de
en
sixty-eight ho
oo quiet. Usually, there was the faint sound of Isabelle moving through the halls, the soft click of her heels, or the dis
with unblinking green eyes. It hadn't moved in hours. It looked at me with t
I muttered, running
mpressed, and curle
igned by me, of course-and the ring on the nightstand like a dramatic teenager. She thought this stunt
I didn't chase. I waited. And when she realized how cold
zed on the d
, putting it on sp
oice was sharp, cutting through the stale air of the office
id, leaning back in my chair. "She
"I had one of my men check. She's been locked in there all week,
st. Crying. Sick. Good. That meant she wa
learn that tantrums have consequences. When
ed the Elder involved in your marital squabbles. Tonight is the St. Regis Charit
there," I
me. Isabelle was breaking. It was only a ma
ndeliers the size of small cars hung from the ceiling, casting a glittering light over the
vet-covered railing. From here, I could see everything, but no o
m behind me. He was my most trus
crowd below. I was scanning for threats, fo
are here, near the bar. And..." Ma
frowning.
ted a gloved hand toward the center of the room, near the massive
e woman in the red dress, by the fo
od ran
d she was sick. She was supposed to be cu
ed Marco
that clung to every curve of her body-curves I thought I knew, but which looked dangerously foreign in t
crying. She
as la
xposed, as she smiled at a man stand
in my hand
ut. All I could feel was the inferno igniting in my chest. The lie my mother
ing. She was p
d, my voice sounding
stairs, my vision tunneling. The world narrowed dow
d to be s
he whole world saw
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