"I need police assistance at the Park Hyatt in Manhattan," Grace said, her voice steady and clear. "I was just physically assaulted by my fiancé. I need officers on the scene."
The heavy door to the lounge flew open. Dillan burst into the hallway. He heard the end of her sentence. His face went from pale to a mottled, furious red.
"Are you out of your mind?!" he yelled, his voice echoing loudly down the corridor. He froze for a fraction of a second, his eyes darting frantically between the phone and her face. "Hang up that phone, Grace. You have no idea what you're doing."
Grace didn't blink. "I'm doing exactly what I must."
The defiance in her voice snapped the last thread of his restraint. He lunged at her, his hand reaching out to snatch the phone from her grip.
Grace saw him coming. She quickly switched the phone to her left hand, stepping back.
"Help!" Grace shouted. She didn't scream, but she projected her voice down the long hallway. "Security!"
At the far end of the corridor, two hotel security guards in dark suits snapped their heads toward the noise. They broke into a run.
Dillan kept coming, his hands grasping at the air near Grace's face. Before he could make contact, the two guards arrived. They stepped between them, their large frames forming a solid physical wall. They shoved Dillan back by his shoulders.
"Sir, step back right now," the taller guard commanded.
Dillan fought against their grip, his chest heaving. He pointed a finger over the guard's shoulder, aiming it right at Grace's face.
"You're dead, Grace!" he spat, saliva flying from his lips. "I'll bankrupt your entire family! You'll have nothing!"
Grace watched his pathetic display of rage. She felt nothing but a cold, clinical detachment. She looked at the second guard and pointed down at her foot.
"He pushed me into a marble bar," she said calmly. "I'm bleeding."
The guard looked down. The bright red blood staining her pale skin and expensive shoe was undeniable. He immediately reached for the radio clipped to his shoulder.
"We need the lobby manager up here now," the guard said into the mic. "And escort the lady to the private elevator."
Five minutes later, the elevator doors chimed open at the ground floor. Grace walked out. She favored her uninjured leg, limping slightly, but her posture remained rigidly straight. She pushed through the revolving glass doors and stepped out into the chaotic noise of the Manhattan street.
The cold autumn wind hit her face.
Across the street, parked illegally near the curb, sat a massive, black Maybach. The rear windows were tinted so dark they looked like solid obsidian.
Inside the cavernous, leather-scented cabin, Hudson Turner sat perfectly still.
He was positioned in a high-tech wheelchair, a prop he despised but utilized flawlessly. His dark, piercing eyes were fixed through the tinted glass, watching the drama unfold on the steps of the hotel.
In the driver's seat, Mike glanced in the rearview mirror.
"Sir? Should we pull away?" Mike asked quietly.
Hudson didn't speak. He simply raised his right hand, his index finger lifting a fraction of an inch. A silent command to wait.
His gaze was locked on Grace. He saw the blood on her ankle. He saw the harsh, unforgiving line of her jaw. He saw the absolute lack of fear in her eyes. A dark, heavy wave of interest pooled low in his gut.
The hotel doors burst open again. Dillan shoved past a bellhop, his eyes frantically scanning the street until they landed on Grace. He started toward her.
The piercing shriek of police sirens cut through the city noise.
An NYPD patrol car slammed on its brakes, the tires squealing against the asphalt right in front of the hotel. Two officers jumped out before the car had completely settled. Their hands hovered near their duty belts.
"Step back! Keep your hands where I can see them!" the lead officer shouted, pointing directly at Dillan.
Dillan stopped abruptly. He held his hands up, but his face twisted into a mask of arrogant annoyance.
"Officers, this is ridiculous," Dillan said, trying to force a laugh. "It's just a lovers' quarrel. My fiancé is just being dramatic."
The officer didn't smile. He grabbed Dillan by the shoulder, spun him around, and shoved him face-first against the stone wall of the hotel.
"Spread your legs," the officer ordered, beginning a rough pat-down.
Grace walked slowly toward the second officer. She kept her hands visible.
"I made the call," Grace said. "He shoved me into a bar in the VIP lounge. There are cameras in the hallway that will show him chasing me. I want to press charges."
The officer took out a notepad, his eyes dropping to the blood on her shoe. In New York, visible physical injury in a domestic dispute meant an automatic arrest.
Dillan heard the officer's radio crackle with a request for transport. Panic finally broke through his arrogance.
"You can't arrest me!" Dillan yelled, struggling against the officer holding him against the wall. "Do you know who I am? I'm Dillan Hayes! My family owns half this block!"
The officer's face remained completely blank. He pulled a pair of steel handcuffs from his belt. The sharp click-clack of the metal ratcheting around Dillan's wrists cut through his shouting.
Grace stood on the top step of the hotel. She looked down at Dillan. His custom suit was wrinkled, his hands were bound behind his back, and his face was red with humiliation. She looked at him the way one might look at a stain on the sidewalk.
Inside the Maybach, Hudson watched the cold, ruthless expression on Grace's face.
The corner of his mouth twitched upward into a slow, predatory smile.
"Beautiful," Hudson murmured. His voice was a low, gravelly rumble in the quiet car.
The police guided Grace toward the back seat of a second patrol car that had just pulled up. She needed to go to the precinct to make a formal statement.
As she slid into the back seat, she turned her head. Through the glass of the police cruiser, her eyes swept across the street and landed on the black Maybach.
She couldn't see through the tint. It was physically impossible. But the hairs on the back of her neck suddenly stood up. Her stomach tightened. She felt the heavy, suffocating weight of being watched.
The police car shifted into gear and pulled away from the curb, taking Grace and the arrested Dillan in opposite directions.
Hudson leaned back in his chair. The smile vanished, replaced by a sharp, calculating focus.
"Drive," Hudson commanded. "And call Arthur. I want every piece of information on that woman on my desk in an hour."