![Sold to the Ruthless CEO[The Lady Series 3]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fs3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com%2Fallinnovel-storage%2Fadmin%2Fbooks%2Fcmnikzskt00v6h5nmdss282k5%2F1775201257334.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
In the velvet darkness of Golden Cage, Manhattan's most secretive private club, every woman has a price — except Melody Calloway. For five years, Melody has navigated a world of dangerous men and darker deals with nothing but her composure and a plan to get out. No one touches her. No one gets close. No one sees past the perfect smile to the girl who gave up everything at nineteen to save her family. Raymond Thorne sees past it in thirty seconds. A former Scotland Yard detective with hands that can break bones and eyes that miss nothing, Raymond arrives at Golden Cage on a corporate investigation and leaves with something he didn't plan for: the image of a woman standing alone in the center of chaos, untouched by violence, undone by a single word — sorry. Three days of trying not to think about each other. Three days of failing. Then Marcus Webb, the man Raymond is investigating, drugs Melody and delivers her to Raymond's office — a bribe designed to compromise them both. But what was meant to be a transaction becomes something neither of them can control, and the walls they've spent years building collapse in a single devastating night. Now entangled in corruption, conspiracy, and a desire that defies every rule they live by, Raymond and Melody must decide: protect themselves, or protect each other. They can't do both.
The SUV turned onto East 73rd Street at nine forty-five and Marcus Webb had been sweating for approximately forty minutes.
He could feel it - the particular cold dampness between his shoulder blades, the way his collar had stopped sitting properly, the clammy persistence of hands that he was pressing flat against his thighs so no one would notice them. The car was climate-controlled. The problem was not the temperature.
"The venue is just ahead," he said, aiming for the easy confidence of a man who had arranged this kind of evening a hundred times. He had, in fact, arranged evenings like this many times. The problem was that none of those previous evenings had included Raymond Thorne in the passenger seat.
Raymond Thorne did not acknowledge the comment. He was looking out the window at the cross street with the focused absence of a person who was either thinking about something important or thinking about nothing at all, and Marcus Webb, who had been around enough dangerous men to develop a functional read of them, could not tell which. This had been the case for the entire forty-minute drive. It had not gotten easier.
In the back seat, Dominic Ashford had his phone out and appeared to be reading something. Sebastian Forsythe had his eyes closed, which did not mean he was sleeping - in the two years Marcus Webb had been attending these corporate socials, Sebastian Forsythe's apparent tranquility had never once meant he was not paying attention. He was, Marcus Webb had decided, the most quietly alarming person in the vehicle, which was saying something given that Raymond Thorne was also in the vehicle.
And behind Sebastian, taking up slightly more than her fair share of seat, was Sophie Blackwood.
Sophie was ten years old. She was wearing a blazer that belonged to someone significantly larger than herself, and she had arrived at the car pool with a small notebook and the prepared explanation that her father had updated the evening's itinerary. Alexander Blackwood had, in fact, not updated the evening's itinerary. His senior management team had nonetheless failed to produce effective arguments against Sophie's presence in the vehicle, which was a failure mode that occurred with a regularity that said more about Sophie than about any deficiency in their professional capabilities.
Edwin Mercer, who had been managing the Blackwood household since before Sophie was born and who had therefore developed, over a decade, a finely calibrated sense of impending disaster, sat beside Sophie with the expression of a man who had already calculated his overtime and found the math unsatisfying.
"You're not supposed to be here," Edwin said.
"I'm conducting social observation," Sophie said, without looking up from her notebook. "It's educational."
"Your father-"
"My father is in Singapore. He won't know until Tuesday."
"I will know," Edwin said.
"Edwin," Sophie said pleasantly, "you're going to tell him exactly what you decide to tell him, and we both know how that particular negotiation works, so can we skip to the resolution and enjoy the evening?"
Edwin said nothing. The expression on his face was the expression of a man who had already surrendered and was maintaining the performance of resistance purely out of professional dignity.
Sophie was writing in the notebook. She had been writing in the notebook since they crossed 59th Street. Marcus Webb had a clear sightline to the top of the page and had confirmed, to his considerable personal unease, that she was writing down observations about everyone in the car. His own entry appeared to be the longest.
"Mr. Webb," Sophie said, still writing, "are you worried about tonight?"
"Certainly not."
"Your baseline perspiration is elevated. You've adjusted your collar four times since we entered the Midtown Tunnel." She looked up. Her eyes were her father's eyes, which was to say they were attentive and interested and already several steps ahead of the conversation. "You can tell me. I'm good at keeping confidences."
"Sophie," Edwin said.
"I'm just observing."
"Observe quietly."
She returned to her notebook. After a pause, she turned to Raymond. "Uncle Raymond. What are we looking for tonight?"
Raymond, who had been staring out the window, turned slightly without turning his full attention away from whatever he was tracking in the street. "Information," he said.
"About the financial irregularities in the production division."
Marcus Webb's hands, which had been pressing flat against his thighs, pressed considerably harder.
"That's correct," Raymond said, with the same inflection he would have used saying the weather is cool tonight.
"Marcus Webb manages the production division," Sophie observed.
"I'm aware."
"So this is a social visit in the technical sense only."
"Sophie," Edwin said, with a firmness that suggested he had identified a genuine threat level.
Sophie closed her notebook with the expression of a person complying in letter only. She looked out the window at the passing Upper East Side streetscape with the focused attention of a naturalist arriving at an interesting habitat.
The SUV stopped. Marcus Webb climbed out first, pulling at his collar.
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