PRICED BY MY BILLIONAIRE NEMESIS
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tone. But instead, here I am-standing in the marble lobby of the Corinthian Hotel, wearing a dress I definitely cannot afford, waiting to escort a seventy-eight-year-old millio
harmless. He just wants company. He'll be asleep
felt like it was held together with hope and desperation. Then the universe decided to punish me for that optimism, because the moment I step out from behind the column to greet M
and the
g at me like I just crawled out of the sewer and tracked filth across his Ital
ing the role of "pleasant female dinner companion" when he is the
ust a brilliant, infuriating boy who could make professors stutter. But now? Now he stands in the center of the lobby like a lion b
n beams. "You loo
ght smile. "T
a polite kiss to my knuckles. The look on Adrian's face darkens instantly, sharp and lethal, as if he's watching some
still working your way
mmets. "Excuse
ockets like he owns the oxygen in the room. "You lef
ally happened-never wanted to. He just swallowed whatever poisonous story someone whisper
r into my burning lungs. "
Sutton-sweet, confused, unaware he's being
silence, of no closure, no explanation, nothing but one devastating winter night that
ay everything I've held back
er, d
m through his and guide him toward the restaurant. But Adria
I say
orced me into. He looks at me the way someone looks at fruit that has just begun to rot-mild disgust, mild
se suite is prepared. W
He doesn't look away from me
s mind about why I'm here with a seventy-eight-year-old man. He wants to see the spectacle
h wild enthusiasm. I'm nodding politely, sipping from my spoon, pretending I'm not hyperaware of Ad
ng a small gold-plated platter. A cream envelope r
lready took its dinner fee. Tip
, mi
ng up. The weight is light but stiff. I
5,
ch
le's distinctive, a
across the room. Adrian. Still at his table. Still pretending to eat. Still analyzing me like I'm a cr
in
into my purse with a grateful smile and pretend this isn't a humiliation wrapped
nd taps two fingers
ngers.
en
housand
ultures waiting for the body to fall still. My hand trembles and I place it on my chest to steady myself. Mr. Sutton mistakes the m
s chair, crosses his arms, and tilts hi
e it. Prov
ll, and rage burns away the last shred of shame. I pick up the e
tles, like a switch flipping behind his eyes. So I lift my own hand,
doesn't need to. In that moment, the truth slices straight through me: he isn't judging me. He's evaluating me. Pricing me. Calcu
ck, heavy, suffocating. When I look up again-against my better judgment-Adrian isn't even watching me. He's eating now. Small, deliberate bites of steak, as if fueling himself for w
ey. So you're min
ad even though he
ine-not at him-but at myself, for one awfu
," I whisper. A lie. Pap
lest nod toward the exit. A signal. A summons. A bill being called due. Then his gaze locks wi
xactly what conc
wo
what he inten