The heart monitor beeped in the white room. Beep. Beep. Beep. Fifteen days of that sound. Fifteen days of pretending she couldn't hear it.
Braden's hand covered hers. His thumb moved back and forth across her knuckles. Once, that touch made her feel safe. Now it made her skin crawl.
"Clara," he said. His voice was soft, sad. Like he'd practiced it a hundred times. "When are you going to wake up? I miss you so much."
Chelsea spoke next. Her voice cracked, like she was holding back tears. "Braden, don't do this to yourself. The doctors said it would take a miracle."
Inside her head, Clara laughed. A bitter, soundless laugh. Right on cue.
Braden let go of her hand. She heard his shoes on the floor-soft leather soles, expensive. He walked to the window. His back to her bed. His voice dropped lower, but the room was so quiet she caught every word.
"What did the lawyer say about the power of attorney for the trust fund?"
Chelsea's voice changed. No more fake tears. Sharp and hungry. "He said as long as the wedding goes ahead next week, even with the bride... absent... your signature as her guardian will be enough to release the first payment."
Rage hit Clara like a slap. Hot. Tight in her chest. Her fingers twitched. She forced them still. Her nails dug into her palms. Her jaw clenched so hard her teeth ached. She kept her breathing shallow and even. Slow. Like someone asleep.
Then she heard it. Fabric rustling. A wet sound. A kiss.
"My love," Chelsea whispered, right above her. "Soon, everything the Beaumonts have will be ours."
Braden's voice went low and rough. "When we get the money, I'm buying you that jewelry store on Fifth Avenue. You deserve those diamonds more than she ever did."
Clara remembered Seraphina's warning. Weeks before the accident. "Clara, Braden's finances are a mess. He's in deep." She'd brushed it off. Family paranoia. She'd been so blind. Trusting two people who were now plotting over her body like she was already dead.
They kept talking. Casual. Like a business deal. They laughed about her art. Her lack of interest in corporate finance. She was their golden goose. Their silent vault.
Her stomach turned. A wave of sickness so strong she felt it in her throat.
"What about her shares?" Chelsea asked. "Can we transfer those after the wedding too?"
"That requires board approval," Braden said. "But once we have control of Clara, we'll find a way. Just a matter of time."
Not just the money. The company. Her father's legacy.
Clara lay still. Her mind ran through her plan again. And again. Every detail. Every risk. It had to be perfect.
They finally moved toward the door. Satisfied. Triumphant. Before they left, Braden leaned over her. His breath smelled like coffee and lies. He whispered right in her ear.
"Rest in peace, Clara."
Something lit up inside her. Cold and hot at the same time. Not just justice anymore. Annihilation.
The door clicked shut. The room went silent except for the beeping.
Slowly, carefully, Clara opened her eyes. No grogginess. No confusion. Just cold, hard clarity. Hate sat in her chest like a stone.
She moved her arm. Her muscles were stiff from lying still so long. Her hand fumbled under the pillow and found the micro-phone. Seraphina had slipped it to her three nights ago during a late "check-up."
The screen glowed against her pale face. She pressed the speed-dial.
One ring.
"Clara? Are you okay?" Seraphina's voice was a whisper, tight with worry.
Clara's voice came out dry and raspy. But the words were steel. "Seraphina, I need your help. On my wedding day, I'm going to burn them to the ground."
"Consider it done, cousin." Seraphina's voice went cold. Hard. "Tonight, I'm getting you out of there. You need to let off some steam before the main event."
Clara ended the call. She sent the audio file she'd just recorded.
A moment later, her phone buzzed. Seraphina had it. Clara slid the phone back under her pillow. Closed her eyes. Steadied her breathing. Slow and even. The silent witness.
The performance continued. Just a little longer.
The afternoon stretched on. Every hour a test. Hospital announcements over the intercom. Nurses changing shifts. Traffic humming outside. Each sound marked time. Each sound brought her closer.
Just after midnight, the door hissed open. A woman in nurse's scrubs pushed a covered cart. The kind for medical equipment. Seraphina.
She moved fast. Eyes checked the hallway camera. Then she closed the door. "Showtime," she whispered. "I've got someone I want you to meet tonight. Trust me."
Seraphina unplugged the non-essential monitors. Plugged a small device into the main console. It would loop Clara's vitals for the next hour. A digital ghost for the nurses.
Clara was already dressed. A simple black dress Seraphina had smuggled in. She slid off the bed. Her legs felt weak. Shaky. She climbed into the hollow base of the cart. Curled into a tight ball. Seraphina covered her with a white sheet.
They moved through the hospital corridors. Quiet. Fast. The employee exit slid open. Cold New York air hit her face. Then they were in Seraphina's car. Merging into the river of headlights flowing through Manhattan.
The car stopped at a door with no sign. In a quiet alley in the Meatpacking District. A big man with a scar across his eyebrow-Marco-saw Seraphina's plate and nodded. He unlocked the door from inside.
"Tonight, you forget those bastards," Seraphina said. Her eyes glinted in the dim light. "The man I want you to meet... he's something special. Just let yourself get lost for a few hours."
Clara's exhausted mind heard the coded meaning. High-class escort. She almost smiled. Too tired to argue. Too broken to care. She nodded.
Inside, The Velvet Rope was all dim lights and plush velvet. A low beat pulsed through the floor. The air smelled like expensive perfume and secrets. Seraphina led her to a booth. Ordered her a whiskey. Squeezed her hand.
"Enjoy." Then she disappeared into the crowd.
Clara drank. The whiskey burned going down. But it didn't burn away the images. Braden's face. Chelsea's smile. She tried to numb herself. But the pain was alive.
A tall figure moved behind the bar. White shirt. Black vest. Sleeves rolled up to his elbows. Strong forearms. He polished a crystal glass with focused intensity. Different from the preening crowd around him.
Dimitri Sterling.
Seraphina had described him as a man who could make a woman forget her troubles for a night. To Clara's exhausted mind, that meant one thing. He'd agreed to meet her as a favor to Seraphina. Arranged through a mutual friend.
His eyes were deep blue. They swept the room and landed on her. He saw a woman drinking alone. Shattered. Defiant. Out of place in this world of calculated pleasure.
Clara looked up. Their eyes met. The whiskey had loosened something inside her. This must be him.
She reached into her purse. Pulled out the diamond engagement ring Braden had given her. Cold. Heavy. A shackle. She slid it across the mahogany bar.
"This is your payment," she said. Her voice steady. "One night."
Dimitri's hands stopped moving. He put down the glass. Looked from the ring to her face. Something flickered in his eyes. Amusement. Intrigue. He'd been offered many things. Never a jewel for a night.
The club owner, Marcus, started to approach. A look of deference on his face. Dimitri silenced him with one sharp glance.
He picked up the ring. Weighed it in his palm. His voice was low. A rumble. "Are you sure?"
Clara didn't answer with words. She leaned forward. Grabbed his tie. Pulled him down. Her lips met his. Not seduction. Rage. Grief. A desperate need to feel something other than the weight of betrayal.
The kiss broke something in her. The wall she'd built over fifteen days. For a second, all of it crashed through-Braden's betrayal, the lonely silence, the exhaustion of pretending. She kissed him harder. Not seductive. Desperate. Drowning.
Tears burned behind her closed eyelids. Weeks of refusing to cry. Her fingers tightened on his tie. Knuckles white. She wasn't calculating anymore. Just a broken woman trying to feel alive.
Her mouth tasted like whiskey and salt. Tears she wouldn't let fall.
Dimitri didn't break the kiss. He straightened. Lifted her into his arms like she weighed nothing. Carried her through the parting crowd. Up a private staircase. Into the club's penthouse suite.
Inside, she was the aggressor. Clumsy. Urgent. He met her with something surprising-tenderness. Firm control. He stripped away her pain, layer by layer. Until only sensation remained.
Afterward, she fell asleep in his arms. Deep. Dreamless. The first real sleep she'd had in weeks. For the first time since the accident, she felt safe.
Dimitri lay awake. Watched her chest rise and fall. He knew nothing about her. But he felt a pull. Curiosity beyond the physical.
Clara woke with the first gray light of dawn. The man beside her was still asleep. Shame washed over her. Hot. Sick. What had she done?
She slipped out of bed. Found her dress. Dressed in silence. She placed the diamond ring on the nightstand. Final payment. She didn't look back. Fled the suite. Fled the memory.
The door clicked shut.
Dimitri opened his eyes. He'd been awake the whole time. He reached over and picked up the ring. A slow, dangerous smile spread across his face. He had a feeling he'd see her again.
His phone buzzed. Julian Croft.
"Mr. Sterling." Julian's voice was dry. Amused. "I just received an interesting report. The Velvet Rope's silent alarm triggered at 3:47 a.m. in the penthouse suite. The club owner tells me you personally disabled the security feed. Should I be concerned, or just entertained?"
Dimitri turned the ring over in his fingers. Watched the morning light catch its facets. "I was never there. The system malfunctioned."
"Of course it did." Julian paused. "And the woman who left the building fifteen minutes ago wearing a dress that costs more than the average Brooklyn apartment-should I assume she's also a system malfunction?"
Dimitri said nothing.
"Alright." Julian sighed. "But you should know. Your grandfather's people are sniffing around again. Theodore heard you declined the Denning merger dinner last week. He's not happy. If he finds out you spent the night playing bartender while dodging a hundred-million-dollar deal..."
"Let him sniff." Dimitri's voice was calm. But something underneath sharpened. "I didn't decline the dinner. I simply chose not to attend."
"There's no difference, and you know it."
"There's every difference. I won't be managed. Not by Theodore. Not by anyone." He closed his fist around the ring. "Find out who she is. Quietly."
"Already running facial recognition against the exterior cameras. Give me an hour."
"Make it thirty minutes."
Julian let out a low whistle. "You've never asked me to run a background check on a woman before. She must be something."
Dimitri ended the call without replying. He rose from the bed. Crossed to the floor-to-ceiling window. Looked down at the waking city. Far below, a lone cab pulled away from the curb.
He didn't know her name. She'd walked into his club with a diamond ring and a desperate kiss. Walked out without asking for a single thing.
In his world, that made her dangerous. A woman who wanted nothing from him.
He looked at the ring again. Slipped it into his pocket. Began to dress.
The network he commanded stretched across three continents. The fortune he would inherit was measured in billions. None of it mattered right now. All he could think about was her sad eyes and the taste of whiskey on her lips.
He would find her. And when he did, he intended to learn what had put that fracture of grief behind her gaze-and why a woman who could afford a ring like this had been willing to trade it for one night with a stranger.
The Plaza's grand ballroom was packed with sympathetic faces and hushed whispers. Braden Strong moved through the crowd in his Tom Ford tuxedo. His expression was perfect. Tragic. Devoted.
"It's what she would have wanted," he explained to a distant Beaumont relative. He dabbed at a dry eye. "To celebrate our love, even now. It's for the best... a way to bring her good luck."
Chelsea Tate clung to his arm. Blush-pink bridesmaid dress. Red-rimmed eyes. Swollen from crying. The devastated best friend. Flawless performance. Inside, a triumphant thrill ran through her.
Clara's father, Harrison Beaumont, stood stiffly near the altar. His face was a storm cloud. He'd fought against this sham of a wedding. But Braden had been persuasive. Cited a fake conversation where Clara supposedly made him promise to go through with it no matter what.
The first chords of the wedding march swelled through the ballroom. All heads turned to the entrance.
Then she appeared.
Not in a wheelchair. On her own two feet. Clara Beaumont. Simple white silk gown. Clear, sharp eyes. She stepped forward. One step. Another. Slow. Deliberate. Down the aisle.
Weeks of forced stillness had left her muscles weak. Her joints stiff. Each step was a quiet act of will. Her legs trembled. Her hand gripped the edge of her gown to steady herself. She refused to show it.
A collective gasp swept the room. Then stunned murmuring. She was awake. She was walking.
Braden and Chelsea's faces went slack. Performative grief melted into horror. The color drained from their cheeks. Pale. Terrified.
Harrison and his wife rushed forward. Tears of real joy streaming down their faces. "Clara! Oh my God, Clara!"
Clara held up a hand. Stopped them. Her gaze was fixed on the two figures at the altar. She walked past her parents. Took the microphone from the officiant. Her voice rang clear and strong through the silent ballroom.
"Thank you all for coming to my funeral. Oh, my apologies. I meant wedding."
The sarcasm hung in the air. Thick. Uncomfortable.
Braden recovered first. He rushed toward her. Arms outstretched. Overjoyed fiancé. "Clara! You're awake! It's a miracle!"
She met him with a look so cold it could freeze fire. "Yes, it is a miracle, Braden. A miracle that let me see exactly what kind of vermin you are."
She gave a sharp nod to Seraphina. Standing discreetly by the audio-visual booth.
The massive screen behind the altar flickered to life. Sterile white walls of Clara's hospital room. Then the audio kicked in.
Every word of their conspiracy. Every greedy plan to steal her inheritance. Echoed through the ballroom. The video showed them kissing. Bodies pressed together. Feet from where she lay helpless. Damning. Undeniable.
Dead silence. Then an explosion of outrage.
Braden and Chelsea stood frozen. Ashen. Finished.
Harrison Beaumont let out a roar. Lunged. His fist connected with Braden's jaw. Security guards surged forward. Grabbed both of them.
From the front row, Braden's mother shot to her feet. Brenda Strong. Face twisted into a vicious snarl. "This is fake! It's all fake! You can't do this to my son!" Her voice rose to a hysterical pitch. "And so what if it is real? Your daughter was a vegetable! Was my son supposed to be a monk for the rest of his life? He has a future!"
The shameless words sucked the air from the room. The Beaumonts turned their backs on the Strong family. It was over.
Amid the chaos, Clara raised the microphone again. Her voice cut through the noise.
"This wedding is cancelled."
A pause.
"But I must get married today."
Everyone stared at her like she'd lost her mind.
"According to my grandfather's will," she announced, "my controlling shares in the company must be executed in partnership with a spouse. So I have a new proposal. Any man in this room willing to marry me, right now, will receive ten percent of my shares in Beaumont Consolidated as a wedding gift."
A wave of shock. Disbelief. Greedy calculation. Rippled through the guests. Insane. Desperate. Brilliant.
The room filled with whispers and nervous coughs. No one moved.
Then, from the back of the ballroom, a figure began to walk forward.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Quiet confidence that drew every eye. A perfectly tailored suit. Old money, not new.
Clara's breath caught. Her heart slammed against her ribs.
It was the bartender.
He walked right up to the altar. Intense blue eyes locked with hers. Stopped directly in front of her.
"I will," Dimitri Sterling said. His voice was low. Steady. An anchor in the swirling chaos.