She pressed her lips into a line and plated the lamb, her movements practiced and elegant. It was fine. A board meeting. A crisis overseas.
Things that were always more important.
The floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked Times Square, a chaotic, incessant glow she usually kept hidden behind drawn blinds. But not tonight. Tonight was supposed to be different.
She carried the plates to the table. A flash of light from the largest billboard below caught her eye. A live feed.
The annual St. Jude's Charity Gala.
Gwen froze. The weight of the plates in her hands was immense.
There, a hundred feet tall, was her husband. Damien Sterling. Not in a boardroom. He was smiling in a custom tuxedo, draping his jacket over the bare shoulders of another woman.
Isabel Goodwin.
His first love.
Isabel leaned into him. Her hand rested on his arm. The camera zoomed in on the necklace around her neck, a magnificent spray of diamonds and sapphires. The Heart of Eternity. The auction's grand prize.
A headline materialized across the bottom of the screen.
STERLING CEO DROPS $10 MILLION ON 'HEART OF ETERNITY' FOR FORMER FLAME. IS ROMANCE BACK ON THE TABLE?
The sound of shattering porcelain was distant, as if it were happening to someone else. Her hands were empty. Her breath hitched, a sharp, ragged thing. The city lights began to spin.
The wine glass on the table tipped, falling in what felt like slow motion. It crashed onto the Persian rug.
Red wine soaked into the cream-colored wool. A dark, spreading stain.
Her heart hammered against her ribs. This wasn't real. It couldn't be.
A public declaration. A humiliation broadcast to the entire city.
Her phone shrieked from the counter.
Patty White - St. Mary's Hospital.
Her grandmother's caregiver.
A chill spread through her. She snatched the phone, her fingers trembling so badly she almost dropped it.
"Patty? What is it?"
"Gwen!" Patty's voice was a choked sob. "You have to come. Now. It's your grandmother. She... she collapsed."
The world narrowed to the voice on the phone.
"What happened?"
"I don't know... she was fine, and then... Oh, God, Gwen, just hurry."
Keys were in her hand, but she didn't remember grabbing them. The apartment, the shattered plates, the ruined dinner-all gone. There was only the run. Barefoot. The silk of her house dress was cold against her skin.
She tore through the New York night. The doctor's words from her grandmother's last check-up echoed in the car. *Severe cardiovascular disease. Any significant stress...*
Gwen screeched to a halt in the emergency bay and sprinted inside. The smell of antiseptic hit her first. Sharp and clean, a smell that couldn't cover the despair underneath.
She saw them through the glass of a trauma room. A team of doctors working over a frail body. The line on the heart monitor was a weak, terrifying flicker.
Patty rushed to her, her kind eyes red-rimmed and panicked. "Gwen, thank God."
"What happened?"
Patty's voice dropped to a shaking whisper. "This afternoon... a woman came to visit. Isabel Goodwin."
The name landed like a punch to the gut.
"Isabel? What was she doing there?"
"Said she was a friend of the family. She went into Eleanor's room... I heard shouting." Patty was crying now, twisting the fabric of her uniform. "She said horrible things. About you and Mr. Sterling. That your marriage was a sham. And then... she told your grandmother her pension fund went bankrupt last week. Wiped out by an acquisition. By the Sterling Corporation."
The blood drained from Gwen's face. Nausea rose in her throat, so intense she had to grip the wall to stay upright. It wasn't a coincidence. It was an attack.
The door to the trauma room opened. A doctor stepped out, pulling off his mask. His name tag read Dr. Hayes. He looked at Gwen, his eyes full of a pity she couldn't bear.
He shook his head.
"I'm so sorry. We did everything we could. A massive brain stem hemorrhage."
The world went silent. The noise of the ER faded to a dull roar. Gwen's knees gave out. She slid down the wall, the cold of the linoleum seeping through her thin dress.
She didn't know how long she sat there.
A pair of gleaming, hand-stitched leather shoes entered her field of vision. They cost more than her car.
Damien Sterling looked down at her. His face was a mask. He smelled of champagne and Isabel's perfume.
He crouched, not to comfort her, but to meet her level. His voice was calm, as if closing a deal.
"I've made arrangements with the best funeral home in the city. My condolences."
Gwen lifted her head. Her eyes were dry. She looked into his, searching for something. A flicker of remorse. Of shared loss. Of humanity.
There was nothing.
His assistant helped her to her feet. She moved like a sleepwalker, letting them guide her into a black town car. They drove to a somber building on the Upper East Side.
As she walked down a hushed corridor, a woman in a long, white dress stepped out from a side room.
Isabel Goodwin.
Her face was a perfect portrait of sorrow. She looked at Damien, her voice soft. "Dami, I was so devastated to hear about Eleanor. I came as soon as I could."
Gwen stared at the expertly feigned grief.
Damien moved, placing himself slightly in front of Isabel. A subtle, protective gesture. He looked at Gwen.
"Gwen, this is Isabel."
He said it as if they had never met.
Gwen's fingernails dug into her palms. The sharp pain was an anchor.
The few family friends who had gathered were whispering. Their eyes darted from Isabel to Gwen. Their pitying glances told the story. Isabel, the rightful partner. Gwen, the charity case who had overreached.
"That orphan really thought she could become a Sterling," someone muttered. "Look, the real one is here."
Patty hurried over, pressing something small and hard into Gwen's hand. A digital voice recorder.
"I had it in my pocket," Patty whispered, her voice trembling. "When they started arguing... I turned it on. It's everything she said."
Gwen's fingers closed around the cool metal. It felt like a weapon.
---