Sterling leaned forward, resting his forearms on his knees.
His eyes held a mocking gleam as he stared directly at Ansel.
"You missed the yacht party again this weekend, Ansel."
Jax Adler stood by the private bar, swirling a heavy crystal glass of bourbon over a single large ice cube.
He took a slow sip and let out a dry laugh.
"Maybe our boy finally got a leash put on him by that little Brooklyn girl."
Ansel's thumb stopped moving over the edge of the poker chip.
A sharp spike of irritation hit the back of his neck.
He forced the muscles in his face to remain completely relaxed.
He let a lazy, indifferent smile curve his lips.
He flicked his wrist, tossing the chip perfectly into the center of the pile on the table.
The plastic clattered loudly against the others.
"Don't project your own domestic nightmares onto me, Jax," Ansel said.
Jax walked over and dropped into the armchair across from the sofa.
"It is not just us talking. The Wall Street Journal had a front-page rumor yesterday about the Schultz and Lamb families announcing a merger."
The air in the room suddenly grew thick.
Sterling and Jax both locked their eyes on Ansel's profile.
Ansel looked like a marble statue, his jawline sharp and unmoving under the dim amber lighting.
He reached for his own glass of dark liquor.
He took a swallow, letting the burn of the alcohol coat his throat.
"The press writes what sells papers. There is no engagement."
Sterling raised a single eyebrow.
"Isela Lamb flies back into JFK from Paris next week. You cannot dodge that bullet forever."
The muscle in Ansel's jaw ticked.
He pressed his thumb hard against the rim of his glass, tracing the cut crystal to ground himself.
He kept his posture wide, taking up space on the sofa to project absolute control.
Jax leaned in closer.
"So, if the merger happens, what are you going to do with Ellie? The good student is not going to fit into the new family portrait."
At the sound of Ellie's name, Ansel's heart skipped a single, hard beat against his ribs.
His chest tightened.
He let out a harsh scoff to push the unfamiliar physical reaction down.
He set his glass down on the leather coaster with a heavy thud.
He leaned his head back against the sofa.
"Ellie is a convenience. A pressure valve for my schedule."
Sterling smirked.
"Those good girls are dangerous. Once they fall, they wrap around your neck like a vine and choke you."
A low, dark chuckle vibrated in Ansel's chest.
"She is perfectly behaved."
He looked at the men in the room with absolute certainty.
"She does not check my phone. She does not ask for diamond tennis bracelets. She is zero maintenance."
Jax let out a loud whistle.
"A contract girl who does not need emotional hand-holding. That is the rarest commodity on the Upper East Side."
Just as Jax finished his sentence, the heavy mahogany door to the VIP room swung open. Bryan Roth stood in the doorway, a sneer already twisting his face, clearly having overheard the last few words.
"She is just a middle-class leech staring at your trust fund, Ansel. Throw enough cash at her, and she will disappear."
Ansel's fingers curled into a tight fist around his glass.
His knuckles turned stark white.
A violent urge to cross the room and smash the glass into Bryan's face rushed through his veins.
But his survival instincts, drilled into him since childhood, kicked in.
Defending her now would prove he cared.
It would prove he was weak.
Ansel forced his fingers to uncurl, one by one.
He let out a cold, empty laugh that matched Bryan's tone.
"Exactly."
Ansel looked around the room, his voice dropping to a flat, dead pitch.
"This is just a limited-time pure movie. I am playing a role."
He picked up his glass again.
"When the credits roll, I will write her a nice recommendation letter for her resume, and we will part ways."
The room erupted into loud, knowing laughter.
The men clinked their glasses together, celebrating the ruthless rules of their world.
Ansel lowered his eyelashes as the laughter echoed around him.
He looked down at his phone resting face-up on the table.
There was a text from Ellie from thirty minutes ago, wishing him a good night.
A sudden, sharp ache twisted in his gut.
He grabbed the phone and flipped it face-down against the wood.
He needed to shut off the feeling.
Across the room, the heavy mahogany door was not completely shut.
A two-inch gap let the dim, yellow light from the hallway slice into the dark room.
Outside that gap, standing perfectly still on the hallway carpet, Ellie Hartman heard every single word.