A CEO Was Trapped in a Hotel Until a Single Dad Called Her His Wife-eirian

The room at the Meridian Grand Hotel was too warm for January.

Boston was frozen white below the twenty-second-floor windows, but inside the hotel, heat gathered under crystal chandeliers and clung to every silk sleeve, champagne flute, and polished smile.

Evelyn Carter had built her life by noticing what other people hoped she would ignore.

Image

That was why she heard the lie in the young event coordinator’s voice before she understood the words.

“Ms. Carter, they’re waiting for you in the executive lounge.”

Evelyn turned slightly, not enough to startle the girl, only enough to see the laminated badge hanging from her blazer pocket.

Temporary event staff.

No last name visible.

“There is no executive lounge on this floor,” Evelyn said.

The girl blinked too quickly.

“Mr. Hale asked me to bring you.”

Victor Hale.

Harrington Consolidated’s chief financial officer.

Evelyn let the name pass over her face without reaction, because reaction was currency in rooms where men like Victor counted everything.

A woman did not become CEO of Harrington Consolidated by trusting rooms she had not approved.

She had reviewed the floor plan three times.

She had marked the VIP elevators, service corridors, catering routes, camera placements, emergency exits, private conference rooms, and the temporary greenroom assigned for board speakers.

There was no executive lounge on twenty-two.

Still, Evelyn followed.

Refusing would create a scene, and Victor Hale had built his career around making the person who objected look unstable before anyone asked why she objected.

Her midnight-blue dress brushed her calves as she left the ballroom.

Her heels were low enough to run in.

Her phone was in her clutch, fully charged, and her right thumb rested near the emergency call shortcut.

Behind her, a senator was onstage talking about innovation with the polished emptiness of a man who had never missed a meal.

Four hundred guests listened, laughed, and clapped in the correct places.

Read More