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Chapter 4 - Chapter 4: The Proposal

He's late.

Not by much—only three minutes—but it tells me what I need to know. He's nervous. Probably circled the block twice, working up the courage to walk through that door.

Good.

I'm sitting behind my grandfather's desk—my desk now—in the corner office of Stellar Holdings. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook Manhattan. The sun's setting, painting the city in shades of gold and blood. Poetic, really.

The desk is clear except for three things: a crystal decanter of whiskey, two glasses, and a single manila folder.

The folder that's going to change everything.

Maya buzzes me on the intercom. "Ms. Sterling? Mr. Cross is here."

I take a breath. Smooth my hands over my skirt. I'm wearing Armani tonight—black suit, red silk blouse, the kind of outfit that costs more than I used to make in a month. My hair's pulled back in a severe bun. Makeup perfect. Armor in place.

I'm not the girl he destroyed. I'm someone else entirely.

"Send him in."

The door opens.

And there's Damien Cross, looking like he's walking toward his own execution.

He's wearing a Tom Ford suit—charcoal gray, perfectly tailored—but he's loosened his tie. His hair's messier than usual, like he's been running his hands through it. There are shadows under his eyes that even expensive concealer can't quite hide.

He looks exhausted. Stressed. Afraid.

It's intoxicating.

"Aria." My name sounds broken coming from his mouth.

"Ms. Sterling." I don't stand. Don't smile. Just gesture to the chair across from my desk. "Sit."

He hesitates. For a second, I think he might refuse—might try to take control of this situation through sheer force of presence like he probably does in every other negotiation.

But he sits.

Smart man.

"Would you like a drink?" I pour myself two fingers of whiskey. Macallan 25. The good stuff. "Or are you too busy trying to figure out how to manipulate this conversation?"

His jaw tightens. "I'm not here to manipulate anything."

"Right. You're just here because your company's failing and I'm the only one who can save it." I take a sip. Let the burn settle. "How does it feel, Damien? Being the one who's desperate? Being the one who needs something from someone who hates you?"

"Aria—"

"Ms. Sterling," I correct. Ice in my voice. "You lost the right to my first name three years ago."

He flinches. Actually flinches. It shouldn't feel this good, but God help me, it does.

"I want to explain—" he starts.

"Explain what?" I set down my glass. Lean forward. "Explain how you seduced me for six months, extracted every secret about my father's company, and then sold them to the highest bidder? Explain how you destroyed a twenty-year business in less than a week? Explain how you disappeared while my father put a gun to his head?"

His face goes white. "I didn't know he would—"

"You didn't care." My voice is deadly quiet now. "You got paid. You moved on. You never looked back. My father was just collateral damage in your career advancement. I was just collateral damage."

"That's not true." He's leaning forward now too, and there's something in his eyes—desperation? guilt?—that almost makes me hesitate. Almost. "I thought about you every day. I wanted to reach out, I wanted to—"

"But you didn't." I sit back. Let silence fill the space. Let him drown in it. "You want to know what the last three years have been like for me, Damien? I worked as a bartender. As a dog walker. I escorted." I watch his eyes widen. "That's right. I sold my body to strangers because I needed to eat. Because you took everything else."

"Jesus Christ, Aria—"

"Ms. Sterling." My voice cracks like a whip. "Call me by my name or get the fuck out of my office."

He closes his eyes. Takes a breath. When he opens them again, there's something raw there. Something that looks almost like pain.

Too bad. I'm done caring about his feelings.

"Why am I here?" he asks quietly. "If you hate me this much—and you should, I'm not saying you shouldn't—why invite me here? Why not just destroy me and be done with it?"

"Because destruction is too easy." I pick up the folder. Feel its weight. "This contains evidence of every illegal thing you've ever done. Insider trading. Securities fraud. Corporate espionage. Tax evasion. If I turn this over to the SEC, you'll go to prison for twenty years. Minimum."

All the color drains from his face.

"But prison's too clean," I continue. "Too simple. You'd serve your time, get out eventually, rebuild. People would feel sorry for you. Poor Damien Cross, brought down by vengeful ex-girlfriend. You'd probably write a book about it."

"What do you want?" His voice is barely above a whisper.

"I want you to understand what it feels like." I stand now. Walk around the desk. Perch on the edge, looking down at him. He's taller than me, stronger than me, but right now I have all the power and we both know it. "I want you to feel helpless. Used. Humiliated. I want you to know what it's like to have someone you trusted strip away every defense until there's nothing left."

His throat works as he swallows. "How?"

I smile. It's not a nice smile.

"I'm going to make you a deal." I cross my legs. Watch his eyes track the movement before he forces them back to my face. "Your company's dying. The Stellar Holdings problem—as your board so eloquently calls it—is killing you. You need a win. Something big enough to prove you're not finished."

"And you're going to give me that?" Disbelief in his voice.

"I am. I'm going to stop interfering with your deals. I'm going to quietly support your next three major acquisitions. I'm going to help you secure enough capital to stabilize Cross Capital Management and get your board off your back." I pause. Let it sink in. "I'll even give you the evidence in this folder. All of it. You'll be free and clear."

Hope flickers in his eyes. Desperate, pathetic hope.

"What's the catch?"

"The catch," I say softly, "is that you're going to give me twenty-one nights."

Silence. He's staring at me like he's not sure he heard correctly.

"Twenty-one nights," I repeat. "Starting tomorrow. Every night, you come to wherever I tell you to come, whenever I tell you to come. You do whatever I demand. No questions. No negotiations. No safe words. Complete submission to my control."

Understanding dawns. His eyes go wide.

"You're insane."

"I'm rich." I shrug. "There's a difference. And you're desperate. So here's how this works: For twenty-one nights, you belong to me. Your body, your pride, your control—all mine. I'm going to humiliate you. Break you. Make you feel every single thing you made me feel."

"And if I refuse?"

"Then I release this evidence tomorrow morning. The SEC will have it by noon. You'll be in handcuffs by dinner. Your company will collapse. Your engagement will implode. Your mother—" I pause, because this is the knife I've been saving, "—your mother will lose her medical care when all your assets get frozen. That MS treatment she needs? The private facility? Gone."

I did my research. I know about Eleanor Cross. I know she's the reason he did it, the leverage his father used. I know it's his weakness.

And I'm going to exploit it without mercy.

His hands are shaking. "You'd do that? Hurt an innocent woman to get to me?"

"Would I?" I lean closer. "Or would you be the one hurting her by refusing my deal? See, that's the beautiful part, Damien. This is your choice. You can walk away right now. Let the consequences fall where they may. Or you can take responsibility for once in your goddamn life and pay your debts."

He's breathing hard now. Trapped. We both know it.

"What exactly would these... nights... entail?"

"Whatever I want." I don't blink. "Some nights might be public humiliation. Some might be private. Some might be sexual, some might not be. You don't get to know in advance. You don't get to prepare. You just show up and submit."

"This is blackmail."

"This is justice." I stand. Walk back around to my chair. Create distance because if I stay close to him much longer, I might do something stupid. Like remember what it felt like when he touched me. "You used my body to get what you wanted. Now I get to return the favor."

"It's not the same." But his voice lacks conviction.

"Isn't it?" I pour myself another drink. My hands are steadier than I expected. "You had a choice three years ago. You chose to destroy me. Now you have another choice. Twenty-one nights, or twenty years in prison. Choose."

He's quiet for a long time. I can see the war happening behind his eyes. Pride versus survival. Dignity versus desperation.

Finally: "If I do this... when it's over, it's over? No more attacks on my company? No more revenge?"

"After twenty-one nights, we're even." I nod. "You walk away. I walk away. We never see each other again."

It's a lie. I know it's a lie. After twenty-one nights of having him under my control, I won't want to let go. But he doesn't need to know that yet.

"What about Victoria?" he asks. "My engagement?"

"Keep her. I don't care. Tell her whatever you want. Business meetings, work trips, affairs—make up whatever story keeps her happy. That's your problem."

"She'll find out."

"Then don't let her." I shrug. "Or do. Maybe watching your perfect engagement fall apart will be entertaining."

More silence. The sun's almost gone now. The city lights are taking over, turning Manhattan into a constellation of ambitions and broken dreams.

"Why twenty-one?" he finally asks. "Why that number?"

I smile. This smile is genuine. "Because three times seven is the number of completion. The universe was created in seven days. Jacob worked seven years for Rachel. And you're going to give me three times that to unmake what you built."

"That's biblical." He almost laughs. It's a broken sound. "You're quoting the Bible while blackmailing me into sexual submission."

"I prefer to think of it as poetic justice."

He stands. Walks to the window. Stares out at the city that's chewing him up and spitting him out. When he speaks again, his voice is hollow.

"If I say yes... when do we start?"

And there it is. The moment I've been waiting for. The moment he breaks.

"Night One begins tomorrow." I stand too. Walk over to stand beside him at the window. Close enough to smell his cologne. Close enough to remember. "Seven PM. I'll text you the address. Come alone."

"What should I—" He stops. Starts again. "What should I bring?"

I turn to face him. Let him see the coldness in my eyes. The hunger. The rage that's been building for three years.

"Nothing." I pause. Let the moment stretch. "Except your pride. You're going to need something to sacrifice."

He looks at me. Really looks at me. And I wonder if he sees it—the girl he used to know, buried somewhere under all this ice and anger.

I hope not. She's dead. He killed her.

"This is going to destroy me," he says quietly.

"Yes." I don't look away. "But you'll survive. I did."

He nods slowly. Accepting. Surrendering.

"I'll be there."

"I know you will." I walk back to my desk. Pick up the folder. Hold it up. "Because the alternative is losing everything. And you're not brave enough for that."

It's cruel. Accurate, but cruel.

He flinches. Turns toward the door.

"Damien?" I call out. He stops. Looks back. "One more thing."

"What?"

I smile. This time it's not cold. It's anticipating. Excited. Hungry.

"Wear something you don't mind losing."

His face goes pale. He understands now—really understands—what he's agreed to.

Then he walks out without another word.

The door clicks shut.

And I'm alone in my office, heart hammering, hands shaking, whiskey burning in my throat.

I did it. He agreed. Tomorrow night, Damien Cross is mine.

For twenty-one nights, I own him.

I should feel victorious. Triumphant.

Instead, I just feel... empty.

And terrified.

Because revenge is supposed to be simple. Clean. You hurt the person who hurt you, and then it's over.

But nothing about this feels simple.

I down the rest of my whiskey. Pour another. Stand at the window where he stood, looking out at the same city.

Twenty-one nights until this is over.

Twenty-one nights until I'm free of him.

I just hope I survive them.

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