Chapter 6

Carley didn't sleep. She lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, her body rigid, waiting for the sound of Barron's door opening again. It never did.

When the sun finally rose, she felt hollowed out, her eyes burning with exhaustion.

She dragged herself out of bed. She couldn't let last night ruin today. Today was her only way out.

She stood in front of the mirror and applied her makeup with aggressive precision, covering the dark circles under her eyes. She pulled on a sharp, navy blue pencil skirt and a crisp white silk blouse. She locked her hair into a tight, professional bun. The woman in the mirror looked cold, competent, and untouchable.

Downstairs, the house was quiet.

"Morning," Pippa mumbled from the kitchen island, chewing on a piece of toast. "Barron left before the sun came up. Betty said he went straight to a breakfast meeting. Guess his big move back home didn't change his workaholic habits."

Carley's stomach gave a sickening lurch, but she forced her face to remain blank. He moved back to trap me, caught me in my pajamas, humiliated me, and left for work like nothing happened.

She grabbed a travel mug of coffee. "I have to go. Hank is waiting."

The drive to Manhattan was a blur of nervous energy. Carley sat in the back of the Lincoln, reviewing her notes on the Vance Group. They were a top-tier investment firm. Getting a job here meant a massive salary, a signing bonus, and the immediate financial power to walk out of the Newton estate.

The Lincoln pulled up to a towering glass skyscraper in the Financial District.

Carley stepped out. The cold wind off the Hudson River whipped against her face, clearing her head. She walked into the massive marble lobby, her heels clicking sharply against the floor.

The interview was on the 45th floor.

She sat in the waiting area, her palms sweating. When her name was called, she stood up, smoothed her skirt, and walked into the glass-walled conference room.

Gregory Vance, a Senior Vice President with silver hair and sharp, assessing eyes, sat at the head of the table.

For the next hour, Carley was flawless. She answered every technical question with precision. She deflected the stress-test questions with calm confidence. She pushed the memory of Barron's cold eyes out of her brain and focused entirely on the numbers.

When the interview ended, Gregory Vance stood up. A genuine, impressed smile broke across his face.

"Miss Holman, I have to say, your resume is excellent, but your presence in person is even better," Vance said, extending his hand. "We have a few more candidates to see, but expect a call from HR very soon."

Carley shook his hand, relief washing over her in a massive, dizzying wave. "Thank you, Mr. Vance. I look forward to it."

She walked out of the conference room. Her legs felt light. She had done it. She was going to get the job. She was going to be free.

She walked down the wide, carpeted hallway toward the elevator bank.

She pressed the down button. The digital display above the metal doors lit up, counting down the floors. 48... 47... 46...

Ding.

The polished steel doors slid open.

Carley took a step forward, a smile still lingering on her lips.

The smile died instantly. Her blood turned to ice in her veins.

Standing in the dead center of the elevator, surrounded by three older men in expensive suits, was Barron Newton.

He wore a charcoal suit that fit him like armor. His hands were resting casually in his pockets. He was listening to the man next to him speak, his face a mask of bored authority.

Carley's lungs seized. She couldn't breathe. She couldn't move. What was he doing here?

Barron's eyes shifted. They locked onto Carley standing in the hallway.

For a fraction of a second, his gaze dropped to her fitted skirt, then snapped back up to her face. His expression didn't change. He looked at her with the blank, chilling indifference of a stranger.

Carley's feet were glued to the carpet. She couldn't step into that metal box with him. Her claustrophobia flared, making the hallway spin.

"Ah, Mr. Newton!"

Gregory Vance's voice boomed from behind Carley.

Carley flinched as Vance walked past her, his posture instantly transforming from the authoritative interviewer to a subservient subordinate. Vance practically bowed as he approached the elevator.

"We weren't expecting you on this floor today, sir," Vance said, his voice dripping with the kind of absolute subservience reserved for the man whose holding company had just acquired a forty percent stake in their firm.

Sir? Carley's stomach plummeted into a bottomless pit. Barron wasn't just a visitor. He had absolute power here.

Vance turned, noticing Carley still standing frozen in the hall. His face lit up.

"Mr. Newton, perfect timing," Vance beamed, gesturing toward Carley. "This is Carley Holman. She just interviewed for the senior analyst position. Brilliant girl. Highly recommend her."

Barron's eyes slowly slid from Vance back to Carley. The silence in the elevator was heavy, dark, and lethal.

Vance chuckled, oblivious to the sudden drop in temperature. He looked back and forth between them. "Actually, Miss Holman, you share a family name with Mr. Newton's adoptive family. Do you two know each other?"

The question hung in the air like a live grenade.

Every man in the elevator turned to look at Carley.

Barron stared at her. His left hand came out of his pocket. He slowly reached over and adjusted the cuff of his right sleeve. It was his signature move-the physical manifestation of him taking absolute control of a situation.

He was waiting for her answer.

Chapter 7

The air in the hallway turned to lead. Carley's heart hammered against her ribs so violently she thought the men in the elevator could hear it.

Do you two know each other?

Carley stared into Barron's dark, bottomless eyes. If she said yes, if she admitted she was his adoptive sister, her professional life would instantly become entangled with him. He would have power over her career. He would use what happened last night-the pajamas, the humiliation-to crush her reputation here. He would never let her escape.

She had to cut the cord. Now.

Carley dug her fingernails into the leather of her portfolio. She forced her facial muscles to relax. She pulled her lips back into a polite, entirely hollow smile.

She shifted her gaze away from Barron and looked directly at Gregory Vance.

"I'm sorry, Mr. Vance," Carley said. Her voice was steady, crisp, and terrifyingly clear. "You must be mistaken. I don't know this Mr. Newton."

The silence that followed was absolute.

It felt as if the oxygen had been sucked out of the corridor.

Gregory Vance blinked, his smile faltering. He looked confused. "Oh. I... I apologize. I just assumed..."

Carley didn't look back at the elevator. She could feel the heat radiating from it. She could feel a gaze so sharp and furious it felt like a physical blade pressing against her throat.

Barron didn't say a word.

He stepped out of the elevator.

The men around him quickly parted, giving him a wide berth. He walked straight toward Carley.

Every instinct in Carley's body screamed at her to run, to step back, but she forced her feet to stay planted on the carpet. She kept her eyes fixed straight ahead, refusing to look at him.

As Barron passed her, he didn't alter his path.

His broad shoulder slammed into hers.

It wasn't a brush. It was a deliberate, hard physical strike.

The impact knocked Carley off balance. She stumbled sideways, her ankle twisting slightly in her heel. She gasped, catching her balance just before she hit the wall.

Barron didn't stop. He didn't look back. He kept walking down the hall, his long strides eating up the distance, leaving a wake of freezing terror behind him.

The executives scrambled out of the elevator to follow him.

Gregory Vance stood in the hallway, staring at Barron's retreating back, and then turned slowly to look at Carley.

The warmth and admiration that had been in Vance's eyes just three minutes ago were completely gone. They were replaced by a cold, calculating distance. He had just seen the most powerful man in the building intentionally shoulder-check this job applicant.

"Well, Miss Holman," Vance said, his voice flat and dismissive. "We have your contact information. We will let you know our decision."

He didn't offer his hand. He turned and walked away.

Carley stood alone in the hallway. Her shoulder throbbed from the impact. Her stomach twisted into a violent knot.

She had just lost the job. She knew it with absolute certainty.

She walked into the empty elevator and pressed the lobby button. As the metal doors closed, her knees finally gave out. She leaned heavily against the steel wall, her breathing ragged. She had stood up to him. She had denied him. But the victory tasted like ash in her mouth.

She walked out of the Vance Group building into the glaring Manhattan sunlight. Her body felt numb.

She pulled her phone from her purse and dialed Clara's number.

"I ruined it," Carley whispered the second Clara answered. Her voice cracked.

She explained everything-the elevator, the question, the lie, the physical hit.

Clara was silent for a long moment. "Carley... you did the right thing. You can't let him think he owns every part of your life. You had to draw a line."

"He's going to destroy me, Clara. He's going to make sure I never get a job in this city."

Before Clara could answer, a loud beep sounded in Carley's ear. Call waiting.

Carley pulled the phone away and looked at the screen. It was Betty, the housekeeper.

A fresh wave of dread washed over her. She clicked over. "Hello?"

"Miss Holman," Betty's voice was stiff and formal. "I am calling to inform you that Madam Eleanor has requested a family dinner tonight at Seaview Manor. Your attendance is mandatory."

Carley stopped walking. The sidewalk spun beneath her feet.

Eleanor Newton. The matriarch. The terrifying, iron-fisted grandmother of the Newton family who rarely left her estate in the Hamptons.

A family dinner. Tonight. Just hours after she publicly humiliated Barron.

This wasn't a dinner. It was an execution.

"I understand, Betty," Carley choked out. "I'll be there."

She hung up the phone. Her lungs restricted, the claustrophobia gripping her chest in a vise. Barron wasn't just going to ruin her career. He was bringing the entire family down on her head.

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