
Rejecting Billionaire's Plea
Chapter 3
The cameras flashed like lightning strikes as I stepped out of the Whitmore Industries building. For a moment, I was blinded by their intensity, but I refused to shield my eyes or duck my head. The paparazzi had been camping outside since dawn, hungry vultures waiting for a glimpse of the 'Wilting Heiress' – their cruel nickname splashed across every tabloid in the city.
'Victoria! Is it true Alexander left you for his childhood sweetheart?' one shouted.
'How does it feel to be replaced?' called another.
'Are the rumors about your breakdown at the Met Gala true?'
Their questions hit like physical blows, each one designed to crack my composure. I paused at the top of the steps, feeling the weight of dozens of lenses trained on my face. The narrative they'd constructed was clear: poor, desperate Victoria Sterling, abandoned and humiliated by her husband, crumbling under the rejection.
I smoothed down my Chanel blazer and addressed them directly, my voice carrying across the sudden hush.
'I understand you're all doing your jobs,' I said, my tone measured and clear. 'But marriage – and its dissolution – is a deeply personal matter. I would appreciate the same privacy any person deserves during a time of transition.'
I took a deliberate breath, feeling strangely powerful despite their intrusion.
'I am not wilting. I am not broken. I am simply choosing a different path forward.'
Without waiting for their response, I descended the steps to where my driver held the car door open. As I slid into the backseat, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the tinted window – chin high, shoulders back, not a hint of the turmoil I felt inside visible on my face.
My phone buzzed with a text as we pulled away from the curb. An unknown number, but the message made the sender immediately clear:
*Victoria, I'd love to clear the air between us. Dinner at Le Bernardin tomorrow night? Just us girls. We should talk about Alexander – for his sake.*
Charlotte. Of course. The victory dinner, thinly disguised as an olive branch. I could picture it perfectly: her sitting across from me, projecting sympathetic concern while subtly reminding me of everything I had lost. She would be the gracious winner, I the pitiful loser who needed consoling.
I typed my response carefully:
*Charlotte, thank you for the invitation. Unfortunately, my schedule is fully committed. I wish you well.*
Simple. Dignified. And denying her the satisfaction she craved.
Three days later, I walked into the Bergdorf Goodman restaurant for the annual Fashion Foundation luncheon. The room was a sea of designer outfits and air kisses, New York's fashion elite gathered to support emerging designers. I had been on the selection committee for years, long before my marriage to Alexander.
As I made my way to my assigned table, conversations hushed, then resumed with increased intensity. I caught fragments – 'divorce' and 'Charlotte' and 'poor thing' – but kept my expression neutral as I greeted acquaintances with practiced ease.
I was halfway through my salad when Charlotte made her entrance, fashionably late and dressed in a stunning white Valentino dress that screamed innocence. She floated through the room, accepting sympathetic touches and whispered encouragements before taking her seat at a table near the center of the room.
The foundation director was midway through announcing the showcase finalists when Charlotte stood abruptly, her chair scraping loudly against the floor.
'I'm sorry,' she said, her voice trembling with perfect vulnerability. 'I can't sit here and pretend everything is fine.'
All eyes turned to her as she dabbed at non-existent tears.
'My design portfolio was sabotaged before the final judging,' she announced, her gaze finding me across the room. 'Someone replaced my original sketches with altered versions.'
The room collectively gasped.
'Victoria Sterling had access to all submissions as a committee member,' Charlotte continued, her voice breaking. 'And she had every reason to want to humiliate me.'
The accusation hung in the air like poison gas. Dozens of eyes swiveled to me, watching for my reaction, hungry for the drama of two women fighting over a man.
I set my fork down slowly, feeling a strange calm settle over me. This was Charlotte's true face – not the fragile victim, but a calculated strategist willing to destroy my professional reputation to secure her victory.
As I rose to my feet to address her accusation, I knew one thing with absolute certainty: Charlotte Mason had just made a critical error. She had mistaken my dignity for weakness – and that was a mistake she would soon regret.
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