Her life was scripted: charity galas, private school debates, and dinners where conversations revolved around mergers and acquisitions. Every smile was rehearsed, every word calculated. Tonight was no different. Another gala, another evening of polite laughter and hollow compliments.
"Elena, are you ready?" her mother's voice floated through the door, crisp and commanding.
"Yes," Elena replied, smoothing the silk of her gown. She looked perfect-because perfection was expected. But inside, she felt like a ghost haunting her own life.
The limousine ride to the downtown hotel was silent except for the hum of the engine. Her parents discussed business expansions while Elena stared out the tinted glass, watching the city blur past. Neon lights flickered, people laughed on sidewalks, and for a moment, she envied their freedom.
The ballroom glittered with chandeliers and champagne flutes. Elena smiled, nodded, and played her part. But as the speeches droned on, a restless energy coiled inside her. She needed air-needed escape.
Slipping through a side door, she stepped into the cool night. The city smelled of rain and possibility. That's when she saw him.
A motorcycle gleamed under a streetlamp, and beside it leaned a man who looked like he owned the night. Leather jacket, tousled hair, and eyes that carried storms. He wasn't part of her world-he was the warning every parent gave.
Their eyes met. For a heartbeat, the noise of the city faded.
"Lost, princess?" His voice was rough, teasing.
She should have walked away. Instead, she said, "Maybe I am."
He smirked, swinging a leg over the bike. "Hop on. I'll show you what running feels like."
Every rule screamed no. But the part of her that had been suffocating whispered yes. Before she could overthink, she slid behind him, gripping the leather of his jacket as the engine roared to life.
The city lights blurred as they sped through streets she'd never seen before-neon signs, graffiti murals, laughter spilling from late-night diners. It was chaotic, raw, and real. For the first time in years, Elena wasn't Beaumont's daughter or the perfect heiress-she was just a girl chasing something that felt alive.