"She needs to sweat this fever out of her."
He turned the heat up to a scorching roar and locked the heavy iron door.
In that dark, roasting oven, I cramped and bled out on the concrete floor. I lost my baby, and my body was so traumatized I could never carry a child again.
Lying in a pool of my own blood, the truth finally pierced through my blind gratitude.
Dominic had staged the accident that brought us together just to infiltrate my family. He never loved me; he only wanted to steal my empire and replace me with his mistress once he thought my protective older brother was dead.
With the last of my strength, I dipped my fingers into my blood and wrote "Vengeance" on the steel wall.
Just then, an explosion shook the foundation, and the door was blown off its hinges. My brother, very much alive, stepped through the smoke.
Chapter 1
Lily POV
The midday sun had baked the flagstones to a pale, shimmering grey, and the heat pressed down on the taut skin of my belly, eight months stretched. My husband's "sweet" little sister locked the doors of heavy, triple-paned glass.
Her mouth formed the words, soundless through the thick glass: a pantomime of a threat. She was promising that if the heat did not make me bleed, she would invent a story for the one man in the city whose name was a synonym for retribution-a story about poison. And the worst part was not the lie itself. It was that I knew, with the bone-deep certainty of a wife who had learned to read the weather of her husband's moods, that he would believe her without a single question asked of me.
Dominic Hale was that boss.
He was a man whose quietest murmurings were said to have financed a dozen morticians, a whisper in the city's alleys that could make a seasoned cutthroat turn out his pockets and weep on the cobblestones.
And I, in the grand folly of a young wife, had presumed his particular brand of cruelty was a tool for his trade, never to be turned on the woman he called his queen.
I was mistaken.
The heat radiated upwards from the stone, a dry, stinging sensation that crept through the soles of my feet.
A bead of sweat traced a path from my temple to my eyelid, blurring the world into a wavering mirage. My palms, pressed flat against the glass, met a surface that felt not just hot, but alive with trapped solar energy.
It was locked tight from the inside.
Sophie watched from the other side, a figure suspended in the cool, still air of the drawing-room.
A single drop of condensation slid down the crystal tumbler she held, a slow, perfect tear. She brought it to her lips and drank with a leisure that was a performance in itself.
Then, her mouth curved into a familiar shape.
It was the very same counterfeit innocence, a widening of the eyes, that had first purchased her entry into the Hale estate.
It was I who had pulled her from the clumsy grasp of a subordinate at a charity affair a year prior.
Dominic, citing the need for her protection, had installed her in our house.
He had carved out a place for her at the mahogany table, treating her with the cloying reverence of a brother she never was to him.
Now, this borrowed authority was being wielded to see me cooked alive.
My vision bled at the periphery as a dull wave of dizziness hit me.
Deep within, a sharp, panicked kick jabbed against my ribs-not the familiar flutter, but a frantic thrumming that seemed to echo my own lack of air.
I needed water.
I needed shade.
I scanned the sun-bleached expanse of the empty patio.
The estate guards were nowhere to be seen; Sophie had sent them away on some pretext.
My fingers, slick with sweat, scrabbled at the lip of a large ceramic urn. Adrenaline, a cold fire in my veins, gave my exhausted limbs a final, convulsive strength. I clawed a heavy, sharp-edged piece of granite from the packed earth. With a sound that was half-sob, half-grunt, I swung the stone against the lower corner of the glass panel, where the metal frame met the floor.
The pane did not so much shatter as implode, a concussive boom followed by the sound of a thousand tiny, glittering shards cascading onto the polished floorboards within.
I took the one step required to cross the threshold, through the jagged maw I had created.
A sliver of glass, unseen, laid open the arch of my foot. The pain was a distant, secondary fact.
The refrigerated air of the house met my skin, a shock so profound it was its own form of violence.
Sophie's tumbler slipped from her fingers, shattering on the floor in a spray of ice and water. Her mouth opened, but the sound that came out was not a scream of terror, but a high, theatrical shriek of calculated alarm.
The sound had not yet died when the great oak doors at the far end of the hall were thrown open with such force they struck the interior walls.
The ring of boot heels on marble announced him before he appeared, a striding silhouette against the bright afternoon light.
He was dressed for the city in a dark suit of a cut so fine it seemed to absorb the light, and he brought with him the scent of his world: expensive wool, cologne, and the faint, metallic tang of spent cordite. There had been a time when that scent had made me feel protected. Now, it only reminded me of the day I had found a burned-out car with my brother's signet ring in the ashes-and Dominic standing beside it, his face arranged in an expression of grief that had never quite reached his eyes.
His dark hair was perfectly styled, but a small, hard muscle worked itself just below his ear, a barometer of his temper.
His eyes, the color of wet slate, made a slow, methodical inventory of the room: the glittering debris, the overturned chair, and the small, dark red stain beginning to blossom on the pale wood beneath my foot.
Only then did his gaze settle on Sophie.
As if a string had been cut, Sophie's legs gave way. She sank onto the rug, not in a heap, but in a carefully arranged posture of collapse. Her face was buried in her hands, and her shoulders began to heave, though no sound escaped her at first, only a series of sharp, indrawn breaths that mimicked a sob.
Her voice, when it came, was a fractured whisper, weaving a narrative of my sudden, inexplicable rage-of a door locked by my own hand, a self-inflicted exile, and a violent re-entry meant only for her.
I opened my mouth to speak, the truth a dry cinder in my throat, to tell him she had engineered this entire scene, that she had left me in the heat to harm what was ours.
Dominic's attention remained fixed on the tableau before him.
He moved past me as if I were a piece of furniture, his motion fluid as he knelt.
His hands, which I had seen break a man's fingers, moved with a surgeon's delicacy over her arms for wounds that were not there, his thumb brushing away the manufactured tears from her cheeks.
A band of iron seemed to tighten around my ribs, and the refrigerated air I had craved moments before now refused to enter my lungs.
My balance failed me, and I reached out and my fingers closed on the fine worsted of his sleeve.
The words came out as a dry rasp. I needed a doctor.
Dominic rose and turned to face me.
When he finally looked at me, there was nothing in his face to read. No anger, no concern. It was a perfect, polished nullity.
His hand closed on my upper arm. There was no warning, no preamble. The pressure was immense, his fingers finding the soft flesh above the bone and digging in with a proprietor's strength.
He turned, pulling me with him, and began to walk. I was not led, but hauled, my bare feet stumbling to keep pace down the long, cool corridor that led to the basement.
I heard a strange, pleading sound and realized it was my own voice, babbling about the child, about the heat, about a doctor.
Over his shoulder, his voice was a low, flat thing. "This envy of yours. It has festered."
"You will learn to be civil to my guests." The word 'guests' landed like a slap. Sophie was not a guest in my home. But then again, neither was I anymore. I was just the collateral he hadn't yet finished cashing in.
We reached the bottom of the concrete stairs, and he pulled me onward toward the steel door at the corridor's end.
This was the room without windows, the one he called 'the quiet room,' where business associates who had become liabilities were sent to reconsider their positions.
The air that drifted out was old and dead, carrying the faint, cloying scent of rust and sweat.
He released my arm only to place his hand flat against my back and push.
The shove sent me staggering forward. I fell, not gracefully, but with the clumsy, jarring impact of dead weight, my arms instinctively trying to cradle my belly from the hard floor.
A frantic energy seized me; I pushed myself to my knees and reached a hand toward the light in the doorway.
Dominic stood on the threshold, a dark shape against the light, his head inclined slightly as he looked down, his expression that of a man observing an insect on the pavement.
He took hold of the heavy iron door and, using his shoulder, began to swing it shut. The rusted hinges groaned in protest.
The bolt was thrown. The sound was not a single clank, but a series of metallic reverberations that seemed to suck the last of the air from the room. And in the suffocating silence that followed, I heard something far more terrifying than the echo of steel: the first, faint whisper of a truth I had spent two years refusing to name. My husband had never loved me. He had only ever loved the key I unwittingly handed him-the one that unlocked my family's vault. But he made one mistake. He left me alive. And a Lin always pays her debts.