
Stitching His Downfall: The Ghost Designer's Revenge
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The Mediterranean sun was blinding, reflecting off the azure waters of Port Hercule like a scattered handful of diamonds.
Vivian Hayes walked down the immaculate teak docks of the Monaco marina with the measured, predatory grace of a panther. She wore a tailored white linen suit of her own design, oversized dark sunglasses, and carried her leather handbag tightly against her side.
*The Golden Locke* sat at the end of dock 4A. It was a massive, three-deck superyacht, a floating monument to the billion-dollar empire Vivian had built with her bare hands.
As she approached the gangway, a burly private security guard stepped forward, holding up a hand.
"Excuse me, miss. This is a private vessel. No unauthorized personnel."
Vivian didn't break her stride. She smoothly reached into her bag, pulled out her black titanium Locke Luxury executive card, and held it up.
"I am Vivian Hayes-Locke," she said, her voice cutting through the warm sea breeze like ice. "I own fifty percent of this boat. If you don't step aside immediately, I will have you thrown into the harbor and sued for delaying my boarding."
The guard glanced at the card, his face paling as he recognized the name. He stepped back instantly, lowering his hand. "My apologies, Mrs. Locke. We... we weren't expecting you. Mr. Locke didn't mention—"
"It's a surprise," Vivian said, slipping the card away and stepping onto the deck. "Don't radio up. I want to see the look on his face."
She navigated the familiar corridors of the yacht, the plush carpets absorbing the sound of her heels. As she approached the master cabin on the upper deck, she could hear the soft, sultry notes of a jazz record playing. Mingled with the music was the distinct, bubbly laughter of a woman.
Vivian stopped outside the heavy mahogany door.
She didn't hesitate. She didn't brace herself for heartbreak. She simply reached out, turned the polished brass handle, and pushed the door open.
The master cabin was bathed in golden afternoon light. Champagne bottles sat chilling in silver buckets. The massive king-sized bed was unmade.
And standing in the center of the room, admiring herself in the floor-to-ceiling mirror, was Camilla DuPont.
Camilla was wearing the 'Midnight' gown.
Vivian's eyes instantly snapped to the dress. It was a breathtaking creation of deep, iridescent blue silk, hand-embroidered with thousands of tiny Swarovski crystals that caught the light like a star-filled sky. But on Camilla, it looked wrong. The bodice was meant for a different slope of shoulders; the bias cut was pooling awkwardly around her hips. Camilla was cheapening a masterpiece just by breathing in it.
Sitting on the edge of a velvet chaise lounge, holding a crystal flute of champagne, was Harrison Locke. He was shirtless, wearing only tailored linen trousers, his golden hair perfectly tousled.
He was smiling at Camilla.
"It really is stunning on you, darling," Harrison purred. "We'll debut it on you at the gala before the Paris show. The press will go absolutely wild."
"It's a bit tight in the chest," Camilla complained, pouting her lips at her reflection. "Can't Vivian let it out a bit? She's always making things so restrictive."
Vivian stepped fully into the room.
"I don't alter masterpieces to fit off-the-rack bodies, Camilla."
The sound of Vivian's voice dropped into the room like a live grenade.
Harrison violently jerked upward, his champagne splashing over the rim of his glass onto the expensive rug. His perfectly tanned face drained of all color. "Vivian!"
Camilla spun around, her manicured hands flying to her chest, her eyes wide with sudden, unadulterated panic. "Vivian! I... we... this isn't—"
"London looks a lot sunnier than you described on the phone last night, Harrison," Vivian said, her voice eerily calm. She took off her sunglasses, folding them with precise, deliberate movements, and slipped them into her pocket.
Harrison scrambled to his feet, setting the glass down. He immediately threw on his charismatic, damage-control smile—the one that always worked on the board of directors. "Darling, sweetheart, listen to me. This isn't what it looks like. I flew down here for an emergency meeting with a European distributor. Camilla just happened to be in Monaco for a shoot, and I wanted to test the gown on camera—"
"Stop," Vivian commanded. The single word cracked like a whip.
Harrison snapped his mouth shut.
Vivian walked slowly into the room, ignoring her husband entirely. Her eyes were locked onto Camilla, who was trembling slightly, instinctively backing away until her spine hit the mirrored wall.
"Vivian, really, he just wanted me to try it on," Camilla stammered, trying to muster a smug, defensive posture but failing under Vivian's dead-eyed stare. "It's just a dress."
"It is not just a dress," Vivian said quietly, closing the distance between them. "It is four hundred hours of labor. It is hand-dyed silk from a private mill in Lake Como. It is an architectural marvel of structural boning and bias-cut organza that I bled over for three months."
Vivian reached into her leather handbag.
When her hand emerged, she was holding the heavy, Japanese carbon-steel fabric shears. The blades gleamed wickedly in the Mediterranean sunlight.
Camilla let out a high-pitched shriek, pressing herself flat against the mirror. "Harrison! Are you crazy? Harrison, do something!"
"Vivian, put those down!" Harrison shouted, lunging forward and grabbing Vivian's arm. "Have you lost your absolute mind? You're acting hysterical!"
Vivian didn't look at him. She merely turned her head slightly, staring at his hand where it gripped her arm.
"Remove your hand from my body, Harrison. Right now. Or the next thing I cut will be your primary asset."
The absolute, frozen zero in her voice made Harrison flinch. He slowly let go, stepping back, his hands raised. "Vivian, please. Be reasonable. You're upset. I can explain everything. I'll buy you whatever you want. We can go on a vacation. Just... put the scissors down."
Vivian ignored him. She stepped right up to Camilla, who was hyperventilating, tears ruining her perfectly winged eyeliner.
"Hold still, Camilla," Vivian ordered softly. "These shears are incredibly sharp. If you flinch, I might slip. And blood stains are notoriously difficult to get out of silk."
"What are you doing?" Camilla whimpered, her voice trembling violently.
"I am reclaiming my intellectual property."
Vivian reached out, her left hand gripping the delicate, crystal-beaded neckline of the million-dollar gown. With her right hand, she slid the lower blade of the shears under the silk at Camilla's shoulder.
*SNIP.*
The heavy, sickening sound of thick silk and structural boning being sliced apart echoed in the cabin.
"Vivian, no! That's a million-dollar prototype!" Harrison screamed, stepping forward, but stopping as Vivian flashed the blades in his direction.
"It's *my* million-dollar prototype," Vivian corrected smoothly. She turned back to Camilla.
*SNIP. SNIP.*
Vivian worked with the terrifying speed and precision of a master surgeon. She cut down the side seam, slicing through the intricate hand-beading. Crystals detached from their threads, raining down onto the plush carpet like tiny, scattered teardrops.
Camilla sobbed, standing rigid with terror as the cold steel brushed against her bare skin, slicing away the fabric that clung to her body.
"The bias tape," Vivian narrated calmly as she cut across the waistline, "was sewn by hand to ensure the drape didn't pucker. You stretched it when you forced it over your hips."
*SNIP.*
"The bodice," Vivian continued, cutting straight up the back zipper, entirely destroying the structural integrity of the dress, "features a hidden corset. Something a vain, opportunistic little girl like you wouldn't understand."
With one final, brutal cut, Vivian severed the remaining shoulder strap.
The 'Midnight' gown—the centerpiece of the entire Locke Luxury fall collection, the dress that was supposed to secure their dominance at Paris Fashion Week—slid off Camilla's body in two ruined, useless halves. It collapsed onto the floor in a puddle of ruined silk and shattered crystals.
Camilla stood shivering in her expensive lingerie, wrapping her arms around herself, sobbing uncontrollably.
Vivian took a step back, looking down at the ruined fabric. She felt absolutely nothing for the dress. It was just material. But the act of destroying it? That felt like the first deep breath she had taken in four years.
She turned calmly to Harrison, who was staring at the pile of silk with an expression of pure, unadulterated horror. His imposter syndrome—the deep, rotting fear that he was nothing without her—was suddenly written all over his face.
"You're insane," Harrison whispered, his charismatic mask completely shattered. "You've ruined the collection. You've ruined the centerpiece. Do you have any idea what you've just done?"
"I know exactly what I've done," Vivian replied, sliding the shears back into her leather bag.
She reached down to her left hand. Smoothly, without a hint of hesitation, she slid the massive, flawless five-carat diamond engagement ring and the matching platinum wedding band off her finger.
She walked over to the small table where Harrison had set his champagne glass.
Vivian held her hand over the crystal flute and opened her fingers.
*Plink.*
The rings sank to the bottom of the bubbling champagne.
"Vivian, wait," Harrison stammered, suddenly realizing the gravity of the situation. His arrogance tried to rear its head again. "You can't just leave. You need me. Who is going to sell your designs? You hide in the shadows because you're terrified of the industry! You're nothing without my face!"
Vivian paused at the door, her hand on the brass knob. She looked back over her shoulder, her gaze sweeping over her pathetic, half-naked husband and his shivering mistress.
"You have it backward, Harrison," Vivian said, her voice echoing with total, absolute finality. "You are the shadow. I am the sun. And as of this exact moment? The fall collection is officially canceled."
She stepped out of the cabin, closing the door behind her, and walked away from the yacht without looking back.
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