Chapter 3

I stood on our penthouse balcony, my fingers gripping the railing until my knuckles turned white. Below, the moving trucks looked like toy vehicles, men in uniforms loading Arthur's possessions with mechanical efficiency. The autumn wind whipped my hair across my face, providing a convenient curtain for the tears I allowed to fall—tears the paparazzi stationed across the street would capture with their telephoto lenses. Another perfect shot of the abandoned woman, devastated by betrayal.

One of the movers carried Arthur's vintage record player—the one we'd found at a flea market during those three desperate years when the Alaric fortune had vanished. I remembered how we'd danced to crackling jazz in our tiny apartment, planning our revenge in whispered conversations between kisses. Now, that record player was heading to the penthouse Arthur had purchased for Clementine.

"Ms. Bennett?" Our housekeeper, Maria, appeared at the balcony door. "Would you like me to prepare some tea?"

"No, thank you," I replied, my voice appropriately hollow. "I'd prefer to be alone."

Maria's eyes held genuine sympathy. She'd witnessed everything—my devotion to Arthur through poverty, my tireless support as he rebuilt his empire, and now, his apparent abandonment. What she didn't know was that Arthur and I had carefully selected her years ago, knowing her connection to Eleanor Hartwell would eventually prove useful.

When night fell, I gathered our framed photographs—evidence of our supposed happiness—and arranged them before the fireplace. The flames cast dancing shadows across the living room as I methodically fed each picture to the fire, saving only one: Arthur and me at the beach house where we'd first discussed avenging Iris.

I pulled out my phone and typed: "Missing the white roses. The garden feels empty without them."

Arthur's response came seconds later: "They'll bloom again soon. More beautiful than before."

Our code. Everything was proceeding as planned.

Three days later, I sat alone at Meridian Club, deliberately selecting a table with high visibility. The maître d' had seated me with obvious discomfort—everyone knew about Arthur's betrayal by now, and my presence created an awkward energy in the exclusive restaurant.

"I'll have the herb-crusted salmon with lavender risotto," I told the waiter, ordering Iris's favorite dish. My private memorial.

The restaurant's hushed conversations suddenly dimmed, then swelled again with renewed intensity. I didn't need to look up to know who had entered. The distinctive scent of Clementine's perfume—always too heavy, too desperate to be noticed—reached me before she did.

"Table for two," her voice carried deliberately across the room. "Mr. Alaric will be joining me shortly to discuss wedding arrangements."

I kept my eyes on my menu, though I could feel her gaze burning into me. When she and her companion were seated—close enough for me to hear every word—I finally looked up.

The emerald necklace around her throat caught the light, sending green fire across the white tablecloth. Arthur's grandmother's necklace—a piece I had worn with reverence, knowing its significance to the Alaric legacy. Clementine's fingers kept touching it, drawing attention to her prize.

"Arthur insisted I wear it," she announced loudly to her companion, though her words were clearly meant for me. "He said it should be worn by the woman who will bear the next Alaric heir."

I took a slow sip of water, letting the ice clink against my teeth. In my mind, I saw Iris bleeding on her wedding day, her pregnant belly sliced open by Clementine's orders. The rage that rose in me was useful—it colored my cheeks and made my hand tremble slightly. To anyone watching, I appeared wounded by the reminder that I would never be Mrs. Alaric.

The following week brought a different kind of invasion. The first delivery arrived at dawn—exotic orchids in a hand-blown glass vase. The card read simply: "Beauty recognizes beauty. —Soren Isolde."

By midweek, my apartment resembled a florist's shop, interspersed with vintage champagne bottles and velvet jewelry boxes I refused to open. Each gift more expensive, more presumptuous than the last.

When he appeared at my dance studio during the children's ballet class I taught twice weekly, I knew he'd grown impatient with my lack of response. Soren Isolde leaned against the doorframe, watching with predatory intensity as I demonstrated a simple plié to a line of six-year-olds in pink tutus.

"Your grace is wasted on children," he said when the class ended, blocking my path to the changing room. "A woman who moves like you deserves a more... appreciative audience."

The little girls filed past us, some casting curious glances at the imposing man in the expensive suit.

"Mr. Isolde," I acknowledged, keeping my voice neutral. "This is hardly the place for a social call."

"You've ignored my gifts," he stepped closer, his cologne overwhelming in the small space. "And my calls. I'm beginning to think you're playing hard to get."

"I'm not playing anything," I replied, stepping back. "I'm simply not interested."

His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Arthur has moved on. You need protection now—a real man who appreciates what my brother clearly didn't."

As his fingers brushed my arm, I felt a cold certainty settle in my chest. Soren Isolde would be even easier to destroy than his sister. His arrogance made him blind to the trap closing around them both.

"Perhaps," I said softly, watching hope flare in his eyes, "we could discuss this somewhere more private."

The predator never suspects when he becomes the prey.

Chapter 4

I felt a chill run down my spine as I entered the grand conference hall of the Alaric Business Summit. The room buzzed with anticipation—CEOs, investors, and industry leaders gathered for the annual panel discussion on market trends. My eyes instinctively searched for Arthur, finding him across the room in deep conversation with the CFO of a rival company. He looked impeccable in his charcoal suit, not a single dark hair out of place. For a brief moment, his gaze flickered toward me, so quickly that no one else would notice.

The moderator called for everyone to take their seats. I moved toward my assigned place on the panel, mentally reviewing the points I'd prepared about sustainable investment strategies. Just as I reached my chair, a familiar floral scent assaulted my senses.

"Excuse me, I believe I'm seated here." Clementine Isolde slid gracefully into the seat between Arthur and me, her smile dripping with false sweetness.

"I wasn't aware you were part of the panel," I said, keeping my voice neutral despite the anger bubbling beneath my skin.

"Last-minute addition." She adjusted her designer blazer, the movement deliberately showcasing her diamond bracelet—another Alaric family heirloom. "Arthur thought the discussion needed a fresh perspective."

I took my seat, one chair removed from where I should have been, and placed my notecards on the table. Throughout the discussion, Clementine made pointed comments, each one carefully crafted to undermine me.

"In business, as in life," she said during a question about corporate loyalty, "it's important to know one's place in the hierarchy. Some people simply aren't cut out for leadership roles, regardless of how... supportive they might be."

Her eyes slid toward me, lips curved in a smirk. The audience wouldn't catch her meaning, but I understood perfectly. She was reminding everyone that I had been merely Arthur's support system, never his equal.

When the moderator called for a fifteen-minute break, I excused myself to the ladies' room, needing a moment alone to collect myself. I was applying fresh lipstick when the door swung open, and Clementine's reflection appeared in the mirror beside me.

"You know, Maeve," she said, checking her already perfect hair, "I've been doing some digging into your past. Fascinating stuff."

I capped my lipstick, keeping my movements deliberate and calm despite the sudden racing of my heart. "My life is hardly fascinating."

"Oh, I disagree." She leaned against the counter, too close for comfort. "Iris had quite an impact on you, didn't she?"

The sound of my sister's name on her lips made my blood run cold. I fought to keep my expression neutral, though my fingers tightened around my clutch.

"I don't know what you're talking about," I replied, moving to step around her.

Clementine blocked my path, her voice dropping to a whisper. "I know more than I'm letting on, little follower. Much more."

The nickname—what Iris had affectionately called me—felt like a slap. Only someone who had been there, who had witnessed my relationship with Iris, would know it.

I pushed past her and walked out, my heart hammering against my ribs. She knew. Somehow, she knew who I really was.

That night, I drove to the cemetery, the headlights of my car cutting through the fog that had settled over the grounds. The moon hung low in the sky, casting long shadows across the rows of headstones. I found Arthur already waiting by Iris's grave, his tall figure silhouetted against the darkness.

"She knows," I said without preamble as I approached. "Clementine mentioned Iris today. She called me 'little follower.'"

Arthur's jaw tightened, a muscle pulsing beneath his skin. "Then we accelerate the plan."

A third figure emerged from the shadows—Marcus, Arthur's twin brother. In the moonlight, their resemblance was uncanny, though Marcus's eyes lacked the intensity that always burned in Arthur's.

"Show me again," Arthur instructed his brother.

Marcus straightened his posture, tilted his chin at the exact angle Arthur favored, and spoke. "The Alaric investments are non-negotiable." His voice had the same commanding tone, the same slight inflection on certain words that made Arthur so compelling in boardrooms.

I watched in fascination as Marcus transformed before my eyes, becoming Arthur's perfect mirror image. We spent the next hour refining our strategy, going over every detail of our plan.

As we prepared to leave, I knelt before Iris's headstone and placed a bouquet of white roses at its base. The marble was cool beneath my fingers as I traced her name.

"Soon, sister," I whispered, feeling the familiar ache of loss. "Soon we'll have justice."

Arthur's warm hand covered mine, his presence solid and reassuring. "For Iris," he murmured.

"For Iris," I echoed, rising to my feet.

As we walked back to our cars, my phone chimed with a notification. A text message from Clementine to Arthur, accidentally sent to our group chat:

"I want a seat on the board. Tomorrow. Prove you're committed to our future, or the engagement is off."

Arthur and I exchanged looks. The trap was baited, and Clementine was walking right into it.

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