The Man Who Rescued Me From the Rain Controlled the Deal My Stepmother Was Desperate to Save-thuyhien

“Get down.”

Matthew’s hand came off the seat and hovered for half a second, not touching me, just marking the space where he wanted me to move. The dark SUV behind us broke through a sheet of rain, headlights flaring across the rear glass. Water hissed under our tires. Ozone and wet leather filled the cabin.

I slid to the floor behind the front seats, wrapped his coat over my head, and pressed my cheek against the rubber mat. The wool smelled faintly of cedar and expensive soap. Above me, the windshield wipers snapped back and forth like metronomes.

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“Luis, take the service road behind Legacy,” Matthew said.

His voice never rose.

The driver nodded once and cut the wheel hard. My shoulder slammed lightly into the seat frame as the Escalade veered onto a narrower road lined with dripping pines. Gravel spat under the tires. The SUV behind us stayed with us.

Matthew’s phone lit his face from below. “Jenna, stop the Hale closing. Every wire. Every signature. I want compliance on standby and security at Tower Two in seven minutes.”

A beat passed.

Then he asked, “What’s your last name?”

My teeth were knocking together. “Hale.”

Silence.

Not empty silence. The kind that changes shape.

“Veronica Hale?” he asked.

I pushed the coat off my head enough to look up. “Yes.”

His jaw tightened. He looked through the windshield, then at the mirror, then back at his phone.

“Call Detective Vega with Plano PD,” he said. “And have Nurse Keller meet us upstairs.”

The Escalade surged forward. A horn blared somewhere behind us. Luis took another sharp turn, and then I heard something metallic roll across the back floor near my hand. My missing courage, probably. My breath kept catching halfway in, halfway out.

The other SUV came closer.

Luis glanced at the mirror. “They’re trying to box us.”

Matthew lowered his window two inches. Rain smell and cold air sliced in. He looked once at the side mirror, calm as a man studying numbers on a screen.

“Not tonight,” he said.

A black security gate appeared ahead of us through the rain, tall and bright under white floodlights. Luis flashed his beams twice. The gate began to slide open before we reached it. We shot through. Behind us, the other SUV tried to follow and met steel. Brakes screamed. A horn held too long in the storm.

The gate shut.

Only after we rolled into the underground garage did my fingers unclench from Matthew’s coat.

He opened his door and stepped out first.

When he leaned back toward me, he kept his eyes level with mine instead of looking down over me.

“You’re safe for the next ten minutes,” he said. “After that, we make the next move together.”

The building elevator smelled like polished metal and coffee. I stood inside it with my arms locked around myself, rainwater dripping off my dress onto black stone tile. My bare feet left muddy half-moons behind me. Matthew took off his white shirt jacket lining from under his coat and handed it to the driver without a word. No one looked at my torn shoulder for too long. No one asked me to repeat anything yet.

On the twenty-second floor, a woman in navy scrubs waited by an open suite door with a fleece blanket, a first-aid case, and the kind of face that had seen panic before.

“I’m Dana,” she said. “You don’t have to tell me a thing until you’re ready.”

Warm air hit me first. Then the smell of chamomile tea.

My knees nearly folded.

Dana wrapped the blanket around me and guided me to a cream-colored sofa. Matthew set his phone on the marble counter across the room and stayed there, far enough away that I could keep breathing.

The first time Veronica smiled at me, I was sixteen and standing in my father’s kitchen with a mixing bowl in my hands.

She had walked in wearing a white coat over a pale blue dress, glossy hair tucked behind one ear, perfume drifting ahead of her. My father looked younger around her. Lighter. He touched the small of her back when he introduced us like she had already belonged there for years.

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