She wheeled her suitcase to the closet. The space was half-filled with garments her mother had sent-dresses in colors that would make her visible, noticeable, acceptable. She also hung her own clothes nearby: three pairs of trousers, in navy, black, and gray; five shirts, in white and beige; and a coat. Clearly, she wanted people to focus on her work, not her packaging.
Her phone buzzed on the nightstand. The screen lit with a video call-Niamh Knox, her face already filling the frame, red hair wild, expression urgent.
Keira answered. "You have no idea what time it is here."
"Don't care." Niamh's voice was her mother's Brooklyn and her father's Mayfair, all jumbled together. "You're in New York. You're doing the thing. Tell me everything. Did you meet him? The mysterious fiancé?"
Keira sat on the bed, the mattress too soft, too yielding. "I met him."
"And? Details, Keira. Is he handsome? Is he horrible? Is he-" Niamh's face shifted, something dawning. "Wait. What's his name? You never said."
"Jered Knox."
Silence. Then Niamh's scream, loud enough that Keira had to pull the phone from her ear.
"Jered? My cousin Jered? The one with the yellow car and the brain damage?"
Keira felt something loosen in her chest. The first real laugh since she'd landed. "You know him."
"Know him? Keira, I've been warning people about him since we were twelve. He's the family embarrassment. The reason we don't have reunions." Niamh's face filled the screen, serious now. "Tell me he didn't hurt you. Tell me he wasn't-"
"He was exactly what you described," Keira said. "Down to the prenup thrown over his shoulder."
Niamh's vocabulary became colorful, multilingual, and largely unprintable. Keira let it wash over her, feeling the warmth of it, the loyalty. Niamh had been her roommate at the École des Beaux-Arts. She had seen Keira through the worst year of her life and never asked for explanation. Some friendships existed outside family, outside logic, outside time.
"I'll be in New York next month," Niamh finished. "We'll get drunk. We'll plot his downfall. We'll-"
The bedroom door opened without knock or warning.
Keira looked up. A young man stood in the frame, nineteen maybe, with Milo Vaughn's jaw and Annette's eyes and none of the polish either of them had learned to wear. He leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, already surveying the room like he owned it.
Blair Vaughn. Her half-brother. The heir.
"I'll call you back," Keira said to Niamh, and ended the call.
"Don't stop on my account," Blair said. "Gossiping with your European friends about how backward we are?"
Keira stood. She didn't move toward him. She let the distance between them speak.
"Is there something you need?"
"Need?" He pushed off the doorframe, took two steps into the room. "I need you to understand how this works. You're here for one reason-to marry Jered Knox and secure the Vaughn-Knox merger. In exchange, Dad's going to give you some shares. Ten percent, I heard."
"Seventeen," Keira said. "And they're not his to give. They're mine. Grandmother's trust."
Blair's smile was all teeth. "See, that's where you're wrong. Vaughn Group shares don't leave the family. Especially not to someone who's about to become a Knox. You're an outsider, Keira. You've always been an outsider. And outsiders don't get to dilute my inheritance."
He said it plainly, without shame. The logic of his world, spoken aloud.
Keira walked toward him. She was taller by two inches. She used it, stopping close enough that he had to tilt his head to maintain eye contact.
"Blair." She kept her voice low, intimate. "Let me explain something. You want me to take ten percent and disappear. I want seventeen percent and my freedom. If I don't get what I want, I start looking at the rest of the Vaughn family trust. The structures. The loopholes. The ways a disinherited daughter might challenge a will that favors a son who hasn't finished college."
She watched the color leave his face. Watched his Adam's apple bob as he swallowed.
"You're threatening me?"
"I'm informing you." She stepped back, opening the space between them. "Your inheritance is safe as long as mine is respected. Push me, and we'll both discover how much family law I've learned in the last four years."
Blair's mouth opened. Closed. He looked young suddenly, young and frightened and furious about it.
"You wouldn't dare," he said, but his voice had thinned.
He turned, walked to the door, slammed it hard enough to rattle the watercolor prints. His footsteps retreated down the hall, too fast, almost running.
Keira stood alone in the silence. Her hands were steady. Her heart was steady. She had expected worse from this homecoming. Perhaps she would still receive it.
She picked up her phone. Sent Niamh a text: Dinner tomorrow? I need to hear a friendly voice.
Then she walked to the window. The Pinnacle Estate's lights were still burning, a constellation against the darkening sky. Somewhere in that glass fortress, a man she didn't know had decided to watch her.
She would need to find out why.