looking uncomfortable. "Some big corporation bought the whole floor. Heath Global, I think."
Corbin. He hadn't just predicted her moves; he had cut them off before she could even make them.
She sat on a bench in a nearby park, the revised contract-which had been messengered to her that morning-feeling heavy in her bag. It granted her joint custody on paper, but was filled with legal traps.
Her phone rang. It was an unknown number. She answered, desperate.
"Ms. Paul? This is Dwayne Rivera." The name sent a jolt through her. Rivera was the sharpest divorce and trust attorney in the country. She had consulted with him once, a year ago, about her mother's estate.
"Mr. Rivera? How did you-"
"I represent the Heath Family Trust," he said, his voice clipped and professional. "Mr. Heath has retained my services to oversee the execution of your pre-nuptial agreement. He wanted me to inform you that any attempt to contest it would be... unwise. The trust's resources are, for all intents and purposes, infinite."
He wasn't her potential ally. He was Corbin's weapon. Another door slammed shut.
"I understand," she said, her voice hollow.
Kendall called next. Aurora didn't want to answer, but the call was a video chat, and she hit accept by accident.
"How's the street, sister?" Kendall laughed from the interior of what looked like a private jet.
"Go to hell," Aurora said.
"Preston just bought your old restoration studio," Kendall said. "He's turning it into a storage unit for his golf clubs. Just thought you should know."
Aurora hung up.
She looked at her stomach. This baby. It was her only piece on the board. Corbin wanted it, but he wanted it on his terms. Her threat about a "stressful pregnancy" had been a bluff, and she suspected he knew it. She needed a better one.
She stood up. She walked to a public library-she didn't want to use her cell. She logged onto a computer and searched for clinics in Queens. Not for an abortion. For a consultation. She needed a medical record, a piece of paper that proved she was considering it. A paper trail was leverage.
She found a number for a clinic on 34th Avenue. One that took same-day appointments.
"I need to book a consultation," she said into the payphone. "Today. Now."
In the back of a Rolls Royce Phantom, Corbin watched the red dot on his tablet moving through Queens.
"She's at the public library," his assistant, Marcus, said from the front seat. "She just called a clinic on 34th Avenue. 'Women's Choice'."
Corbin's hand tightened around the tablet until the screen distorted.
"Is it a reputable facility?" Corbin asked.
"It's... barely legal, sir. Cash only."
Corbin felt a surge of rage so pure it almost blinded him. She would risk her life-and his heir-in a chop shop rather than accept his terms. He had underestimated her capacity for self-destruction.
"Marcus," Corbin said, his voice dangerously low. "That clinic is part of our real estate portfolio, isn't it? Under the 'Urban Renewal Initiative' shell company?"
Marcus paused, checking a file. "Yes, sir. We acquired the building six months ago."
"Shut it down," Corbin ordered. "Effective immediately. Cite health code violations. Have our security team meet me there. No one gets in or out."
"Yes, sir."
Corbin watched the red dot move toward the subway.
"Drive," he ordered. "Fast."