Manhattan glittered like a city waiting for blood.
You sat across from Matteo D’Angelo with a glass of whiskey untouched in your hand, wondering what kind of woman makes a deal with a man like him and still expects to walk away whole.
Maybe not a wise woman.
But you were done being wise in the way Holden preferred.
Wise had meant quiet.
Wise had meant forgiving his little cuts because they came wrapped in cashmere and apology flowers.
Wise had meant letting him shrink Chloe Castell into Mrs. Montero, then acting grateful when the cage had good lighting.
Matteo watched you with those still, dark eyes.
“You know what people say about me,” he said.
“Yes.”
“And you came anyway.”
“I didn’t come because you’re safe.”
His mouth shifted slightly.
“Then why did you come?”
You lifted your chin.
“Because Holden is.”
For the first time, Matteo smiled.
Not warmly.
Not kindly.
But with recognition.
“Ah,” he said. “You don’t want comfort. You want fear.”
You looked out the window at the Hudson, black and shining under the city lights.
“I want my husband to feel what I felt when I opened my own door and saw my best friend wearing my earrings.”
Matteo studied you.
“Fear won’t be enough.”
“It’s a start.”
“No,” he said. “It is a spark. Sparks die unless they find something to burn.”
You turned back to him.
“What are you saying?”
“I’m saying a man like Holden Montero doesn’t humiliate his wife at the Plaza unless he already believes the room belongs to him.”
Your fingers tightened around the glass.
“He does.”
“Then we change the ownership of the room.”
You laughed once.
“You make that sound simple.”
“It is simple,” Matteo said. “Not easy.”
He reached into his jacket and removed a small black card.
No logo.
No title.
Only a number embossed in silver.
“You will go home tonight. You will not scream. You will not threaten. You will not tell Holden you came here.”
You looked at the card.
“And you?”
“I will learn why Holden Montero is suddenly confident enough to bring his mistress to a public gala while accusing his wife of instability.”
The word hit exactly where he meant it to.
Instability.
That had been Holden’s chosen weapon.
Not divorce.
Not money.
Not even Celeste.
He wanted to make your reaction the evidence.
He wanted to wound you, then point to the blood and call you unwell.
Matteo leaned closer.
“Tell me something, Chloe Castell. Before you married him, you were a reporter.”
You had not heard your maiden name spoken like that in years.
Not as history.
As power.
“Yes.”
“Investigations?”
“Yes.”
“What did you investigate?”
“Corporate fraud. Art theft. Political donors. Real estate laundering.”
His eyes sharpened.
“And you married Holden Montero?”
You almost smiled.
“I was in love, not brain-dead.”
“Love and brain death are often confused in Manhattan.”
Despite everything, you laughed.
It startled you.
It startled him too, though he hid it quickly.
Then he said, “Reporter rules. What would you do if this were not your life?”
The question sank deep.
You looked down at the whiskey.
If this were not your life, you would follow the money.
You would ask why Holden needed the gala.
You would ask why Celeste was not just hidden, but displayed.
You would ask why his mother was preparing to call you unstable.
You would ask what story he needed written before the truth could arrive.
You looked up.
“I’d start with the Plaza Gala donor list.”
Matteo nodded once.
“There she is.”
The words were quiet.
But they struck harder than praise.
There she is.
Not Mrs. Montero.
Not ruined wife.
Not humiliated woman locked in a closet.
Chloe Castell.
The woman Holden had buried without realizing she still knew how to dig herself out.
Matteo stood.
“Silian will take you home.”
“I can take a cab.”
“You can.”
He looked toward the door.
“But tonight, you won’t.”
The Irishman from the elevator appeared as if summoned from the wall itself.
You stared at Matteo.
“I said I needed you for the gala. Not a handler.”
“And I said I would decide later what I wanted.”
Your spine stiffened.
“Be careful.”