Chapter 5

For the next three days, Corinna barely left Zane's studio.

Her workbench was a disaster zone of crumpled sketch paper, dull pencils, and half-empty coffee cups.

She sat hunched over the table, rubbing her temples. Every time she closed her eyes to visualize a design, the suffocating memories of the Hampton estate crept in. The cold walls, Carolee's sneers, Holland's indifferent back.

Zane walked over and physically snatched the pencil out of her hand.

"Stop," Zane said. He dropped a glossy ticket onto her sketchbook. "Brooklyn Art Fair. Go outside and breathe, or you are going to burn out before you even start."

Corinna let out a frustrated breath. She knew he was right. She grabbed her faded trench coat and walked out into the biting wind.

The art fair was packed. The noise of the crowd and the vibrant colors of the independent booths slowly loosened the tight knot in her chest.

She wandered through the aisles until she reached a small, poorly lit booth in the far corner.

Her eyes locked onto a raw, uncut stone resting on a piece of cheap velvet.

It was a black opal.

The surface was rough and dull, looking almost like a piece of dirty coal. But as Corinna shifted her weight, the overhead light caught a fracture in the stone.

Deep inside the dark core, a violent explosion of fiery red and electric blue light flashed.

Her breath hitched.

The stone was exactly like her. Buried in darkness, dismissed by everyone, but holding a blinding fire inside.

The inspiration hit her brain like a physical lightning bolt.

She pulled out her wallet, slammed all her remaining cash onto the table, and grabbed the stone. She did not even ask the vendor for a receipt. She turned and sprinted all the way back to the studio.

She burst through the door, ignoring Zane's surprised look. She threw off her coat and dropped into her chair.

She grabbed a fresh pencil. The graphite screamed against the paper as she drew frantic, aggressive lines.

The concept was "Cocoon."

She was going to use an incredibly dangerous technique. She would wrap the raw, unpolished black opal in a cage of hollowed-out gold wire. The gold had to be thin enough to look like fragile threads, but strong enough to hold the heavy stone.

It required absolute perfection. One slip of the hand, and the gold would snap.

She worked for ten hours straight. Her back screamed in agony. Her vision blurred.

As she pushed the engraving tool into the gold wire, her hand trembled slightly from exhaustion. The sharp steel blade slipped.

It sliced deep into the side of her index finger.

Blood welled up instantly, dripping onto the metal bench.

Zane rushed over with a first aid kit. "Corinna, stop! You need to rest."

"Do not touch it!" Corinna snapped. Her eyes were wild, completely consumed by the work.

She wrapped a piece of gauze tightly around her bleeding finger, picked up the tool, and kept carving. She could not feel the pain. She only felt the fire in her chest.

As the sun began to rise, casting a gray light through the window, she made the final polishing pass.

She set the tool down.

The piece was finished. The dark, rough opal was trapped inside a vicious, beautiful cage of gold thorns. But the gold could not hide the stone. Through the gaps in the cage, the fiery light of the opal burned brighter than ever.

Zane stood behind her. He sucked in a sharp breath.

"My god," Zane whispered. "This is better than anything you did at Van Cleef."

Corinna leaned back in her chair. Her muscles felt like jelly, but a deep, pure satisfaction settled in her stomach. She was back.

She took a high-resolution photo of the necklace, uploaded it to the competition portal, and hit confirm.

Across the river, in the towering glass monolith of the Warner Group headquarters, Alex sat at his desk.

He was scrolling through the preliminary submissions for the jewelry competition. Hundreds of thumbnails blurred past his tired eyes.

Suddenly, his finger stopped on the mouse.

He clicked on an image titled "Cocoon." The design was so aggressive, so breathtakingly unique, that it made him sit up straight.

He glanced down at the designer's name in the corner of the screen.

Corinna Massey.

Alex blinked hard. He rubbed his eyes and looked again. The name did not change.

His stomach dropped. He hit print, grabbed the paper from the tray, and ran toward the private elevator.

He bypassed the secretary and pushed open the heavy oak doors of the top-floor office.

Holland was sitting at the head of a long table, listening to three nervous executives give a quarterly report.

Alex ignored them. He walked straight up to Holland and placed the printed design and the registration form face up on the desk.

Holland frowned, deeply annoyed by the interruption. He waved his hand, dismissing the executives. They scrambled out of the room.

Holland looked down at the paper.

His eyes scanned the intricate gold work of the necklace. His usual expression of bored superiority vanished. His jaw tightened.

Then, he saw the name.

Holland's breath caught in his throat. He leaned forward, staring at the paper as if it were a bomb. He knew she had studied design in Paris before they married, but he had always assumed it was nothing more than resume-padding-a frivolous hobby meant to make a socialite look cultured. He had never imagined that the lines she drew possessed such terrifying power and vitality. This was absolutely not the work of an amateur. The sheer genius radiating from the page made him feel a sudden, violent loss of control. The woman he thought was a useless, money-hungry ornament had created a masterpiece. A violent wave of shock and confusion crashed through his chest.

He grabbed his desk phone and slammed his finger onto the intercom button.

"Alex," Holland's voice was a low, dangerous growl. "Find out exactly where Corinna has been and what she has been doing since she left my house. I want every detail."

Chapter 6

Holland stood by the floor-to-ceiling window of his office. He looked down at the tiny yellow cabs crawling through Manhattan.

He rolled an unlit cigar between his fingers. The tobacco leaves crunched under his tight grip. His chest felt tight, filled with an unfamiliar, crawling irritation.

The intercom on his desk buzzed.

"Mr. Warner," the head of the finance department said. His voice trembled slightly. "The monthly trust fund transfer to your wife's account just bounced back. The account has been permanently closed."

Holland's hand jerked. The cigar snapped in half. Shreds of brown tobacco spilled onto the pristine carpet.

He stared at the speaker. Closed.

He had been absolutely certain that her dramatic exit and the divorce papers were just a negotiation tactic. A desperate play for his attention. But closing the account meant she was cutting off her only source of oxygen.

A sudden, sharp spike of panic hit his stomach. He hated the feeling. He immediately crushed it down, replacing it with cold anger.

The office door opened. Alex walked in, carrying a thick manila folder. He looked pale and sweating.

"Sir, the investigation report," Alex said, placing it on the desk.

Holland walked over and flipped the folder open.

The first photograph showed Corinna standing in the freezing rain in Brooklyn. She was dragging a scuffed suitcase up the steps of a decaying, red-brick apartment building.

Holland's breath hitched. The image of her in that filthy environment felt like a physical punch to his gut.

He flipped the page rapidly.

There were pawn shop receipts for her designer clothes. And then, a massive hospital bill from Mount Sinai.

Holland's eyes scanned the numbers. It was a deposit for an experimental, life-saving treatment for Jaycob.

His blood ran cold. He did not know. He had no idea she was pushed so close to the edge that she had to sell her clothes to keep her brother breathing.

He slammed his hand onto the desk.

"Why was I not informed that her brother's condition had deteriorated?" Holland yelled, his voice echoing off the glass walls.

Alex took a step back, swallowing hard. "Sir... a year ago, you gave a direct order to the security and medical liaison teams. You told them to block all communications and requests from the Massey family. You said you were tired of her using him as an excuse."

Holland froze.

The memory hit him. He had said those exact words to punish her for asking him to attend a charity dinner with her.

A heavy, suffocating wave of guilt rose in his throat. It tasted like ash.

But his massive ego, built over thirty years of absolute control, instantly threw up a wall of defense. It was not his fault. She should have begged harder.

He forced his eyes back to the report, desperate to find something to justify his anger.

He found it on the fourth page.

It was a surveillance photo taken through a basement window. Corinna was standing shoulder-to-shoulder with a man in a jewelry studio. The man was Zane.

In the photo, Corinna was smiling. It was a bright, genuine, glowing smile.

Holland stared at her mouth. In three years of marriage, she had never smiled at him like that. She only ever looked at him with careful, measured obedience.

A vicious, ugly spike of jealousy ripped through his chest. It burned like acid.

He threw the photo onto the desk.

"So this is why she is so brave," Holland sneered, his voice dripping with venom. "She found a new sponsor."

He pulled open the bottom drawer of his desk. He bypassed the corporate seals and pulled out a thin, old file. It was his psychological evaluation from his childhood at The Beacon, the elite psychiatric facility his mother had locked him in.

Tucked inside the file was a yellowed piece of drawing paper.

It was a crude crayon drawing of a little girl holding a sunflower in a dark room. In the bottom right corner, there was a single, childish letter: C.

Holland traced the letter with his thumb.

That little girl was the only person who had ever looked at him with pure kindness. She was his anchor in the dark.

He looked from the drawing to the photo of Corinna smiling at Zane. The contrast twisted his stomach. The girl in his memory was pure. The woman he married was a deceitful, vain opportunist.

He had absolutely no idea that the girl who drew the sunflower and the woman in the photo were the exact same person.

He shoved the drawing back into the drawer and slammed it shut. The loud bang echoed in the room.

His eyes turned dead and calculating. He was the king of Wall Street. No one walked away from him.

"Alex," Holland said, his voice dropping to a terrifyingly calm whisper. "Find out who supplies the raw materials for Zane's studio. Buy them out or threaten them. I want his entire supply chain severed by tomorrow morning."

Alex nodded nervously. "Yes, sir."

"I want her to realize that out there, she is nothing," Holland said to the empty room as Alex left.

He picked up the printout of Corinna's "Cocoon" design. He fed it into the paper shredder next to his desk.

He watched the sharp blades tear the beautiful design into tiny, meaningless strips.

Chapter 7

The afternoon sun hit the cast-iron facades of Soho, casting long, sharp shadows across the cobblestone street.

Corinna stood on the sidewalk, holding a rolled-up architectural floor plan. She looked up at the wide glass windows of an empty commercial space.

"The natural light here is perfect for a showroom," Corinna said. Her eyes were bright, mapping out display cases in her mind.

Zane walked up beside her. He handed her a plastic cup of iced Americano.

"It is expensive, but with the money you made from the auction, we can cover the first six months of rent," Zane said.

A dry, brown leaf drifted down from the tree above them and landed on Corinna's shoulder. Zane casually reached over and brushed it off.

It was a completely innocent, fleeting touch.

Half a block away, parked illegally next to a fire hydrant, sat a black SUV with heavily tinted windows.

Inside, Alex sat in the driver's seat. He held a camera with a massive telephoto lens. He pressed the shutter button. The camera clicked rapidly, capturing the exact moment Zane's hand touched Corinna's shoulder.

Alex immediately synced the camera to his phone and hit send.

Three miles away, in a glass-walled conference room at the Warner Group, Holland sat at the head of a massive oak table.

He was in the middle of a hostile takeover negotiation. The room was dead silent as the opposing CEO sweated through his suit.

Holland's phone buzzed against the wood. The screen lit up.

He glanced down. The thumbnail image loaded.

Holland saw Zane's hand on Corinna's shoulder. He saw the relaxed, comfortable way she stood next to him.

The temperature in the conference room seemed to plummet ten degrees.

Holland's jaw clenched so hard his teeth ground together. The muscles in his neck jumped. His pupils contracted sharply. He placed his phone face down on the polished wood with terrifying precision. The opposing CEO stammered, trying to continue his pitch, sweating under the sudden, suffocating pressure radiating from the head of the table. Holland raised a single hand, his fingers completely rigid. "Pause," Holland said, his voice dropping to a freezing, dead calm. "Ten minutes." He stood up slowly, his movements perfectly controlled, but his knuckles were stark white. He did not look at the executives. He walked out of the room with measured, heavy footsteps, locking his blind, murderous rage entirely behind his ribs until the glass doors sealed shut behind him.

He walked into a private alcove and hit dial.

"Alex," Holland barked, his voice vibrating with raw fury. "Find out who owns the building they are standing in front of. Double whatever rent they are offering. I want that space off the market in five minutes."

Back in Soho, Corinna took a sip of her coffee. She turned to the real estate broker standing next to them.

"We will take it," Corinna said.

The broker beamed. He pulled a thick lease agreement from his leather briefcase and handed her a silver pen.

Corinna uncapped the pen. She pressed the tip to the signature line.

The broker's phone suddenly erupted in a loud, obnoxious ringtone. He held up a finger, apologizing, and answered it.

Corinna watched the broker's face. In less than ten seconds, the man's fake tan seemed to drain away, leaving him pale and sweating.

"Yes. Yes, understood," the broker squeaked. He hung up the phone.

He reached out and physically snatched the contract out from under Corinna's pen.

"I am so sorry," the broker stammered, refusing to make eye contact. "The owner just pulled the listing. It is no longer available."

Corinna frowned. "I can offer twenty percent above the asking price."

The broker shook his head rapidly. He backed away. "It is not about the money, miss. You... you pissed off someone who owns half this city. I cannot do business with you."

The broker turned and practically ran down the street.

Corinna stood frozen. The paper cup in her hand crinkled as her grip tightened.

She knew exactly who owned half the city.

Zane kicked a trash can on the sidewalk. "Is this Warner? I will call my uncle. We can fight this legally."

"No," Corinna said sharply. "Do not drag your family into this. You cannot fight his capital with lawyers. He will bury you in injunctions for years."

She closed her eyes. She took a deep breath, pulling the cold city air into her lungs.

When she opened her eyes, the last trace of fear was gone. She was backed into a corner, and the only way out was through him.

She pulled her phone from her pocket. She dialed Holland's number.

He answered on the first ring.

"Did you enjoy the walk in Soho?" Holland asked. His voice was smooth, dripping with arrogant satisfaction. "Are you ready to stop playing this ridiculous game and come home?"

Corinna let out a short, hollow laugh.

"Thirty minutes," Corinna said, her voice like cracking ice. "Fifth Avenue and 59th Street. Show up, or I swear to God, I will make you regret it."

She hung up before he could say another word.

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