A Desperate Gala Kiss Pulled Her Into a War With Her Ex-Tep

Her lips were on a stranger’s mouth before she could decide whether she had just saved herself or ruined her life.

The ballroom smelled like champagne, white roses, candle wax, and the kind of money that made everyone lower their voices.

A string quartet played near the far wall, soft enough to be elegant and loud enough to cover private cruelty.

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Arya Bennett had learned to notice sounds like that.

Music.

Laughter.

A glass set down too hard.

A breath behind her that changed before the hand came.

She stood beside the glass wall on the forty-second floor of the Harrington Gala with an untouched champagne flute in her hand and five bruising fingerprints hidden beneath the soft shine of her bracelet.

Below her, the city looked almost peaceful.

From that high up, traffic became red and white beads of light.

Office towers looked clean.

Sidewalks looked empty.

Pain looked like something that happened to other people, on lower floors, where the carpets were not so thick and the flowers were not replaced before they wilted.

But Marcus Vale was crossing the ballroom toward her.

He smiled as he walked.

That was the part that always fooled people.

Marcus smiled beautifully.

He had the kind of face that made women at fundraisers lean closer and older men trust him with introductions.

He remembered names.

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