/1/119376/coverbig.jpg?v=af75e13f1f281fb7f6e575e3286c8920)
was the same tempera
master bedroom. It blurred the lights of the distant shore, turning them into hazy, indistinct stars.
eavier tonight. Colder. A permanent, metallic reminder of a wedding three years ago with no guests, no celebration, just the sterile quiet of a judge's cha
, resonant tones counting the first second of a new day. T
ght and proud for hours,
et presence had been a fixture in the Sterling estate for decades, entered c
edge, took in her solitary figure by the window. Brenda said nothing.
rittle, practiced thing that didn't rea
renda. You di
er icy fingertips. They trembled, just slightly, a b
g face-up on the marble coffee table, lit up. The sharp, intr
icked up the phone. Her br
e was at the private terminal of JFK Airport, his tall frame acting as a shield against the wind and rain. He h
e water. She recognized that woman. Sloane Kensingto
his public, press-conference smile, all sharp angles and corporate power. This was a soft, gentle cur
ike a physical blow, a fist clenching tight around
alright?" Brenda's voi
A sharp intake of breath was her only response. She opened her mou
the impact knocked over a silver picture frame beside it. The
e one photo from
he shards of glass. Her vision was blurred by a sudden rush of
d blood welled up, then fell
hing to her side. "Don't touch it,
ain against the pristine white. She felt noth
came the low, familia
urged through her. He ca
om spin. She ignored the throbbing in her finger and rushed
ain. The driver's door opened, and
It was Caleb, his
d colder and darker than before. She sagged against the window frame, clos
polite knock echoed at
rsonal smile, holding a large, pe
ion. "Mr. Sterling sends his deepest apologies. An urgent M&A deal wit
knew. He had to know where Julian really was. The lie
that the seasoned assistant, a man who faced down corporate sharks daily
he unbearable tension. She took the box from Caleb's
ave a slight, formal bow an
It looked like a mockery. A joke at her expense. Arden walked
n. It came undone with a sof
lace. A gaudy, ostentatious piece from the brand's latest, m
was the kind of piece a man with no taste and a lot of money would buy. The kind
ss stones that represented nothing. This soulless object was the final nail in the coffin
n pain, she hurled the necklace a
b of fractures radiated from the point of impact. The
mirror. A woman with wild hair, red-rimme
other. The pain in her chest began to recede, replace
resses Julian's stylists had picked for her. In the very back, she found what she was looking for. A perfect
Her finger was still bleeding, smearing a small
t. That would be too emotional. Instead, she methodically we
or his world. It was t

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