Chapter 2

My phone buzzed on the nightstand, pulling me from a fitful sleep. Caleb's name flashed across the screen, and my heart skipped despite everything that had happened between us.

"I'm sorry for everything, Naomi. I've been terrible lately. Can we meet? I want to make things right."

I stared at the message, my thumb hovering over the screen. After weeks of coldness and distance, this sudden apology felt like water in a desert. Maybe he'd finally realized what he was throwing away.

"The Grande Pearl Hotel, Room 1508. 8 PM. I have a surprise for you."

A surprise. My pulse quickened. Could this be the romantic gesture I'd been waiting for? The Caleb I remembered from before Jazmin returned?

"Okay," I texted back, trying to sound casual despite the hope blooming in my chest.

I spent hours getting ready, selecting a deep blue dress that brought out my eyes—the one Caleb had always loved. If this was our chance to reconnect, I wanted everything to be perfect.

The Grande Pearl was one of the city's most exclusive hotels. As I stepped into the elegant lobby, I smoothed my dress nervously. What if this was another disappointment? Another excuse?

I took the elevator to the fifteenth floor, my reflection in the polished doors showing flushed cheeks and bright eyes. The hallway was quiet, plush carpet muffling my footsteps as I approached Room 1508.

I knocked softly, then harder when no one answered immediately.

The door swung open, and I froze.

A man stood before me—tall, with dark eyes that widened in surprise. Not Caleb.

"Naomi?" he said, his voice deep and accented.

Before I could respond, a flash went off to my right—bright and startling in the dim hallway. Then another. And another.

"Who are you?" I demanded, stepping back as the stranger—Hugo Mendoza, I realized with a jolt—looked equally confused.

"I—" he began, but never finished.

"Perfect timing," came a familiar voice behind me.

I turned to see Caleb striding down the hallway, Jazmin clinging to his arm. His face was cold, calculating—nothing like the man who'd sent that apologetic text.

"What is this?" I whispered, though I was beginning to understand.

Caleb held up his phone, swiping through images that had just been sent to him. Photos of me knocking on Hugo's door. Photos of us standing in the doorway. Photos that could tell any story Caleb wanted them to.

"You've put me in quite a position, Naomi," he said, his voice eerily calm. "These will be all over social media by morning unless you make things right."

My hands trembled as I pointed at him. "You set me up?"

"It's not that simple," Caleb replied, glancing at Jazmin, who watched with barely concealed satisfaction. "Hugo here needs a wife. He's dying, you see. Family requirements for his inheritance."

I stared at Hugo, who remained silent, his dark eyes unreadable.

"Why me?" I asked, my voice breaking.

"Because you can afford to be generous," Caleb said coldly. "You've had everything handed to you, Naomi. It's time you gave something back to society."

"Gave something back?" I repeated incredulously. "By marrying a stranger? What about us? Our engagement? Our years together?"

Jazmin's grip tightened on Caleb's arm, her eyes gleaming with triumph.

"That's over," Caleb said simply. "Jazmin and I have reconnected. This arrangement works best for everyone."

Something snapped inside me. All the hurt and betrayal crystallized into pure rage.

"You bastard," I whispered, my hand connecting with his cheek before I could think.

The slap echoed in the hallway. Caleb's face reddened where my palm had struck, but his expression remained unmoved.

"Think about your options, Naomi," he said calmly. "The photos or the marriage. Your choice."

I turned and fled, tears blurring my vision as I stumbled toward the elevator.

Hugo watched me go, his face unreadable in the doorway of Room 1508.

---

"Mom?" I called weakly as I burst through the front door of my family home.

She appeared instantly, as if she'd been waiting. "Naomi! What happened?"

I collapsed into her arms, the story spilling out between sobs. Caleb's text. The hotel room. Hugo Mendoza. The photographer. The ultimatum.

"He wants me to marry him," I choked out. "Or he'll ruin me with those photos."

My mother's arms tightened around me as my father appeared in the doorway, his face darkening with rage.

"That little bastard," he growled. "After everything we've done for him."

"He's been planning this," I whispered. "With Jazmin. They want me out of the way."

My father was already pulling out his phone. "I'm calling our lawyers. And investigators. We need to know exactly what game they're playing."

Within hours, the first photos appeared online—carefully cropped to tell whatever story Caleb wanted them to tell. My phone exploded with messages:

"Is it true?"

"I can't believe you'd do this to Caleb!"

"What's going on with you and Hugo Mendoza?"

I turned off my phone and crawled into my childhood bedroom, pulling the covers over my head as tears soaked my pillow.

How had it come to this? The man I'd loved since childhood had orchestrated my complete humiliation.

And somewhere across the city, Hugo Mendoza was waiting for my answer.

Chapter 3

The morning after my world collapsed, I awoke to the sound of voices downstairs. My parents' hushed tones carried urgency that made my stomach knot. I pulled on a robe and descended the stairs, only to freeze at the threshold of our living room.

Three strangers sat perched on our sofa, their postures rigid with formality. The woman at the center—elderly but regal—commanded the space with her presence alone.

"Naomi," my mother said softly, gesturing for me to join them. "These are representatives from the Mendoza family."

I noticed then that the elderly woman's eyes—sharp despite her age—fixed on me with peculiar intensity.

"Ms. Bailey," she said, her voice carrying the faintest accent. "I am Victoria Mendoza, Hugo's grandmother."

The name hit me like a physical blow. Hugo Mendoza. The stranger from last night. The man Caleb had trapped me with.

"We understand this is... unconventional," Victoria continued, her gaze never leaving my face. "But we come with a formal proposal."

My father's jaw tightened. "After your grandson's involvement in my daughter's humiliation? You have some nerve."

"Hugo is ill," Victoria said simply. "Terminally so. Our family trust requires him to be married to access funds for experimental treatment."

I felt my parents stiffen beside me. This wasn't what Caleb had mentioned.

"Your grandson was part of Caleb's scheme," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "Why should we believe anything you say?"

Victoria's eyes softened strangely. "Hugo is not what you think, Miss Bailey. And neither am I."

She reached into her handbag and withdrew a document. "We're prepared to offer substantial benefits to your family. Business partnerships. Financial considerations. And of course, our solemn promise that Naomi would be treated with nothing but respect."

My father took the document, scanning it with narrowed eyes. "This is... comprehensive."

"The photographs have already damaged Naomi's reputation," Victoria said gently. "Refusing our offer might be interpreted as admission of an actual affair."

My mother gasped softly. I felt the blood drain from my face.

"We'll need time to consider," my father said finally.

Victoria nodded, rising gracefully. As she passed me, she paused. "We'll await your answer, Miss Bailey. I believe you'll find this arrangement... mutually beneficial."

Her eyes lingered on me with that same strange recognition that confused everyone present.

---

I didn't know what possessed me to go to Caleb's office. Perhaps I needed to see for myself what I already knew in my heart.

The receptionist recognized me. "Miss Bailey! I'm not sure if Mr. Foster is—"

I brushed past her, following the sound of voices to his corner office.

I should have knocked.

Caleb stood between Jazmin's legs as she perched on his desk, her fingers tangled in his hair. Papers scattered across the floor where they'd knocked them in their haste.

They broke apart at my entrance, but not quickly enough.

"Naomi," Caleb said, his voice flat. Not guilty. Not ashamed. Just... annoyed.

Jazmin's lips curved into a smirk as she slid off the desk. "Well, well. Look what the cat dragged in."

I stood frozen in the doorway, unable to form words.

"I was just telling Caleb how much I missed him," Jazmin said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. She moved to him, pressing herself against his side. "We've been reconnecting."

Caleb had the audacity to look irritated by my presence rather than guilty. "Naomi, this isn't a good time."

Jazmin's eyes gleamed with triumph as she pressed herself closer to him. "Actually, I'm glad you're here. We need to talk about the gifts."

"Gifts?" I echoed numbly.

"Caleb gave you so many things during your... relationship," she said, emphasizing the word like it was a joke. "Under false pretenses, of course."

She began listing items with surgical precision: "The diamond earrings from Cartier. The Hermès bag you carry everywhere. The promise ring."

I felt something inside me break as she continued her inventory.

"Those were gifts," I managed. "Not loans."

Jazmin stepped closer, her voice rising. "They're mine now. Caleb's with me. Everything he has is mine."

I slipped the promise ring from my finger and held it out. Jazmin reached for it, but I dropped it deliberately, watching it bounce on the carpet between us.

"Take it," I said quietly.

---

The crowd at Luminous Gallery parted like the Red Sea as Jazmin's voice carried across the marble floor.

"She stole everything from me!" she cried, flanked by two friends who nodded in solemn agreement. "The jewelry, the bags—all gifts from my fiancé!"

I froze by the perfume counter, clutching my purse strap so tightly my knuckles whitened.

"That's Naomi Bailey," someone whispered loudly enough for me to hear. "The one who had an affair with Jazmin's fiancé."

"Wasn't she engaged to someone else?" another voice questioned.

Jazmin produced a tissue and dabbed at non-existent tears. "She manipulated him for years," she said, her voice breaking perfectly. "Took advantage of his kindness."

Smartphones appeared everywhere, recording her performance.

"These were family heirlooms," she continued, producing a list. "Passed down through generations of Fosters."

I stepped forward, unable to remain silent. "That's not true. I was engaged to Caleb first—"

Jazmin's friends moved with surprising speed. One grabbed my arm, the other reached for my purse.

"Give them back!" one shouted, her nails digging into my skin.

"Stop!" I cried, struggling against their grip.

Suddenly the crowd parted again as Caleb pushed through, his face a mask of concern.

"Let her go," he ordered, pulling me away from Jazmin's friends.

For a moment, I thought he'd actually come to my rescue. Then I saw the calculation in his eyes as he positioned himself between me and the crowd, playing the hero for the cameras.

"Are you okay?" he asked loudly enough for everyone to hear.

I wrenched my arm from his grasp and backed away, dignity the only thing keeping me upright as tears streamed down my face.

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