The Heiress Gambit-Chapter 33- Deal
PAIGE
The car ride to Daki Tech was silent. The only sound was the soft hum of the car’s engine. I stared out the window, but I didn’t see the city. All I could feel was the deep, satisfying ache in my muscles.
It was a dangerous feeling. A reminder.
My legs felt shaky and weak as I finally stepped out of the car at the office building. The simple act of walking was a challenge. Every step sent a little jolt through me, a private echo of the night before and the stupid, prideful challenge this morning.
I tried to hide it, straightening my spine and clutching my bag a little tighter.
He noticed. Of course he did.
Reomen fell into step beside me, his hands tucked casually into his pockets. He looked fresh and powerful, like he could run another ten miles without breaking a sweat.
He leaned in close, his voice a low, smug whisper meant only for me.
"Having trouble walking straight, Black Cat?" he murmured. A slow, knowing smirk played on his lips. "Looks like you really did overdo it this morning. All that... effort."
Heat flooded my cheeks. He wasn’t just talking about the run. He was talking about everything. He was enjoying this, seeing me physically marked by what had happened between us.
I kept my eyes fixed ahead on the glass doors, refusing to give him the satisfaction of a response. But my body was betraying me with every slow, careful step I took.
He chuckled softly, the sound dripping with amusement. "Don’t worry. You’ll get used to it. Eventually."
Then he strode ahead, leaving me to follow in his wake, moving with an infuriating, easy grace that my own body could no longer match.
I was left with the humiliating proof of my surrender, and his triumphant smile burning in my mind.
The ache in my legs was a constant, humiliating reminder as I walked to my office. I moved carefully, each step a little too slow. I hoped no one noticed.
The workday was easy, a blur of simple tasks. It was a relief. My mind was too busy replaying the morning—his smirk, my weakness—to focus on anything complicated.
Then, my phone buzzed. A message from him.
Boardroom. Now.
My heart jumped. This was it. The plan was moving.
I stood up, my muscles protesting. I walked to the boardroom, trying to hide the slight unsteadiness in my steps. I pushed the door open.
The air was cold. Two men sat at the massive table. Reomen, at the head, a king on his throne. And across from him, my father.
Shunsuke Rimestone looked the same as always: cold, perfectly dressed, his face like stone. His eyes flicked to me when I entered. There was no warmth in them. No surprise. Just a quick, dismissive glance, like he was looking at a piece of furniture.
Reomen didn’t smile. But his eyes did. They met mine for a second, and I saw the silent command. Play your part.
I didn’t sit by my father. I walked around the table and took the empty seat next to Reomen. It felt like a declaration.
My father’s eyes followed me, his expression tightening just a little.
"Father," I said. My voice was calm, polite. But I let a tiny, cold smile touch my lips. It wasn’t friendly. It was a warning. A reminder that I was now sitting with the enemy. His enemy.
His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. He gave a single, slow nod. "Paige."
Reomen watched the whole exchange, a look of quiet, smug satisfaction on his face. The mouse was taking the cheese. And we were watching him do it.
Reomen leaned back in his chair, the picture of relaxed power. He gestured toward me with a lazy wave of his hand.
"Paige," he said, his voice smooth as glass. "Why don’t you enlighten your father on the financial upsides of this opportunity? You’ve crunched the numbers."
It was my cue. I opened the sleek portfolio in front of me, my fingers steady despite the frantic beat of my heart. I looked across the table at my father, his face an impassive mask.
"Of course," I began, my voice cool and professional. I started laying out the proposal, painting a picture of staggering returns and minimal risk.
I used all the right terms, all the complex financial language I knew he respected. It was a beautiful, glittering trap, and I was building it right in front of him.
"The initial projections suggest a forty-two percent return within the first fiscal year," I said, pointing to a perfectly crafted graph. "The market volatility actually works in our favor here, creating a unique window for aggressive growth."
As I spoke, Reomen would interject, just little comments. He was the master fisherman, gently tugging on the line.
"Astonishing," he’d murmur, shaking his head in faux awe. "A truly unique find, Shunsuke. Your daughter has a sharp eye."
Then another time, when I mentioned the need for a swift decision, he leaned forward, his tone conspiratorial. "That’s the key. Speed. The window for a move this bold is... fleeting. We’re lucky Paige identified it before our competitors did."
We were a perfect team. I laid out the irresistible bait, and Reomen sprinkled it with just enough credibility and urgency to make it impossible to refuse.
I watched my father’s face. He tried to maintain his cold, detached expression, but I saw it. The slight gleam in his eyes when I mentioned the profit margins. The almost imperceptible nod when Reomen praised the "opportunity." His arrogance was doing all the work for us. He believed he was too smart to be tricked, too powerful to fail. He saw my presentation not as a warning, but as a confirmation of his own genius for being involved.
He was falling for it. Completely. He was so busy looking at the glittering prize, he didn’t see the jaws of the trap widening beneath his feet.
And the entire time, a tiny, fierce flame of smug joy burned inside me. We were winning. And I was helping tear his empire down, brick by arrogant brick.
The final number landed. A staggering, impossible figure for projected profit. I let the silence hang in the boardroom for a moment, letting the fantasy sink into my father’s mind.
Shunsuke leaned back, a slow, satisfied smile touching his lips for the first time. It was a cold thing, but it was there. He saw his victory, his expansion, his triumph.
"And how soon can we commence?" he asked, his voice full of its usual arrogant authority.
Reomen didn’t even blink. "The moment the paperwork is signed." He slid a single, weighty document across the polished table. "My lawyers sent it over last night after our initial discussion. I trust you’ve had time to review it?"
A lie. A smooth, effortless lie. We’d sent it an hour ago, counting on his eagerness to blind him.
"Of course," Shunsuke said, as if he’d scrutinized every line. He pulled a pen from his inside pocket—a heavy, expensive fountain pen—and without another word, he signed his name with a sharp, decisive scratch.
The trap snapped shut.
He stood, buttoning his suit jacket. The meeting was over. He had what he wanted. But as he turned to leave, his eyes landed on me. Not the analyst, not the employee. His daughter, sitting firmly on the other side of the table, next to the man who had just tricked him.
His gaze held mine for a long, silent second. It wasn’t angry. It was... calculating. Questioning. His eyes flicked to Reomen, then back to me, and a faint, confused frown creased his brow. He was trying to solve a puzzle he didn’t understand. What is her place here? What is she to him?
But he was Shunsuke Rimestone. He did not ask personal questions. He only assessed assets and liabilities. With one last, unreadable look, he turned and walked out, the door clicking softly behind him.
The second he was gone, the air in the room changed. Reomen let out a low, soft chuckle. He didn’t look at me. He just stared at the closed door, a predator watching his prey walk blindly off a cliff.
"He didn’t even read it," he said, his voice rich with smug victory. He finally turned his head, his dark eyes meeting mine, gleaming with pure, unadulterated triumph.
"The old fool is already broke, and he just doesn’t know it yet







