"What?" Deron barked, his voice dripping with venom.
Elias's voice crackled through the speaker, tight and unusually strained. "Sir. I apologize for the interruption. Cornelius Fitzpatrick is here. He is waiting in the first-floor study."
Deron's hand froze on the console. The anger in his posture instantly evaporated, replaced by a rigid, icy tension.
Cornelius Fitzpatrick. The patriarch. The absolute dictator of the Fitzpatrick empire. He never left the family compound in Westchester unless the sky was falling.
Deron knew exactly why the old man was here. The Hamptons scandal. The sudden, chaotic engagement to a disgraced Hogan girl.
Deron turned his wheelchair back to Aspen. His expression was locked down, unreadable.
"Stay here," Deron ordered. "Elias will show you to the guest wing. Do not leave the penthouse."
Aspen nodded once. She knew better than to argue when the real power players were taking the board. She watched as Deron rolled onto the private elevator and disappeared.
A moment later, Elias stepped out of a secondary elevator. He led Aspen down a long, dimly lit corridor to a massive bedroom suite.
Aspen walked inside and stopped dead. The walk-in closet doors were open. Inside, hanging in pristine rows, were dozens of designer dresses, casual wear, and silk sleepwear. On the vanity sat a velvet tray filled with diamonds and sapphires.
She checked the tags. Everything was exactly her size.
A cold shiver ran down her spine. Deron hadn't just accepted her proposal last night; he had been preparing for her arrival long before she ever picked the lock on his hotel door. His control was terrifying.
Meanwhile, on the first floor, Deron rolled into the wood-paneled study. The room smelled of old leather and expensive cigar smoke.
Cornelius Fitzpatrick sat in a high-backed leather armchair by the unlit fireplace. He was eighty years old, but his eyes were as sharp and predatory as a hawk's. He was rolling two polished steel Baoding balls in his right hand. Clack. Clack. Clack.
"You caused quite a mess tonight, Deron," Cornelius said, not looking up.
"I secured a wife," Deron replied evenly, stopping his wheelchair in the center of the room. "And I humiliated Vance Hogan in the process. I thought you would be pleased."
Cornelius stopped rolling the steel balls. He looked up, his gaze piercing straight through Deron. "There are a hundred women in New York with impeccable pedigrees who would marry you for the trust fund alone. Why her? A bastard child with no bloodline, dragging a sex scandal behind her."
Deron met his grandfather's stare. He didn't tap his finger. He didn't show a single ounce of weakness.
"Because she is the one I want," Deron said. His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of an iron vault.
Cornelius raised an eyebrow. "Want? You are a Fitzpatrick. We do not marry for want. We marry for leverage."
"She has leverage," Deron countered. "She has teeth. She gutted her own family without blinking. And..." Deron paused, the image of her at a debutante ball years ago-defiant even then, a flash of wildness in her eyes that no one else seemed to see-flickered in his mind. He had known, even then, that she was not what she appeared to be. "She is useful."
Cornelius studied his grandson. He saw the absolute, unyielding obsession hidden behind Deron's cold mask. As the patriarch, Cornelius only cared about results. Deron needed a wife to solidify his standing against his cousins. If this feral Hogan girl kept Deron focused, so be it.
Cornelius stood up. He walked over and placed a heavy, liver-spotted hand on Deron's shoulder.
"Fine," Cornelius said. "If she is your choice, then we lock it down before the board starts asking questions. You will marry her in three days. At the family chapel. Core members only."
"Understood," Deron said.
"Do not disappoint me, Deron," Cornelius warned, his grip tightening painfully on Deron's shoulder. "And do not let that girl become a weakness."
After the old man left, Deron sat alone in the dark study. He pulled out his encrypted phone and texted Elias.
Dig into Aspen Hogan's past. The last five years. Every overseas trip, every missing record. I want to know everything she is hiding.
He trusted her ambition. He trusted her hatred for the Hogans. But he knew she was keeping secrets. And Deron Fitzpatrick never allowed secrets in his bed.
Deron took the elevator back up to the penthouse. He rolled into the master suite. Aspen had showered. She was standing by the window, wearing a white silk robe, her damp hair falling over her shoulders.
Deron stopped behind her. He didn't touch her, but his presence enveloped her like a heavy blanket.
"Get some sleep," Deron said, his voice flat. "We are getting married in three days."