Audrey's heart slammed against her ribs. She frantically hit a shortcut key, blanking the drawing tablet's screen, before snapping the MacBook shut. The sharp clack of the aluminum casing echoed in the quiet room. Her breath hitched, catching in her throat as she shoved the laptop and the darkened tablet under a stack of blank printer paper, cutting off the risk of her secret identity being exposed.
Dozier pushed the doors wide open. A draft of chilled air from the hallway swept into the room, raising goosebumps on Audrey's bare arms. Her shoulders locked into place.
He walked in, his expensive Tom Ford suit jacket dangling from his grip. He tossed it carelessly onto her pristine white leather sofa. It was a physical invasion of her only safe space in the penthouse. Audrey's stomach twisted with a familiar, sickening knot of resistance.
Audrey pushed her chair back and stood up. She smoothed the front of her silk skirt, trying to maintain the dignity of the lady of the house.
Dozier stopped in the center of the room. His cold, unblinking stare pinned her to the spot. A wave of humiliation washed over her skin, hot and uncomfortable.
He reached up and loosened his silk tie with a sharp tug. "Blake is moving in tomorrow."
The words dropped like a physical weight in the room. Audrey's pupils contracted. Her lungs forgot how to pull in air.
"Without discussing it with me first?" Audrey asked. Her voice shook, but she forced herself to meet his eyes, fighting for an equal footing in this marriage.
Dozier let out a low, humorless laugh.
"This penthouse belongs to the Hodge family," Dozier said. His voice was flat, devoid of any warmth.
The reminder of her lack of ownership stripped away her right to refuse. Audrey bit down hard on her lower lip, the metallic taste of blood blooming on her tongue.
"I am still recovering," Audrey said, her voice dropping to a whisper. "It has only been a year since the miscarriage. I need quiet."
She hoped the mention of their lost child would trigger some basic human sympathy.
Dozier rolled his eyes, cutting her off with a sharp wave of his hand. "Stop using an accident to play the victim, Audrey. It's exhausting."
His accusation twisted the knife in her gut. Her heart plummeted, hitting the floor of her stomach.
Audrey took a deep, jagged breath. She wanted to scream that it wasn't an accident. She wanted to tell him that Blake had pushed her down those stairs. Instead, she dug her fingernails into the soft flesh of her palms until crescent-shaped red marks appeared. She kept the secret locked behind her teeth.
Dozier turned his back to her and walked over to the crystal liquor cabinet. He poured amber whiskey into a heavy glass. The clinking of the ice cubes was a clear refusal to continue the conversation. He was the absolute authority in this room.
Audrey walked up behind him. "We have a contract. There are boundaries to this marriage."
Her attempt to use their legal agreement as a shield sounded pathetic even to her own ears.
Dozier spun around. He closed the distance between them in two long strides and slammed the heavy whiskey glass down on the mahogany desk. The liquid sloshed over the rim. His towering height cast a dark shadow over her, suffocating her. Audrey took a half-step backward, her calves hitting the edge of her chair.
He leaned down, his face inches from hers. "Learn your place, Mrs. Hodge. Do not overstep."
His low whisper shattered her pride into jagged pieces. A sharp sting hit the back of her eyes.
Audrey turned her face away. She stared at the floorboards, hiding the moisture welling in her eyes, throwing up a desperate mental wall to protect what was left of her sanity.
A sharp knock on the open door frame broke the suffocating tension. Doris, the head housekeeper, stood there with her hands folded over her apron.
"Excuse me, sir. How should I prepare the guest room for tomorrow?" Doris asked.
The question cemented the reality. Blake was coming.
Dozier didn't even look at Audrey. He kept his eyes on Doris. "Prepare the room right next to the master suite."
The blatant favoritism felt like a bucket of ice water poured over Audrey's head. Her fingers went numb.
Doris nodded. As she turned to leave, her eyes flicked to Audrey. The housekeeper's lips curled into a faint, mocking smirk. The silent reminder of Audrey's lower-class origins scraped against her raw nerves.
"Put her in the downstairs guest room," Audrey said, her voice tight. It was her last, desperate attempt to hold her ground.
Dozier shot her a look of pure disgust. "Absolutely not."
"She doesn't need to be right next to us," Audrey argued.
"Blake is weak. She needs constant care," Dozier said.
The moral guilt-trip slammed the door on any further argument. Audrey's throat closed up. She had no words left.
Dozier picked up his glass, downed the rest of the burning liquid in one swallow, and walked straight toward the door. The unilateral notification was over. The air in the room felt heavy and stale.
Audrey stared at his broad back. "Do you even remember that tomorrow is our wedding anniversary?"
It was a pathetic, final test of his heart.
Dozier's footsteps paused for a fraction of a second. He didn't turn around. He didn't speak. His silence was a physical blow, heavy with contempt. He crushed her last remaining fantasy into dust.
He walked out. The heavy double doors slammed shut behind him. The glass panes in the windows rattled from the force.
The sound severed the invisible string holding Audrey up. Her knees gave out. She collapsed back into her desk chair, all the strength draining from her muscles.
Her hands shook violently as she reached out and opened the MacBook again. She stared at the digital canvas, desperate to escape into the world she created. But the bright colors blurred together as hot tears finally spilled over her eyelashes.
The screen of her phone, sitting next to the keyboard, lit up. The name 'Genevieve' flashed across the glass. Her biological mother.
A fresh wave of exhaustion settled deep in her bones.
Audrey reached out and hit the red decline button. She cut off the incoming harassment from her toxic family. The small act of defiance sent a rush of cold adrenaline through her veins. Her tear-filled eyes hardened into ice.
She pulled open the bottom drawer of her desk. Her fingers bypassed the expensive stationery and grabbed a plain white plastic bottle labeled 'Vitamin C'.
She popped the cap off. Inside were tiny, round birth control pills. She tipped the bottle and shook two pills into her palm. She tossed them into her mouth and swallowed them dry.
The chalky, bitter taste coated the back of her throat. It was a harsh physical reminder. She would never bring a child into this toxic, loveless prison.
Audrey turned her chair and looked out the floor-to-ceiling windows. The glittering lights of the Manhattan skyline stretched out before her. She gripped the armrests of her chair. She swore to herself that she would build her comic empire, take her money, and walk out of this penthouse forever.