Chapter 5

CHAPTER FIVE

The Sentence Delivered

Vivienne's breath hitched as though the air itself had turned against her. Her mother's words

clung to the silence like a verdict, one she hadn't known she'd been tried for. The murmurs from

the ballroom still drifted faintly through the walls, but here the world was reduced to the cold

space between her and the two people who claimed to love her.

"I have no connection to him," Vivienne said. The words came out raw, unsteady. "I have never

met Grayson Holt. He has nothing to do with me."

Her father watched her with the detachment he used when negotiating contracts. His eyes, dark

and precise, held no softness. Her mother stood straighter, her posture perfect even in this

hallway where the truth had begun to unravel Vivienne's life thread by thread.

"You don't need a connection," her mother said. "You need to listen."

"I won't listen to something this insane," Vivienne shot back. Her voice thinned as emotion

strained against the edges. "You're talking about giving me to a stranger. A man with a

reputation so dark that people refuse to speak his name above a whisper."

"You will lower your tone," her father said sharply. "This is not a discussion."

Vivienne shook her head, her curls trembling against her cheeks. "Of course it's a discussion.

You're you're selling me. How can you look at me and call that family? How can you expect me

to obey?"

Her mother stepped forward. "We expect you to do what is necessary."

Vivienne felt the corridor closing around her, every breath tightening until she couldn't tell where

her panic ended and her anger began. "Necessary for you. For your debts. For the alliances

you've made without me."

Her father's jaw flexed. "This is not about debts."

"Then what is it?" she demanded.

He hesitated, a brief flicker of something crossing his features pride? fear? shame? before he

buried it beneath that firm, businesslike calm. "Our future hinges on this agreement."

Her mother added, "And yours."

"My future?" The laugh that escaped Vivienne was thin and wild. "My future should be my

choice. Not something you hand over like a bargaining chip."

Her father's tone hardened. "Grayson Holt is not a man one negotiates with lightly. His

protection is not a luxury. It is an asset few families ever earn. Do you understand the power

we're aligning with?"

Vivienne stared at him in disbelief. "Do you understand what you're aligning me with?"

Her mother's gaze sharpened. "Grayson Holt asked for a bride. We offered you. The contract

has been signed."

Vivienne's body stiffened. The coldness of those words wrapped around her like a chain.

"Signed? Without my knowledge?"

Her father didn't blink. "Your knowledge wasn't required."

Vivienne took two unsteady steps back until her shoulders brushed the wall. She felt the world

press against her, felt the weight of decisions she had never been invited into. Her breath

trembled the way her voice did. "I don't want this. I don't want him. I don't want any part of this."

Her mother's expression didn't soften. "Want has nothing to do with it. Our alliances depend on

your compliance. This is bigger than your feelings."

Vivienne nearly choked on the words. "My life is bigger than your alliances."

Her father's patience snapped like a quiet thread. "Enough. You will not disgrace this family by

resisting. Holt wanted someone from our bloodline. Not Tessa. You."

Vivienne felt her stomach drop, slow and sickening. "Why me?"

Her parents exchanged a look so swift and telling that Vivienne caught the answer before they

spoke it.

Her mother exhaled. "Tessa is too valuable to risk."

The sentence struck as if someone had slapped her. "Valuable?"

"Tessa is essential to our future business relationships," her father said. "She is being prepared

for roles that require visibility, influence, and stability. Holt is unpredictable. His life is dangerous.

His reputation "

"Crippled. Scarred. Ruthless." Vivienne's voice was small but vicious. "That's what people

whisper."

"That is precisely why we couldn't give him Tessa," her mother said. "But you..." She paused as

if selecting the correct phrasing. "You are adaptable."

Vivienne felt every part of her freeze. Adaptable. Moldable. Sacrificial. All the words her parents

never said but always acted out in private ways.

Her breath trembled as she forced out, "You chose me because I'm easier to lose."

Her mother didn't confirm it. But she didn't deny it either.

Vivienne backed away from them, one step at a time, as if distance could shield her from their

choices choices made at boardroom tables and over business dinners while she studied,

worked, lived, loved, utterly unaware that her life had been decided behind polished doors.

"You can't make me do this," she whispered. "I'll run. I'll leave tonight."

Her father's voice cut through her desperation. "You won't get far."

"Watch me."

She spun and ran down the corridor, dress brushing her legs as she darted past the staircase.

Panic fueled her steps, hot and breathless, until she reached the side foyer where a pair of

security guards stood men in dark suits, heavy-built, hands resting near their belts.

She lunged toward the door.

One guard stepped forward, his large frame blocking her path. "Miss Cross, you need to return

to the celebration."

"I'm leaving," Vivienne said, breathless. "Move."

"I can't do that," the guard replied. "Orders."

Her heart thrashed against her ribs. "Orders from who?"

"Your father."

Behind her, footsteps approached measured, confident, familiar. Her parents.

Vivienne pressed her palm to the door, pushing against it even when it didn't budge. "Let me

go."

Her mother's voice slid through the hallway, calm and final. "Vivienne, stop."

Vivienne didn't turn. "You can't keep me here."

Her father's tone was colder than winter stone. "Holt's men will arrive within minutes. It is time

you accept this."

Vivienne closed her eyes as the truth took shape like a dark, imminent wave. The door no

longer felt like an exit. It felt like an illusion a border she would never cross again.

She dropped her hand, fingers trembling, breath thin. Her parents stood behind her like two

walls closing inward.

Outside, in the distance, engines rumbled. Heavy. Approaching.

Her father spoke again, quieter this time. "Prepare yourself. He's coming for you."

Vivienne opened her eyes, staring at the darkness beyond the glass. The night seemed to pulse

with a presence she couldn't yet name a presence that would change everything her escape had already been sealed shut.

Chapter 6

CHAPTER SIX

Vivienne didn't turn around at first. She stood with her hand still resting on the cold glass of the

door, her breath fogging faintly against it as if even the warmth of her lungs was trying to

escape. She could hear her parents behind her her father's steady inhale, her mother's faint

exhale, both of them composed in the way only people confident in their power could be.

Seconds stretched. Then Vivienne pivoted, slow and deliberate, forcing herself to face them

even though her pulse hammered like a trapped creature. Her voice was tight. "Why wasn't

Tessa chosen?"

Her mother blinked once. The question didn't shock her. It annoyed her. "We already explained "

"No," Vivienne interrupted, stepping forward. The desperation that had clawed its way up her

spine now edged her tone with something sharper. "You gave excuses. I want the truth. The real

reason. No more half-answers."

Her father's jaw worked once, a small flicker of irritation crossing his face. He was unused to

defiance from her quiet, dutiful Vivienne who rarely caused ripples. Tonight her voice created an

unexpected disturbance.

"You are emotional," he said.

"And you are hiding something." She moved closer, shoulders squared even as fear trembled

beneath the surface. "Why her? Why not Tessa?"

Her mother's gaze cooled further. "This isn't a competition."

"It became one the moment you offered me in her place."

The silence between them sharpened until Vivienne could almost hear the ticking of the

chandelier crystals in the ballroom beyond, swaying with distant movement. Her parents

exchanged another one of those subtle looks too quick to decipher, too familiar to dismiss.

Vivienne pressed her palms to her sides to keep from shaking. "Tell me."

Her father spoke first. "We couldn't risk Tessa."

The words were too light for the weight they carried. Vivienne stared at him, waiting for the rest.

He avoided her eyes for the briefest moment a tell, a fracture in his flawless composure before

meeting her gaze again.

Her mother took over. "Tessa's value to this family is different from yours."

Vivienne's stomach twisted. "Value," she echoed. "Like she's an asset. Like I'm an asset."

Her mother's expression didn't change. "There is nothing wrong with being valuable."

"To you," Vivienne said, voice thinning. "Only to you."

Her father exhaled sharply. "You are twisting our intentions. Tessa is positioned for greater

visibility. Her social connections, her presence it all supports our long-term strategies. She has

been groomed for it."

Vivienne flinched at the word groomed. It sat heavy in the air, coated with implication.

Her mother added, "She is meant for the public eye. For alliances that depend on grace, beauty,

and perception. Her marriage will anchor several political and financial relationships we've spent

years cultivating."

A chill crawled up Vivienne's spine. "So because she's too important... I'm expendable?"

Her father bristled. "No one said anything about expendability."

"You didn't have to."

The guards at the door shifted their weight, uncomfortable witnesses to a conversation that

vibrated with unspoken cruelty.

Vivienne's hands curled into fists. "You chose me because you don't think I matter. Because

losing me is easier than losing her."

Her mother's voice hardened. "Tessa's future was carefully mapped. Holt's reputation makes

him unsuitable for someone with her visibility."

Vivienne stiffened. "What does that mean?"

Her father pinched the bridge of his nose, a gesture he used when delivering unpleasant truths.

"His world is dangerous. Violent. Rumors surrounding him are not exaggerated. His alliances

are built on blood and power. Any woman who enters that sphere disappears from society's

center."

Vivienne swallowed, though her throat felt coated with glass. "And you're sending me there

instead?"

Her mother's silence was all the answer needed.

But her father, ever direct, spelled it out: "You can handle a quieter life. One without public

scrutiny."

The words hit her harsher than if he'd slapped her. She heard every layered meaning the

dismissal, the ranking, the cold categorization.

Her mother spoke again. "Your temperament is suited for it. You don't crave attention. You don't

need the spotlight. You will not resist the way Tessa would."

"I'm resisting now."

"You'll grow out of it," her mother said softly, as if Vivienne's terror and rage were childish

tantrums.

The breath left Vivienne's chest in a shaky gasp. Her world rearranged itself, tilting into a shape

she didn't recognize. She had always known her role in this family hovered somewhere between

necessity and background noise but she had never imagined it would come to this.

"You're wrong about me," she said quietly, voice trembling with the beginnings of a resolve she

had never needed before tonight. "You don't know who I am. You never tried to know."

Her father shook his head as though rejecting the sentiment. "You're overreacting. Holt is

powerful, yes, but he can provide stability. Your life will not lack comfort."

"I don't care about comfort. I care about choice."

"Choice," her mother echoed with a strange softness. "Choice is a luxury people like us cannot

afford."

Vivienne stared. "That only applies when I'm the one paying for the sacrifices."

Her father grew impatient. "Enough. We understand this is difficult for you, but you will adjust.

Many women have entered marriages they did not choose."

"I am not 'many women.'"

"You are our daughter," her mother said, "and you will do what's required."

Vivienne took two steps back. She needed space, breath, anything. But the hallway felt like it

was splitting her open.

Her father's voice followed her, targeting her spine. "Tessa will form alliances that benefit us

publicly. You will form the one that protects us privately. It is a balance."

Vivienne let out a sound that was not quite a laugh, not quite a sob. "So that's the truth. Tessa is

too valuable to be risked on a man rumored to be dangerous, crippled, and cruel. But I... what?

I can be?"

Her mother folded her hands elegantly. "We trust you to endure."

"Endure," Vivienne repeated. "Like a burden."

"Like a responsibility," her father corrected.

Vivienne felt the weight of that word like a chain tightening around her wrists. "And I never had a

say."

"You did," her mother said. "By being born."

Vivienne's chest tightened with a pain so sharp she almost staggered. She looked at her mother

and father two people shaped by ambition so deeply they didn't realize how their shadows

swallowed everything around them.

And then she understood something she had never allowed herself to admit:

They hadn't chosen her for this sacrifice because she was the weakest.

They had chosen her because she was the strongest.

The one who could bend without breaking at least in their eyes.

Her father glanced toward the front of the estate as the rumble of engines grew louder. "Prepare

yourself. This conversation is finished."

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