ログインMarcus’s heavy leather boots hit the sleek, charcoal-gray tiles of the executive corridor like the dull, rhythmic thuds of a failing engine. He didn't even know where he was walking anymore. The thick leather folder containing the Vandermeer clearances was clamped so tightly under his armpit that the cardboard backing was actively buckling, the sharp edges biting right through the damp fabric of his black button-down shirt. His vision was a blurry, vibrating tunnel of glass partitions, brushed steel doors, and the soft, maddening hum of the building's massive climate control system.He could still see it. Every single agonizing detail was permanently printed onto the back of his eyelids.The way that charcoal wool skirt had been pushed entirely up over the pale, heavy curve of her thighs. The way Damien’s thick, blunt fingers had dug into her skin, leaving slight, temporary indentations in the soft flesh. The absolute, unbothered arrogance of his father's mouth moving against hers.
The leather folder felt entirely too heavy in Marcus’s grip. It was just a thick stack of finalized customs clearances and secondary financing agreements.He had spent twenty minutes in his own office, staring at the signature lines until the black ink began to blur into meaningless squiggles, trying to force his heart rate down to something resembling a normal rhythm.He just wanted to get it over with. He wanted to drop the documents on the desk, get his father’s sign-off, and flee the building before the walls completely closed in on him.He didn't check with the executive assistant. Her desk outside the massive double doors was empty anyway—probably down down the hall at the copy station. Marcus didn't care. He didn't think to pause. He just gripped the heavy brass handle, turned it, and pushed the thick oak door open without knocking.The air in his lungs instantly turned to solid lead.Marcus froze. His boots felt like they had been welded directly into the plush, dark blue ca
The glass-walled enclosure of the fortieth-floor boardroom was usually a freezer. The building's central AC system was set to a brutal, industrial chill specifically designed to keep forty middle-aged board members from sweating through their bespoke three-piece suits during long fiscal reviews.But Marcus was burning alive.He stood at the front of the long, polished mahogany table, the plastic casing of the presentation remote biting hard into the sweaty palm of his right hand. On the massive projector screen behind him, a complex, color-coded spreadsheet detailing the Rotterdam port allocations was glowing in bright, clinical blues and greens. He was supposed to be speaking. He was supposed to be explaining why the third-quarter freight tariffs had dropped by three point eight percent.Instead, he was just choking on his own tongue."The... the secondary terminal capacity," Marcus stammered, his voice dropping into a rough, uneven register that sounded completely unpracticed. H
"Excuse me, ma'am, but I’m going to have to ask you to stay in the front gallery. The private salon is entirely closed to the public right now."Sophia stopped dead in her tracks, her beige leather heels clicking to a sharp, jarring halt against the white marble floor of Maison Vaudreuil. She stared at the young sales assistant holding a sleek black iPad like a shield. The girl looked barely twenty, her hair slicked back into a tight corporate bun, her expression polite but completely unyielding."Closed?" Sophia’s voice carried that high, icy pitch she usually reserved for incompetent airline staff or slow caterers. She adjusted the heavy strap of her luxury handbag, her knuckles turning a slight, stressed white. "I have had a platinum profile with this boutique since before you completed your primary education. I don't wait in the front gallery.""I am incredibly sorry, ma'am," the assistant said, her voice dropping into a hushed, reverent whisper that only made Sophia’s blood boil
The phone vibrated against his thigh. A harsh, mechanical buzzing that felt like a drill against his bone.Sophia.It had to be Sophia. She was thousands of miles away, probably sitting in some sterile, overpriced hotel suite, executing their flawless, strategic plan for him to take back the company.He didn’t answer it.He didn’t even pull the phone out of his pocket to check the caller ID. He just stood there in the dark, cavernous kitchen, staring completely blankly at the spot on the marble counter where Diane had just been standing. The heavy, intoxicating scent of her orange blossom perfume was still hanging in the cold air, completely suffocating him. It coated the back of his throat. It tasted like absolute ruin.The vibration finally stopped. It timed out, leaving behind a heavy, crushing silence that was somehow infinitely worse.Marcus turned around and walked out of the kitchen. His legs felt entirely hollow. Walking up the grand, sweeping staircase of the villa felt like
It was somewhere around two in the next morning. Maybe closer to three. The antique clocks in the villa were completely out of sync, their heavy, rhythmic ticking just echoing down the dark, cavernous hallways like a countdown to his own execution.Marcus was standing in the middle of the massive, industrial-grade chef's kitchen. He hadn't turned the lights on. The only illumination was the harsh, pale LED glow spilling out from the open door of the sub-zero refrigerator.He felt ill. The toxic, suffocating jealousy from dinner hadn’t faded. It had just curdled. It had sunk deep into the lining of his stomach, sour and heavy, making his hands shake so badly he had already dropped an empty water glass into the stainless steel sink. Thankfully, it hadn't shattered.He leaned heavily against the cold marble of the center island, rubbing the heels of his hands brutally into his bloodshot eyes. He was losing his mind. He was actually, genuinely losing his grip on reality.Anger wasn't work
Sophia’s fingers were shaking so hard she dropped her iPad onto the silk duvet. It was half past two in the morning, but the bedroom in her father’s villa was bright, illuminated by the harsh, blue glow of three different burner phones scattered across the sheets.She had spent forty-eight hours an
It was past eight. The cleaning crew was somewhere on the lower floors, their distant, rhythmic vacuuming just a faint vibration under the floorboards.Diane walked slowly, her heels clicking against the marble trim with a lonely, hollow echo. She was tired, the champagne from the afternoon having
The sun didn’t rise so much as it just made the fog over the marina turn a sickly, bruised yellow.Marcus hadn’t slept. Not a wink. He’d spent the whole night pacing the length of his living room, his bare feet sticking slightly to the expensive hardwood floors he was three months behind on paying
Sarah didn’t go straight down to the fourth floor. She waited. Five minutes, maybe six, just standing by the high-capacity copier in the corridor, letting the rhythmic thudding of the machine settle her nerves. It was funny. She’d done worse things for Diane, far more legally grey things, but this







