She stepped forward, her sneakers splashing in a puddle. The doorman, a man who'd seen her on Mr. Carroll's arm a hundred times, hesitated. His eyes scanned her soaked jacket, the worn hem of her jeans, and the canvas shoes. His professional mask slipped for a fraction of a second. He didn't see a guest. He saw a problem.
"Ms. Olsen?" he asked, glancing from the screen of her phone to her dripping hair. His voice lacked its usual smooth polish.
Claire didn't argue. She didn't blink. She simply held his gaze, her expression a blank, unreadable wall. She turned the screen of her phone toward him. It was a text from Axel Carroll. The doorman sighed, the rigid line of his shoulders dropping slightly as he realized he couldn't turn away the boss's girlfriend, no matter how she looked. He took a step back.
"Enjoy your evening, Ms. Olsen," he said, though his tone suggested he highly doubted she would.
Claire walked past him, closing her wet umbrella and leaving it in the brass stand by the door. The sudden blast of heat from the lobby hit her wet clothes, making her shiver. Her sneakers squeaked against the polished marble floor as she made her way down the long hallway. She held the garment bag tightly in her right hand. Inside was a Tom Ford suit. Axel had ruined his original shirt at the charity gala earlier and had retreated to his private after-party here, texting her to bring a replacement, like she was some sort of high-end delivery service.
She reached the end of the hall and pushed open the heavy oak door to the private suite.
The smell hit her first. A thick mixture of Cuban cigars, expensive Baccarat Rouge perfume, and old money. The room was dimly lit, the jazz music soft and low. Claire's eyes swept the room. Axel was sitting in the center of the burgundy leather sectional, his tie loosened, a glass of whiskey dangling from his fingers. He looked relaxed. He looked like a king holding court.
And draped all over him, like a second skin, was Candida Reid.
Candida was the newly returned true heiress of the Reid family. That was her ultimate weapon in Axel's world. She had legs that went on for miles and a face that launched a thousand campaigns. Right now, her long, manicured fingers were tracing lazy circles on Axel's chest, right where his shirt fell open. She looked up as the door opened, her eyes landing on Claire with a slow, predatory smile.
Pierce Wexler, Axel's best friend and professional sycophant, was sitting in the armchair across from them. He stopped talking mid-sentence. The room went dead silent. Everyone was looking at her.
Claire's heart dropped. It didn't race; it just dropped like a stone in a still pond. But she didn't let it show. She kept her face perfectly still, a mask she had spent three years perfecting. She walked straight to the coffee table, her sneakers squeaking softly, and placed the garment bag down. The sound was heavy and dull in the quiet room.
Candida let out a little laugh. It was a high, tinkling sound, completely devoid of humor. She looked Claire up and down, her nose wrinkling slightly as she took in the wet shoes and the cheap jacket.
"Look at this," Candida said, her voice loud enough to cut through the jazz. "The dry cleaning delivery girl got lost. Honey, you're dripping on the Persian rug."
Claire didn't look at Candida. She kept her gaze locked on Axel. She waited. For three years, this had been the routine. Someone would insult her, Axel would sigh, tell them to lay off, and then apologize to her later in private. She waited for him to be the Axel who held her hand under the table. She waited for him to be the man who said she's with me.
Axel looked at her. His blue eyes were cold. There was no annoyance at Candida's behavior. There was no apology. There was just a vague sense of irritation, like she was a fly buzzing around his dinner. He brought the whiskey glass to his lips and took a slow sip.
Pierce let out a low whistle. "Well, Axel," he said, leaning back in his chair with a grin. "I guess your little charity project is finally up. You going to write her a final check, or do I have to call security?"
Axel set his glass down on the table with a sharp clink. He looked at Claire, his expression bored. "Claire," he said, his voice flat. "I'm done."
Claire swallowed. The sound was loud in her own ears.
"I'm tired of the clinging," Axel continued, tapping his fingers on his thigh. "I'm tired of the texts. I'm tired of feeling like I'm babysitting. It's over. Hayes will contact you tomorrow. He'll set up a transition. You'll be taken care of. You won't need to work for a long time. Just... go."
The room held its breath. Pierce was smiling. Candida was preening. They were all waiting for the show. They wanted tears. They wanted a scream. They wanted her to fall on her knees and beg the prince to take back the pauper. They wanted the tragedy they all assumed she was.
Claire stood there. She felt a click deep inside her chest. It wasn't a snap; it was a lock finally being picked open. The heavy, iron door she had built inside herself-the one that held all her excuses, all her rationalizations, all her pathetic hope-swung open, revealing nothing but a cold, empty room. She didn't feel sad. She didn't feel angry. She felt incredibly, painfully stupid.
She looked at Axel. She looked at the man she had loved, the man she had cooked for, the man she had stitched her entire identity around. He was a stranger. He was a small, cruel boy sitting on a big couch.
She nodded. It was a small, precise movement.
"Okay," she said. Her voice was clear. It didn't waver.
Axel blinked. His eyebrows pulled together for a fraction of a second. A flicker of something-surprise, annoyance-crossed his face. He had expected a fight. He had expected to win.
Claire didn't give him the chance. She turned around. She didn't look at Pierce. She didn't look at Candida. She walked straight to the heavy oak door, her wet shoes silent on the rug now. She pulled the door open, let it close behind her with a soft thud, and locked the noise, the smoke, and the toxic world of Axel Carroll in the past.
She walked out of the Core Club. The rain was still falling, cold and heavy, slapping against her skin. But the air felt clean. It felt new. She stood on the curb, her arm raised, and a yellow taxi screeched to a halt in front of her. She yanked the door open, slid into the back seat, and slammed it shut.
"Where to?" the driver asked, not looking up from his phone.
Claire gave him the address of the penthouse on Fifth Avenue. As the car lurched into traffic, she pulled out her phone. She opened Axel's contact page. She saw the custom text tone she had set for him-a special song she thought was romantic. She saw the little star next to his name, marking him as a favorite. She saw the background photo of them smiling in Central Park.
She tapped "Edit." She changed the text tone to default. She unstarred him. She deleted the photo. She took him off the top of her message list. She didn't block him. Blocking implied she still cared enough to keep him out. She just erased him. She looked out the window as the lights of Manhattan streaked by in the rain.