The morning light sliced through the floor-to-ceiling windows, painting a sterile stripe across the king-sized bed. Jodi Holden woke up to the familiar emptiness beside her. The sheets on Armand's side were cold, undisturbed. He was already gone.
There was never a note. There was only evidence of his departure.
Her eyes landed on the silk nightgown pooled on the floor. He'd torn the strap last night. A small, violent act in the middle of what he demanded be called tenderness.
She reached for her phone on the nightstand, a ritual she hated. The screen was dark. No messages. No missed calls. Just the silent, glaring proof that she hadn't crossed his mind since he'd left his bed.
Her thumb hovered, then tapped on her email icon. The habit was ingrained, a desperate search for some acknowledgment of her existence.
A new message sat at the top of her inbox. The sender wasn't Armand. It was "Taylor Corp. Family Office."
Her breath hitched.
The subject line was a string of project codes. She typed in the password she had been forced to memorize five years ago. The email opened.
It was brutally simple. No greeting, no explanation. Just the digital signature of an electronic key and an address: a penthouse apartment on Central Park West.
A cold dread, heavy and thick, settled in her stomach. This was it. He was finally moving her out, warehousing her in a new, convenient location, tidying up his life.
Before she could fully process the thought, her phone vibrated with a text message. A bank alert from Credit Suisse.
Her private account had been credited with a seven-figure sum.
The phone slipped from her numb fingers, clattering against the marble floor. The amount was too large. It wasn't an allowance. It felt like a severance. A final payment for services rendered.
A lump of ice formed in her throat. She swallowed it down, picked up the phone, and did something she hadn't done in over a year. She dialed Armand's private line. The agreement allowed it, but his reactions had trained her not to.
The phone rang six times, each one stretching into an eternity. She could almost hear his sigh of annoyance when he finally answered. The background was filled with the rhythmic whump-whump-whump of a helicopter's rotor blades.
"Jodi."
His voice was clipped, distant. The sound of a man interrupted.
She fought to keep her own voice steady, to erase any trace of the panic clawing at her insides. "I received the email. And the transfer notification."
A pause. "And?"
"Armand, what is this?" she asked, the question coming out as a whisper.
A dry, humorless chuckle came through the line. It was the cruelest sound she had ever heard. "A reward," he said, his voice flat and devoid of any emotion. "For last night. For your obedience."
The word hit her like a slap. Reward. Her blood felt like it was turning to slush in her veins. Her obedience had been priced, packaged, and delivered via wire transfer.
"A reward?" she repeated, the word tasting like ash in her mouth.
"The apartment is for your convenience. It's closer to the office," he said, his impatience bleeding through the connection. "Don't be difficult, Jodi."
He thought she was questioning the gift. The sheer, insulting generosity of it. He had no idea that she was choking on the humiliation. That he had just surgically removed the last shred of dignity she had been clinging to.
She took a shaky breath. The air felt thin, useless. "I understand."
She ended the call.
She didn't say another word. Anything more would be classified as "difficult." Any emotion would be a breach of their unspoken contract.
She walked to the massive window, her bare feet silent on the cold floor. New York City sprawled below her, a glittering, indifferent beast. It was beautiful and it was heartless. Just like him.
Five years. For five years, she had played the part of the perfect, compliant lover. So perfect, so compliant, that he had forgotten she was a person.
She caught her reflection in the glass. The faint, purplish marks on her neck, the ghost of his possession. For the first time, a wave of true, physical nausea rolled through her.
The money and the apartment weren't gifts. They were gilded handcuffs. They were a gag order written in dollars and square footage.
She turned away from the window, grabbing her phone again. She needed a distraction. Work. Anything to stop the screaming in her head. She opened the news app.
A headline from the financial section pushed to the top of her feed.
Her finger trembled as she tapped it. Her heart didn't just sink. It plummeted.
Taylor Corp CEO Armand Taylor to Announce Engagement to European Royalty.
The article was brief, speculative, but the source was solid. It was accompanied by a grainy photo of Armand at a gala in Monaco, his head bent toward a blonde woman, his profile sharp and focused.
And just like that, everything clicked into place.
The apartment. The money. The "reward."
He wasn't just moving her out. He was scrubbing the evidence. Cleaning house before the new owner arrived.
A laugh escaped Jodi's lips. It was a broken, silent thing. A tear traced a hot path down her cold cheek, then another.
She finally understood the price of her obedience. And she knew, with a certainty that chilled her to the bone, that this five-year transaction was finally, irrevocably, over.