Cleo Kline POV:
The ballroom erupted. A cacophony of gasps, shouts, and frantic whispers filled the air, each word a shard of the shattered reality I had just created. Faces contorted in disbelief, confusion, and outright outrage. Everyone was looking at me, then at Hazen, then back at me, as if trying to decipher a riddle no one could solve.
Holden stood frozen, a statue of disbelief. His face was a ghastly white, his eyes wide and vacant. Then, a primal roar tore from his throat. "No! You can't! You can't choose him! Cleo, you're mistaken! You're confused!" He lunged forward, his hand outstretched as if to physically retract my words.
Elsworth Ingram, his face grim but unyielding, stepped forward on the platform. His voice, though not raised, sliced through Holden' s desperate cries. "Holden! Silence yourself! The decision has been made. Cleo's choice is final." His gaze was a steel trap, pinning Holden in place.
An older lawyer, Mr. Davies, who stood beside Elsworth, tapped the microphone. "Indeed," he confirmed, his voice dry and official. "The terms of Mr. Kline's will are explicit. Cleo's designation is legally binding and irrevocable."
Holden' s eyes were wild, darting between Elsworth, the lawyer, and me. He looked like a cornered animal. "Cleo, please! Don't do this! You don't know what you're saying! You're making a mistake, a terrible mistake!" His voice cracked, desperation clawing at his throat. "I love you, Cleo! You know I do! We were meant to be!"
I looked at him, truly looked at him, for the first time without the rose-tinted glasses of infatuation. His desperation wasn't for me. It was for the power, for the inheritance, for the future he believed was his by right. "No, Holden," I said, my voice steady, devoid of any emotion. "We were never meant to be. And you, in your heart, know that too."
Hazen, who had remained silent beside me, his presence a dark, unyielding force, shifted slightly. His gaze, usually unreadable, flickered with something I couldn't quite decipher. Surprise? A hint of... satisfaction?
Holden' s composure snapped. "You bitch!" he spat, his voice raw with fury. He lunged at me again, his hands reaching for my throat. "You ruined everything! You're nothing without me! You ungrateful little whore!"
Before his hands could touch me, Hazen moved. It was a blur of motion, a primal instinct. He stepped in front of me, shielding me. His hand shot out, grabbing Holden' s wrist with astonishing speed and force. Holden cried out, his face contorted in pain as Hazen twisted his arm, forcing him back.
Mr. Davies and two burly security guards, almost as if on cue, rushed forward. They wrestled Holden, still struggling and screaming obscenities, away from us. "She's insane! She's manipulative! She's a gold digger!" his voice echoed as they dragged him towards a service exit.
Elsworth Ingram, his face etched with cold fury, watched his son go. "Close the doors," he commanded, his voice like iron. The heavy oak doors at the back of the ballroom swung shut with a resounding thud, effectively sealing Holden out.
Elsworth then turned to me, a faint, almost imperceptible smile playing on his lips. He descended from the platform, approaching me with a small, velvet-covered box in his hand. He opened it. Inside, nestled on crimson silk, was a gleaming key. An old, ornate key, surely symbolic. "Cleo," he said, handing it to me. "This is the key to the executive suite. It will be waiting for you. A new chapter begins."
I took the key. It felt heavy in my hand, cool and substantial. It was more than a key; it was a testament. A symbol of power, of change, of a future I had just seized. Holden's screams, now muffled by the closed doors, were a distant echo. This felt less like vengeance and more like justice.
Elsworth gestured to the crowd, his voice booming once more. "Let us celebrate this new partnership! The future of Ingram Corporation lies in capable hands!" The crowd, ever quick to adapt, began to applaud, albeit hesitantly at first, then with more conviction. Their shock was giving way to acceptance, their envy to pragmatism. They knew who held the power now.
Hazen, who had been observing the scene with his usual stoic silence, finally turned to me. His dark eyes held a flicker of surprise. "You actually chose me," he murmured, his voice a low rumble. It wasn't a question, but a statement of utter astonishment.
I looked up at him, meeting his intense gaze. "Why wouldn't I?" I asked, a hint of steel in my voice. "You're the only one who ever truly protected me."
His expression softened, just barely, a ghost of an emotion crossing his scarred face. Hope? Confusion? He seemed to wrestle with something unspoken.
Mr. Davies, clearing his throat, interrupted the moment. "We should proceed with the formal introductions, Mr. Ingram, Miss Kline. The board members are eager to meet with you both."
I felt a surge of triumph, a rush of cold satisfaction. Holden's downfall was complete. His empire, built on lies and manipulation, was crumbling. And I was standing on the ruins, with the "monster" by my side.