The Heiress Gambit-Chapter 41- Result
AUTHOR
TOKYO, JAPAN - THE RIMESTONE ESTATE, AOYAMA
It’s been two weeks since Shunsuke signed the proposal.
The silence in the Rimestone study was no longer cold and controlled. It was hot and brittle, charged with a tension so sharp it could cut glass.
Shunsuke Rimestone, who never raised his voice, who prided himself on a composure as impenetrable as a Rolex President watch, slammed his hand on the immense oak desk from Poltrona Frau. The sharp crack made the crystal tumbler of whiskey tremble.
"This is a catastrophe!" he snarled, his voice a low, furious rasp that was somehow more terrifying than a shout. He glared across the desk at a cowering Payton. "This ’opportunity’ you championed is bleeding us dry! The capital calls are relentless. The projections were a fantasy! There must be a miscalculation, an error somewhere in the initial data!"
He was furious at her, blaming her naive greed for leading him into this trap. The idea that his own disinherited daughter and the tech upstart he’d patronized could have orchestrated this was so inconceivable it never even crossed his mind.
Payton, dressed in a rumpled Valentino blouse, looked like a scolded child. "But Daddy, the numbers... Mr. Daki said..."
"Do not quote that man to me!" Shunsuke snapped, cutting her off. He turned his fury on the financial documents scattered before him, as if he could find the flaw through sheer force of will.
Across the room, Barbara Rimestone stood by the floor-to-ceiling window overlooking their immaculate garden. She wasn’t listening to the specifics. She was gripping the sleeve of her elegant Brunello Cucinelli cashmere cardigan, her knuckles white. Her usual icy poise was shattered, replaced by a visible, fluttering anxiety.
"Bank of America is already questioning our liquidity for the New York property holdings," she said, her voice unnaturally high. "And the fund managers in London... the calls are becoming persistent." Her eyes were wide with a very specific, personal horror. She wasn’t seeing numbers on a page; she was seeing a future without her private appointments at Bergdorf Goodman, without her summers in the South of France. She was seeing herself as poor, and the thought was literally making her tremble.
"The art collection," she said suddenly, turning to Shunsuke, a desperate edge in her voice. "The Hockney. The Koons. We could quietly approach Sotheby’s... just to shore things up, to buy time until we fix this."
Shunsuke’s jaw tightened. Selling the art was a public admission of failure. It was a stain on the family’s legacy. "No," he bit out. "Not yet."
He stood up, pacing over the priceless silk Tabriz rug. "There has to be another way. We will find the error. We will renegotiate the terms. We are Rimestones. We do not fix catastrophes; we avoid them. This... this will not stand."
But his words rang hollow in the opulent room. The foundations of his empire, built on arrogance and cold calculation, were creaking. And for the first time, Shunsuke Rimestone looked not like a tycoon, but like a man desperately trying to hold a collapsing wall upright with his bare hands.
They were trying to fix it, but they had no idea they were trying to bail out a boat that had already been scuttled from within.
– – –
Meanwhile.
The sleek black Lexus LS sedan glided to a silent halt in the private underground garage of Reomen’s Tribeca penthouse. The engine’s quiet hum faded, leaving a thick, anticipatory silence in its wake.
For two weeks, the plan had been a relentless, ticking clock in the background of their lives. But now, with the first tremors of its impact being felt across the ocean, the tension had shifted from strategic to something far more personal.
Reomen got out, a predatory energy in his movements. He didn’t wait for the driver, opening Paige’s door himself. His hand found the small of her back, a familiar, possessive brand through the silk of her blouse, and guided her toward the private elevator.
The ride up was silent, but it was a different silence than before. It wasn’t filled with unsaid challenges or resentment. It was charged with a current of shared victory and a hunger that had been simmering for fourteen long days.
He led her into the penthouse, the vast, minimalist space glowing with the lights of the Manhattan skyline. Without a word, he went straight to the temperature-controlled wine cabinet, selecting a bottle of Cristal champagne. The pop of the cork was loud and celebratory in the quiet room.
He poured two flutes, the bubbles fizzing wildly. He handed one to her, his fingers brushing against hers, a deliberate, lingering touch.
"A toast," he said, his voice a low, intimate rumble. He raised his glass, his dark eyes locking onto hers. They weren’t smirking now; they were blazing with a fierce, proud intensity. "To the brilliant, vengeful mind of my financial consultant. And to the first cracks in a very old, very corrupt wall."
Paige clinked her glass against his, a slow smile touching her lips. The cool champagne tasted like victory and possibility. "To cracks," she echoed.
He took a sip, his eyes never leaving her over the rim of the glass. He set it down on a nearby console with a soft click.
"You know," he began, stepping closer. The playful, sarcastic tone was back, but it was laced with something darker, more wanting. "Watching you dismantle your father’s empire is the most erotic thing I’ve ever witnessed. It’s better than any strip tease."
Paige felt a flush of heat but held her ground. "Is that all I am to you? A sexy spectacle of corporate sabotage?"
He closed the final distance between them, his hand coming up to cup her jaw, his thumb stroking her cheek. "Oh, you’re far more than that, Black Cat," he purred. "You’re my favorite sin. My most expensive habit. The one variable in all my equations I can’t quite solve."
He leaned in, his lips hovering just a breath from hers. He wasn’t kissing her. He was making her wait. Making her want it.
"It’s been two weeks," he murmured, his voice husky. The words were a confession and a challenge. "Two weeks since I had you screaming my name in that guest room. I find I’m... impatient for an encore."
His other hand slid down her arm, his fingers intertwining with hers. He was surrounding her, his heat, his scent, his overwhelming presence.
"And I think," he continued, his gaze dropping to her mouth, "you’re impatient for one, too."
He was right. The denial was gone, burned away by the champagne and the victory and the raw need she saw reflected in his eyes. She wanted this. She wanted him. The complicated, infuriating, brilliant man who had handed her the keys to her own revenge.
She didn’t answer with words. Instead, she rose onto her toes and finally closed the agonizing distance, capturing his mouth with hers.
It wasn’t a gentle kiss. It was a collision. Two weeks of pent-up tension, sarcastic banter, and searing looks exploded into a desperate, hungry claiming. Her hands fisted in the lapels of his Tom Ford suit jacket, pulling him closer.
Reomen groaned into her mouth, a raw, unfiltered sound of triumph and desire. His arms wrapped around her, crushing her against him as he walked her backward, never breaking the kiss.
He was done waiting. The game, for tonight, was over. The only thing left was the win.
– – –
REOMEN
I break the kiss, breathing hard. Her taste is on my lips, and it’s not enough. It will never be enough. "The bedroom," I growl against her mouth. It’s not a request. It’s a demand, a need.
I take her hand. Her fingers are slim and cool in mine, but I can feel the frantic pulse at her wrist. I lead her out of the living room, down the hall. My heart is a drum in my chest, a rhythm that only she can create.
In a blink, I have her inside my bedroom. The door clicks shut, the lock engaging with a final, definitive sound. I lean against it, looking at her standing in the middle of my domain.
My grin is wicked, sharp. I can see the excuses and deflections dying in her eyes, replaced by pure, undiluted want.
"See?" I say, my voice rough. "No escape this time, Black Cat."
She doesn’t run. She charges.
The kiss is instant, a chemical explosion. We don’t make it to the bed. We don’t need to. This is better. Fierce, reckless. Our teeth clash. I taste the faint, metallic tang of blood. She bites my lip, and a dark, approving laugh escapes me.
"Always with the claws," I mutter against her mouth.
I push her, and she stumbles back, her hips hitting the cold, hard edge of my desk. Perfect. Papers—financial reports, the blueprints of her family’s ruin—scatter around us like fallen leaves.
She gasps, her hands gripping the edge of the desk, her knuckles white. Her eyes are wide, dark pools of fire. I step between her legs, caging her in.
"All that brilliant, scheming talk," I whisper, my hands sliding up her thighs, pushing her skirt higher. "All those sharp words. And here you are." I lean in, my lips brushing the shell of her ear. "Tell me you want this."
She doesn’t speak. She just looks at me, her chest rising and falling with ragged breaths. Her silence is its own answer. It’s a challenge. It’s a surrender.
I kiss her again, deeper this time, my hands claiming her body. The world narrows to this: the cool wood of the desk under my hands, the heat of her skin, the sharp, sweet scent of her, and the intoxicating sound of her breath catching in her throat.
This is more than sex. This is a victory lap. This is claiming what is mine.
"Say it, Paige," I demand, my voice a low command in the dark room. "I want to hear you say you’re mine."







