"Sign it, Mrs. Sterling. It is the best offer you are going to get," a voice said. It was oily, condescending, and laced with false sympathy. "And frankly, considering the... compromising photographs we have of your little shopping trips on the company dime, it's more than fair."
Gloria blinked, her vision sharpening.
She was sitting in a high-back leather chair in a room that screamed corporate sterility.
Across the mahogany table sat a man in a pinstripe suit that cost more than most cars. His name was Vance. He was a lawyer. And he was a shark.
Gloria looked down at the document beneath her hand.
Asset Renunciation Agreement.
The words seemed to float on the page, detaching themselves from the paper and rearranging into a terrifying reality.
Memories that did not belong to her flooded her brain in a violent torrent.
She wasn't just Gloria. She was that Gloria. Gloria Peck. The gold digger. The villainess of The Sterling Legacy. The woman who married Arthur Sterling for his trust fund, abused his children, and was destined to die alone, bankrupt, and frozen on a park bench in the story's final pages.
She gasped, the air catching in her throat like a fishhook.
She looked at the date on her watch. This was the first act. The beginning of the end.
Arthur Sterling had been missing for three months after a plane crash in the Andes. everyone assumed he was dead. Vance was here to bully the "grieving" widow into signing away her rights to the estate before the body was even found.
"Gloria?" Vance tapped the paper with his index finger. A small dot of ink bled into the white fiber. "The board is waiting. The settlement is generous."
Generous.
She scanned the numbers. A lump sum of fifty thousand dollars.
In her past life, fifty thousand was a down payment on a house. In this life, Gloria Peck had gambling debts totaling five million dollars. Signing this paper wasn't a settlement. It was a death sentence.
She shifted her gaze to the corner of the room.
A boy sat there. He looked about fourteen, though his eyes were ancient. He wore a prep school blazer that was slightly too big for his thin frame.
Jones Sterling. Arthur's eldest son.
He was staring at her with a hatred so pure it felt like a physical weight on her skin.
In the book, Gloria signed the papers, took the cash, and left Jones to the wolves. Jones would grow up to be a cold, ruthless antagonist who eventually destroyed everything Gloria touched.
Survival instinct kicked in, primal and hot.
If she signed this, she died. If she followed the script, she died.
Gloria's fingers curled around the heavy Montblanc fountain pen lying on the table. The cold resin felt grounding against her sweating palm.
Vance smirked. He thought she was reaching for the pen to sign. He thought he had won.
"Smart girl," Vance murmured. "Arthur would want you to move on."
The mention of his name was the spark.
Gloria didn't uncap the pen. She didn't align it with the signature line.
She stood up.
The movement was abrupt, knocking her chair back against the wall with a loud clatter.
Vance flinched, his smirk faltering. "Mrs. Sterling?"
Gloria raised her hand high above her head.
She drove the pen down.
It wasn't a delicate motion. It was a strike.
The metal nib of the pen slammed into the mahogany table, piercing right through the center of the Asset Renunciation Agreement.
Thud.
The sound was sickeningly solid. The pen embedded itself into the wood, vibrating like a tuning fork. It missed Vance's hand by less than an inch.
Vance yelped, a high-pitched sound that was entirely undignified. He scrambled back, knocking over his glass of water. Ice cubes skittered across the polished surface.
Silence descended on the room. It was absolute. Heavy.
Gloria's chest heaved. She stared at the pen standing upright in the table, a monument to her refusal.
In the corner, Jones's jaw dropped. The cynical mask he wore cracked, revealing the confused boy underneath.
Gloria smoothed the front of her Versace skirt. Her hands were trembling, but she forced them to be still.
She looked Vance dead in the eye.
"This contract," she said, her voice raspy but steady, "is garbage."
Vance sputtered, wiping water off his lapel. "Have you lost your mind? I will call the Board. I will have you removed-"
Gloria laughed. It was a cold, sharp sound that surprised even her.
She walked over to the floor-to-ceiling window. Her reflection stared back. She was beautiful. Terrifyingly beautiful. High cheekbones, dark hair, eyes that looked like they could cut glass.
She turned her back on the city skyline and looked at Jones. She ignored the lawyer completely.
"Did you read the fine print, Jones?" she asked.
Jones froze. He didn't know how to react. The stepmother he knew would be asking about the check, not the clauses.
"I..." Jones started, his voice cracking.
"They are trying to steal your inheritance, you idiot," Gloria snapped, but there was no venom in it. Only urgency. "And they are using me to do it."