Broken By The Heir, Claimed By Power
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n Furstenberg, navy blue silk, found two weeks ago at a consignment shop in Brooklyn for eighty dollars. She had spent another fort
ed coffee on Spencer Kensington's loafers at a charity gala she was covering for the City Chronicle. Two y
and history. She had eaten instant ramen for three months to afford it. Spencer collected vintage cameras, usually lea
d against the w
from a number she didn't recog
on't be late. "Operat
ey'd had their first real date, away from the prying eyes of the gossip columns. Only Spencer would use that phrase. It was his way of telling her
t of romance, the way it made him feel like the director o
d stepped out into the cool October air. The wind bit at her exposed calves. She hailed an Ub
e slid into the backseat that smelled of
ing aggressively into the stream of yel
cer's circle usually got engaged at the two-year mark. She tried to push the thought away, but it lingered, sticky and sweet. She wasn't sure
and ivy, a place where the city's elite went to eat food that cost more than her rent. A
vement, and she stumbled, catching herself just before her knees hit the co
quick, practiced sweep of her-the frayed cuff of her coat,
for the evening, Miss,"
Kensington," Elena s
deferential apology. He stepped aside, pulling the heavy brass door open
lro
candlelight, maybe a violinist if Spencer was feeling particular
ented with lilies and money. A massive crystal chandelier hung overhead
A hostess with a clipboard gestured towar
sound. Beside the double doors stood a sign on an easel. It w
a st
ad them again, because her brai
Van Der Woodsen
ingly high-definition. The texture of the paper. The serif font-Spencer's favorite
physical rejection of what she wa
age
en
laugh that sounded like breaking glass. The one Spencer had c
l the rope handles dug into her palm, cutti
was what a sane person would do. A sane per
ore she was a girlfriend. She need
ed the d
k of crystal, a jazz quartet playing something upbeat and s
f the room, under the larg
blue tuxedo she had helped him pick out for his cou
tightly around the waist o
made in a year. She was beaming, tilting her head back to laugh at something Spencer said. Spence
chest, sharp and hot, as if someone h
encer lo
over the heads of the well-wishe
saw
the color of ash. The champagne flute in his hand tilte
She stopped laughing. Sh
r thrift-store dress and frayed trench coat, Van
, tight, victorious
n to die down. Heads turned. Whispers star
is
the repor
is going t
the intruder. The glitch in the matrix. The dir
ook a step forward, his hands raising slightly,
is eyes. It wasn't love
as p
g her. He was afraid she
f hors d'oeuvres. She didn't move, but t
a group of investors. Victoria Kensington. Spencer's mother. Her face was a m
uard start to m
replaced by a cold, hard fury that settled in her
ed her knees. She stared straight