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Love Deal, Family Loss Novel Cover

Love Deal, Family Loss

The sound of Paislee's Louboutin heels against Carter's marble floor echoed through his penthouse office like gunshots. I wasn't there to witness it, but I heard about it later—how she stormed in like a hurricane, her perfectly styled blonde hair whipping around her face as she hurled the legal documents across his mahogany desk. "I don't need your pity money!" Her voice had reportedly cracked on the last word, though knowing Paislee, she'd probably practiced that vulnerable tremor in the mirror. The papers scattered like autumn leaves—inheritance documents, legal briefs, all the proof that her father's illegitimate daughter had claimed what Paislee had always believed was rightfully hers. Carter had tried to reason with her, offering his investment, his connections, his wealth. But Paislee's pride was a living thing, wounded and vicious. She'd swept the documents off his desk with one dramatic gesture, her emerald eyes blazing with the kind of fury that only comes from losing everything you've never had to earn. "I'm leaving for London," she'd declared, her chin lifted in that defiant way I remembered from childhood. "I'll prove I don't need anyone. Not you, not my father's money, not anyone." The door had slammed behind her with enough force to rattle the floor-to-ceiling windows, leaving Carter alone with the scattered papers and the echo of her declaration.
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Chapter 2

The law office smelled of leather and old money, all mahogany panels and brass fixtures that gleamed under the amber light of banker's lamps. I sat across from Carter's lawyer, a sharp-eyed woman in her fifties who slid the contract across the polished table with the efficiency of someone who'd done this a thousand times before.

"Standard investment agreement," she said, her voice crisp and professional. "Mr. Kennedy's firm will provide the necessary funds for your parents' medical expenses in exchange for a thirty percent stake in your consulting company."

I nodded, my hands trembling as I flipped through the pages. The numbers were there—eight hundred thousand dollars, with provisions for additional medical costs as needed. It was everything I'd asked for, everything my parents needed to live.

Then I reached page seven.

"What's this clause?" I asked, my finger hovering over the dense legal text. "Fulfill social and personal obligations as determined by Mr. Kennedy?"

The lawyer's expression didn't change. "Standard language for business partnerships that require public representation. Charity events, business dinners, that sort of thing."

I looked up at Carter, who was leaning against the window, his silhouette dark against the city skyline. He turned, catching my gaze with those familiar brown eyes that had once made my heart race for entirely different reasons.

"Just what we discussed, Sierra," he said, his voice gentle but firm. "Nothing you can't handle."

My pen felt like it weighed a hundred pounds. The words blurred together as I stared at the signature line, thinking of Mom unconscious in her hospital bed, of Dad growing thinner with each passing day. The medical bills were mounting faster than my salary could cover, and this contract was the only lifeline we had.

I signed my name with careful precision, each letter sealing my fate.

---

Six months later, the Grand Ballroom of the Plaza Hotel glittered like a jewel box. Crystal chandeliers cast dancing light across marble floors while New York's elite mingled in designer gowns and thousand-dollar suits. I stood beside Carter in a navy blue dress he'd selected—elegant but not too flashy, expensive but not ostentatious. Everything calculated to project the right image.

"Senator Morrison, I'd like you to meet Sierra Nichols," Carter said, his hand settling on my lower back with practiced ease. "My business partner."

The word partner felt like a lie coating my tongue. The senator's wife looked me up and down with the calculating gaze of someone mentally cataloging my worth.

"How lovely," she said, her smile sharp as glass. "And what exactly do you do, dear?"

"I run a consulting firm," I replied, grateful my voice came out steady. "We specialize in strategic planning for small businesses."

"How... entrepreneurial." The way she said it made entrepreneurial sound like a disease. "And how did you and Carter meet?"

Carter's fingers pressed slightly into my back, a warning I'd learned to recognize. "We've known each other since childhood," he said smoothly. "Business and pleasure, you might say."

The senator's wife's eyes lit up with the predatory gleam of someone who'd just caught the scent of gossip. As they moved away, I caught fragments of whispered conversation drifting from other clusters of guests.

"...his new plaything..."

"...wonder what happened to the Thomas girl..."

"...certainly knows how to pick them..."

Each whisper felt like a small knife between my ribs. I kept my smile fixed in place, my posture straight, playing the role Carter had purchased with his investment dollars. When he introduced me to business associates, I was his partner. When he spoke to old family friends, I was simply Sierra, with implications that hung in the air like expensive perfume.

The worst part was how natural it felt, having his hand guide me through the crowd, feeling the weight of his attention. This was what I'd dreamed of for so many years—being by Carter's side, being chosen by him. But the reality was hollow, purchased rather than earned, performed rather than felt.

---

The fluorescent lights in my office buzzed overhead at three in the morning, casting harsh shadows across the financial reports scattered across my desk. My eyes burned from staring at spreadsheets, and my neck ached from hunching over my laptop for the past eighteen hours.

I had to prove myself. Every day, every client meeting, every successful project was another piece of evidence that Carter's investment was worthwhile. That I was worthwhile.

The coffee had gone cold hours ago, but I drank it anyway, grimacing at the bitter taste. My phone showed seven missed calls from Dad, probably worried about why I hadn't visited the hospital today. But there was no time. The Henderson account needed restructuring, the Mitchell proposal was due tomorrow, and three potential clients were expecting presentations by the end of the week.

The numbers on my screen began to blur together. I blinked hard, trying to focus, but the spreadsheet kept swimming in and out of view. My chest felt tight, like someone was slowly tightening a band around my ribs.

I stood up too quickly, and the room spun around me like a carnival ride. The last thing I remembered was the taste of copper in my mouth and the distant sound of my laptop hitting the floor.

I woke up to antiseptic smell and the steady beep of monitors. Carter was sitting in the visitor's chair, not slouched with worry but upright, checking his phone with the casual attention of someone waiting for a delayed flight.

"You're awake," he said, glancing up briefly before returning to his screen. "Doctor says you collapsed from exhaustion. Dehydration, lack of sleep, the usual."

I tried to sit up, but my head pounded in protest. "How long was I out?"

"Six hours. Long enough to miss the Hartwell meeting." He finally put his phone away and pulled out a manila folder. "Speaking of which, I've had the lawyers draw up a contract extension. Your company's performance has been... adequate. We'll continue the arrangement for another year."

He placed the folder on my bedside table like he was delivering a business report, not visiting someone who'd just collapsed from working herself into the ground for his benefit.

"Carter," I said, my voice hoarse. "I ended up here because I'm trying to prove my worth to you. Doesn't that concern you at all?"

He stood up, smoothing his suit jacket with the same care he'd shown for adjusting his investment portfolio. "What concerns me is maintaining our agreement. The doctors say you'll be discharged tomorrow. I've rescheduled the Hartwell meeting for Thursday."

He paused at the door, his hand on the frame. "Take better care of yourself, Sierra. You're no use to me if you're in the hospital."

The door closed behind him with a soft click, leaving me alone with the monitors and the contract extension and the crushing realization that I'd become nothing more than a business inconvenience in his carefully ordered world.

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