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Katia
I woke up to the sound of people singing badly.
“Happy birthday to you...” I blinked hard against the sunlight filtering through the curtains, my brain slow to reboot. The voices were getting louder, and for a second, I thought I was dreaming. A really weird, off-key dream.
“Happy birthday, dear Katia...”
My bedroom door flung open. I sat up so fast the blanket tangled around my legs like a trap. My vision adjusted just in time to see a small parade entering my room, Delia leading the way with a cupcake on a tray, Dad trailing behind her holding a phone like he was filming a hostage video, and then, my mother, smiling. I nearly choked because my mom has never smiled at me.
“Happy birthday, sweetheart,” she said; her voice was smooth and artificial, like she’d sprayed it with perfume before letting it out of her mouth.
I stared at her like she’d grown a second head. Because here’s the thing: Martha didn’t do birthdays. Not mine, anyway. Delia got birthdays. Princess themes, balloons, new dresses, and a chorus of relatives pretending they liked each other. I got awkward silences and last-minute gas station cards. I once got a vacuum cleaner. I was twelve.
So this? This felt like a setup.
“Um... thanks?” I said, my voice rough from sleep and suspicion.
Delia plopped the tray down in my lap like she was presenting a peace offering. “I made the cupcake myself,” she said sweetly, which meant the maid probably did it while Delia supervised with a glass of wine.
I looked down at it. Vanilla with white frosting and one lonely candle jammed in the center like a warning flare.
“Blow it out,” my dad said cheerfully, but his eyes were doing that thing they always did when he was nervous, darting around like they were looking for an exit.
I narrowed my eyes. “Okay, seriously. What’s going on?”
My mom gave a soft laugh, as if I was being silly for having the correct instincts. She sat down on the edge of the bed, smoothing the comforter like she’d ever touched it before.
“You’re twenty now,” she said gently. “That’s a very important age.”
“Cool,” I said, unimpressed. “Should I be bracing for a tax seminar or something?”
Delia giggled. Dad coughed.
Mom kept going, undeterred. “You’re a woman now, Katia. And your father and I have something very exciting and important to tell you.”
There it was. The sting in the frosting. The trap under the ribbon.
I sat up straighter. “Okay…”
She looked at me like she was about to hand me a tiara. “You’ve been chosen to marry Julian Windsor.”
The room didn’t go quiet; it went hollow.
For a second, I couldn’t even process the words. I stared at her, waiting for a punchline, a camera crew, or something.
“Who?” I asked, even though I’d heard her perfectly.
“Julian Windsor,” she repeated, like I was the dumb one. “The Windsor heir. Their family has been interested in an alliance for years. You were betrothed when you were sixteen.”
I blinked. “What?!”
Dad gave me a sheepish look. “We didn’t want to overwhelm you at the time.”
“At the time? You mean when I was sixteen?!”
Mom’s smile never wavered. “It was a strategic match. His family is very private. Very powerful. This is a good thing, Katia. You’re incredibly lucky.”
Lucky?
Like this was some kind of prize.
Like I should’ve been jumping up and down because I was the golden ticket in a billionaire breeding lottery.
“I’ve never even met him,” I said, still struggling to wrap my head around the casual horror of what she’d just dropped on me like it was a brunch topic.
“Neither has Delia,” she replied smoothly. “But if things had gone differently, she would’ve married him instead. You should be grateful it’s you.”
“Wow,” I muttered. “How generous of you, Mother.”
Delia leaned against the bedpost, swirling her hair around her finger. “He’s supposed to be really handsome. And rich. Like... rich rich. The Windsors own, like, everything. Casinos. Oil. Maybe a spaceship? I don’t know. They’re super secretive.”
“Oh great,” I snapped. “So I’m marrying a ghost with a trust fund, and you know this how?”
My mom’s eyes hardened, just for a second. “Don’t be dramatic. He’s real. And they chose you. That should mean something.”
“No,” I said. “What means something is that you waited four years to tell me I was promised to a complete stranger like this is a medieval auction.”
My dad cleared his throat. “We thought we’d wait until the Windsors reached out. And... they have.”
I stared at him. “You mean this is happening now?”
“They’ve arranged to meet in a few weeks,” my mother said. “There will be dinner. Formalities. You’ll get to know each other before the engagement becomes public.”
Public? Right. Because this wasn’t a relationship. It was a press release waiting to happen.
“I can’t believe this,” I said, my voice flat. “You didn’t even ask me.”
“You don’t ask about opportunities like this,” she said firmly. “You accept them.”
That was her tone now. The mask was slipping. She wasn’t the smiling mother with a cupcake anymore. She was the CEO of this family, and I was a failed acquisition being forced into a merger.
I got out of bed, shoving the tray off my lap. The cupcake toppled sideways, the candle smearing frosting across the blanket like a smear of white lies.
“I need air,” I said.
Mom stood up. “Katia, don’t be ridiculous—”
“No. I need to think. I’m going to Vegas.”
That caught her off guard. “Vegas?”
“Just a weekend,” I lied. “To clear my head. You want me to marry a stranger? Fine. But let me have one moment of freedom first.”
She looked like she wanted to argue, but Dad touched her arm. “Let her go. She’ll come around.”
I watched the silent war play out in her expression. In the end, control won. Because she thought she already had it.
“Fine,” she said, that awful smile returning. “Go. Take some time. But don’t forget what’s waiting when you come back.”
I didn’t answer.
I was already packing the second the door closed.
They thought they were giving me space. What they didn’t know was that I wasn’t going to Vegas for air. I was going for speed.
~Katia~The Monaco invitation arrived three weeks before the IG tech summit.Encrypted message, underground circuit contacts, the usual routing. The race was on a Thursday, the night before the summit's final day, which meant I would be sleeping two hours and presenting to four hundred people on the energy of pure adrenaline. Sam had looked at the schedule and said nothing for ten seconds and then said, "You're going to do it anyway.""Obviously," I said."I'll book a later checkout," she said.The old Grand Prix circuit at 2 AM was something I had been waiting two years to run. Not the modern circuit, but the original one, the one that existed before barriers and safety redesigns, the one that ran through the streets of Monaco the way the city itself ran — tight and unforgiving and absolutely beautiful. The underground circuit used approximately sixty per cent of the original layout. Enough to feel it.Sixteen riders. Invitation only. The kind of race that existed because enough seri
DeliaI’ve always been the "good" daughter. The one who wore the right dresses, smiled at the right donors, and never made a scene unless it was choreographed for maximum impact. But sitting in the plush, overly silent library of the Windsor estate, I felt like a background character in my own life.Julian was never home. And when he was, he looked through me like I was a piece of expensive furniture he’d inherited but didn't know where to place. I was a Kensington, raised to be the crown jewel of the family, yet here I was, playing house in a mausoleum while my sister, Katia, seemed to occupy every corner of Julian’s mind. It wasn't just the lack of attention; it was the erasure. I was his wife on paper, a secret contract meant to solidify the Kensington-Windsor alliance, but I was strictly forbidden from uttering a word of it to the public. To the world, I was just another socialite; to Julian, I was a ghost he’d paid to stay quiet.By Friday, the silence of the estate became deafen
~Julian~Reid put the full file on my desk at seven AM on Saturday."You're not going to like it," he said."Tell me anyway."He sat down. "Five years ago Victor Hale was shortlisted for a government AI logistics contract. UK Ministry of Defence, infrastructure management across three divisions. Significant money. Significant profile. The kind of contract that legitimises a company for the next decade." He paused. "He didn't get it.""Who did?""A startup called Meridian Systems. Eight employees, eighteen months old, operating out of a converted warehouse in Shoreditch. Nobody had heard of them. Nobody understood how they beat Halo's bid." Reid set a page on my desk. "The official review cited Meridian's proprietary algorithm for predictive logistics mapping. Victor's team filed a formal objection. It was dismissed. He appealed. The appeal was dismissed."I looked at the page. At the name Meridian Systems."Three years ago," Reid continued, "Meridian Systems was acquired. The founders
~Katia~Mother called on a Thursday with the warmth she deployed when she was about to do something I wasn't going to like."A spa weekend," she said. "Just you and me. Girls' trip. You've been working too hard, Katia; everyone can see it. Two nights at Rosewood. My treat."I looked at Sam across the office. Sam looked back."Just us?" I said."Just us," Mama said. "Mother and daughter. Long overdue."I should have said no. I knew I should have said no. I said yes because Dad had called me the week before and said quietly that Mother had been having a difficult few months, and he thought it would mean something if I made the effort, and because, despite everything, I was still capable of making efforts for people who had hurt me when I believed the effort was genuine.The effort was not genuine.I arrived at the Rosewood on Friday afternoon to find that the spa weekend had three additional guests.I discovered this when a man knocked on my door at seven PM holding roses. He was tall a
~Delia~I sat at the far end of the table and watched my marriage end in real time.Not legally. Not officially. Just the slow, excruciating process of understanding that the man you are contractually bound to has never once looked at you the way he looks at someone else, and that someone else is sitting three seats away, laughing at a story about a teddy bear with singed eyebrows.Julian laughed too. Not the managed version he used at events. The real one. The one I had never once heard him produce in eight months of living in the same house.I picked up my fork and put it down.He had put food on her plate.I had watched it happen. He had reached across without thinking about it — the lamb, because she had been looking at it — and placed it on her plate with the ease of someone who did that all the time. Who knew what she wanted before she said it. Who paid that kind of attention.He had not put food on my plate.He had not looked at my plate once.I was his wife. I was sitting at h
~Julian~My grandmother told me about the lunch at eight thirty in the morning.Not as a question. As information. "Katia is coming at noon. Gail will be here. I expect you at the table."I looked at my phone for a moment after she hung up. Then I called Zane."Did you know about this?""About what?""Grandmother. Katia. Lunch. Today."He had a way of making me wait while he processed God fucking knows what. "No. But I'm not surprised."I wasn't surprised either. Grandma Celeste had been moving pieces around a board since before I understood there was a board. She had arranged the Windsor family dinner that introduced Katia to the family. She had specifically requested Katia's presence at every significant family event since. She had told me, in a corridor after a dinner, that Katia was the woman I was supposed to marry.This lunch was not a coincidence.I told Delia at nine. She received the information with the composed stillness she had developed since Dubai, quieter than before, m







