Jered's hand found the stereo knob and killed the music. The sudden silence was violent. Alexus made a small sound of protest, but one look from Jered and she subsided, pouting at the window.
He cleared his throat. The sound was theatrical, designed to command attention.
"Since we're all adults here," he said, "let's be direct."
His hand dipped to the center console. He pulled out a manila folder, thick with legal paper, and tossed it over his shoulder. It landed on Keira's laptop with a slap. The cover page faced up, the words PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT printed in bold, black letters.
Keira didn't touch it. She finished the sentence she was typing-structural load bearing wall, reinforced concrete-and saved the document. Only then did she close the laptop and set it aside. Her fingers rested on the folder's edge, light as a bird's wing.
"Don't take it personally," Jered said. He was watching her in the rearview mirror, waiting for a reaction. "I'd do this with anyone. Knox family wealth isn't for public distribution."
Alexus turned in her seat, her smile sharp. "Jered's allowance alone could buy you a nice little apartment in whatever European city you couldn't hack it in."
Keira opened the folder. She flipped through the pages with the same attention she gave building codes. Her eyes found the relevant clause on page seven. Upon dissolution of marriage, the party of the second part-Keira Gibson-shall receive a lump sum payment of ten million dollars, in full and final settlement of all claims...
She closed the folder.
"Jered," she said. Her voice was quiet, but it cut through the car's ambient noise like a blade through silk. "You misunderstand the situation."
His eyes narrowed in the mirror. "Do I?"
"First, I won't sign this." She set the folder on the seat beside her, untouched. "Second, you're not marrying me. I'm condescending to marry into the Knox family."
The silence was absolute. Alexus's mouth formed a perfect O.
Keira continued, her tone conversational, almost gentle. "My dowry, if we're using that word, is my father's promise of first-right-of-refusal on all Vaughn family Wall Street partnerships for the next decade. A promise that remains entirely hypothetical until I actually say 'I do'. Without my signature on a marriage certificate, that deal is paralyzed. Your father can tell you what that's worth." She paused, her eyes moving to Alexus's frozen face. "As for ten million... that might cover your girlfriend's Hermès budget for three years. Limited editions only."
Alexus's face flushed crimson. Her hand went to her throat, to the silk scarf knotted there-Keira noted the print, seasonal, probably twelve hundred dollars.
Jered's foot slammed the brake. The Porsche shrieked, tires biting asphalt, and Keira's body snapped forward against the seatbelt. The folder slid to the floor. Horns blared behind them.
He twisted in his seat, one hand white-knuckled on the wheel, the other reaching back like he might grab her. His face was mottled, the tan failing to hide the red rising from his collar.
"Who the hell do you think you are? Some Vaughn castoff they stuck in Europe because you embarrassed them?"
Keira met his eyes. She didn't flinch. She didn't raise her voice.
"I'm Milo Vaughn's daughter. That name opens doors your father's money can't buy. Is that credential sufficient?"
She watched him process it. Watched the rage hit the wall of her composure and splatter. He hadn't expected resistance. He hadn't expected her to know the game, let alone play it.
She said nothing more. She retrieved the folder from the floor and placed it on the seat, a silent rejection. Her eyes moved to the window, to the traffic crawling past, to the city skyline emerging through the haze.
She glanced down at her phone. The battery icon drained another two percent in a matter of minutes, the device running warm against her palm. A forced data handshake. Someone was actively pulling her location telemetry, tracking them off the expressway, through the brake check, through Jered's tantrum.
Not a coincidence. Not media. Someone was watching her specifically, specifically enough to endure this circus.
Her hand found her phone in her pocket. She didn't pull it out, just held it, feeling its solid weight. She would need to find out who. She would need to know if they were threat or... something else.
Jered's breathing was audible, ragged. He faced forward again, his hands gripping the wheel at ten and two. The Porsche lurched back into traffic, jerking between lanes with adolescent aggression.
Keira opened her laptop. She put her headphones back on. The screen's glow was the only light on her face as the car carried them toward Long Island, toward the house that had never been her home, toward the next act of this grotesque comedy.
She had won the first exchange. She had also made an enemy.
But she didn't care.