"I don't care what the FAA regulations are, just keep this plane in the air," Harper snapped.
Her fingernails dug into the soft leather of the armrest until her knuckles turned a stark, bloodless white.
She stared out the oval window of the private jet.
The glittering, suffocating grid of Manhattan was shrinking into the black ocean below.
The intense G-force of the steep ascent pressed her spine hard against the seat.
She looked down at her lap.
A deep blue velvet ring box sat there, heavy and mocking.
It felt like a physical weight crushing her sternum.
Her father's voice echoed in her ears, cold and absolute.
Sign the marriage certificate with Sterling, Harper, or I freeze your trust and strip your shares.
A wave of acidic nausea clawed its way up her throat.
She grabbed the velvet box.
With a sharp, violent flick of her wrist, she hurled it across the cabin.
It hit the stainless steel trash bin in the aisle with a dull thud and vanished inside.
A private flight attendant rushed over, her face pale with concern.
"Ms. Bright? Is everything alright?"
Harper waved her away frantically.
"Leave me alone. Bring me a double Scotch on the rocks. Now."
The attendant nodded quickly and retreated to the galley.
Suddenly, the phone resting on the mahogany tray table began to vibrate violently.
The caller ID flashed her mother's name: Camille.
Harper slammed her finger onto the red reject button.
A rush of adrenaline spiked through her veins, making her fingertips tingle.
Two seconds later, the phone buzzed again.
This time, the screen displayed a custom ringtone. Howard Bright.
Her stomach twisted into a tight, painful knot.
She knew her father. If she ignored him, he would freeze her credit cards before the plane even landed.
She gritted her teeth, swiped the screen, and pressed the phone to her ear.
"Where the hell are you?" Howard's voice barked through the speaker, loud enough to rattle her eardrum.
Harper forced her breathing to slow down.
"I'm on the plane with Sterling," she lied, her voice completely flat. "We're heading to Maui to work on our relationship, just like you wanted."
Howard let out a harsh, metallic laugh.
"Do not play games with me, Harper. Send me a picture of the two of you right now, or I'm calling your pilot to turn that jet around."
Harper hit the mute button.
Her heart hammered a frantic, painful rhythm against her ribs.
Her fingers flew across the screen, pulling up her text thread with Sterling.
Send the Hawaii photo. NOW. He's checking.
She stared at the screen, her lungs burning as she held her breath.
Three agonizing seconds passed.
A photo popped up.
It was a flawless Photoshop job. Sterling and Harper, smiling fake smiles on a sun-drenched beach.
Harper immediately forwarded the image to her father's chief of staff.
She unmuted the call.
"Check your assistant's phone," she said coldly.
She heard the rustle of paper on the other end, followed by Howard's heavy sigh.
The tension in his voice dropped a fraction.
Before he could speak, Camille snatched the phone.
"Harper, darling! The Vera Wang fitting is moved to next Tuesday. You need to drop five pounds before then, your waist looked thick in the silk."
Harper pinched the bridge of her nose.
A sharp, stabbing migraine pulsed behind her right eye.
She couldn't do this right now.
She grabbed an empty foil snack wrapper from the tray table.
She crushed it directly against the phone's microphone, creating a deafening burst of static.
"Mom? I can't hear you," Harper yelled over the noise. "We're over the Pacific. Losing satellite connection."
She aggressively twisted the wrapper one last time and ended the call.
She immediately switched the phone to airplane mode.
The cabin fell into a heavy, ringing silence.
The flight attendant approached quietly and placed a crystal glass of amber liquid on the table.
Harper picked up the Scotch and downed it in one burning swallow.
The liquor scorched her throat, but it grounded her.
She unclasped her Hermès Birkin bag and pulled out a manila folder.
It was a highly classified file from a private investigator.
She opened it and stared at the grainy photograph inside.
It showed her father standing in a dark alley, handing a briefcase to a towering, broad-shouldered man.
The man's face was obscured by shadows, but his sharp, brutal jawline was visible.
The pilot's voice crackled over the intercom, announcing their descent into Las Vegas.
Harper traced the man's jawline on the paper.
He was a fixer. A cleaner. And he was her only lead to the man who knew the identity of her father's bastard son.
She memorized the shape of his jaw, her pulse steadying into a cold, hard rhythm.