The Billionaire Called Her A Beggar, Then The Elevator Opened-eirian

Rain made the Astoria Grand look untouchable from the outside.

Gold light poured through the glass doors.

Valets ran under black umbrellas.

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Guests stepped from polished cars and vanished into warmth before the city could touch them.

Amelia Russo reached those doors with no umbrella, no guard, and no breath left in her chest.

Her right hand held the curve of her stomach.

Her left hand left a muddy print on the brass handle.

Six months pregnant, soaked through a ruined silk dress, wrapped in a canvas coat she had pulled from an alley, she looked like the kind of woman wealthy people train themselves not to see.

That was the first lie of the night.

Twenty minutes earlier, she had been safe inside an armored SUV with two guards and a route cleared to the private gala upstairs.

Her husband, Dominic Russo, had sent the car himself.

Dominic trusted very little in the world, but he trusted armored steel, trained men, and the old rule that no one touched a wife under protection.

The men in the black van broke all three.

They rammed the SUV at a red light on 54th, hard enough to spin the rear bumper into a taxi.

Glass spiderwebbed.

The driver cursed.

Amelia heard a sound like firecrackers, then David, her lead guard, shouted from the front seat.

He did not tell her to hide.

He told her to run.

He shoved the rear door open, pushed her toward the curb, and turned his own body toward the gunfire.

Amelia ran because he made her run.

She ran through rain and horns and one man’s startled curse as she cut across traffic.

Her phone was gone.

Her coat was gone.

The only thing she had was the baby and the certainty that Dominic was somewhere above the hotel waiting for a wife who should have arrived fifteen minutes ago.

By the time she reached the Astoria Grand, her shoes were full of water and one knee was bleeding under the silk.

Inside, heat hit her face so suddenly she nearly cried.

The lobby smelled of flowers, polished wood, and money.

A pianist played near the bar.

A dozen people stood around a man in a gray suit, laughing at a story that sounded cruel even before Amelia understood the words.

That man was Richard Vale.

Two days earlier, every finance page in the country had called him a genius.

His company, OmnisTech, had gone public with a valuation so large that strangers were already repeating it as if it proved his character.

Amelia was trying to reach the front desk when a cramp tightened low across her stomach.

She stumbled.

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