Brook shoved the last oversized men's dress shirt into the black garbage bag.
The fabric still smelled strongly of cedarwood.
She tied the plastic strings into a harsh knot and sneezed violently as dust kicked up from the floor.
The doorbell rang, a loud and frantic sound echoing through her small midtown apartment.
Brook stiffened, her heart rate picking up.
She walked quietly to the door and looked through the peephole.
A man in a high-end courier uniform stood in the hallway, holding a small package.
Brook unlocked the deadbolt and pulled the door open.
The courier handed her a velvet jewelry box with no return address on it.
He held out an electronic pad, stating he needed her direct signature.
Brook did not take the pen.
She popped the lid of the velvet box open right in front of him.
A massive, custom Cartier diamond necklace rested on the dark silk, catching the hallway light.
A cold laugh escaped her throat.
This was Damon's classic move, throwing expensive toys at his pet to keep her quiet.
Take it back.
She pushed the box into the courier's chest.
She slammed the door shut and locked the deadbolt again, her hands shaking slightly.
Miles away, in the top-floor boardroom of Vaughn Capital, the air was freezing.
Damon sat at the head of the long glass table, his face a mask of absolute indifference.
He was listening to the quarterly report from the venture capital division.
M. Black walked quickly into the room, his footsteps silent on the carpet.
He leaned down and whispered into Damon's ear.
He delivered the news that the Cartier necklace had been rejected and returned.
The Montblanc fountain pen in Damon's hand snapped in two under his sudden, crushing grip. Dark ink bled rapidly across the crisp financial report.
Damon raised his eyes, sweeping a look across the room that made every executive stop breathing.
He waved his hand, dismissing the entire meeting without a single word.
He stood up and took long, aggressive strides back to his panoramic corner office.
He pulled at the knot of his silk tie, loosening it as a strange heat crawled up his neck.
He picked up his private phone from the desk and dialed Brook's number.
The line clicked immediately to a cold, automated voicemail greeting.
Damon stared at the screen, his jaw clenching so hard his teeth ached.
He could not process the fact that she had just cut him out of her life so completely. The silence where her name used to be on his phone felt like a physical wound, bleeding out the last shreds of his rationality.
He paced over to the floor-to-ceiling window.
He looked down at the concrete jungle of Manhattan.
The image of Brook walking away from him last night, her back completely straight and devoid of hesitation, flashed in his mind.
Back in her apartment, Brook opened her MacBook.
She logged into her private bank account.
She stared at the balance, confirming she had more than enough to survive on her own without touching her trust fund.
She opened a new email draft.
She typed out a brief, sterile message, stating that their three-year arrangement was officially terminated.
Her finger hovered over the send button for three agonizing seconds.
She took a deep breath, filling her lungs with the stale air of her apartment.
She pressed the return key.
A distinct notification sound pinged from the computer on Damon's desk.
He walked over and clicked the email open.
His pupils contracted into tiny pinpricks the second he read the words.
There was no anger in the email, no emotion at all.
It read like a legal disclaimer, as if she were firing an incompetent employee.
Damon grabbed the heavy crystal paperweight from his desk and hurled it across the room.
It smashed into the wall, the sound of shattering glass echoing loudly.
His secretary rushed to the open doorway, her eyes wide with panic.
Get out.
Damon roared, his chest heaving up and down as he struggled to pull air into his lungs.
He placed both hands flat on his desk, trying to force the violent rage down.
He remembered the summer night in the Hamptons three years ago.
He remembered how she had worn that red dress, how she had looked at him like a clever fox.
Now she thought she could just tear up the contract and walk away clean.
Damon hit the intercom button on his phone.
He ordered M. Black to find out exactly where Brook was going today.
Brook changed into a pair of practical jeans and a blazer.
She grabbed her bag, ready to head to the tech incubator in Brooklyn to start her new livestream project.
She walked out of her apartment building and stepped onto the sidewalk.
A massive black Range Rover suddenly swerved and parked aggressively, blocking her path entirely.
The tinted window rolled down.
Damon's face appeared, his features tight with a dark, suffocating anger.
Get in the car.
His voice was a harsh command that left no room for argument.
Brook stopped walking.
She stood three feet away from the heavy vehicle, her expression completely blank.
She looked at him the way she would look at a stranger asking for directions.
She pulled her phone from her pocket and held it up.
If you take one step out of that car, I am calling the NYPD.
Her voice was steady, lacking any trace of the fear he expected to see.
The muscles in Damon's jaw jumped.
He stared at her, unable to believe she was actually threatening him with the police.
Brook did not wait for his response.
She turned on her heel and walked briskly toward the subway station.
She left the Wall Street tyrant sitting in his car in the middle of the busy street.
Damon watched her back disappear into the crowd.
He slammed both of his fists against the steering wheel.
A wild, obsessive need to possess her burned through his veins, hotter than before.





