
Cutting the Strings: The Heiress's Revenge
Cutting the Strings: The Heiress's Revenge Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The private elevator ascending to the triplex penthouse of the Sterling Tower was practically silent, a marvel of modern engineering that Victoria Sterling had personally approved during the building’s construction. She leaned against the mirrored wall, allowing her eyes to slip shut for just a fraction of a second. The flight from Tokyo had been brutal, fourteen hours of recycled air and relentless negotiations to secure a massive supply chain contract for Sterling Hospitality.
She had closed the deal, of course. She always did.
Victoria adjusted the collar of her sharp, charcoal-grey blazer, her reflection staring back at her with cool, calculating dark eyes. At twenty-eight, she had spent the better part of a decade operating in the shadows of her own empire. When she met Arthur Pendelton eight years ago, he was a struggling junior manager with big dreams and two orphaned teenage siblings to raise. Victoria had fallen for his ambition, or rather, the potential of it. She had quietly funneled her vast, inherited wealth into building a hospitality empire, installing Arthur as the face of the company—the charismatic CEO—while she acted as his 'consultant' and handled the grueling reality of running the business. She had raised his siblings, Mason and Lily, as her own. She had bought them a family.
Or so she thought.
The elevator doors chimed softly and parted, revealing the sprawling, marble-floored foyer of the penthouse. Victoria stepped out, her designer heels sinking into the plush, custom-woven rug. She hadn’t told Arthur she was arriving a day early. She had envisioned a quiet evening, perhaps a glass of wine and a rare moment of connection with her fiancé before the quarterly board meeting tomorrow.
Instead, a burst of loud, raucous laughter echoed from the sunken living room.
Victoria paused, her hand hovering over the keypad that controlled the smart-home lighting. That wasn't the television. That was Mason’s booming, nineteen-year-old laugh, followed closely by the high-pitched giggle of his twin sister, Lily.
"I'm just saying," Mason's voice carried clearly over the ambient jazz music playing from the hidden speakers, "if Victoria catches you drinking that, she's going to initiate a total lockdown. You know how she gets. The woman has a spreadsheet for our oxygen intake."
Victoria frowned, her hand dropping to her side. She stepped silently down the hallway, the shadows of the corridor concealing her approach. She paused just behind the massive, freestanding limestone fireplace that separated the dining area from the living room.
"Oh, let her track it," Arthur’s voice drifted over, thick with amusement and an expensive buzz. "She’s in Tokyo until tomorrow night. God, it’s been so nice being able to actually breathe in my own house for a week without her nagging about quarterly projections or expense reports."
"Your aura is definitely lighter, Arthur," a soft, breathy voice replied.
Victoria froze. That wasn’t Lily.
She leaned slightly, peering through the gap between the limestone pillars. The scene in her living room looked like a perfectly curated advertisement for a lifestyle she despised.
Arthur lounged in the center of the white leather sectional, looking effortlessly handsome in his unbuttoned linen shirt. Mason and Lily were draped over the matching armchairs, holding crystal goblets filled with a dark, ruby liquid. Victoria’s eyes zeroed in on the bottle sitting on the glass coffee table. It was her 1990 Château Margaux. A five-thousand-dollar bottle she had purchased at auction to celebrate her late father’s birthday.
But it was the woman sitting practically in Arthur’s lap that made the air in Victoria’s lungs turn to ice.
Elara Thorne.
Victoria recognized her instantly. Elara was a twenty-four-year-old "spiritual wellness" influencer whom Arthur had recently hired on a ludicrously expensive retainer to consult on the spa menus for their new resort line. She was currently wearing a silk slip dress that left nothing to the imagination, her blonde hair perfectly tousled as she traced a manicured finger down Arthur’s chest.
"Victoria just has very… dense energy," Elara said, pouting her lips in a display of practiced sympathy. "She’s so attached to the material world. Budgets, rules, boundaries. It blocks your manifestation potential, Arthur. You’re a visionary. You need space to dream."
"Exactly," Arthur agreed, leaning down to press a kiss to Elara’s bare shoulder. "She’s a workhorse. Don't get me wrong, she's great at the boring operational stuff, which is why I keep her around. It frees me up to actually lead the company. But she doesn't understand the soul of the business. You do, Elara."
Victoria’s face remained completely impassive, though her heart beat a slow, heavy rhythm against her ribs. *A workhorse.* She had sacrificed her twenties, her public recognition, and her peace of mind to build the throne he was currently sitting on, and he thought of her as a workhorse.
"She’s just so strict," Lily whined, taking a sloppy sip of the priceless wine. "She threatened to cut off my credit card last month just because I bought a few bags. Like, it’s your money, Arthur! You're the CEO! Why does she act like she owns the place?"
"Because she’s a control freak, Lil," Mason scoffed, tossing a grape into the air and catching it in his mouth. "Remember when she made us get tutors instead of letting us go to Cabo for spring break? She’s like a robot. I don't think she actually has feelings. I can't wait until you finally marry her, Arthur, so you can put her in her place and just give us our trust funds."
Arthur chuckled, a dark, arrogant sound. "Everything in due time, Mason. Let her keep organizing the spreadsheets. Once the new resort launches and my equity vests completely, we won't have to tip-toe around her moods anymore."
Elara giggled, shifting her weight. As she raised her hand to brush a stray lock of hair behind Arthur’s ear, the ambient light caught the jewelry on her wrist.
Victoria’s breath hitched, just slightly.
It was a custom-machined, diamond-encrusted Patek Philippe watch. There was only one in the world. Victoria’s father had commissioned it for her twenty-first birthday, shortly before he passed away. She kept it in the biometric safe in the master bedroom. A safe that Arthur, as her fiancé, had override access to.
"I still can't believe you gave me this," Elara cooed, admiring the watch as it glittered on her wrist. "It’s so vintage. It really grounds my root chakra."
"Only the best for my muse," Arthur murmured, leaning in to capture Elara’s lips in a deep, lingering kiss. Mason and Lily didn't even flinch, simply laughing and clinking their glasses together as if their brother cheating on his fiancé of eight years in her own home was a regular Tuesday night occurrence.
In the shadows, Victoria did not cry.
There was a time, perhaps five years ago, when this betrayal would have shattered her. She would have burst into the room, screaming, demanding answers, weeping over the sacrifices she had made. She would have asked what she did wrong, why she wasn't enough, why the siblings she had mothered had turned into such ungrateful parasites.
But Victoria Sterling was no longer a girl who believed she had to buy love. She was a woman who understood the cold, hard mathematics of an investment.
Arthur Pendelton was a bad investment. Mason and Lily were sunk costs.
Victoria smoothly reached into her blazer pocket and extracted her sleek, matte-black smartphone. She bypassed the lock screen and opened the camera, hitting the record button.
She held the phone steady, capturing the high-definition footage of Arthur making out with Elara, the stolen diamond watch gleaming on the influencer's wrist, the empty bottle of Château Margaux, and the twins laughing in the background. She recorded for two full minutes, ensuring the audio of their mocking banter was crystal clear.
"Honestly, Arthur," Elara said, pulling back from the kiss with a breathless laugh. "What are you going to do when she gets back tomorrow? You can't actually sleep in the same bed as her. Her vibes are so toxic."
"I'll tell her I'm stressed about the board meeting and need the master suite to myself," Arthur said dismissively. "She’ll sleep in the guest room. She always does what I tell her if I frame it around the company's success."
"God, you're a genius," Mason cheered.
Victoria stopped the recording. She saved the file to three separate encrypted cloud servers.
Without making a single sound, she turned around and walked back down the dark corridor. The heavy front door of the penthouse opened with a soft click and closed behind her, locking automatically.
The silence of the elevator was a stark contrast to the sickening noise of the penthouse. Victoria leaned against the glass, her expression a mask of absolute, terrifying calm. She pulled up her contacts and bypassed her usual corporate directory, scrolling down to a number she only used for absolute emergencies.
She pressed call. It rang twice before a crisp, professional voice answered.
"Ms. Sterling," Richard said. As the senior partner at her private wealth management firm, he was one of the three people on earth who knew the true extent of her net worth. "It is eleven p.m. in New York. I assume the Tokyo acquisition went well?"
"The acquisition is finalized, Richard," Victoria said, her voice smooth and devoid of any tremor. "But we have a domestic issue. I need you to initiate Protocol Zero."
There was a sharp intake of breath on the other end of the line. "Protocol Zero? Ms. Sterling, are you certain? That will sever all financial bridges. It will completely isolate the liquidity."
"I am certain," Victoria said, stepping out of the elevator and into the private, climate-controlled parking garage beneath the tower. She walked toward her sleek black Maybach, the heels of her shoes clicking rhythmically against the concrete. "I want every joint account frozen. I want the black cards issued to Arthur Pendelton, Mason Pendelton, and Lily Pendelton revoked instantly. I want all automated trust allowances halted."
"Understood," Richard said, his tone shifting into rapid-fire efficiency. "What about the corporate accounts linked to Mr. Pendelton’s CEO title?"
"Leave the primary operational accounts alone for now, I don't want to spook the board," Victoria instructed, opening the door of the Maybach and sliding into the driver's seat. "But cut off his discretionary spending fund. Any expense over one hundred dollars requires my direct, two-factor authentication. And Richard?"
"Yes, ma'am?"
"Transfer the forty million in shared liquidity into my solo-access offshore firewall," Victoria commanded, starting the engine. The car purred to life, a low, powerful growl in the empty garage. "I want it gone before midnight."
"I am executing the transfers now, Ms. Sterling," Richard said. The sound of rapid typing echoed through the phone. "The black cards will begin declining in approximately three minutes. The liquidity is moving... now. The firewall is up. You are the sole signatory."
"Thank you, Richard. Goodnight."
Victoria ended the call. She placed her phone in the center console and opened her private banking app. The screen illuminated her face in the dark cabin of the car.
She watched the numbers on the screen.
*Joint Liquidity Account: $40,500,000.00*
She hit the 'Confirm' button on the pending firewall transfer.
The screen refreshed. A small loading circle spun for half a second.
*Joint Liquidity Account: $0.00*
*Status: FROZEN*
Victoria locked her phone and shifted the car into drive. A cold, razor-sharp smile finally broke through her stoic expression, not reaching her eyes.
"Let's see how much they love you tomorrow, Arthur."
***
Cutting the Strings: The Heiress's Revenge of Contents
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