Her husband, Kingston Riddle, looked up from a schematic laid out on the dining table. He was dressed in a simple grey Henley and jeans, a stark contrast to the opulence around them. The remnants of his law career, before the federal plea deal that had shackled him and, by extension, her. His face was neutral, unreadable. He walked over, his worn leather boots silent on the polished marble floor, holding a garment bag like it contained biohazard material.
"Isadora," Kingston said, his voice a low baritone that always seemed to scrape against her nerves. "You are going to look like you own the room tonight. The champagne silk is a strategic choice for your skin tone."
Isadora reached out and touched the garment bag. Her fingers trembled slightly. She had been liquidating personal assets for this gala ticket for months, skipping board meetings and dodging creditors, all for tonight. Tonight was the night. It had to be.
"Thank you, Kingston," Isadora said, her voice sounding breathless even to her own ears. "I just want everything to be perfect."
Kingston began to lay the dress out on the bed, smoothing the layers of tissue paper. He paused, looking up at Isadora with a look that was neither smug nor excited, but analytical.
"Speaking of perfect," Kingston said, leaning against the doorframe. "Grafton Blanchard was here yesterday."
Isadora felt her stomach drop and then soar, a physical sensation like missing a step on a staircase. She gripped the edge of the dresser, the lacquered wood cool under her sweating palms. Grafton was here.
"Oh?" Isadora tried to keep her voice casual, but she knew she was failing. "Did he find what he was looking for?"
Kingston's eyes held a flicker of something she couldn't name. "He certainly did. He bought the last Aurelia Eternity Lock bracelet we had in stock. The limited edition with the pavé diamonds."
The air left Isadora's lungs. She knew that bracelet. She had circled it in a magazine six months ago while sitting on Grafton's couch, watching a Knicks game. She had jokingly told him that the lock mechanism meant you were stuck with the person forever. He had laughed then, ruffling her hair.
"The Eternity Lock," Isadora repeated, the words tasting like ash on her tongue.
"I had it sent up from the vault myself," Kingston said, turning his attention back to the schematic on the table. "I have a feeling you're going to be very happy tonight. Good luck with the fundraiser, by the way."
Isadora watched him, this man who was legally her husband but functionally a stranger living in her home. She paid for his existence, and in return, he offered cryptic warnings and maintained the facade of their transactional marriage. She walked out of the bedroom hugging the dress to her chest, the noise of Fifth Avenue traffic fading into a dull buzz. She felt hollow, as if gravity had decided to stop working just for her.
She got back to her dressing room and hung the dress on the back of her door. It shimmered under the warm light of her vanity. Her phone lit up on the marble countertop.
Grafton.
Isadora took a deep breath, counting to three before she swiped the screen.
Meet me in the VIP box at Gilded Lily tonight. I have something important to tell you. This deal is ours for the taking, Izzy.
Important.
She read the word over and over again. Important meant the bracelet. Important meant the lock. Important meant that after twenty years of being his family friend, his shadow, his "little Izzy," he was finally going to ask her to be more. A partner. In business, and in life.
Her phone buzzed again. It was a FaceTime request from Zoe. Isadora answered, letting out a shaky breath that she had been holding in since Kingston's announcement.
"He bought the bracelet!" Isadora yelled before Zoe could even say hello.
Zoe's face appeared on the screen, pixelated but clearly skeptical. "Are you sure, Izzy? Did he actually say it was for you?"
"Kingston told me he bought it yesterday," Isadora said, pacing her small room. "And he just texted me to meet him at the club because he has something 'important' to tell me. What else could it be, Zoe? It's the Eternity Lock."
Zoe sighed, but she smiled. "Okay. Okay, maybe you're right. He's dense, but maybe he finally woke up. Just... keep your guard up, okay?"
"I don't need a guard," Isadora said, stopping in front of her mirror. She looked at her reflection. Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes bright. "I need to get ready."
She spent two hours getting ready. She did her makeup the way Grafton liked it-natural, soft, nothing too bold. She put on the champagne dress. It fit like a second skin, the silk cool against her heated body. She left her wrists bare. She wanted nothing to interfere with the bracelet.
The sun began to set over Manhattan, casting long, orange shadows across her floor. She remembered being ten years old, scraping her knee on the playground, and Grafton carrying her to the nurse's office. He had been her hero then. He was her hero now.
Her phone buzzed. Her Uber was downstairs.
Isadora grabbed her purse. Inside was a small velvet box containing vintage cufflinks she had bought for him. A gift to celebrate their new venture. She checked her reflection one last time, spritzed on the gardenia perfume he once said smelled like summer, and walked out the door.
Her neighbor, Mrs. Gable, was getting the mail. She stopped and stared. "You look like you're glowing, dear."
"I feel like it," Isadora said.
She sat in the back of the Uber, watching the city blur past. The car moved toward the Meatpacking District, the streets getting narrower, the cobblestones vibrating beneath the tires. Her palms were sweating. She wiped them on her thighs, hoping she wouldn't stain the silk.
The car pulled up to the curb near Gilded Lily. The line was already around the block. The bass from the club thumped against the car windows, a rhythmic heartbeat that matched her own.
Isadora stepped out. The humid night air hit her. She looked up at the neon sign buzzing above the heavy iron doors. This was it. She took a step forward, ready to walk into the rest of her life.