brass of the doorknob when his voice cut thr
to
back to him, a final, fragile shield against the cruelty she knew was coming. The
floor, a slow, deliberate tread that echoed the pounding in her ear
devoid of any warmth. "And she won't just be a guest. She will be
ical blow. She spun around, her eyes wide wi
e that had been in the Sterling family for generations. It was a symbol. A statement. By tradition, it w
shaking with a mixture of anger and desperation. "It belo
reath. "Sloane has already
wearing my dignity around her neck at my event. That
ining space between them, his towering frame blocking out t
how this 'legal' arrangement came to be. You think I don't remember? You, in my hotel room? The conveniently timed photographers? You
mmed into her with the force of a battering ram. The room tilted, the edges of her vision
was the victim, too. But the words died in her throat. The utter hatred in hi
ace. "The necklace will be delivered to Sloane's apartment tomorrow morning," he said
saw a complete stranger. A cruel, cold monster who enjoyed her pain. In that instant, whatev
er her. The shaking stop
his what you want?" she asked, her voice
have. A flicker of something-annoyance? confusion?-crossed his
oken smile touched her lips, a smile th
ish," she
ements fluid and deliberate. She grasped the doo
e in conversation, their eyes hungry for gossip. They saw her face-pale as a ghost, her mak
ed past them all, a queen in exile, her broken pride her onl
ut behind her. She stepped
t box, her strength deserted her. Her knees buckled, and she sli
t, scalding torrent, washing away the last three years of her life. Th
one. Her fingers, clumsy with grief, scrolled through he
g breath and wiped her eyes with the back of her hand. She stood up, pulled a pair
difference firmly in place. She pushed through the revolvi
ne buzzing. When the lawyer's secretary a
swallowing her words. "Please tell Mr. Thorne I ne
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