The slide of silk sheets against her bare back sent a jolt of pure ice through her veins.
Bare.
Her back was bare.
Panic seized her heart, a cold, tight fist squeezing the air from her lungs. She forced her eyes open.
The room swam into focus. It was vast and opulent, a crystal chandelier dripping from the ceiling like a frozen waterfall. This wasn't her room. This wasn't any room she had ever been in.
She turned her head on the pillow.
And met a pair of cool, gray eyes.
A man was propped up on the pillows beside her. His chest was bare, a landscape of lean, defined muscle that tapered down to the crisp white sheet covering his waist. He was brutally handsome, his face a collection of sharp angles and stark lines, and he was watching her with an unnerving calm.
He was Ace Griffith, but she didn't know that. All she knew was the terror clawing its way up her throat.
A scream formed, but it died before it could escape. She scrambled backward, dragging the duvet with her, pulling it up to her chin like a shield.
There was no lust in his eyes. Only a quiet, assessing intensity.
"Who are you?" Her voice was a dry, ragged whisper.
He didn't answer. His gaze flickered to a half-empty glass of champagne on the bedside table.
Then, a noise from the hallway. Footsteps, frantic and loud, accompanied by a high, shrill voice that made Alexandrea's blood run cold.
"Right here! I saw her with my own eyes, the shameless girl, bringing a man into this room!"
Ivette Terry. Her adoptive mother.
The color drained from Alexandrea's face. The pounding in her head, the strange room, the man in her bed-it all snapped into place. A trap. This was a trap, and she had walked right into it.
The door burst open with a deafening crack, slammed against the inner wall without a shred of warning.
Ivette Terry stormed in, a phalanx of reporters and a few wide-eyed New York socialites trailing in her wake.
The world exploded in a series of blinding white flashes. The rapid-fire click of camera shutters was like a machine gun, each shot capturing her disheveled and terrified, trapped in a stranger's bed.
Ivette rushed to the bedside, her face a mask of theatrical grief, but her eyes glittered with a triumphant, venomous light.
"Alexandrea! How could you do this? How could you disgrace our family name like this? The Terry name is ruined because of you!"
Alexandrea's mind went blank. A tidal wave of shame washed over her, so powerful it felt like drowning.
The reporters' questions were like bullets.
"Miss Terry, who is this man?"
"What is your relationship?"
"Were you aware of this affair, Mrs. Terry?"
Ivette sobbed, a public performance of a heartbroken mother, launching into a tirade about Alexandrea's rebelliousness, her wild nature, her complete lack of morals.
Alexandrea tried to speak, to say that this wasn't true, but her voice was a ghost, lost in the storm of accusations and flashing lights.
In the midst of the chaos, Ace Griffith slowly sat up.
The movement was unhurried, but it carried a weight that seemed to suck the air out of the room. The frantic energy faltered. The reporters lowered their cameras slightly, their instincts telling them the power dynamic had just shifted.
He reached for a dress shirt slung over a nearby chair, shrugging it on with a deliberate grace that was utterly at odds with the scene. His gaze swept over the intruders, cold and dismissive, before landing on Ivette.
The reporters started whispering, a confused murmur rippling through the room as they tried to place the man whose presence alone could command such silence.
Ivette saw his composure, and a flicker of panic crossed her face. This wasn't in her script. The man was supposed to be a nobody, a hired hand, or at least someone who would be just as flustered as Alexandrea.
Ace's eyes finally settled on Alexandrea, who was trembling under the duvet, her face pale and tear-streaked. Then he looked back at Ivette, and the corner of his mouth curved into a smile that held no warmth at all. It was a smile that promised consequences.
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