
His Mother Offered Me Millions to Leave Him
Chapter 1
The check slid across the table with the same casual precision Victoria used for everything else in her life. Five million dollars, written in ink so black it looked like it might bleed into the ivory paper. The Manhattan penthouse stretched around us, all glass and steel and the kind of silence that costs money to maintain. I watched the check come to rest against the white tablecloth and felt something sharp and familiar unfurl in my chest.
"Five million," Victoria said, her voice carrying the crisp authority of old money. "Disappear from my son's life, Ms. Reed. Consider it a fair price for the inconvenience."
She didn't touch her water glass. Didn't fidget. Just sat there like she was conducting a board meeting, which I supposed she was. The Bishop family board meeting on how to remove the gold-digging trash. I picked up the check, studied it for exactly one beat, and tore it cleanly in half.
"Your son's happiness is worth at least one hundred million," I said, letting the pieces flutter back onto the table. "If you want to negotiate, bring a serious number."
For the first time since I'd met her, Victoria's composure cracked. Just a hairline fracture. Her right hand moved to her left, fingers straightening each ring with deliberate care. One diamond, two sapphires, a platinum band. I cataloged the tell like I cataloged everything else — ammunition for later.
"You misunderstand," she said, but her voice carried an edge now. "This isn't a negotiation."
"Everything's a negotiation, Victoria. Even sitting in your overpriced penthouse drinking coffee that costs more than most people's daily salary." I stood, smoothing my skirt with the same theatrical flourish I used for everything. "You just haven't made a real offer yet."
I walked out without touching my coffee. Let her sit there with it, I thought. Let her wonder if I'd poisoned it with my presence. The elevator doors closed on her straightening her rings again, and I smiled to myself. Round one.
Back at the penthouse, I found Kaisen in the living room, silhouetted against the floor-to-ceiling windows that made Manhattan look like a jewelry box spread out below us. He turned when he heard me, and I launched into my performance before he could speak.
"You will not believe what your mother tried to do," I announced, kicking off my heels with a theatrical flourish. "She actually thought five million would make me disappear. Five million! Can you imagine? I'm worth at least ten times that."
Kaisen's expression remained perfectly still, but his eyes tracked my every movement as I paced the room, playing the part I'd perfected. The shameless gold-digger. The woman who loved his money more than him. The role that kept everyone — including myself, sometimes — from looking too closely at what else might be there.
"What did you do?" His voice was low, even.
"I told her I'd consider one hundred million." I laughed, the sound bright and sharp as breaking glass. "She looked like I'd slapped her. Oh, and I tore the check in half. Very dramatic, very satisfying. Now I need dinner at Le Bernardin to recover from the trauma."
He was quiet for a moment, and then: "You should have asked for two hundred million."
I blinked. Then laughed for real, the sound surprising even me. "I'll remember that next time."
His phone was already out, fingers moving across the screen with the same precision his mother used for everything. "Le Bernardin. Eight o'clock."
I moved toward the bedroom to change, but his hand caught my waist, pulling me back against him. "You're extraordinary," he murmured against my hair, and I felt his lips curve into a smile I couldn't see. "Do you know that?"
I leaned into him, playing my part. "I'm expensive. There's a difference."
His hand tightened on my hip. "Not to me."
The next morning, I was in the kitchen making coffee when Elliot Voss appeared in the doorway. Kaisen's chief of staff had the kind of polished efficiency that made him look like he'd been carved from the same marble as the Bishop building. He nodded to me politely before turning to Kaisen.
"Sir, a moment?"
I carried my coffee to the terrace, giving them privacy, but I could hear the low murmur of their voices through the open door. Elliot's careful cadence, Kaisen's clipped responses. When I returned, Elliot was gone, but Kaisen stood by the window, his profile sharp against the morning light.
"Everything okay?" I asked, settling onto the sofa.
"Elliot thinks my mother will escalate." He turned, watching me with those dark eyes that missed nothing. "He's concerned."
I shrugged, the gesture deliberately careless. "She can try."
That afternoon, I drove to the private medical facility where my mother stayed. The kind of place that didn't exist in my world before Kaisen — all hushed voices and private rooms that cost more than most people's monthly rent. Teresa was asleep when I arrived, her breathing shallow but steady. I sat beside her bed, holding her hand, feeling the paper-thin skin and the bones underneath.
I pulled out my phone and opened the medical files I checked more often than my own reflection. New treatment options, new clinical trials, new hopes I could barely afford to entertain. The attending physician stopped by, and I updated him on my research with the same precision I used for everything else. His eyes held a mixture of respect and pity that I pretended not to see.
On the drive back, I passed the SoHo block where my boutique was taking shape behind scaffolding and construction netting. I pulled over and stood on the sidewalk, looking up at what would soon be mine. Not Kaisen's. Not a gift or an allowance. Mine.
My hand moved to my chest, fingers pressing against the fabric over my heart. The gesture felt automatic, necessary, though I didn't know why. Just one of those things my body did without consulting my brain.
That evening, Victoria sat in her sunroom with Veronica Ross, the tea service gleaming between them like armor. "The boutique opening," Victoria said, her voice carrying the same crisp authority she'd used with me. "That's our opportunity."
Veronica nodded, smoothing her skirt with practiced grace. "I understand."
"You'll be there as Kaisen's appropriate choice," Victoria continued, straightening her rings one by one. "The kind of woman who belongs in his world. The kind who understands what he needs."
"And Scarlett?" Veronica asked, though she already knew the answer.
"Scarlett will be exposed as what she is. A novelty. A distraction." Victoria's smile was sharp as winter. "This time, we won't underestimate her."
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