Eleanor WitchBourne sighed.
Nearly cursed. Got as far as the first syllable — the sharp, satisfying f already forming between her teeth — before she caught herself and swallowed it back down.
Ladies didn’t curse. WitchBournewon especially didn’t curse. Hundred years of breeding and boarding schools and the constant, low-grade surveillance of a family that asured its worth in reputation rather than currency had beaten that particular impulse into submission long before Eleanor was old enough to know what the words ant.
But gods, she wanted to.
Seven days.
Seven days she’d been sitting in this place— this admittedly beautiful, obscenely expensive room on the forty-third floor of the Sovereign Tower — waiting.
Just... waiting. Like a parcel that had been delivered to the wrong address and was too polite to complain about it.
She’d arrived in Paradise ready to grovel like her father had asked her to. Ready to swallow every ounce of pride her father’s tears had left her and offer herself — her dignity, her fury, her bloody knuckles — to the Price family on a silver platter.
Ready to apologise to the man who’d walked into her office uninvited and put his hands on her body like it belonged to him.
Ready to do the worst thing she’d ever have to do.
And the Prices had made her wait.
Seven. Fucking. Days.
The F word had never felt so right!
No eting, audience or schedule. Just calls and ssages — always from assistants, never from anyone who mattered — telling her to be patient. To remain available.
To stay comfortable and enjoy the accommodations.
Stay comfortable.
As if comfort was the issue.
As if the problem was the thread count of the sheets and not the fact that she was rotting in a tower while the people who held her family’s future in their manicured hands couldn’t be arsed to give her a date.
The ssages between the lines were clear enough.
[Sit tight. Look pretty. Don’t make noise. Don’t ask questions. Don’t forget that the best thing you will ever accomplish in your life — your single greatest contribution to your bloodline — is being the daughter who married into a Legacy family and helped the WitchBournes climb from British old money to global relevance.]
That was it.
That was her ceiling.
Not her education, her mind and neither the charity she’d built from scratch at twenty. Not any of it. Just her body. Her bloodline. Her willingness to lie still and smile while a stranger claid what her father had sold.
Eleanor wanted to scream.
Instead, she exercised. It was the only thing that kept her sane.
Mornings in the Tower’s private gym — empty, rcifully, at the hour she preferred. Weights. Core. The punishing routine she’d built for herself over years of channelling anger into sothing productive because the alternative was throwing very expensive furniture through very expensive windows.
Evenings she ran.
Out through the Tower’s ground-level exit, into the streets of Paradise, and just — went. No route. No destination.
Just her legs and her lungs and the fading daylight turning the most beautiful place on Earth into sothing that looked like a painting she couldn’t afford and didn’t want.
Because Paradise was beautiful.
She’d give it that.
Annoyingly, aggressively, almost insultingly beautiful — the kind of beautiful that made you feel worse about your own situation because the setting was so perfect that your misery looked ungrateful by comparison.
The streets were clean.
The air slled like money and jasmine. The architecture was the kind of thing you’d see in magazines captioned if only and here it just — existed. Like it was nothing.
Like beauty on this scale was the baseline and everything else was a downgrade.
She ran through it and hated it and loved it and hated that she loved it.
And when she wasn’t exercising, when the gym was occupied and the streets were too hot and her room had started to feel like a cell made of silk and marble —
She sat in the lobby.
The Sovereign Tower lobby was entertainnt.
Not good entertainnt the kind Eleanor would have chosen.
But when your options were stare at the ceiling of your room or stare at the ceiling of the lobby, at least the lobby had people.
Movent.
The comforting background hum of lives being lived by people who weren’t trapped in diplomatic purgatory.
She’d found her spot on the third day. A deep chair in the corner near the south windows, angled so she could see the main entrance and the private elevators bank without being imdiately visible herself.
A book in her lap — always open, rarely read — and a coffee that the lobby staff brought without being asked because they’d learned her habits faster than she’d learned theirs.
And from that chair, in that corner, Eleanor WitchBourne watched the circus.
It happened every ti.
The boy would enter the lobby — or leave it, didn’t matter which direction — and the building lost its collective mind.
Phei.
That was the na. She’d heard it so many tis now it had stopped being a na and started being a weather event. Like rain or thunder or that thing that happens when the barotric pressure drops and everyone gets a headache.
The female residents would suddenly find reasons to be in the lobby. Staff mbers who’d been professionally invisible for hours would materialise near the front desk with urgent paperwork.
Won who’d been walking sowhere with purpose would stop, mid-stride, and just — stand there.
Watching.
So of them asked for photographs. Selfies. A mont of his ti. They’d approach with their phones already out and their composure already cracking, and he’d smile — that smile, the one that made grown won forget their own surnas — and oblige.
Every. Single. Ti.
Eleanor watched it from her chair with the detached fascination of a nature docuntary viewer. "And here we see the female of the species responding to the presence of the dominant male. Note the dilation of the pupils. The involuntary adjustnt of the hair. The complete abandonnt of dignity.
It was entertaining. She’d give it that. In a mildly horrifying, deeply confusing, what-is-wrong-with-these-people sort of way.
But not entertaining enough to get involved.
Because she didn’t understand it. Genuinely. She could see that the boy was attractive — she wasn’t blind, she had functioning eyes, she could acknowledge objective beauty the way you acknowledge a well-built bridge or a particularly striking sunset without wanting to throw yourself off or into either one.
But the reaction? The mass hysteria? The way these won — wealthy, educated, powerful won — turned into giggling puddles of need the mont he walked past?
No.
She didn’t get it.
He was a womanizer, for God’s sake. An actual, unrepentant, seemingly proud womanizer. Every ti she saw him he was with a different woman. Sotis two. Sotis a whole entourage of them, trailing with him like a very attractive cot with a tail made entirely of broken hearts and questionable decisions.
And the rumours —
Oh, the rumours.
That he was sleeping with his aunt. His actual aunt. Not so family friend soone casually called auntie — his aunt.
By blood or marriage? or whatever particular branch of the family tree he’d decided to climb and set fire to.
And both of them — the boy and the aunt in question — appeared to give approximately zero fucks about the fact that everyone in Paradise knew.
The rumours had found their way into every ear in the community, had been whispered across dining tables and dissected in group chats and probably discussed at whatever passed for church in a place where the residents’ net worth exceeded most countries’ GDP.
And they didn’t care.
Not even a little.
Whatever. She didn’t care either.
Eleanor’s phone vibrated on the last day while she sat in the lobby tonight.
She pulled it from her lap, expecting another be patient ssage from another faceless assistant —
And stopped.
The notification was different. Formal. The Price family crest in the corner — that pretentious little seal she’d co to associate with the taste of bile — and beneath it, actual information. An actual date. An actual location.
[eting confird. Lady Abigail Price. Hell Paradise Island. Two days.]
Attached:a shared ticket. Flight details. Accommodation arrangents on the island. The full itinerary laid out with the clinical efficiency of people who organised lives the way other people organised spreadsheets.
Eleanor stared at the screen.
Seven days of nothing and now — this. Two days’ notice. Hell Paradise Island. Like they were inviting her to brunch.
She exhaled. Long. Slow. Through her nose.
Finally.
The waiting was over.
Whatever ca next — whatever humiliation, whatever performance of contrition, whatever fresh hell the Price family had designed for her — at least it was coming. At least the purgatory had an end date now.
At least she could stop sitting in this lobby pretending to read a book she hadn’t turned the page of in three days.
She stood. Gathered her things. Started walking toward the elevators, scrolling through the itinerary — confirming the flight, checking the tis, noting the dress code (formal; the Prices will provide attire if necessary, which was its own particular flavour of insulting) —
And walked directly into soone’s back.
Hard.
*****
A/N:It’s coming guyssss... finally! I have been waiting for this mont for so long!
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