Eliza's hands clamped onto the door frame of the Maybach. Her knuckles turned bone-white, her fingers digging into the metal so hard she thought her nails would rip off. She wasn't getting out. She wasn't going in there.
Alistair sighed, a sound of utter impatience, and reached out to pry her fingers loose.
Clifford shoved the butler aside. "Useless," he muttered. He leaned into the car, his large hand closing over Eliza's shoulder. He dragged her out of the vehicle with zero effort.
Her legs gave out the second her heels hit the ground. She collapsed onto the cold, gray epoxy floor of the garage, the impact jarring her teeth.
The automatic glass doors of the clinic slid open. Three figures in blue scrubs and surgical masks pushed a stainless-steel gurney toward them at a brisk pace. The metallic clatter of the wheels on the floor sent a spike of pure terror through Eliza's stomach, making it cramp violently.
"No!" she screamed. She swung her arms wildly, trying to fight them off, but the doctors were practiced. They caught her wrists and forced her back onto the gurney.
Click. Click.
The heavy leather restraints snapped shut over her wrists and ankles. She was pinned down like an animal in a slaughterhouse.
Clifford stepped up to the side of the gurney. He looked down at her, his face utterly impassive. He reached over to a nearby tray and picked up a sterile scalpel. The overhead fluorescent lights glinted off the steel.
He brought the knife to her face. The freezing cold metal of the blade's back pressed against her cheek. He trailed it slowly down her jawline, over the pulse hammering in her neck, stopping just above her collarbone.
"If you make one more sound," he said, his voice a demonic whisper, "I won't wait for the doctor. I'll cut it out of you myself right here."
Eliza clamped her jaw shut. The tears she had been holding back broke free, streaming down the sides of her face and pooling in her ears. Her brain felt like it was short-circuiting from the fear.
Just as the tip of the blade touched the fabric of her sweater, a shrill, piercing ringtone shattered the silence of the garage.
Alistair pulled the phone from his pocket. He glanced at the screen, and all the blood drained from his face. He practically threw the phone at Clifford. "Sir. It's the Matriarch."
Clifford's eyes narrowed. He dropped the scalpel onto Eliza's chest and snatched the phone. He jabbed the speaker button, his jaw tight with irritation.
"What?" he barked.
An ancient, aristocratic voice crackled through the speaker. Eleonora Prescott did not sound angry; she sounded absolute. "Call off the surgery, Clifford. Keep the child."
Clifford's hand tightened around the phone until the case creaked. The Grays may have had the name, but everyone knew the Prescott money was what kept this empire afloat. Eleonora held all the cards. "Absolutely not," he snarled. "I am not letting a blind beggar carry a Gray heir."
Eleonora's cold laugh echoed in the concrete garage. "Then say goodbye to your trust fund. The board will freeze every cent by morning if you defy me."
The words trust fund hit him like a physical blow. His hand, which had been reaching for the scalpel again, froze in mid-air.
"Furthermore," Eleonora continued, her tone leaving no room for argument, "you will marry this woman immediately. I want legal legitimacy. No bastards. No questions."
Clifford roared in frustration. He hurled the phone across the garage, then grabbed the scalpel off Eliza's chest and threw it at the wall. The blade shattered with a sharp, metallic ping, the fragments raining down onto the epoxy floor.
Eliza lay on the gurney, her chest heaving. Marriage? The word echoed in her mind, completely absurd, completely insane.
And then, the pain hit.
The slight buzzing in her skull from the car erupted into a full-blown electrical storm. A surge of raw current slammed into her optic nerves. She squeezed her eyes shut against the agonizing pain, feeling like a thousand needles were being driven directly into her brain.
She writhed against the restraints, a low whimper escaping her lips. The doctors backed away, looking at Clifford for instructions, but he was busy fuming, his back turned to her.
The burning suddenly vanished, replaced by a bizarre, cooling sensation. It felt like ice water washing over her brain, soothing the fried nerves.
Eliza gasped. She opened her eyes a fraction of an inch.
The darkness... it wasn't complete anymore. A faint, painful flicker of white light, like a dying firefly, pulsed behind her eyes for a millisecond before vanishing. It was nothing, a phantom sensation born of pain, but it was the first crack in a decade of night. She turned her head toward the sound of ragged breathing. Standing three feet away, his chest heaving with rage, his jaw clenched tight, was a man whose presence radiated pure fury. She couldn't see the dark hair or the sharp, arrogant line of his profile, but she felt the weight of his gaze. For the first time in ten years, Eliza Christian felt a shift in the endless dark. She was facing Clifford Gray. And he had no idea her world was beginning to fracture.
The clinic's underground garage faded into the background as the Maybach sped south. Eliza didn't fight this time. She sat quietly in the back seat, her hands folded in her lap, her mind racing a million miles a minute while she pretended to be the same blind victim she had been an hour ago.
The car pulled into the underground garage of a sleek, glass tower in Tribeca. The penthouse.
The elevator doors opened directly into the living room. Clifford grabbed her arm and shoved her forward. Eliza stumbled, catching herself on the arm of a massive, L-shaped Italian leather sofa before falling onto the cushions.
She curled her legs beneath her, keeping her head down, her hair falling forward to hide her face. But behind the curtain of hair, her eyes were wide open. She was frantically, greedily cataloging every detail of the space. The floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Manhattan. The cold, minimalist furniture. The lack of any personal items. It was a cage for a king, not a home.
Marcus, the bodyguard, walked in behind them. He handed a thick manila folder and a tablet to Clifford. "The background check and the footage, sir."
Clifford walked over to the floor-to-ceiling window, the city lights glittering at his back. He pulled a cigar from his pocket, lit it with a gold lighter, and tapped the screen of the tablet.
Eliza watched him through her lashes. She could see the video playing on the screen-the hallway of the hotel where they had met. She saw herself, clearly drugged out of her mind, stumbling into the wrong room. She saw Clifford walking in behind her.
It proved she hadn't set him up. She was just a victim of circumstance.
Clifford let out a harsh, cynical breath. He tossed the tablet onto the glass coffee table. It landed with a sharp, expensive clatter. Even with the proof of her innocence right in front of him, the disgust on his face didn't fade. He still looked at her like she was trash stuck to his shoe.
A man in a dark suit stepped forward. He was one of the family lawyers, carrying a thick stack of papers. He dropped the document onto the table in front of Eliza with a heavy thud.
"Miss Christian," the lawyer droned, his voice as cold as the room. "This is the prenuptial agreement. You waive all rights to alimony, property, and the Gray surname. You are retained solely as a gestational carrier. Upon birth, you surrender the child and vacate the premises."
Eliza reached out, her hand trembling slightly. She pretended to feel the table for the pen, her fingers brushing over the paper. She found the pen, but she didn't sign yet. She just held it, her knuckles white.
Clifford's shadow fell over her. He had walked up silently, the scent of cigar smoke and cedar washing over her. He leaned down, his face inches from hers.
"Listen to me," he said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "This marriage is a leash. Once the baby is born, I will cut that leash and throw you out. Do not think for a second that you are anything more than a temporary inconvenience."
Eliza bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted blood. She wanted to look up. She wanted to stare directly into those cold, arrogant eyes and tell him exactly where he could shove his leash. But she wasn't ready. She was in the enemy's camp, surrounded by his people.
Instead, she forced her face into a mask of defeated submission. She bent over the paper and signed her name. Because she was "blind," the signature came out shaky and crooked, the tail of the 'n' dragging far past the line. It was perfect.
Clifford snatched the paper away from her. He gave her one last, dismissive look, then turned on his heel. "Marcus, lock the door."
The front door slammed shut, followed by the heavy, metallic thunk of a deadbolt engaging. The penthouse fell into absolute silence.
The second he was gone, Eliza's stomach revolted. The stress, the fear, the sheer willpower it took to sit there and take his abuse-it all crashed into her at once.
She bolted off the sofa. Using the mental map she had created from her quick glance around the room, she sprinted down the hallway. She pushed open the frosted glass door of the guest bathroom and fell against the marble vanity.
She gagged over the sink, her stomach heaving until nothing but bitter acid came up. When it was over, she reached out and turned the faucet. The cold water was a shock to her system. She splashed it over her face, washing away the sweat and the dried blood from her temple.
Slowly, Eliza raised her head.
She looked into the large, ornate mirror hanging above the sink.
The woman staring back at her was pale, her hair a mess, her eyes red-rimmed. But the eyes... they were no longer dead. They were no longer the blank, unfocused stare of a victim.
Her pupils contracted, focusing sharply on her own reflection. She could see the burst blood vessels in her sclera. She could see the faint, fading bruise on her jaw. She could see the cold, hard hatred burning in her own gaze.
She raised a hand, her fingertips touching the cool glass of the mirror, tracing the outline of her own face. It wasn't a hallucination. It was real. The reflection in the mirror was a stranger-pale, haunted, bruised. But beneath the fear, something else stirred. The same cold fury she'd felt as a child, listening to her family's home burn. They thought they could break her, just like the Pasks had. They were wrong. This time, she wasn't a helpless child. This time, she had a weapon inside her own head. A slow, chilling smile curved her lips. It wasn't a smile of happiness. It was a smile of pure, unadulterated intent.
She looked directly into her own eyes and mouthed the words without a sound.
"Game on, Mr. Gray."
Three days later, the Hamptons.
The Gray family estate sprawled across acres of manicured lawn that ended abruptly at the edge of the Atlantic Ocean. The sea wind howled off the water, whipping the expensive white roses adorning the makeshift altar on the lawn.
Eliza stood at the edge of the red carpet. She had been stuffed into a cheap, ill-fitting wedding dress that was at least one size too small, the fabric scratching her skin. She clutched her white cane in a death grip.
Through the thin, sheer veil covering her face, she let her eyes wander. She wasn't looking at the ocean. She was looking at the guests. The women in their haute couture, the men in their tailored blazers, sipping champagne while pretending they weren't staring at the freak show.
The officiant shifted uncomfortably, checking his watch for the fifth time. Sweat beaded on his forehead.
The groom was nowhere to be seen.
A few burly security guards stood near the altar, their faces blank, but even they looked embarrassed. The whispers from the crowd were getting louder, the fake pity curdling into open mockery.
"She actually thought she was going to be a bride."
"Incubator is more like it."
"Disgusting. A cripple buying her way in with a bastard."
Eliza's enhanced hearing caught every single word. She kept her face perfectly blank, her chin tucked down, playing the part of the terrified, helpless blind girl to perfection.
The click of expensive heels on the stone pathway silenced the crowd. Jordyn Alvarez glided onto the red carpet. She wore a stunning crimson gown that probably cost more than Eliza's entire life, a champagne flute dangling carelessly from her manicured fingers.
Jordyn stopped in the center of the aisle, her voice carrying over the wind with practiced sweetness. "Well, since Clifford is busy closing a multi-billion dollar deal, I think it's only fair we find someone to fill in. We can't expect the poor girl to walk alone, can we?"
She waved her hand toward the edge of the lawn, where a young Latino man in a janitor's uniform was emptying a trash can. "You. Come here. Walk her down the aisle."
A ripple of cruel laughter swept through the guests. It was a power play, a public humiliation designed to put Eliza in her place-below the help.
The janitor looked terrified. He wiped his hands on his pants, but two security guards grabbed his arms and shoved him toward the red carpet. He stopped in front of Eliza, his eyes glued to the floor.
Underneath the voluminous skirt of her wedding dress, Eliza's hands curled into fists. Her nails bit into her palms hard enough to draw blood.
But she took a deep breath, forcing her facial muscles to relax into a tragic, compliant smile. She reached out with her free hand, pretending to grope the air, until her fingers lightly brushed the janitor's rough, coarse sleeve.
Jordyn rolled her eyes at Eliza's submission. "Boring," she muttered, turning on her heel and sashaying back to her seat.
The wedding march began to play. Eliza walked slowly, guided by a man who smelled of bleach and sweat, toward an altar where no one was waiting for her.
With every step, she scanned the faces in the crowd. She memorized the face of every sneering socialite, every condescending tycoon. She burned their features into her enhanced memory.
They reached the altar. The officiant stammered through the vows, his voice tight with awkwardness. "Do you, Eliza, take Clifford-"
"I do," Eliza said. Her voice was soft, but it cut through the wind with absolute clarity.
There was no exchange of rings. There was no kiss. Just a lawyer stepping forward, slapping a marriage certificate onto a cheap folding table.
The janitor was pulled away. Eliza stood alone at the table. She picked up the pen, her hand hovering over the paper.
The moment the pen touched the paper, a flash of memory hit her. She was fifteen again, her head forced down onto a desk by Cade Pask, her hand forced to sign away her inheritance. The same suffocating helplessness. The same violation.
But this time, as she looked at the paper, she didn't feel helpless. She felt the cold, sharp edge of murder in her heart.
She pressed down, her hand trembling convincingly. The signature came out shaky and crooked, the tail of the 'n' dragging just below the line. The perfect, clumsy signature of a blind woman.
The lawyer snatched the paper away, his lip curling in distaste. "The union is legal," he announced flatly.
There was no applause. The guests immediately turned their backs on her, swarming the champagne tower and resuming their gossip.
Eliza stood alone on the wind-swept lawn, her cheap veil whipping around her face. She reached up and pulled the veil off, letting the sea breeze hit her skin.
She stared out at the churning gray waters of the Atlantic. In her mind, the neural interface hummed, sharpening her focus. She wasn't just looking; she was analyzing, memorizing every guard's patrol route she could spot, every camera she could see from her position. The hunt had begun.