"Where are we going?" she asked as the car turned off the highway, heading toward Queens instead of Manhattan.
"To get your things," Julian said, looking out the window. "And to settle your debts."
"No," she panicked. "You can't go there. My family... they're..."
"I know what they are," Julian cut her off.
They pulled up to the peeling gray house she grew up in. She could already hear shouting from inside. Her father's voice. Her brother Leo's manic laughter.
She unlocked the door, and the smell of stale beer and desperation hit her.
Her mother, Linda, was in the hallway. When she saw Elena, her face twisted.
"You little slut!" she screamed, raising her hand. "You ruined everything! Ryan called. The wedding is off! Who is going to pay Leo's gambling debt now?"
Silas caught her wrist in mid-air. He didn't twist it; he just held it there, an immovable wall.
"Don't touch her," Silas said calmly.
Her father, George, waddled out of the kitchen. He stopped when he saw Julian in the wheelchair.
"Who is this?" George demanded. "The cripple? You brought the cripple to my house?"
"This is my husband," Elena said, her voice shaking but loud. "We got married today."
"Husband?" Leo came down the stairs, looking high. "Does he have money? Because Ryan promised us a million."
"Five million," Julian said.
The room went silent. Her father's eyes bulged.
"What?"
"I will authorize a structured settlement of five million dollars," Julian said, his voice bored, as if he were buying a newspaper. "On one condition."
"Anything," her mother gasped, her anger instantly replaced by greed.
Silas pulled a document from his jacket.
"You sign this," Julian pointed to the paper. "It's a complete severance of parental rights and a restraining order. The payments will be managed by a blind trust. You violate the order, the money stops instantly. She ceases to be your daughter. She becomes a Sterling."
Elena stared at Julian. Five million? He said he was cut off.
"You can't do that," she whispered to him. "That's money you don't have yet."
"Hush," he said. "It's an annuity. I can manage the monthly flow."
Her father didn't even read the document. He snatched the pen. "Where do I sign?"
"Dad?" she choked out. "You're selling me?"
He didn't look at her. He was looking at the financial agreement Silas held. "You were always ungrateful, Elena. At least now you're useful."
He signed. Her mother signed. Leo signed.
Elena watched them. She watched the people who raised her trade her for a piece of paper without a second of hesitation. Something inside her snapped. The last thread of hope she had for being loved by them withered and died.
Silas collected the papers.
"Like dogs," Julian muttered.
"When do we get the first payment?" her father demanded.
"Let's go, Elena," Julian said, turning his chair. "You don't live here anymore."
She walked out of that house and she didn't look back. She got into the car, and for the first time in her life, she didn't cry. She felt cold. She felt hard.
Julian handed her a handkerchief. She hadn't realized a single tear had escaped.
"It gets better," he said.
"Does it?" she asked.
"No," he admitted. "But you get stronger."
The elevator opened directly into the penthouse.
Elena stepped out onto marble floors that reflected the city lights of Manhattan like a black mirror. The apartment was massive-cold, modern, and breathtakingly expensive.
"I thought you were cut off," she said, spinning in a slow circle. "This place is..."
"I bought this years ago through a holding company," Julian said. "It was a lucky investment I made before the accident. The family thinks it belongs to a foreign diplomat."
He wheeled himself into the living room, which was dominated by a glass wall overlooking Central Park.
"The master suite is yours," he said, pointing to a set of double doors.
"But... the accessibility features," she stammered. "You need the master."
"I don't sleep much," he said shortly. "And I don't share a bed. There's a guest room down the hall I've set up for myself."
He moved toward the kitchen island. "Water?"
"Please."
She watched him. He moved with an efficiency that was mesmerizing. He reached for a glass from the low shelf.
Crash.
The glass slipped from his fingers and shattered on the floor.
"Damn it," Julian hissed. He gripped the edge of the counter, his knuckles white. "Useless hands."
Her heart squeezed. She rushed over. "Don't touch it! You'll cut yourself."
She knelt down, picking up the shards. "It's okay, Julian. It's just a glass."
He looked down at her. His expression was tortured. "I used to run a billion-dollar fund. Now I can't even hold a cup of water."
She remembered the cold, hard braces she had felt earlier. The reality of his struggle hit her. "You're not useless," she said fiercely, looking up at him. "You saved me today."
He stared at her for a long moment. The air between them crackled. He reached out, his hand hovering over her cheek, then dropped it.
"Go to bed, Elena. It's been a long day."
She nodded, retreating to the master bedroom. The bathroom was like a spa. She stripped off the dress that smelled like the worst day of her life and stepped into the shower. She scrubbed her skin until it was raw, trying to wash away Ryan, her father, and the shame.
Out in the living room, the lights were off.
Julian sat in his wheelchair until he heard the water running.
Then, he stood up.
He didn't struggle. He didn't wobble. He stood to his full height of six-foot-three, stretching his back. He winced slightly-the welts from the cane were real enough-but his legs were powerful pillars of muscle.
He walked silently to the wall of monitors hidden behind a piece of abstract art. He tapped a key.
Screens flared to life. Stock tickers. Surveillance feeds from the Sterling estate. A live feed of Ryan arguing with Miss Chen.
He picked up his phone.
"Initiate Project Zero," Julian said into the phone. His voice was ice. "And Silas? Find out which teacher at Elena's school is leaking gossip to the press. I want her gone by morning."
"What about the accounts?" Silas asked.
"Just monitor them for now," Julian commanded. "Log every transaction Victoria makes. We build the trap before we spring it."
He hung up and walked to Elena's bedroom door. It was locked.
He smiled, a dark, predatory curve of his lips.
"Good girl," he whispered. "Keep your guard up."
He walked back to his chair and sat down, becoming the cripple once more.
The next morning, the silence in the penthouse was heavy.
Elena found Julian at the kitchen table, reading a newspaper. He was wearing a crisp gray shirt, his hair wet from a shower. He looked... domestic.
"I'm going to work," she announced, grabbing a piece of toast.
Julian lowered the paper. "Are you sure? The press is camping outside the school."
"I'm a history teacher, Julian. I have a curriculum. And if I hide, they win."
"Silas will drive you," was all he said.
When she arrived at St. Jude's Prep, the atmosphere was toxic. The security guard looked at her with pity. The students whispered behind their hands.
"Did you see the photos?"
"I heard she was pregnant with his baby."
"Gross."
She kept her head high and walked to the staff room.
Sarah, the math teacher who had always hated her, was holding a tabloid magazine. She slammed it on the table when Elena walked in.
"Well, if it isn't the bride of Frankenstein," Sarah sneered. "How much did he pay you? Or do you just have a thing for broken toys?"
"Excuse me?" Elena felt the blood rush to her face.
"You're a disgrace to this school," Sarah spat. "Parents are calling. They don't want a gold-digger teaching their kids ethics."
Just then, the principal, Mr. Henderson, hurried in. He looked pale.
"Miss Miller... I mean, Mrs. Sterling," he stammered.
"Am I fired?" she asked, bracing herself.
"Fired? Good heavens, no!" Henderson looked terrified. "We value your contribution immensely. In fact, we've received a... generous anonymous grant this morning, contingent on your continued employment and comfort."
Sarah's jaw dropped. "What? You said yesterday you were going to suspend her!"
Henderson turned to Sarah. His face hardened. "Pack your things, Sarah. You're let go."
"What?!" Sarah shrieked.
"We found evidence that you sold student information to the press," Henderson lied badly. "Security will escort you out."
Elena stood there, stunned, as Sarah was dragged away, screaming.
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number.
Have a good day, Mrs. Sterling. - J
She looked out the window. The black SUV was still at the curb. Silas gave a tiny wave.
When she got home that evening, Julian was exactly where she left him.
"How was work?" he asked without looking up.
"Strange," she said, sitting across from him. "My work bully got fired. And the principal gave me a raise. Did you...?"
"I made a few calls," Julian shrugged. "I may be an outcast, but I still know where the bodies are buried. Henderson has a secret fondness for offshore betting sites that aren't exactly legal. An old friend tipped me off."
It was a lie. She knew it was a lie. But looking at him-this man who couldn't even walk, yet could move mountains for her-she felt a lump in her throat.
"Thank you," she whispered.
She walked over and hugged him. She wrapped her arms around his neck and buried her face in his shoulder.
He stiffened. For a second, he didn't move. Then, slowly, his large hand came up and patted her back.
"You're my wife, Elena," he said, his voice rough against her ear. "No one hurts what is mine."