Ardella stopped in front of the heavy, soundproof door of the VIP room. She took a deep breath, trying to force her racing pulse back to a normal rhythm. Her chest was still tight from seeing Ethelbert.
She pulled her phone out of her pocket. She switched the ringer off and opened the camera app, setting it to record in high definition.
She reached out and wrapped her fingers around the cold metal door handle. She pressed down on it, just an inch.
The door cracked open. The thick soundproofing broke, and the loud, obnoxious laughter from inside the room flooded her ears.
She looked through the narrow gap. Braden Coffey was slouched back on a leather sofa. His expensive shirt was unbuttoned halfway down his chest.
A Broadway actress named Scarlett was straddling Braden's lap. She was holding a crystal flute of champagne, giggling loudly.
A hedge fund manager standing near the table raised his crystal glass, the amber liquid swirling inside. He leaned in, a sly, condescending smirk playing on his lips. Instead of a blatant insult, he chose the sophisticated cruelty typical of Wall Street. He yelled over the heavy bass of the music, "Braden, my man, you're really taking one for the team with this merger! Heard the Price family name carries a lot more debt than prestige these days. I just hope the girl is worth the charity!"
Braden let out a loud, arrogant laugh. He did not try to hide his disgust for Ardella.
Ardella kept her hand perfectly still. She pressed the red record button on her screen, zooming in slightly to capture Braden's face in clear focus.
Braden kept talking. He bragged to the room that he was only marrying Ardella to keep his father happy for the corporate merger. He said that once the papers were signed, they would live completely separate lives.
Scarlett pouted. She hit Braden lightly on the chest and asked if he thought his new fiancée was prettier than her.
Braden grabbed Scarlett's chin. He laughed and called Ardella a boring nun. He said he had absolutely no desire to ever touch her.
The men in the room erupted into louder, uglier laughter.
Ardella watched the screen. A cold thrill ran through her veins. She felt the exact satisfaction of a hunter watching a trap snap shut on a careless animal.
She kept the camera rolling. She needed to make sure every single word that violated their prenuptial morality clause was captured perfectly.
Braden pulled Scarlett down and started kissing her aggressively. His hands moved all over her body in plain sight of everyone.
Ardella decided she had enough. The evidence was destructive enough to ruin him. She tapped the screen and stopped the recording.
Her fingers moved quickly. She uploaded the video file directly to her encrypted cloud drive. She watched the progress bar hit one hundred percent.
She put her phone back into her bag. She closed her eyes for one second and adjusted the muscles in her face.
When she opened her eyes, the cold hunter was gone. In its place was the perfect mask of a shocked, heartbroken, and devastated fiancée.
Ardella shoved the heavy door hard. The wood slammed against the inside wall with a loud bang.
The laughter in the room died instantly. Every single pair of eyes snapped toward the doorway.
Braden shoved Scarlett off his lap. The arrogant smirk vanished from his face, replaced by pure, naked panic.
Scarlett let out a high-pitched scream. She scrambled to pull up the straps of her dress.
Ardella walked into the room. Her heels clicked loudly against the hardwood floor. Each step sounded like a hammer hitting an anvil in the dead silence.
The hedge fund manager who had been laughing a minute ago slowly lowered his glass. He took a step backward, trying to blend into the dark wallpaper.
Braden stuttered. He choked on his words, calling out Ardella's name and waving his hands, trying to say it was all a misunderstanding.
Ardella stopped in front of the low glass table. She looked down at Braden, who was still sitting on the sofa looking like a cornered rat.
Her eyes were slightly red. Her lower lip trembled just the right amount. She played the role of the betrayed woman flawlessly.
She reached down and picked up a glass of iced martini from the table. She locked her cold eyes onto Braden's sweating face.
Ardella did not hesitate. She flicked her wrist and threw the entire glass of iced martini directly into Braden's face.
The freezing liquid and the green olives hit him right on the bridge of his nose. The alcohol dripped down his chin and soaked into his expensive, unbuttoned shirt.
Someone in the back of the room gasped. No one moved. They all stared in shock.
Braden jumped up from the sofa. He wiped the stinging alcohol from his eyes. His face turned bright red with rage, and he raised his hand high, ready to strike her.
Ardella did not step back. She stepped forward. She tilted her chin up, and her eyes turned into two shards of black ice.
Braden's hand froze in the air. The sheer violence in her stare terrified him. He slowly lowered his arm, his chest heaving.
Ardella reached into her bag and pulled out her phone. She turned the screen toward Braden and hit play.
The high-definition video started. Braden's voice filled the quiet room, clearly stating his disgust for the Coffey family merger and his plans to cheat.
Braden's face went from red to a sickly, pale white. He lunged forward, trying to snatch the phone from her hand.
Ardella easily stepped to the side. She let out a dry laugh and told him that ten copies were already backed up to the cloud.
She leaned in closer. She lowered her voice so only he could hear. She whispered the exact dollar amount TMZ would pay for this video.
Braden ground his teeth together. He asked her how much money she wanted to keep her mouth shut.
Ardella looked at him with pure disgust. She told him she did not want a single cent of his family's dirty money.
She gave him her only condition. Braden had to go to the press himself. He had to announce the end of the engagement and take full public responsibility for the breakup.
Braden shook his head frantically. He said his father would break his legs if he was the one to ruin the merger.
Ardella shrugged her shoulders. She tapped her screen, pretending to open an email draft to a senior reporter at the Wall Street Journal.
Braden broke. He grabbed her wrist, his fingers digging into her skin. He begged her to give him a few days to figure something out.
Ardella ripped her arm away from him. She pulled a sanitizing wipe from her bag and slowly wiped the skin where he had touched her.
She gave him her final ultimatum. He had exactly seventy-two hours to clean up his mess, or she would ruin him.
She dropped the used wipe directly into the ice bucket on the table. She turned around and walked toward the door.
As she passed Scarlett, Ardella kept her eyes fixed straight ahead, not sparing the actress a single glance. The adrenaline in her veins was still pumping hot and fast. It was far too dangerous to acknowledge her in a room full of hostile witnesses; one wrong look could unravel the entire trap she had just sprung. She pushed through the heavy brass doors, leaving the suffocating heat of the VIP room behind.
Once she stepped out into the quiet corridor, the tension in her shoulders dropped a fraction. She felt a brief, sharp vibration in her coat pocket. Pulling out her secondary phone, she shielded the screen with her palm and saw a text from an encrypted number: "Job done. Awaiting payment. -S." Ardella's lips curled into a faint, satisfied smile. She deleted the message instantly, watching the letters vanish into the digital void. The final payment for Scarlett's acting services would be wired by morning.
Ardella walked down the hallway with the confident stride of a winner.
She only made it a few steps before her muscles locked up. Coming around the corner of the hallway was a group of men.
Leading them was Ethelbert Stone.
His personal assistant, Leo, was walking slightly ahead, whispering something into Ethelbert's ear.
There was nowhere to hide. Ardella forced her legs to keep moving. She stared straight ahead, trying to pretend she did not see him.
As the distance between them closed, the scent hit her. It was his custom cologne. A heavy, dark mix of oud and cedarwood.
The smell bypassed her brain and went straight to her nervous system. Her knees went weak. Her stomach dropped.
The hallway was narrow. They were about to pass each other, and the air between them grew so thick she could barely breathe.
Ardella stopped breathing. She pressed her shoulder blades hard against the velvet wallpaper of the hallway, trying to put as much space between them as possible.
Ethelbert did not slow down. His long, powerful legs moved silently across the wool carpet.
In the fraction of a second before they passed each other, Ethelbert shifted his body just an inch toward her.
The cold metal of his suit cufflink brushed against the fabric of her trench coat. It made a tiny, scratching sound.
Ardella's heart violently contracted. The physical contact sent a shockwave through her body. Her brain instantly flashed back to two years ago, to the penthouse, when his hands had roughly ripped the buttons off her shirt.
She kept her eyes glued to the pattern on the floor. She prayed for him to just walk past her.
Ethelbert walked by without looking at her. He treated her like she was nothing but empty air.
Leo, walking behind him, gave her a small, polite nod. But Ardella saw the complicated pity in the assistant's eyes.
She did not nod back. She sped up her walking, desperate to escape the hallway that was now completely filled with Ethelbert's scent.
She thought she was safe. Then, a loud, greasy voice echoed from the other end of the hall. It was the hedge fund manager from Braden's room.
The man ran out into the hall, trying to suck up to Ethelbert. "Mr. Stone! Sorry you had to see that little drama just now!"
Ardella froze in her tracks. A layer of cold sweat broke out on her spine.
She heard Ethelbert stop walking. His deep, cello-like voice echoed in the quiet space.
"What drama?" Ethelbert asked. His tone was completely flat.
The manager pointed a sweaty finger at Ardella's back. He laughed and said it was just the pathetic woman who got cheated on by the Coffey kid.
Ardella felt a heavy, crushing stare land on her back. It felt like a physical weight pressing down on her shoulders.
She stood frozen. Her fingers gripped the leather handles of her Hermes bag so hard her knuckles turned white.
The manager kept talking. He asked if Ethelbert knew the notorious niece of the Price family.
The hallway went dead silent. The air was sucked out of the room.
A few seconds passed. Then, Ethelbert let out a low, quiet laugh. There was zero warmth in the sound.
He spoke very slowly, his voice dripping with absolute disdain. "I don't know her."
Those four words were like cold knives plunging straight into Ardella's chest.
She knew he would say that. She expected it. But hearing him deny her existence so brutally still caused a physical pain that made her throat close up.
The manager laughed, agreeing that a low-class gold digger was beneath Mr. Stone's notice.
Ardella ground her teeth together. She forced the burning tears back down her throat.
She did not turn around. She straightened her spine, lifted her chin, and walked proudly toward the elevator.
The metal doors opened. She stepped inside and started hitting the close button over and over again.
Just as the doors were about to shut, she looked through the narrowing gap. Her eyes met Ethelbert's.
There was no indifference in his ice-blue eyes now. There was only a bottomless, dark obsession and a terrifying possessiveness.
The doors slammed shut. Ardella slumped against the cold metal wall of the elevator. She gasped for air, her chest heaving as if she had just survived a car crash.