"You look stressed, Ellie," Chloe had said, her voice dripping with honeyed condescension. "Relax a little. Have some champagne."
The casual cruelty of the words had stung. Chloe was right. No one ever looked at the blind stepsister, the inconvenient reminder of their mother's brief, regrettable second marriage. Eleanora was furniture. A burden they tolerated because appearances demanded it. She could hear it in every forced politeness, every sigh of exasperation when she asked for help.
Now, the memory of that syrupy voice made her stomach clench. It wasn't a sister's concern. It was the purr of a predator closing in.
She had been betrayed. By her own family.
A sharp click from the hallway snapped her out of her daze. The electronic lock on her door beeped, the indicator light flashing from red to green. A sound she had learned to recognize in the countless hotels her stepfather's business had dragged them through.
The heavy door swung inward. A man filled the doorway. She could feel the displacement of air, the sour bite of whiskey on his breath. It was Director Pierce, a Hollywood heavyweight known for his artistic films and his even more infamous appetites. She had been introduced to him earlier that evening, had felt the way his hand had lingered too long on her wrist, the way his voice had dropped to something greasy and intimate when he'd murmured, "So you're the blind one. How intriguing."
He stepped inside, pushing the door shut with a click of finality. The heavy thud of the "Do Not Disturb" sign followed.
"Don't be scared, little bird," he sneered, his voice a low, predatory rumble. "Your family knows how to be practical. A role in my next blockbuster is worth a small sacrifice, don't you think?"
A transaction. She was just a bargaining chip.
Rage cut through the drug-induced fog. She bit the inside of her cheek, hard, the coppery taste of blood anchoring her to reality.
Pierce advanced. His rough hand clamped around her wrist. "Don't fight it. Your sister said you have a stubborn streak a mile wide. Said you've got more fire in you than anyone she's ever met." He let out a low, hungry chuckle. "I do so enjoy the spirited ones. They're far more satisfying to break."
Chloe had told him everything. Chloe had handed her over like a wrapped gift.
He shoved her backward. Her hip slammed against the edge of a desk, and her hands flew out desperately, scrambling across the polished surface. Her fingers brushed against something heavy and cold. Glass. Cut crystal. An ashtray.
He didn't give her time to swing it. His hand shot out and grabbed her wrist, twisting it until she cried out and the ashtray clattered to the floor. Then his other hand was in her hair, yanking her head back, and she felt the cold press of something metal against her lips. A small canister. She tried to turn her face away, but his grip was too strong.
"Open your mouth, little bird," he hissed. "Chloe said you'd be difficult. That's why I brought insurance."
She clamped her jaw shut, but he pinched her nose, cutting off her air. When she finally gasped for breath, he sprayed. A fine, sweet-tasting mist flooded her mouth and throat. She choked, coughing violently, but it was already too late. The drug was inside her.
He released her, and she stumbled backward, clawing at her throat. The heat was already starting. A slow, creeping warmth that spread from her chest outward, making her skin prickle and her veins hum.
"There now," Pierce said, and she could hear the smile in his voice. "That's better. In a few minutes, you won't be fighting me at all. You'll be begging for it."
Rage and terror crashed together inside her. She wouldn't beg. She wouldn't give him the satisfaction. Her hand swept desperately across the floor, searching for the fallen ashtray. Her fingers found it just as his footsteps approached.
She swung blindly, putting every ounce of strength she had left into the blow.
The heavy glass connected with his skull with a sickening, wet crunch. He roared in pain, staggering backward, his grip on her wrist finally breaking. She heard him crash into the wall, heard his body slide to the floor.
For one terrifying second, silence.
Then a groan. Wet. Pained. He was still conscious.
Eleanora didn't wait. She ran.
She threw herself toward where she remembered the door to be, her outstretched hands finding the wood. She fumbled for the handle, yanked it open, and stumbled into the hallway.
Behind her, she heard him struggling to his feet. His voice, thick with rage and pain, echoed down the corridor. "You bitch! When I find you-"
But she was already running. Her left hand trailed along the wall, counting doors by feel. She had memorized the hotel layout earlier that day. Her cane had mapped the turns, her fingers had counted the doors. It was the only way to survive in a world not built for her.
She didn't get far.
The drug was hitting her in waves now, each one stronger than the last. Her legs felt like they were filled with wet sand. Her lungs burned. The corridor seemed to stretch and warp around her, her internal compass spinning uselessly. She lost count of the doors. She didn't know where she was anymore.
She stopped, her chest heaving, her bare feet sinking into the thick carpet. The hallway stretched away from her in both directions, vast and silent and utterly unknowable. Somewhere behind her, Pierce was still coming. She could hear his uneven footsteps, the wet drag of his injured body against the wall.
Her trembling hand swept frantically along the wall, searching for a doorframe, an alcove, anything that might offer shelter. Her fingers skimmed over smooth wallpaper, then the cool surface of a door, then-
A doorknob. Right under her hand.
She grabbed it without thinking, a drowning woman clutching at anything solid. The knob turned under her desperate grip.
The door swung inward.
She stumbled forward, her center of gravity shifting as she pitched into the dark space beyond. Her outstretched hands met nothing but air.
And then, suddenly, they met something else entirely.
Warmth. Skin. The solid, unyielding plane of a man's bare chest. Damp from the shower. Still wet.
She crashed into him, her palms flat against the hard muscle of his torso, her fingers instinctively curling against his skin to catch herself. Her frantic hands scrabbled for purchase, catching the edge of the bathrobe draped loosely over his shoulders. The robe was untied, hanging open, and her desperate grip pulled it further apart. Her palms pressed flat against the solid wall of his chest, feeling the slick warmth of shower-damp skin over sculpted muscle, the steady thud of his heartbeat beneath her fingertips.
The faint, clean scent of cedarwood soap enveloped her.
For one suspended, breathless heartbeat, the world stopped.
Then a voice came from above her. Low. Controlled. Edged with cold command.
"Who the hell are you?"