She wore a gold Versace gown that hugged her slender curves, her dark auburn waves cascading over one shoulder like silk. Diamond studs glinted at her ears, and a sapphire pendant nestled against her collarbone, an heirloom passed down from her grandmother, one of Manhattan's original socialites.
She held a glass of champagne in one hand and her phone in the other, eyes flicking through social media notifications with the casual grace of someone born to rule the world.
"Darling, the mayor's wife is staring at you again," her best friend Natalie whispered with a teasing grin. "If looks could kill, she'd be on trial."
Isabella smirked. "She's just jealous her facelift didn't take. Besides, I'm not the one who's been eyeing her husband all night."
Natalie let out a delighted gasp. "You bitch."
They clinked glasses and laughed, the sound like music over the classical notes swelling through the room. This was Isabella's world, glamorous, untouchable, soaked in wealth and power. She didn't just belong here. She owned it.
But just as she lifted her glass to her lips again, her phone buzzed with a notification that froze her smile in place.
Unknown Number:
Call me now. It's about your father. It's urgent.
Her heart skipped a beat.
She hesitated, then slipped away from the crowd, her heels clicking against the marble as she stepped into the hallway. With trembling fingers, she dialed back.
"Isabella Sinclair?" a gruff male voice answered.
"Yes. Who is this?"
"This is Dr. Reynolds from St. Vincent's Hospital. I'm... I'm afraid your father collapsed during a meeting this evening. We tried everything. But... he didn't make it."
Her breath caught. For a second, the world stood still. Her ears rang as if the orchestra had crescendoed into chaos.
"I, I don't understand. My father was fine this morning. We had breakfast together. He was, he was laughing."
"I'm sorry. It was a massive heart attack. It happened quickly."
She didn't remember hanging up. The phone slipped from her fingers and clattered to the floor. The noise echoed in the quiet hallway, but no one came. The world, which moments ago had revolved around her, didn't notice she was crumbling.
Isabella's hand flew to her chest. Her heart thudded erratically, disbelief and grief washing over her like a tidal wave. How could he be gone? Her father was the strongest man she knew. Her protector. Her everything.
She stumbled back into the main room, dazed. The laughter, the music, the flashing cameras, it all seemed wrong now. So fake. So hollow.
Natalie caught sight of her and rushed forward. "Bella? What happened? You look like you've seen a ghost."
Isabella blinked, her eyes glassy. "He's gone... my father's dead."
The glass slipped from her hand and shattered on the marble floor.
Three days later, the funeral was held at Saint Patrick's Cathedral.
The turnout was massive. Business tycoons, politicians, celebrities, everyone who mattered came to pay their respects. And everyone was watching Isabella. She stood at the front, dressed in black, with her head held high, refusing to let them see her break.
But inside, she was falling apart.
Her uncle, Charles Sinclair, arrived late, flanked by two lawyers and a smug expression that set her teeth on edge. He barely spoke to her. Didn't offer condolences. Just gave her a tight nod and took a seat in the front row like he owned the place.
And the worst part?
He soon would.
The reading of the will took place in a cold office high above Manhattan.
Isabella sat beside her father's attorney, confused as legal jargon filled the room. She'd expected to inherit the company, 'Sinclair Holdings', just as her father had always promised. She was his only child, after all.
But then Charles spoke up.
"As the acting chairman of Sinclair Holdings, I'd like to move forward with the transition as outlined in the trust."
Isabella turned to him sharply. "What are you talking about?"
Charles adjusted his cufflinks, smug. "You're not mentioned in the trust, Isabella. Your father signed everything over to me shortly before his death."
"That's impossible!" she snapped. "He would never"
"The documents are legally binding," the lawyer interjected, looking uncomfortable. "He amended them just two weeks ago."
Her stomach twisted. Two weeks ago, her father had been in perfect health. Why would he change the will?
Charles leaned in, voice low and venomous. "You always thought you were the princess of this empire. But this isn't a fairy tale, Isabella. It's business. And you just got outplayed."
She stood abruptly, her chair screeching back. "I'll fight this."
"By all means," he said, smiling. "But good luck finding a lawyer who'll take your case once I shut down your trust fund."
And just like that, the door slammed shut on the life she once knew.
By the end of the week, Isabella had nothing.
Her bank accounts were frozen. Her credit cards declined. Her penthouse was repossessed by the company she once would've inherited. Even her driver was reassigned.
She walked out of the Sinclair building with nothing but a suitcase and the clothes on her back. No car. No money. No name.
The tabloids ate it up.
"Heiress Turned Pauper: Isabella Sinclair's Fall from Grace."
She couldn't bear to read the rest.
She spent that night in a dingy hotel downtown, staring at the cracked ceiling, replaying every moment over and over. Her father's death. Her uncle's betrayal. The pitying looks. The headlines.
Everything was gone.
But something deep inside her began to shift.
She could wallow. She could beg. She could crumble.
Or she could fight.
No more silk. No more daddy's princess. From now on, she would be steel.
The next morning, she grabbed her laptop and started job hunting, real jobs. Entry-level jobs. Anything to pay rent.
Her fingers hesitated over one listing:
'Executive Assistant to CEO-Kane Technologies.'
$8,000/month. Must work under pressure. No weaklings.
Her lips twitched.
She clicked "Apply."
Isabella doesn't realize the man behind Kane Technologies is about to challenge everything she thought she knew-about power, about ambition... and about herself.