Beatrice stood near the fireplace, her arms crossed tight over her chest. She glared at Grace, her eyes burning with pure hatred.
"You did this," Beatrice hissed, her voice trembling with venom. "If he dies, you murdered your own father."
Grace didn't look at Beatrice. She walked slowly toward the stretcher. She stood over her father.
Conrad's eyes fluttered open. Through the plastic of the oxygen mask, he looked up at her. His eyes were wide, filled with a pathetic, desperate pleading. His frail, trembling hand reached out, his fingers weakly brushing against the fabric of Grace's coat.
Grace looked down at that hand. A heavy, suffocating weight pressed against her chest. She closed her eyes for a fraction of a second, forcing the last drop of daughterly guilt deep down into a locked box inside her mind.
When she opened her eyes, they were clear, sharp, and entirely devoid of emotion. She stepped back, out of his reach.
"I will go to the Turners tomorrow," Grace announced. Her voice cut through the noise of the room like a blade.
Beatrice gasped. A sick, triumphant smile broke across her face. She thought she had won. She thought the guilt had broken Grace.
"But," Grace continued, her voice rising slightly, "I have a condition."
The smile fell off Beatrice's face.
Grace looked directly at the family lawyer, who was cowering near the doorway.
"I want an irrevocable severance agreement drafted immediately," Grace demanded. "It will state that I am officially cutting all legal and financial ties with the Albert family. I renounce any future inheritance. In exchange, I take my fifteen percent of the company shares with me, and I am permanently absolved of any family debts or obligations."
"That is robbery!" Beatrice shrieked, stepping forward. "You can't just take the shares and leave! We will never agree to that!"
Grace slowly turned her head to look at her aunt.
"If the paperwork isn't signed and in my hands by morning," Grace said, her tone deadpan, "then you can go to the Turners and explain why there is no bride."
On the stretcher, Conrad let out a violent, rattling cough. He weakly raised his hand and nodded his head toward the lawyer. It was a desperate surrender.
The paramedics pushed the stretcher out the door, the flashing red lights of the ambulance painting the walls of the foyer.
Grace didn't watch them leave. She turned on her heel and walked up the grand staircase.
"Have the documents brought to my room," she told the butler without looking back.
She reached her bedroom and pushed the door shut. She reached out and twisted the deadbolt. The loud click echoed in the quiet room.
The adrenaline finally crashed. Grace leaned her back against the solid wood of the door and slowly slid down until she was sitting on the thick carpet. She pulled her knees to her chest, her breathing shallow and fast.
She looked down at her ankle. The blood had dried, crusting around the bandage the police had hastily applied. She dragged herself up, walked to her en-suite bathroom, and pulled out the first aid kit. She sat on the edge of the tub, pouring stinging antiseptic over the cut, wrapping it tightly with fresh gauze. She did it herself, the physical pain a grounding mechanism.
Once bandaged, she walked to her desk and opened her laptop. She pulled out her phone and dialed a secure number.
"I need a complete dossier on Hudson Turner," Grace told her private investigator the second he answered. "Everything you can find in the next ten minutes."
Five minutes later, an encrypted file dropped into her inbox.
Grace clicked it open. The screen illuminated her tired eyes. The file confirmed the public rumors: Hudson Turner had been in a severe car accident two years ago. He was paralyzed from the waist down. He had been stripped of his CEO title by his family and lived in relative isolation.
But as Grace scrolled down to the financial summaries, her eyes narrowed. She leaned closer to the screen.
There were massive, unexplained movements of capital in subsidiary shell companies linked to his name. The numbers didn't make sense for a disgraced, exiled son. Her business instincts flared. The man on paper did not match the financial footprint he was leaving behind.
She grabbed a notepad and a pen. She began writing down her leverage points, her boundaries, and her absolute bottom line for the negotiation tomorrow.
At 2:00 AM, a soft knock came at her door.
Grace opened it to find the butler holding a thick stack of legal documents, freshly printed and stamped by the family lawyer.
She took the papers, locked the door again, and sat at her desk. She read every single line, every clause, every piece of fine print. When she was absolutely certain there were no traps, she picked up her pen and signed her name on the dotted line.
She locked the agreement in her personal safe.
As the sun began to rise, painting the sky in bruised shades of purple and gray, Grace walked to her closet. She pulled out a sharp, tailored black suit. It was the armor of a woman going to war.
She grabbed her car keys, walked out of the silent house, and drove her SUV toward the address Hudson had provided: The Timeless Gallery.