
Rejecting Billionaire's Offer
Chapter 2
The fluorescent lights of Joe's Diner flickered overhead, casting a sickly glow across the cracked vinyl booth where I sat. My fingers nervously traced the edge of my purse, where five years of secret savings waited. Five years of skimming from grocery money. Five years of preparation for this moment.
"You're sure about this, Mrs. Brooks?" Victor Chen's voice was barely above a whisper as he slid into the seat across from me.
I nodded, glancing around the nearly empty diner in Queens. No one from our social circle would ever set foot in such a place. "Yes. I need to disappear."
Victor's eyes—sharp and assessing—studied my face. He was a small man with impeccable posture and a reputation for discretion among those who needed to vanish.
"The Catalina Plan," he said, sliding a manila envelope across the table. "Ferry schedules, timing for the blind spots in surveillance, and your new identity packet."
I opened the envelope with trembling fingers. Inside was a driver's license with my face but bearing the name Maya Gardner.
"Maya," I whispered, testing the name on my tongue. It felt strange—like clothing that didn't quite fit.
"Your digital footprint has been meticulously erased," Victor continued, his voice clinical and detached. "No social media presence. No credit history. Nothing that could lead back to Macie Gardner."
I handed him the cash—all I had managed to save without Easton noticing.
"This is everything," I said.
"It will be enough for a fresh start."
---
One week before our anniversary, I stood in the living room of our penthouse, staring at the silver-framed photograph in my hands. My grandmother's smile seemed to reach through the glass, her eyes crinkling at the corners just as they had in life.
"What are you doing?"
I hadn't heard Easton enter. I turned slowly, clutching the frame to my chest.
"Nothing," I said softly. "Just remembering."
His eyes narrowed as he recognized the photograph. "Her," he spat. "The woman who raised the person who killed my father."
"It was an accident," I whispered, the words hollow from years of repetition.
"An accident that cost me everything." He stepped closer, his cologne—expensive and suffocating—filling my nostrils. "And you dare to reminisce about her in my home?"
Before I could react, his hand shot out, gripping my wrist with bruising force. "What is this?"
His eyes fixed on the crystal bracelet that encircled my wrist—my grandmother's final gift to me before she died of heartbreak.
"Please," I said, trying to pull away. "It's all I have left of her."
Something dark flashed across his face. "All you have left? You mean like all I had left of my father?"
With a vicious yank, he tore the bracelet from my wrist. The delicate crystals caught the light as he hurled it against the marble wall.
The sound of shattering glass filled the room.
I fell to my knees, desperately gathering the scattered fragments. Each crystal had been carefully chosen by my grandmother—each one representing a moment in our lives together.
"Stop it," Easton said, his voice suddenly cold. "You're making a mess."
I didn't stop. I couldn't. These weren't just crystals—they were the last pieces of the woman who had loved me unconditionally.
As I collected each shard, something inside me hardened. The last thread of hope that Easton might remember the boy he once was—the boy who had promised to protect me forever—snapped like the delicate silver chain of my bracelet.
---
Our fifth anniversary dawned bright and clear. While Easton was at the venue, overseeing preparations for his surprise wedding to Melissa, I slipped out of the penthouse with nothing but a small bag containing essentials.
The ferry to Catalina Island rocked gently beneath my feet. I stood at the railing, watching the waves crash against the hull. The plan was simple but precise.
"Five minutes until the blind spot in surveillance," a voice murmured beside me—one of Victor's team, unrecognizable in tourist attire.
I nodded, placing my bag and shoes exactly where instructed. The rough chop of the water would explain any turbulence captured on camera.
"Remember," the woman said, "once you're overboard, don't surface until you reach the buoy."
I closed my eyes, feeling the salt spray on my face. For a moment, I was a girl again—running along the shore with Easton, both of us laughing as waves crashed around our ankles.
"Three minutes," came the whisper.
I took one last look at the city skyline—at the tower that housed Easton's office, at the life I was leaving behind.
The ferry lurched as it hit a swell. This was my moment.
Without hesitation, I climbed onto the lower railing and slipped into the water.
The cold shocked my system as I plunged beneath the surface, swimming with powerful strokes toward the buoy that marked my exit from this life.
As strong hands pulled me into the waiting fishing boat, I didn't look back.
Macie Gardner was dead.
Maya Gardner was born.
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