LOGINI woke up to my head pounding like someone was taking a hammer to it from the inside.
My phone on the nightstand was lit up and buzzing in a way that communicated something had gone very wrong overnight, which I already knew, but seeing thirty seven missed calls from my secretary at eight in the morning made it considerably more concrete. I lay there for exactly ten seconds. Then I sat up. The notifications kept coming. My secretary. Board members I recognized by name. My father's lawyer. A text from my stepmother that I opened with the particular resignation of someone who already knew they weren't going to enjoy what they were about to read. Family office. Meeting at 10am. Do not be late. I checked the time. 9:40. A stock notification dropped down from the top of my screen and I looked at it long enough to confirm what I already suspected. Not yet catastrophic, but trending that way with the type of momentum it would take to continue on that path to no avail. Rising, I immediately went to the bathroom. The shower was fast and hot and I didn't let myself think about anything beyond the immediate task of being ready and presentable and walking into that meeting looking like a woman who had not left her own wedding the previous afternoon in front of every important person in Seattle. I had worked hard to establish a reputation for myself and had been toying with all kinds of complications that had been thrown at my face in one afternoon, so the least I could do was look like none of it had touched me. I dried my hair, dressed with the first clean clothes I could find and was lining my eyes when my phone buzzed with a text from my secretary. Downstairs in two minutes. I capped the liner, picked up my bag and left. I was greeted at the building entrance by my secretary Maya, who was holding a cup of coffee and on the other hand a tablet, falling into step beside me without missing a beat. She had served as my secretary for three years and her ability to pass negative information in a way that made it sound like a calendar update was her particular specialty. “The board group chat has been on since last night.” As we walked to the car, she maintained a professional tone in her voice, making it lower. “Your lawyer told you he will be at the estate by 10 am because 3 members have called for an emergency session. To date, the story has been picked up by four outlets and the comments have been…" "I don't need to know about the comments." "Understood." She scrolled down to the next page. “Your 11 o'clock has been rescheduled; the Harrington meeting will still be held on Thursday if you don't want me to move it.” "Good." I got into the car. Maya slipped in next to me, and kept on going. I drank the coffee and listened and watched Seattle move past the window. The city looked exactly the same as it always did. Grey sky, wet roads, people moving with their heads down against the cold. Nothing about it acknowledged that my life had shifted considerably in the past eighteen hours. I appreciated that about cities. They didn't care. I finished the coffee and handed the empty cup to Maya and looked out the window the rest of the way. Whatever was waiting for me at that estate I was going to walk into it the same way I walked into everything. Ready and unbothered and giving nothing away. We arrived at my father's estate at exactly ten-thirty. I didn’t rush out of the car. It was a trivial thing I knew was petty and I did it anyway, I collected my things, walking up the front steps at a pace that communicated I was here because I had chosen to be and not because anyone had summoned me. Even before the day he passed, my father's estate was more of Veronica's than mine, and when I came there for a meeting she had organized, it was like coming there on my own terms. Showing up early was not something I was going to do. Let them wait thirty minutes. It was the least I could take from this morning. When I came into the office there were already seated. Two lawyers from the board and my stepmother Veronica, sitting near the head of the table with the scowl she often had when she thought she was going to win something. I've seen that face throughout my life, and it had never once made me feel anything other than tired. I sat at the head of the table. The room adjusted. My father's lawyer Tyler cleared his throat and opened the folder in front of him. He was a lean, thin man who had been busy for twenty years with the affairs of the Reed families and he was the neutral man that is trained to report facts without personal opinion. “Thank you all for coming.” He then glanced at the document. “I'll read the pertinent clause directly.” The air became still. “Full succession of Reed Industries, including all holdings, assets and controlling shares, shall be denied until Sloane Reed has been lawfully married by the time she reaches her twenty-fifth birthday, at which point the estate will pass to Veronica Reed.” I kept my face completely still. The words weren't new ones. I had heard this clause many years ago when my father originally had the will prepared. It was a formality at the time. A checked box to check. I had been engaged to Cole for 2 years and my 25th birthday had been a distant affair that didn't need to happen. It felt urgent now. "I'm twenty four." I looked at Tyler . “The condition is not violated.” "Miss Reed." Tyler’s voice was careful. "Your twenty fifth birthday is in four days. The window is not generous." "But it exists." "Technically, yes. However…" “Then we are done here,” I closed the folder in front of me and looked around the table once. "If there's nothing else, this meeting is adjourned." I stood and my stepmother's voice called out to me. "You could always go back to Cole." Veronica said it with the particular sweetness she used when she wanted something to land hard. "I'm sure he'd still have you. Under the circumstances." I gazed at her for exactly one second. Then I picked up my bag and walked away silently. Some responses weren't worth the breath and Veronica Reed had been trying to get a reaction out of me for fifteen years without success. Today was not going to be the day she got one. I found my lawyer Patrick in the hallway outside. “Tell me there's something.” I continued walking and he walked along with me. "I went through it twice." He matched my stride. "The language is airtight. It was written when your engagement to Cole was already in place so it was never meant to be a threat, it was meant to be a formality. But now…" "Now it's not." I went through the front door. “There's no loophole, Sloane. I looked.” I paused at the foot of the steps, and stood there for a while. The morning air was cold and the city air moved around me completely indifferent, the same way it always did. "Thank you, Patrick." I pulled out my phone as I walked to the car. It rang twice until the other end picked up. "Can you meet me?" I maintained a neutral tone in my voice. "The café on Mercer. One o'clock.”Everyone took their seats with careful precision like pieces arranging themselves on a chessboard, ready to play a deathly competitive game.I tried to figure out what would make me feel less like an outsider in a room full of strangers who all shared blood I didn't have. Then I looked around properly and understood something that helped, marginally. It was the fact that nobody else looked comfortable either.This lookedlike hell for everyone too.The worst part of being here was having to meet Cole again. There was still some anger in me left towards him. He just sat there and stared angrily at me but I couldn't care less. The last I checked I was the victim not him.I decided to focus on something, erasing his existence from my mind. I chose to focus on the other part of the family.Roman sat with his hands folded, composed, but his jaw worked slightly when he thought no one was watching. The cousins along the side of the table kept glancing at each other, then away,like they were
Roman looked exactly as I remembered him.Same silver at the temples, same suit cut with precision. The man had spent decades perfecting how to look like old money even when his portion of it had always been smaller than he believed he deserved.The man was someone who never moved before he understood exactly what moving would cost him.He watched us approach without changing his expression.My eyes moved past him before I could stop them, and there she was. Beth, standing slightly behind Roman's right shoulder, dressed in something pale and unremarkable with her hands folded in front of her composed like a woman who had spent thirty years learning to disappear into rooms while watching everything happening in them.My jaw tightened.I hadn't seen either of them since the reading of my father's will, five years ago, and the intervening time had done nothing to soften whatever I felt looking at them now. Roman's eyes were already calculating. It was so obvious I could see it, the way
Tomorrow won't be easy.Four words. Four words that communicated a very ominous warning Zane gave me that I spent half the night mulling over, trying to extract some additional meaning that wasn't there, and the other half failing to sleep because of it.I got up at six anyway.Because if I was walking into something, I was going to walk in looking super professional so people would think I belonged there.I acted like it was a business meeting because that's the only kind of situation I knew that involved a lot of people in a room who might not want me to do well.I put on a charcoal gray suit that made me look capable without seeming like I was trying too hard to impress. I made my hair like I did when I went for shareholder presentations and my makeup applied with the same exacting hand I used before facing a hostile board.It didn't help.What am I doing? This isn't a freaking board meeting!I exhaled, knowing that even as I told myself otherwise, even as I went through every mot
Oh Thank God, it’s just one man and I can pay him off.That was the first thing I noticed once my pulse settled enough to actually assess the situation instead of just reacting to it. I was so glad that it was not a coordinated ambush, like four photographers working a tip. But just one very lucky man with a camera and an opportunistic instinct that came from following society pages for a living.“Mr Della Ross, can you look here?” Her screamed as the flashes continued.He was so lucky to have been in this exact place to be standing too close to a parked car because he'd recognized a license plate or gotten lucky on a tip from a valet.“I just wanna get one picture to go!” He screamed again as he continued with the pictures.So fucking annoying.I swore in my mind but then again, one man was a problem with a simple solution. Pay him off, easy.I got out of the car before Sloane could say anything, my body between her and the camera, making sure he couldn’t get a decent picture of he
I knew the second I looked at her face.And I'd seen panic before in my line of work. It was common in boardrooms during hostile takeovers, hospital corridors. It was that look of someone whose body had started reacting before their mind caught up. Sloane's eyes had gone distant and it looked like it had everything to do with the room around her, her breathing was visible now in short, shallow pulls. I didn't ask what was wrong because asking would have wasted seconds I didn't have.I got her out.The valet had the car at the curb before I'd finished crossing the lobby, and I had her in the passenger seat with the door closed before she'd said a single word.She was shaking.Now, I wouldn't have been worried if it were just small tremors but it was not. Her whole body was shaking and she had her hands pressed flat against her thighs like she was trying to hold herself together through sheer physical pressure.Her breath was coming in sharp and uneven pulls that didn't seem to be bri
Wear something that would make the whole room keep their eyes on you. That was the entirety of Zane's instruction, delivered over coffee three days before the Whitfield Foundation gala.And even though I hated to admit it, I had spent considerably more time than I wanted to deciding what that meant. Because deep down his validation mattered to me and I found myself wanting to impress him now.It was crazy. “What do you think?” I asked him as I tried dress after dress before I finally settled on a deep navy blue dress that cinched my waist perfectly and showed off my shoulders.“Yes, This is the one” he said wide-mouthed as he stared at me a little too much.The dress was structured at the bodice, fluid below. It was just like he instructed - a dress that caught the room and worked it to my advantage. Before that, I'd tried on six others. I knew immediately when I put it on that the search was over and this was the dress I was going to wear.I couldn’t help but notice how he stared
We are getting married tomorrow.Two days. That was all it had taken from the signed contract to the scheduled wedding. I had expected Sloane Reed to take the full three days, maybe longer. Instead she had called Patrick from the café, confirmed the date before she even stood up from the table, and
He walked in and every head in the café turned. I had already been seated for ten minutes, black coffee in front of me that I hadn't touched, the file on the table within reach. I had chosen the corner table deliberately. Away from the windows, away from anyone who might recognize either of us and
The dress was beautiful and I was walking down the aisle in it. The cathedral sleeves, the pearl buttons running down the back, the train sweeping the floor behind me like something out of a magazine. Cole had picked it himself and it was perfect and with every step I took I looked exactly like a
What the hell are you hiding from me? I had opened my mouth to ask him that when he received a phone call and his countenance changed. The rooftop was empty and the last few guests had left. I had turned to him with the question that had been sitting on my mind since midnight in the villa but







