She pushed the door open. The wind off the Atlantic cut through her trench coat, carrying the scent of wet earth and decaying leaves. It was the anniversary of her mother's death. She stepped out, her heel sinking immediately into the soft, unforgiving mud of the Green-Wood Cemetery parking lot.
She frowned. These were Louboutins. Last season's, but still one of the few assets the Feds hadn't seized.
She opened her umbrella, fighting the gust that threatened to turn it inside out. Through the gray curtain of rain, she saw it. A black Maybach.
Julian's car.
A small, foolish warmth bloomed in her chest. He remembered. Despite the pressure from his family to distance himself from the toxic Compton name, he had come to support her.
She walked faster, the mud sucking at her soles. She reached for the handle of the rear door, intending to tap on the glass, but her hand froze in mid-air.
The car was shaking.
It was a rhythmic, subtle vibration that rocked the heavy chassis on its suspension.
Eleonora didn't breathe. She leaned closer. The privacy tint was dark, illegal in most states, but the window was cracked open an inch at the top, likely to let out the condensation fogging the interior.
Through the gap, she saw a flash of red.
Bright, aggressive scarlet.
She knew that color. Her stepsister, Tiffany, had bought a trench coat that exact shade last week, charging it to a credit card Eleonora had been trying to pay off.
Julian's voice drifted through the crack, breathless and low. "Don't worry about the broke princess. Once I secure her voting proxy for the trust, I'm dumping her."
The air left Eleonora's lungs. It wasn't a gasp. It was a vacuum.
She didn't scream. She didn't reach for the door handle to rip it open. Instead, a cold, clinical clarity washed over her, freezing the blood in her veins.
She pulled her phone from her pocket. Her hands were steady. Too steady.
She tapped the camera icon, switched to video, and held the lens up to the gap in the window.
The camera focused. It caught the movement. It caught the audio. It caught the side of Julian's face, contorted in pleasure, and Tiffany's distinct, mocking laughter.
"She's so pathetic, Julian," Tiffany moaned. "She actually thinks you love her."
"I love her trust fund," Julian corrected.
Eleonora stopped the recording. She uploaded it immediately to her encrypted cloud storage. Only when the 'Upload Complete' checkmark appeared did she allow herself to move.
She tucked the phone away and straightened her collar. Then, she balled her hand into a fist and rapped her knuckles hard against the glass.
The vibration stopped instantly.
A frantic rustling followed. The sound of zippers, the thud of bodies hitting plastic.
The window rolled down slowly. Julian's face appeared, flushed and terrified. His shirt was buttoned wrong.
Behind him, Tiffany was clutching her coat closed, her eyes wide with fake shock, though a smirk tugged at the corner of her mouth.
"El," Julian stammered. "El, listen, it's not-she was just upset and I-"
Eleonora didn't let him finish. She raised the white rose.
She tossed it through the open window. It landed squarely on Julian's lap, the white petals stark against his dark trousers.
"Save it for your new girlfriend, Julian," she said, her voice devoid of inflection. "It's for the dead. Seems appropriate."
Julian's shock turned to a sneer. He brushed the flower off as if it were toxic. "You think you can judge me? You're nothing, Eleonora. You're a liability. A walking bankruptcy filing."
Eleonora smiled. It was a terrifying expression that didn't reach her eyes. "A liability? You're about to find out that I'm a very expensive problem."
She leaned in, bringing her lips close to his ear. "Since you want to climb the Stark ladder so badly, I think I'll go marry the man who actually owns the ladder. Your uncle. Alden."
Julian froze. Then he laughed, a harsh, barking sound. "Alden? The Butcher of Wall Street? He wouldn't look twice at you."
Eleonora straightened up, looking down at him like he was a stain on her shoe. "We'll see."
She turned on her heel.
The wind picked up, ripping the umbrella from her hand. She let it go. It tumbled away across the wet asphalt. She didn't chase it.
She let the rain soak her hair, her coat, her skin. She needed to be cold. She needed to be numb.
She walked past the exit. She walked deeper into the cemetery, toward the private mausoleums where the old money slept.
There was another car parked there. A sleek, armored sedan that looked less like a vehicle and more like a weapon.
Alden Stark was here. She was betting her life on it.