She stopped just past the automatic doors. The New York air hit her lungs-exhaust and freedom, asphalt and possibility. Four years in Paris had thinned her blood. She pulled the coat tighter and let her eyes close for one second. One second to remember why she was back. Grandmother's trust fund. The seventeen percent. That was all.
Her phone buzzed.
She didn't look at it immediately. She knew who it was. When she finally pulled it from her pocket, the screen confirmed it: Annette Vaughn. Her stepmother. The message was three lines, no greeting.
Jered is waiting. Don't keep him. Mind your posture.
Keira's thumb hovered over the reply field. Then she slid the phone back into her pocket, silent. The screen went dark against her hip.
She scanned the crowd. It didn't take long to find him. Jered Knox stood near the coffee kiosk, a study in excess-Gucci suit in a shade of gold that hurt the eyes, blond hair combed back with enough product to reflect the overhead lights. He was laughing at something his phone showed him, head thrown back, throat exposed.
His arm was wrapped around a woman. Not just any woman. Alexus Albert, a name Keira recognized from the endless tabloid feeds her family's PR team insisted on monitoring. Red hair, legs for days, wearing a dress that left nothing to speculation. She was on her toes, her mouth pressed to Jered's cheek. The sound of that kiss carried-wet, deliberate, theatrical.
Jered's free hand found Alexus's hip. His fingers sank in. He squeezed. They both laughed like they were alone in the world.
Keira walked toward them. Her steps didn't hurry. She stopped three feet away, her shadow falling across their little performance.
"Jered Knox."
He turned. Slowly. The way a man turns when he's been interrupted from something more interesting. His eyes traveled from her shoes to her face, taking inventory. She saw the moment he filed her away-beige coat, minimal jewelry, face scrubbed clean of the makeup his world expected. His lip curled.
"Keira Gibson." He said her name like he was tasting it and finding it bland. "You look... plainer than your photos."
Alexus giggled. The sound was glass beads scattering on marble. She pressed closer to Jered, her body a wall of heat and perfume between him and this intruder. Her eyes found Keira's, bright with challenge.
Keira didn't look at her. She kept her gaze on Jered, level and unblinking.
"My luggage. Or do I handle it myself?"
Jered's jaw tightened. He flicked two fingers at a man in black standing nearby-the bodyguard, she assumed. The man stepped forward, took her suitcase without meeting her eyes, and walked toward the exit.
"Baby," Jered said to Alexus, already turning away from Keira, "we'll drop the fiancée at the Vaughn house, then hit the party."
The word hung in the air. Fiancée. He'd never introduced them. He'd never even looked at Keira again. She might have been a package he'd been asked to deliver, something to be signed for and forgotten.
She followed them through the sliding doors. The October wind cut through her coat. Alexus's voice drifted back, syrupy and complaining.
"Why are we doing this? Where's your driver?"
"Show for the parents," Jered said. He glanced back at Keira, just for a moment, and his smile was all teeth. "Demonstrating Knox family sincerity."
Keira's stomach clenched. Not from the cold. She understood now. This wasn't a negotiation. This wasn't even a transaction. It was a demonstration of power, staged for whoever was watching. She was the prop.
They reached the parking garage. Jered stopped beside a Porsche Panamera in screaming yellow, the color of a warning sign. He opened the passenger door with a flourish, but not for her. Alexus slid in, legs folding gracefully, and immediately adjusted the mirror to check her lipstick.
The back seat was left for Keira. She climbed in. The interior smelled of Alexus's perfume-something heavy with vanilla and musk-and the ghost of spilled champagne. Her throat tightened. She focused on breathing through her mouth.
Jered started the engine. The roar filled the confined space. He didn't pull out immediately. He turned in his seat, his arm draped over Alexus's headrest, and his eyes found Keira in the rearview mirror.
"Forgot to mention," he said. "The wedding's getting press coverage. Full access. You'll want to get used to cameras."
He pointed through the windshield. Across the garage, a man with a telephoto lens was raising his camera. The shutter clicked twice, three times. Alexus immediately leaned into Jered, her smile radiant, her hand on his chest. The victorious girlfriend. The happy couple.
Keira's fingers found the edge of her laptop case. She didn't flinch from the lens, but she didn't perform for it either. She let her face go blank, let them capture whatever they thought they saw.
Her eyes moved past them. Past the yellow Porsche, past the concrete pillars. High in the concrete shadows at the garage's far end, a sleek, military-grade surveillance camera pivoted. Its lens was fixed directly on her, a tiny red status light blinking in the gloom. It hadn't been angled that way when she walked through. Or maybe she hadn't noticed. It was watching. She was certain of it. The sensation crawled up her spine like cold fingers, a feeling of being observed not by the paparazzi, but by something far more precise and deliberate.
"Ready?" Jered asked. Not her. Alexus.
The Porsche screamed out of the garage, into the Van Wyck Expressway's perpetual traffic. Keira's body pressed back into the seat. In front of her, Alexus's hand had found Jered's thigh. Their heads tilted together, mouths meeting in sloppy, open kisses that ignored the steering wheel, the speed, the woman sitting three feet behind them.
Keira pulled her laptop from its case. The familiar weight settled on her knees. She found her noise-canceling headphones in the side pocket and put them on. The world muted-Jered's laughter, Alexus's gasps, the engine's whine.
She opened her email. Three messages from Paris, two from her lawyer in New York. She began to type, her fingers moving across the keys in steady rhythm. The screen's glow lit her face in the darkened car.
In the rearview mirror, Jered's eyes flicked to her. She caught the movement without looking up. His mouth moved-she could read the shape of it. Pretentious.
She didn't react. She didn't need to.
She had what she needed from this arrangement. He had what he needed. Two parallel lines, stretching toward a wedding altar and a bank transfer, never destined to touch.
The sensation of being monitored followed them onto the expressway. She saw nothing in the side mirror when they changed lanes, no suspicious vehicles, but her phone's screen flickered with a momentary interference pattern-a localized tracking ping. Silent. Patient. Predatory.
She kept typing. But her free hand moved to her coat pocket, finding her phone, making sure it was charged. Making sure she could call for help if this game turned dangerous.
The laptop screen showed a half-finished building schematic. Her current project, technically on hold while she sorted out this American mess. Her fingers added a line here, adjusted an angle there. The work anchored her. The work was real. The rest-the yellow car, the groping couple, the invisible surveillance tracking them like a shadow-was theater.
She would endure the theater. For the seventeen percent. For Grandmother's name.
For the future she would build once this was finished.