Chelsea gave a weak nod. Beneath the thin hospital blanket, her muscles relaxed. A cold, calculated wave of relief washed over her. Her flawless disguise was now physically complete.
Brenda handed her a thick post-operative care packet.
"Absolutely no strenuous physical activity or intimate contact for at least two weeks," the nurse instructed, her tone turning serious. "The stitches need time to dissolve."
Chelsea reached into her designer handbag resting on the bedside table. She pulled out an anonymous, untraceable prepaid credit card and handed it over. She paid the exorbitant remaining balance in full. There would be no paper trail. No financial footprint leading back to her.
Once alone, Chelsea stripped off the hospital gown. She pulled a washed-out, cheap cotton sundress over her head. The fabric was slightly rough against her skin, a stark contrast to the silk she was used to. It was the perfect visual lie-poor, innocent, and struggling.
She pushed open the door of the recovery room and stepped into the hallway. Her flat shoes sank into the thick, sound-absorbing carpet as she made her way toward the main lobby.
As she neared the corner leading to the reception desk, a voice sliced through the quiet air.
It was a low, cold, and ruthlessly authoritative male voice.
Chelsea's lungs seized. Her heart slammed against her ribs so hard it physically hurt. That voice had echoed in her worst nightmares for five straight years.
She stopped dead in her tracks. She pressed her spine flat against the cool wallpaper, holding her breath. Slowly, she leaned her head just enough to peer around the corner.
Through the gaps in the lobby's decorative palm leaves, she saw him.
Jackson Brooks.
He stood with his back to her, wearing a bespoke charcoal suit that clung perfectly to his broad shoulders. He was speaking to the clinic director, his tone leaving absolutely no room for argument.
"The Brooks Family Foundation requires a full audit of your annual sponsorship accounts," Jackson stated, his voice devoid of any warmth.
Chelsea's brain went into overdrive. She scanned the lobby for an exit. Her stomach dropped. The only elevator leading to the underground parking garage was located directly to Jackson's right.
She pulled her thin scarf up, burying the lower half of her face in the cheap fabric. She lowered her chin to her chest. She just needed him to look down at the financial files for five seconds.
She took a step out from the hallway.
At that exact second, a young, flustered nurse pushing a metal medical cart misjudged the turn. The cart clipped the corner of the wall.
A stainless steel tray slid off the top and crashed onto the marble floor.
The deafening metallic clatter shattered the silence of the clinic.
Jackson stopped speaking. He turned his head, his sharp gaze snapping directly toward the source of the noise.
His eyes swept past the apologizing nurse and locked onto the woman frozen ten feet away.
Jackson's pupils dilated. The bored, authoritative expression on his face vanished, replaced instantly by a layer of terrifying, absolute ice.
He didn't hesitate. He closed the distance between them in three long strides, his leather shoes clicking against the marble like a countdown to an execution.
Chelsea forced her panic down into her stomach. She dug her fingernails brutally into her palms, using the sharp physical pain to trigger her tear ducts. She shrank back, her shoulders curling inward.
Jackson stopped inches from her. His massive frame blocked out the overhead lights, casting a dark, suffocating shadow over her.
"What the hell is a lying whore like you doing in a high-end clinic in New York?" Jackson gritted out, his jaw ticking with barely suppressed violence.
Chelsea took a trembling step back. Her back hit the wall.
"I... I had a benign ovarian cyst removed," she whispered, her voice shaking perfectly. "I saved up for months."
Jackson let out a harsh, mocking laugh. He leaned in closer. His nose almost brushed her forehead. He inhaled the faint scent of hospital antiseptic clinging to her skin.
"Is that right?" he sneered, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Or are you planning another fake miscarriage to extort someone else?"
Chelsea bit down on her lower lip until she tasted copper. Tears welled in her eyes and spilled over her lashes, tracing a path down her pale cheeks. She looked utterly broken.
The clinic director, sensing the volatile shift in the air, hurried over.
"Mr. Brooks," the director said nervously. "If you would please step into the VIP lounge to sign these documents?"
Jackson slowly turned his head to look at the director, his eyes dead. Then he looked back at Chelsea.
"Get out of my city," Jackson warned, his voice a low rumble in his chest.
He turned his back on her and walked away.
Chelsea watched him disappear into the VIP room. The second the door clicked shut, the tears stopped. She wiped her wet cheeks with the back of her hand. A cold, bone-chilling smirk curved her lips as she turned and walked quickly into the waiting elevator.