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Eve’s POV
If I’d known I would see my stepsister’s legs wrapped around my fiancé, I would have worn high heeled shoes that would have doubled as a weapon. Instead I stood in the cottage doorway in ballet flats as the three of us were frozen in a tableau so absurd it could have been a Renaissance painting: The Betrayal of the Heiress, oil on canvas, circa the worst moment of my life. Delphine’s laugh cut off the second the floorboard creaked under my foot. Ambrose was still half on top of her, shirtless and gleaming, his hand locked on her thigh like a man who’d just realized he’d left the stove on and his entire future was on fire. The champagne bottle on the floor rolled in slow, lazy circles, and I watched it spin because looking at spilled champagne was easier than looking at the two people who had just detonated my life. I’d been calling him for the past three hours. Three hours of voicemail and read receipts while I circled the estate with a list of wedding details that now mattered about as much as a grocery receipt. His great aunt couldn’t sit near his mother. His college friends needed a table far from the bar. I’d spent my morning negotiating with the florist while Ambrose was here, in the cottage my mother had loved, doing things to my stepsister I sincerely hoped weren’t in any manual anywhere. The seating chart crumpled slowly in my hand. I noted the Delphine’s dress on the floor and the red marks on Ambrose’s neck that matched her lipstick shade exactly, a color I’d spotted in her bathroom last week and almost complimented. “Well,” I said. “At least someone’s having a good afternoon.” Ambrose scrambled backward so fast his spine hit the armrest and he made a noise like a goat startled by a car. “Eve. This isn’t what it looks like.” “I truly hope not, because it looks like you’re sleeping with my stepsister in my dead mother’s cottage four weeks before our wedding, and that would be a new low even for this family.” Delphine sat up slowly, pulling her dress over her shoulders with the deliberate care of a woman who’d been waiting for this moment and intended to savor every second of it. Her dark hair fell in perfect waves, which was frankly offensive. If I’d just been caught betraying someone, I would at least have the decency to look disheveled. She looked like she’d stepped out of a perfume ad called Deception with top notes of betrayal and base notes of audacity. “You weren’t supposed to find out now,” she said. I kept quiet and let her continue. “You were supposed to find out the day before the wedding,” she continued, smoothing her skirt. “A few hours before the ceremony. We wanted to time it perfectly so there was no room for you to fix anything. No time to find a replacement groom. No time to meet that little deadline your mother set.” She tilted her head with a smug smile. “You would have walked in, seen us, and realized you’d lost everything. It would have been devastating.” She said it the way someone describes a surprise party they were especially proud of planning. Every detail considered, every outcome anticipated. A gift wrapped around a bomb with my name on the tag in elegant calligraphy. To say I was enraged would be an understatement but I’d spent my whole life in a house full of people waiting for me to crack, so I did what I always do. I smiled. It was the smile of someone who’d learned emotional warfare at the dinner table before she learned algebra. “So you’ve been plotting this for months. The affair, the timing, the grand reveal were all designed to make me miss the inheritance deadline.” I turned to Ambrose, who was now deeply fascinated by the floorboards. “And you proposed to me in front of my family and said you wanted to spend your life with me, all while planning to pull the rug out the day before the wedding. I didn’t know you had that much follow-through.” Ambrose’s mouth opened and closed. He looked like a fish dropped on a dock, still trying to negotiate with gravity. “She made it sound reasonable,” he said finally. I laughed in disbelief. “So you think that betraying your fiancée and sleeping with her sister was reasonable. Do you also find it reasonable that you’re half naked and about to be single for the rest of your natural life, or is that just a happy coincidence?” Delphine stood, barefoot on the old wooden floor, and somehow still managed to look regal. That infuriated me most of all. “You can joke all you want, Eve, but you have just thirty days. Good luck finding someone to marry you once word gets out. The desperate heiress, dumped right before her deadline. It’s practically a headline.” “Desperate Heiress does have a nice ring to it. Very tabloid chic.” “You think this is funny.” “I think this is the most effort you’ve ever put into anything, and honestly I’m almost flattered. You’ve wanted my things since we were fourteen. My clothes, my jewelry, my college boyfriend who suddenly stopped calling and appeared on your social media a week later. And now my fiancé.” I glanced at Ambrose, still crumpled against the armrest. “Though your taste hasn’t improved over time.” Ambrose made a small offended noise nobody acknowledged. “The inheritance should have been shared,” Delphine said, and the practiced calm slipped just enough for me to see the rot underneath. “Your mother locked everything up for you. We got nothing. We had to live in your house and smile at your parties and watch you walk around like you were better than us. Do you know what that felt like?” “I imagine it felt like being a guest in someone else’s home and resenting them for it instead of being grateful you had a roof over your head.” “You think you’re so clever.” “I think I’m the only one in this room wearing a complete outfit, which at the moment feels like a moral victory.” She stepped closer, and the floorboard creaked under her bare foot. “Laugh now. But in thirty days you’ll lose everything: the estate, the company and the money. And I’ll be there, watching, when you realize you finally have nothing left that I want.” “Because you’ll already have taken it.” “Exactly.” I stared at her intently before walking out of the room. Behind me, Ambrose scrambled up and called my name, but I didn’t stop. I walked past the house, the gardens, the fountain my mother had imported from Italy the summer before she died. I got in my car and drove away without looking back. My apartment sat on the other side of the city, a clean and quiet space I’d bought with my own money three years ago, when I realized I needed somewhere to breathe that didn’t smell like my stepmother’s perfume and my father’s avoidance. I drove with the radio off and the warm air whipping through my hair, and by the time I pulled into the underground garage, I had gotten a hold of my chaotic emotions. I called Devin. I’d missed three of his calls already, too busy marching toward my own destruction to pick up. He always called when something was off. If the man had a superpower, it was an inconveniently accurate sense of when my life was imploding. He answered on the first ring. “Eve, talk to me. What happened?” His voice undid something in my chest I’d been holding together with pure stubbornness. The words came out in a rush. “I found my fiancé in the garden cottage sleeping with my stepsister. They planned the whole thing, Dev. They were going to wait until the day before the wedding so I’d have no time to find anyone else.” I could tell he was shocked by this turn of events when he kept silent for a few seconds before responding. “Where are you now?” “ I am in my apartment. I couldn’t stay in that estate another minute.” “Are you hurt?” “My dignity is in critical condition, but the rest of me is intact.” “I’m getting on the next flight. I’ll be there tonight.” “You don’t have to do that. You’re always in the middle of something important, and I can’t keep pulling you back every time my life turns into a soap opera.” “Stop talking.” It wasn’t harsh, just firm, the voice of someone who’d already made up his mind. “I’m coming home. You need me, and I’m coming home. That’s the end of the conversation.” I closed my eyes, and the tears I’d been holding back finally broke free, hot and fast down my face. “Okay.” “Keep your phone on. I’ll call when I land. And Eve?” “Yeah?” “Don’t do anything reckless while I’m in the air.” “No promises.” He hung up, probably already dialing the airport, already moving, already doing what he always did when my world cracked open. Devin showed up. He’d been showing up since we were teenagers. He held my hand at my mom’s funeral when I couldn’t feel my fingers. He stayed awake with me on the nights grief came back like a tide. He never asked for anything in return. He was my best friend. My gay best friend. The one person in the world who wanted nothing from me except my company and the occasional pastry when I stress-baked at two in the morning. I’d been so certain of that for so long. I sat on my couch in the quiet of my apartment and let myself cry for exactly two minutes. Then I wiped my face and stared at the city lights blinking on outside the window. I had thirty days to find a husband willing to marry into a family of vipers, thirty days to save my mother’s legacy from the people who’d spent two decades trying to steal it. My mother hadn’t raised a woman who went down without a fight. She just hadn’t raised me long enough to finish the job. I would have to finish it myself. I stared at my phone and waited for it to ring again, already calculating my next move. I could work with thirty days. The math was not promising but the alternative was letting Delphine win, and I would sooner walk into the ocean with rocks in my pockets than give her the satisfaction.Eve’s POV "Who placed her there?" Devin asked, though I think we both already knew the answer. "Martin Lovelace. I have spent the past twenty-four hours reviewing every document and record I could find related to Lydia's background and employment history. The professor who gave her a primary reference, a man named Harold Becker, is not merely a former teacher who thought highly of her academic work. He is Martin's cousin. They grew up together in the same town, attended the same schools, and have maintained a close relationship their entire lives. Harold Becker was the one who personally recommended Lydia for the position in my office, vouching for her character and her qualifications and her trustworthiness. Martin has been planning this infiltration for years, Mrs. Cresswell. He placed a mole inside my office specifically to monitor the will and report back to him on every development." The room fell into a profound silence. I could hear the soft hum of the air conditioning sy
Eve’s POV The message was brief. She could not protect you either. The words hit me like a physical blow, driving the air from my lungs and leaving me gasping. My mother. The car accident. The tampered brakes that the mechanic had found and documented and that my father had ignored. Martin had killed her, or had her killed, and now someone was using her memory, her precious heirloom, her own name, to threaten me and my unborn child in the most vicious way imaginable. I set the rattle down on my desk with exaggerated care because if I did not place it gently I was afraid I might throw it against the wall and watch it shatter. My hands were shaking badly now. Priya was watching me with wide eyes, her professional composure finally crumbling in the face of something so far beyond normal workplace boundaries. "I am calling Mr. Cresswell right now," she said, reaching for her phone. "No." My voice c
Eve’s POVI slept poorly the night before the security team arrived, my dreams fragmented and dark, filled with images of my mother's face and the sound of a baby crying somewhere I could not reach. Devin held me through it, his arms wrapped around me in the darkness, his voice a steady murmur against my hair. He told me everything would be alright, that we would find whoever sent the letter and make them pay, that our child would be born healthy and loved and protected from all the darkness that had plagued my family for so long. I wanted to believe him. I wanted to sink into his certainty the way I had learned to sink into his embrace, trusting that he would catch me if I fell. But the fear was a cold knot in my stomach that would not loosen, and when I finally drifted off near dawn, I dreamed again of my mother's handwriting on those yellowed letters and the terrible knowledge that she had seen her death coming and been powerless to stop it.The security team arrived at seven o'c
Devin's POVThe letter sat on the coffee table between us like a live grenade, its words still echoing in the silence of the apartment. I had read it seven times now, and each reading revealed nothing new except another layer of cold, calculated menace. The phrasing was careful and precise, almost clinical in its cruelty, as if the author had drafted and redrafted each sentence to maximize the psychological damage while leaving no trace of their identity.I called Marguerite at six in the morning. She answered on the second ring, her voice alert despite the hour. Marguerite Chen was not a woman who slept late or was caught unprepared. She had been the executor of the Lovelace estate for over twenty years, and in all that time she had never once been surprised by the depths of human greed and cruelty. I suspected this would not be the exception."Mr. Cresswell," she said when I explained what had happened. "I'll be there within the hour. Don't touch the letter again. There may be foren
Eve's POV The message came three days later. It arrived in a plain white envelope, hand-delivered to our apartment with no return address. The postmark was local. The handwriting was unfamiliar. Inside was a single sheet of paper, typed, unsigned. Congratulations on your pregnancy. It must be wonderful to believe that your troubles are finally over. But you should know that not everyone is celebrating. Your marriage may be legitimate in the eyes of the law, but without a child, you have no claim to the inheritance. The will is very specific on this point. A biological heir, born of the union, before your twenty-seventh birthday. If something were to happen to that child before it draws its first breath, the entire inheritance reverts to the trust. Accidents happen. Pregnancies fail. The world is full of dangers, especially for women who have made as many enemies as you have. Enjoy your happiness while it lasts. It will not last much longer. I read the letter three times. My hand
Eve's POVThe weeks that followed were the happiest of my life.I woke every morning to the weight of Devin's arm draped across my waist and the steady rhythm of his breathing against my hair. The pregnancy made me tired in a way I had never experienced before, a bone-deep exhaustion that settled into my body and refused to leave. But it also made everything sharper. The morning light through the bedroom windows seemed more golden. The smell of coffee brewing in the kitchen seemed richer. The sound of Devin humming while he made breakfast, some old song I didn't recognize, seemed sweeter.I was eight weeks along now. The nausea had faded, replaced by a constant low-grade hunger that sent me wandering into the kitchen at odd hours. Devin had learned to keep the refrigerator stocked with my latest cravings. Pickles and ice cream. Salted crackers and fresh mango. A particular brand of raspberry yogurt that I had never cared about before but now couldn't live without. He never complained.







