Chapter 94
Rose stepped onto the balcony of Herod’s penthouse, a glass of champagne catching the golden light of sunset. Below, Manhattan sprawled in all its glittering glory, oblivious to the small victory celebration taking place sixty floors above.
“To successful beginnings,” Herod said, joining her with his own glass. The evening breeze ruffled his dark hair, softening his usually severe appearance.
“Six p ix percent,” Rose replied, satisfaction warming her voice “Six percent drop in a single day. Millions wiped from Kane Industries‘ value.”
Their glasses clinked, crystal meeting crystal with a delicate ring. Rose sipped the expensive champagne, bubbles dancing on her tongue. The taste of revenge was even sweeter than the Dom Pérignon.
“You should have seen Victoria’s face during that press conference,” she said, leaning against the railing “So controlled on the surface, but I know that look in her eyes. She’s rattled.”
iling. “So”
Herod studied her, his expression curious. “You enjoy this, don’t you? Not just the outcome, but the process. The game itself.”
Rose considered this. “I never thought of myself as someone who enjoyed causing pain. But watching Camille squirm, seeing her precious project questioned.” She trailed off, surprised by the Intensity of her feelings. “Yes, I enjoy it.”
“Most people lie to themselves about such things,” Herod observed, moving closer. “They pretend their revenge is only about justice, not pleasure.”
“I stopped lying to myself a long time ago,” Rose replied. When you grow up unwanted, you learn to see things clearly.”
Something flickered in Herod’s eyes, recognition, perhaps Understanding. The setting sun cast half his face in shadow, half in golden light, emphasizing the sharp angles of his cheekbones.
“Your honesty is refreshing,” he said.
Rose felt a strange flutter in her chest. For weeks, they had worked together with cold precision, their partnership purely transactional. But tonight, celebrating their first victory, something subtle had shifted in the air between them.
“Tell me something real about yourself,” she said suddenly “Not about your family or Victoria Kane or business. Something I don’t know yet.”
Herod seemed surprised by the request. He turned to face the skyline, considering.
“I collect first editions,” he said finally. “Books from the 19th century, mostly. I find comfort in things that have survived their time, outlasted their creators.”
The admission was unexpected, a small, human detail about a man who had revealed so little of himself beyond his thirst for revenge.
“Do you read them?” Rose asked. “Or just collect them?”
“Both. Some nights, when sleep won’t come, I read by the window until dawn.” He glanced at her. “Your turn. Something real.”
Rose felt oddly vulnerable under his gaze. She was accustomed to crafting herself for othare – the supportive sister, the devoted girlfriend. Revealing anything authentic felt dangerous.
“Lcan’t swim,” she admitted. “I nearly drowned as a child, before the foster system. I’ve never been able to put my head underwater since.”
The words hung between them, more revealing than she’d intended. Not just a fact, but a weakness. A fear.
Herod didn’t fill the silence with empty reassurances or prying questions. He simply nodded, accepting her truth as she had accepted his.
“We all have our depths we can’t face,” he said finally.
Inside, Herod’s phone rang. He excused himself, stepping back into the penthouse. Rose remained on the balcony, watching darkness claim the city. Lights flickered on across Manhattan, creating new constellations against the deepening blue.
Through the glass doors, she observed Herod taking the call. His posture shifted subtly, straightening, tensing. Business mode. She’d learned to read his body language during their weeks of planning. Whatever news he was receiving, it was significant.
When he returned to the balcony, his expression had hardened back into the calculating mask she recognized from their strategy sessions.
“Good news?” she asked.
“Confirmation that phase two is ready,” he replied. “Our contact at the engineering firm has implemented the modified specs in the Brooklyn site components. Everything appears exactly as it should, until full system load tests six weeks after installation.”
Rose felt a familiar thrill of anticipation. “And then?”
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