Before I could answer, the polished brass doors of the private VIP elevator chimed.
The polished brass doors slid open with a soft, expensive hum. Instead of the building’s standard security guards arriving to throw me out, the security manager of Vanguard Horizon stepped out of the cabin, flanked by two armed executive escorts. His face was entirely devoid of its usual corporate smugness; he looked like a man who had just received a direct phone call from a firing squad.
He didn’t look at Chloe. He bypassed her completely and bowed his head slightly toward me.
“Ms. Sterling,” he said, his voice dropping into a register of absolute panic. “We were just notified of your arrival. Please accept our profoundest apologies for the delay. The private express car has been secured for you. Your brother, Mr. Victor Sterling, requested that we escort you directly to the penthouse suite.”
Chloe’s jaw dropped so fast her pearl earrings rattled against her collarbone. “Excuse me? What did you just call her? This woman is Vivienne Vance. She’s the wife of our Executive VP. She doesn’t even have an invitation to the main floor!”
The security manager turned a deadly, glacial glare onto Chloe. “Her legal name is Vivienne Sterling. And if you speak another single word in her presence, I will personally ensure you are banned from entering any commercial property in the tri-state area before the sun sets.”
I didn’t offer Chloe a parting glance. I didn’t need to. Her face had shifted from a mask of elitist arrogance to a ghostly, translucent white.
I picked up Sophia, resting her head gently against my shoulder, and stepped into the private elevator. The doors closed, sealing out the lobby, and the car accelerated toward the ninety-fifth floor with a silent, breathless speed.
When the elevator chimed at the top, the doors opened directly into the grand ballroom of Vanguard Horizon. The penthouse was a monument to old-money excess: soaring glass walls overlooking a rain-slicked Manhattan skyline, hundreds of wealthy investors in black-tie attire sipping champagne, and a live orchestra playing soft Vivaldi melodies.
Right in the center of the room stood Dominic.
He looked immaculate in a custom-tailored Tom Ford tuxedo, a sparkling diamond cufflink catching the light as he laughed. Clinging tightly to his arm was a younger woman clad in a backless, emerald-green silk gown. Sitting next to them at the VIP table were my in-laws, looking smugly at a group of city council members, alongside a nine-year-old boy who wore a miniature tuxedo that matched Dominic’s exactly.
Dominic was raising his glass, gesturing toward the woman on his arm. “To the new matriarch of Vanguard’s future,” he projected proudly to his inner circle.
I stepped out of the elevator vestibule, my off-the-rack winter coat swinging around my boots, holding my daughter. Sophia’s small hands clutched the handmade paper necklace tightly against her chest.
As I walked down the center aisle of the ballroom, a heavy, suffocating silence began to ripple through the crowd. It started at the back and moved forward like a shockwave. Executives paused with their glasses halfway to their mouths. Investors turned around, murmuring in confusion at the sight of a woman in a wet coat infiltrating their inner sanctuary.
Dominic turned casually to see what was causing the disruption.
The moment his eyes landed on my face, his confident smile vanished so fast it looked as though his features had been frozen in stone. His glass slipped slightly in his hand, champagne sloshing over his knuckles.
“Vivienne?” he stammered, his voice carrying across the silent ballroom. “What… what are you doing here? Who let you up to this floor?”
The woman in the green dress looked at me with open disgust. “Dominic, darling, who is this unkempt woman? Is this the unstable stalker ex you told my father about?”
Dominic’s mother, who had been laughing a second ago, bolted upright from her seat. “Vivienne, remove yourself this instant! You are ruining the most important night of my son’s career. Have you no decency?”