
His Mother Offered Me Millions to Leave Him
Chapter 3
The footage ran for four days straight.
Every time I opened my phone, there it was — Kaisen's arm around my waist, his voice carrying over the crowd, that word landing like a dropped glass. Fiancée. The clips had been cut and recut, slowed down, zoomed in on my face to catch whatever expression I'd been wearing. I'd watched it once. My expression was perfect. Warm, confident, the picture of a woman who'd expected it.
I hadn't watched it again.
The charity gala was the following Thursday. A cancer research benefit at the Plaza, the kind of event where the flowers cost more than the donations and everyone knew it. I wore a deep green dress and Kaisen's hand at the small of my back, and we moved through the room the way we always did — him clearing space without trying, me filling it without effort. We were good at this part. Whatever else we were, we were good at this.
The photographers were waiting outside when we left.
Not just the usual two or three. A whole cluster of them, pressed against the velvet rope, cameras already up. Someone had tipped them off. I felt Kaisen's hand shift at my back — not tighter, just more deliberate — and then the questions started.
'Kaisen, where's the ring?'
'Scarlett, when's the wedding?'
'Is it true you're already planning the venue?'
I kept my smile exactly where it was. Kaisen stopped walking.
I felt it before I understood it — the slight pause in his step, the quality of stillness that settled over him. I'd learned to read that stillness. It meant he'd made a decision.
'The wedding,' he said, his voice carrying easily over the crowd, 'will cost eight hundred million dollars.' He paused. 'Scarlett can have whatever she wants.'
The cameras went insane.
I smiled for all of them. I kept smiling until we were in the car and the partition was up and Manhattan was sliding past the windows in long streaks of light.
Then I said, 'Do you have any idea what you just did?'
'Yes.'
I turned to look at him. He was watching the city, his profile clean and unreadable in the dark.
'Do you care?'
'No.'
I turned back to the window. Eight hundred million dollars. It would trend by morning. It would be everywhere — the headlines, the commentary, the think pieces about billionaire excess and the women who inspired it. People would have opinions. People always had opinions.
I pressed my fingers against the left side of my chest and watched the city blur past and said nothing else.
---
The first-quarter numbers came in on a Tuesday.
Diane laid the projections on my desk with the careful precision she used for everything, then stepped back and let me read them. I went through the figures twice. Then a third time, because the third time I was sure I wasn't misreading them.
'These are real,' I said.
'They're real,' Diane confirmed.
I set the papers down. The boutique had been open eleven weeks. The numbers in front of me were not boutique numbers. They were the beginning of something else entirely, and we both knew it.
I looked at the figures for a long moment. Then I looked at Diane.
'I want to start routing a percentage of revenue into a separate account,' I said. 'Personal name only. Structured through the LLC.' I kept my voice even, the way I kept it even when I was doing something that mattered. 'Standard financial planning.'
Diane held my gaze for exactly one beat. She was sharp enough to understand what I was actually saying. She'd always been sharp enough for that.
'I'll add it to the task list,' she said.
She picked up the projections and walked out without another word. I sat alone in the office for a while after that, my hand flat on the desk, feeling the solid weight of the wood beneath my palm.
The account would be small at first. Invisible, if anyone looked. Just a line in the LLC's financial structure, the kind of thing that looked like routine bookkeeping to anyone who didn't know what they were looking for.
I wasn't planning anything. I told myself that clearly, the way I told myself a lot of things.
I was just being careful. That was all.
---
Victoria moved quietly when she moved at all.
I didn't know about Lottie Morris yet. I wouldn't know for another week. But I could feel the recalibration happening the way you feel weather changing — a shift in pressure, a quality of stillness before something arrives.
Victoria had found her through an intermediary at a talent agency. That was what I pieced together later. A girl from somewhere small, pretty in a way that had always attracted the wrong kind of attention, with a face that bore an uncanny resemblance to a woman who had been engaged to Kaisen Bishop before she died. The kind of resemblance that was useful if you knew how to use it.
Victoria knew how to use everything.
She met Lottie at a private lunch — the same kind of private lunch she'd used on me, though with a different script. She offered money and access and the warm language of opportunity. She told Lottie she was being introduced into a social circle as a networking connection. She did not tell Lottie she was a psychological weapon aimed at a woman Victoria had been trying to dismantle for months.
Lottie, who had been used by wealthy people before but hadn't yet learned to recognize the shape of it this early, said yes.
I didn't know any of this yet. I was sitting in my boutique office with first-quarter projections and a separate account taking its first quiet breath, pressing my fingers against my chest for reasons I couldn't name.
But Victoria was already moving.
She always was.
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