Hayley didn't answer. She took a deep breath, the air thick with exhaust fumes and the smell of street-cart hot dogs. It did nothing to settle the acid churning in her stomach. Freedom tasted like pollution.
His tone shifted, dropping the feigned annoyance for a cold, transactional finality. He held out a plain manila envelope. "Here. A final bit of generosity."
She stared at the envelope, not moving to take it. "What is it?"
"Fifty thousand," he said, as if discussing the price of a used car. "For your time. Your companionship. Consider it a severance package."
A black Porsche Panamera slid to a silent stop at the curb. The passenger door opened and Jenna Hartman emerged, all long legs and Christian Louboutin heels. The sunlight caught the diamond on her finger-the one that used to be a topic of gossip column speculation. Now it was just a fact.
She glided up the steps and linked her arm through Brad's, her smile a perfect, polished apology. "I'm so sorry, Hayley. I hope this wasn't too awful for you."
Brad instinctively shifted, positioning himself so Jenna was slightly behind him, a protective gesture that painted Hayley as the aggressor. His eyes, once the color of a summer sky she'd loved, were now flat and hard as slate. He looked at her with a disgust that made her skin crawl.
"It's not your fault, darling," Jenna cooed, her voice dripping with synthetic sympathy. "These things happen."
Hayley's gaze dropped to their interlocked hands. Her own nails dug into her palms, the small, sharp pain a welcome distraction from the immense, crushing weight in her chest.
Brad shoved the envelope into her hand. The paper felt flimsy, insulting. "Just take it, Hayley. Take the money and get out of our lives. Go back to whatever gallery will have you."
She looked down at the envelope. It felt weightless, but it carried the full, crushing weight of four years of her life, condensed into a cheap paper container.
Her fingers, trembling slightly, pulled out the check. The number was there in crisp, corporate font: $50,000. Brad's signature was an arrogant, illegible scrawl at the bottom.
She lifted her head. The grief that had clouded her vision moments before was gone, replaced by something cold and clear, like ice forming on a winter lake.
Her hands moved, one to each end of the check.
Rip.
The sound was quiet, but on the noisy street, it felt like a gunshot.
Brad's pupils dilated. A dark flush crept up his neck. "What the hell are you doing?"
She didn't stop. She tore the two halves into four, then eight, her movements precise and methodical.
Then, she opened her hand. The tiny pieces of paper fluttered into the air, a bitter confetti that settled on the perfect shoulders of his Tom Ford suit.
Jenna let out a short, sharp shriek, pulling away as if the scraps were contaminated. "My dress!"
"Are you insane?" Brad lunged forward, his hand clamping around her wrist like a manacle.
Hayley wrenched her arm free, a raw, red mark blooming on her skin. Her voice was low, steady, and lethal. "Keep your money, Brad. Maybe Jenna can use it for birth control."
His mouth opened and closed, but no sound came out. His face was a mottled shade of purple.
Jenna's perfectly composed mask twitched, her lips pulled into a tight, ugly line.
Without another word, Hayley turned and walked down the steps, her spine as straight and unyielding as a steel rod.
"You'll regret this, Hayley!" Brad's voice was a venomous hiss behind her. "You'll come crawling back!"
She didn't look back. She raised her hand, hailing a yellow cab that screeched to a halt in front of her. She slid into the back seat, the worn vinyl cool against her skin.
Only when the door slammed shut, sealing her in, did the first tear break free. It traced a hot path down her cold cheek. The dam broke, and silent, wracking sobs shook her body. But through the blur of tears, her mind was terrifyingly clear.
The trust. The family trust her grandfather had set up. The clause was ironclad. She had to be married to access the next distribution.
The deadline was in seventy-two hours.