LOGINArmstrong's POV
Twenty-four hours earlier, I sat in the Velvet Room with Marcus, nursing a glass of 30-year-old Macallan while he droned on about the upcoming charity gala. "The foundation wants you to bring a date," Marcus said, consulting his tablet. "They've specifically requested that you not attend alone this year. Something about…" "I heard you the first time." I took a sip. "Find someone suitable." "Suitable." Marcus's lips twitched. "Sir, your last three dates were models who spent the entire evening on their phones." "They looked good in photographs." "But that’s not…” “Fine. Find a beautiful woman, someone who can hold a conversation. Someone intelligent, charming, who can help me network." He scrolled through his tablet. "I can reach out to some professional services.." "Do whatever you need to do." Marcus sighed. "I'll have options by tomorrow. It's for children's literacy. Good publicity." "Noted." I dismissed him with a wave. I was about to order another drink when an agitated man suddenly made his way over. Average height, slightly soft around the middle, worn suit, cheap cologne. Everything about him screamed desperation. "Excuse me," he said, voice slurred. "You're Armstrong Goldwyn, aren't you? I couldn't help but overhear…you need a date for an event." My eyes narrowed. I valued my privacy. "Do I know you?" "No, no. I'm Festy Vale." He stuck out his hand. When I didn't take it, he let it drop awkwardly. "I heard you talking. I know someone perfect for what you need. Beautiful, young, smart. Classy and well-spoken. She'd be perfect on your arm." I studied him. Desperate. In financial trouble. The kind of man who'd do anything for cash. "I have people who handle these arrangements," I said dismissively. "But not like her." He moved closer, lowering his voice. "I'm serious, Mr. Goldwyn. She's exactly what you're looking for. Professional, educated, beautiful. And she's... available. For the right price." Something in the way he said "available" made me pause. "What's her name?" Curiosity made me ask. "Lynn. Lynn Sheldon…well, that was her maiden name. She's my..." He hesitated, and I caught it. "She's someone I can vouch for personally. Completely trustworthy." "Your what?" "Does it matter?" His smile was too wide, too eager. "Look, I can have her at your place tomorrow night. You can meet her, see if she's what you're looking for. If she is, we can talk price." I should have said no. Should have called security. But I'd built my empire on reading people, on understanding their weaknesses and exploiting them. "How much?" His eyes lit up. "Four thousand. For the evening." Insulting. I spent more than that on a suit. But I nodded. "Fine. Have her at the Diamond Tower penthouse tomorrow at eight." "Can I get fifty percent upfront? Just to secure the arrangement." I pulled out my wallet and counted out two thousand in cash. He snatched it like a drowning man grabbing a life preserver. "Thank you, Mr. Goldwyn. You won't regret this. Lynn is perfect. You'll see." I watched him scurry away, shoving the cash into his pocket. Something about the interaction left a bad taste in my mouth, but I pushed it aside. Just another desperate fool. I finished my drink and left, putting the encounter out of my mind. Until last night. Now, I looked down at Lynn sleeping in my arms, her dark hair spread across my chest, her breathing soft and even. Dawn light painted her skin gold, and she looked younger in sleep. Vulnerable. I replayed yesterday's conversation with Festy Vale, seeing it now with horrifying clarity. "That was her maiden name." Maiden name. Because she'd taken his name when they married. Vale. Lynn Vale. The man had sold his own wife. Sent her to a stranger's penthouse thinking it was a legitimate job, knowing exactly what would happen. I'd done ruthless things in my career. Crushed competitors. Destroyed people who stood in my way. Built my fortune on being cold and calculating. But I'd never lied to someone who trusted me. Never betrayed someone who loved me. Festy Vale had done both. Lynn stirred against me, and I felt something unfamiliar twist in my chest. Protectiveness. Possessiveness. And underneath both, a burning rage at the man who'd broken her so completely. Her eyes fluttered open. She looked up at me, confusion giving way to memory, and I saw the exact moment she remembered everything. Her face flushed, and she started to pull away. My arm tightened around her waist. "Don't." "I should go," she whispered. "Where?" I asked, watching her face crumble because we both knew the answer. Nowhere. She had nowhere to go. I made a decision. Quick, calculated, final. It's what made me successful. "Stay," I said. "I can't just…" "You can. You will." I sat up, pulling her with me. The sheet fell to her waist, and I saw her instinctive move to cover herself. "I met your husband yesterday. At a bar." Lynn's eyes widened. "What?" "He approached me. Overheard my assistant and I discussing an event. Offered me your... services." The word tasted bitter. "Made it sound like you were available for hire. An escort. I didn't know you were his wife." Horror dawned on her face. "He planned this. It wasn't a desperate impulse. He actually planned it." "He took two thousand dollars from me as a deposit." I watched her process this. "He's been calling my phone since midnight. Wants the other half of his payment." Lynn made a sound like she'd been punched. I pulled her against my chest, and she let me, trembling. "I'm not going back to him," she said, her voice muffled against my skin. "No," I agreed. "You're not." "I don't have anything. No money, no job, no…" "You have me." She pulled back to look at me, confusion clear on her face. "Why? Why would you help me? You don't even know me." I traced her jaw with my finger. "I know enough. I know you deserve better than what he gave you. I know I want to destroy him for what he did to you. And I know that I'm not done with you yet." "I'm not a business deal," Lynn said, but there was no heat in it. "You’re not," I agreed. "You're something far more interesting." I stood, moving toward the bathroom. "Stay here. One week. Give yourself time to figure out what you want to do next. I'll have Marcus bring you clothes, essentials, whatever you need." "And what do you get out of this?" Lynn asked, pulling the sheet up to cover herself. I smiled, and it was neither kind nor gentle. "Maybe I'm curious to see what happens next. Or maybe I just don't like unfinished business." I paused at the bathroom door. "And Lynn? When your husband calls again…and he will…don't answer. Let me handle him." I disappeared into the bathroom, leaving her sitting alone on my bed. Through the door, I could hear her moving around, and I found myself smiling. Lynn Sheldon—Lynn Vale, had walked into my life less than twelve hours ago. And already, I knew one thing with absolute certainty. I wasn't letting her go.Lynn's POV - Six Months LaterI stood in Maya's childhood home, helping her into her wedding dress, and felt overwhelmed with gratitude. One year ago, I'd been broken and scared. Now I was here, watching my best friend marry the love of her life, living with a man who made me feel valued every single day."You look beautiful," I said, adjusting Maya's veil."You look happy," Maya replied, meeting my eyes in the mirror. "Really, genuinely happy.""I am.""How are things with Armstrong?""Good. Really good." I smiled. "We're partners, you know? He respects my career, my independence. We make decisions together. It's nothing like…""Like Festy," Maya finished. "You can say his name, Lynn. He doesn't have power over you anymore."She was right. Festy was a closed chapter now. I'd heard through Diane that he'd served his six months, gotten out, and moved to another state. I felt nothing when I heard the news. Not anger, not relief, not even satisfaction. Just... nothing. He was irrelevan
Lynn's POV"Ms. Sheldon, you're up."I stood, smoothing down my skirt, and walked to the front of the conference room. The Henderson Restaurant Group executives sat around the table, their expressions professionally neutral. Patricia gave me an encouraging nod from her seat.This was it. Three months of work, countless late nights, endless revisions. The Henderson account could make or break my career at Meridian.I took a deep breath and began."Henderson Restaurant Group has been a beloved fixture in this region for thirty years. But in today's market, nostalgia alone isn't enough. You need to evolve while staying true to your roots. That's what this campaign does."I clicked through my presentation, showing the market research, the demographic analysis, and the proposed social media strategy. I'd worked with Jamie on the graphics, stayed late with Patricia refining the messaging. This wasn't just my work…it was a team effort. But I was the one presenting it, defending it, selling
Armstrong's POVI stood in the doorway of Lynn's new apartment; a modest one-bedroom in a decent neighborhood…and watched her direct the movers where to place her minimal furniture. She'd insisted on paying for everything herself: the deposit, the rent, the furniture from IKEA that she'd assembled with Maya's help.Maya left shortly after, said it was ‘cause her wedding preparations but I knew she wanted to give us space. It was killing me not to just buy her a fully furnished luxury condo. But I understood why she needed this. Why she needed to do it herself."That's the last of it," the head mover said, and Lynn tipped them with money she'd earned herself.After they left, she turned to me with a bright smile. "What do you think?"I looked around the apartment. It was small…probably a quarter the size of my penthouse. The furniture was basic, the walls were bare, and the kitchen was the size of a closet. But it was hers. Earned with her own money, filled with her own choices."It
Lynn's POVI sat in the corner coffee shop, my hands wrapped around a latte, watching the door nervously. It had been three years since I'd seen Maya, and I had no idea what to expect. Would she be angry? Resentful? Or worse…indifferent?The bell above the door chimed, and then there she was. Maya looked exactly the same; wild curly hair, bright eyes, that infectious smile that had made us best friends in the first place. When she spotted me, her face lit up."Lynn!"She rushed over and pulled me into a fierce hug before I could even stand. I hugged her back, tears already streaming down my face."I'm so sorry," I sobbed into her shoulder. "I'm so, so sorry. You tried to warn me and I didn't listen and I cut you off and…""Shh." Maya pulled back, gripping my shoulders. "You have nothing to apologize for. He isolated you. That's what abusers do. I knew that, and I've been waiting for you to find your way back."We sat down, and for the next hour, I told her everything. The isolation,
"Ms. Sheldon, this is excellent work."I looked up from my computer to find Patricia standing at my desk, reviewing the campaign proposal I'd submitted for a local bakery client. It was my third week at Meridian, and I was finally starting to feel like I belonged. "Thank you," I said. "I thought the nostalgic angle would resonate with their target demographic.""It's perfect. I'm putting you on the Henderson account."My eyes widened. Henderson was one of Meridian's biggest clients…a regional restaurant chain looking to expand. "Are you sure? I've only been here three weeks.""And in those three weeks, you've proven yourself more capable than people I've had here for three years." Patricia smiled. "You're ready, Lynn. Trust me."After she walked away, I allowed myself a moment of pure joy. This was proof that I could do this, that I belonged in this world.My phone buzzed. A text from Armstrong: How's work?Just got assigned a major account.Congratulations. Dinner tonight to celebra
LYNN’S POVI sat in Armstrong's kitchen at four in the morning, watching him wince as the private doctor he called cleaned the wound on his shoulder. It wasn't as bad as I'd feared…a deep gash that would bruise spectacularly but didn't require stitches…but seeing Armstrong hurt because of me made my chest ache."You should have stayed upstairs," Armstrong said. "I heard the commotion. I was worried.""I had it under control.""He hit you with a bottle, Armstrong. That's not under control."The doctor…an older woman named Dr. Chen, who seemed completely unfazed by being summoned at this hour…finished bandaging Armstrong's shoulder and packed up her supplies. "You'll be fine. Ice it, take your drugs for the pain, and try not to do anything strenuous for a few days.""Define strenuous," Armstrong said dryly.Dr. Chen smiled. "Use your judgment. And Ms. Sheldon? Make sure he actually rests. He has a tendency to ignore medical advice."After she left, I made tea…with my shaking hands…an







