The Ultimatum
The string quartet played soft notes beneath the golden glow of the chandeliers, but Cynthia Harlow barely heard the music. She stood in the center of a glittering ballroom, her arm wrapped around Marcus Reed’s, her fingers tight despite the smile on her face.
Everyone was watching.
Tonight was perfect or at least, it looked that way. Crystal flutes of champagne glimmered in elegant hands, diamond necklaces sparkled against black gowns, and waiters floated like shadows with silver trays. The Harlow-Reed engagement was the social event of the season. Her father, Richard Harlow, had made sure of that.
“You’re shaking,” Marcus whispered, leaning into her ear. “Stage fright?”
She smiled tightly. “Cold hands.”
“Cold feet?” he teased, brushing his lips against her cheek.
“No,” she said. “Just cold hands.”
Marcus laughed, confident and polished in his navy tuxedo. His presence exuded charm, power, and quiet entitlement. He had the looks of a magazine CEO and the heart of a man who’d never heard the word no. The kind of man her father respected. The kind of man who expected the world to align beneath his ambition.
He wasn’t who she dreamed of marrying. But dreams didn’t matter in her world. Legacy did.
And then everything stopped. The ballroom doors opened, and silence swept in behind him.
The man who entered didn’t belong to this polished world of handshakes and headlines. He wore a black suit, no tie, no smile, no warmth. His presence sucked the air out of the room. Dark eyes scanned the crowd like a loaded gun. A man who had come not to attend but to end something.
Caleb Reyes.
Cynthia recognized him instantly. Everyone did.
CEO of Reyes Global. Media ghost. Billionaire enigma. The kind of man you didn’t just invite to a party, you braced for him.
Her father froze at the top of the steps. His champagne glass tilted slightly, catching the light, then stilled. His face turned from pale to bloodless.
“Excuse me,” Richard said, voice low. He handed off his glass and descended into the crowd without another word.
Cynthia watched him intercept Caleb like a missile finding its target. They exchanged no greeting. No handshake. Just a look. Then they disappeared into the side hall near her father’s private chamber at the hotel.
“What’s going on?” she asked Marcus, her pulse spiking.
“No idea,” he said, eyes fixed on the door. “But that man doesn’t show up without a reason.”
Cynthia didn’t wait. She left Marcus standing beneath the chandelier, the hem of her satin gown whispering across the marble floor. She moved fast, heels clicking, heart louder than the music.
She reached her father’s chamber just in time to hear the door click shut. It didn’t lock. She paused, breath tight, and leaned in.
Inside, Caleb’s voice was cold and exact.
“Fifteen years ago, you buried my family with forged numbers and a silver tongue.”
Richard’s voice snapped back. “I told you—”
“You told me lies. I was seventeen. I watched my father get dragged from our house in handcuffs. He killed himself in jail. My mother followed six months later. Do you think I forgot?”
“You have no proof.”
“I have bank records, internal memos, statements from your accountant before he had a heart attack last year, of course. I have enough to bring the FBI through your front door before this party ends.”
Silence. Heavy. Final.
“I can’t let that happen,” Richard said.
“You won’t if I get what I came for.”
Cynthia’s stomach flipped.
“And what’s that?” her father asked.
Caleb’s answer was so quiet, it made her skin crawl.
“Your daughter.”
She pushed open the door. “What the hell did you just say?”
Both men turned. Her father looked like a ghost.
Caleb didn’t flinch. “You’re the last piece of leverage your father has. And the only one I want.”
Cynthia stepped inside, shutting the door behind her. “What do you mean, you want me?”
“I mean,” Caleb said, “you’re going to marry me. In forty-eight hours.”
She laughed, once. “Is this some kind of joke?”
“No. It’s the only deal on the table.” He held up a contract. “Three months. Public marriage. After that, we walk away. You keep your name. He keeps his legacy. I get what I need.”
Her eyes narrowed. “And what exactly do you need?”
Caleb looked at her for a long time. Too long, “Revenge,” he said. “And something else.”
Her father stepped forward. “Cynthia, please—”
“You knew about this?” she asked, voice cracking.
He looked away.
“Tell me it’s not true. Tell me you didn’t do what he said.”
“I did what I had to do,” Richard said, eyes wet. “To protect you. To build something for you.”
“You built it with someone else’s blood.”
Cynthia’s hands were shaking. Her entire body was trembling.
Caleb stepped closer. “The FBI agents are outside this hotel. You sign this, and I call them off. You don’t, and they walk in here before the next toast.”
“Why me?” she asked.
Caleb’s eyes flickered, almost too fast to catch. “Because I don’t have time.”
There was something in his voice. Something strange. Like desperation in a man who didn’t show weakness.
She caught it, “You’re sick,” she said.
He said nothing.
“You can't be serious.”
Still nothing. And that was all the answer she needed.
Cynthia turned to her father, searching his face for the man she once trusted. The man who taught her how to ride a bike and lie to reporters. The man who protected her. But all she saw now was a shell. A man crumbling in front of the consequences he never expected.
She turned back to Caleb and held out her hand. “Give me the pen.”
He did and She signed.
Three months.
That’s all it would take to lose everything she thought she knew.
---
Back in the ballroom, the crowd had resumed its low hum of conversation. Marcus turned as she approached, his brow furrowed.
“Where were you?” he asked.
“We need to talk.”
She pulled him toward the edge of the room, away from cameras and guests. Her voice was low, even.
“It’s over.”
He blinked. “What?”
“I’m calling off the engagement.”
“Cynthia,” he said, his voice hardening. “You can’t be serious.”
“I’m marrying someone else.”
Silence.
Then, like ice cracking under pressure, his expression changed, “You planned this?” he whispered. “You planned to humiliate me in front of everyone?”
She shook her head. “I didn’t want this.”
“You’ve made a mistake,” he hissed. “You’ll regret this. I promise you that.”
She said nothing. Because there was nothing left to say. As she walked away, the flash of cameras found her again. This time, she didn’t smile.
