Home / Romance / THE PROXY BRIDE / The Dinner of Wolves

Share

The Dinner of Wolves

Author: Onyes
last update Last Updated: 2025-08-11 22:20:19

I followed the butler down a hallway that smelled like regret and lemon polish. Left at the Renaissance-era torture device disguised as a coat rack, right past the oil painting of a man who definitely murdered someone for underseasoned soup. My bare feet sank into a Persian rug worth more than Marcella’s entire villa. If I trip and spill champagne on this, will they bury me in the rose garden?

The dining hall hit me like a slap of chilled champagne.

Holy molly!!!

It wasn’t a room—it was a cathedral to excess. Thirty feet high, with vaulted ceilings where crystal chandeliers dripped light like liquid diamonds. A table so long it could’ve doubled as a runway stretched before me, polished to a mirror shine that reflected the storm outside. Ten place settings gleamed with enough silver to arm a small nation. At the far end, a fireplace roared like a caged beast, casting dancing shadows over oil portraits of Drevanes who looked like they’d strangled rivals for using the wrong fork.

Welcome to the Hunger Games, if the tributes were forced to eat truffle foam with a gold spoon.

The butler bowed. “Mademoiselle Veyron.”

All eyes snapped to me.

Showtime, Selene. I pasted on Selene’s vacant smile—the one she used when ignoring servants—and glided forward. Inside, my heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped sparrow. Don’t trip. Don’t blink. Don’t breathe too loudly.

Cassian sat at the head of the table, all sharp angles and storm clouds. He didn’t look up from his tablet, but I felt his gaze like a physical touch. He’s waiting for me to crack.

Then the family began.

The Patriarch (Grandpa Drevane): A prune-faced relic in a velvet smoking jacket, glaring at me like I’d insulted his favorite war crime. Probably thinks I’m a Bolshevik because I didn’t curtsy deeply enough. His knotted hands rested on a cane topped with a silver wolf’s head. Bet he whacks servants with that. Or grandsons who dare to love.

The Matriarch (Grandma Drevane): A tiny bird of a woman drowning in pearls and spite. She held a monocle to one eye, squinting at my hair like I’d brought lice to dinner. Blonde, but is it Drevane blonde? her expression screamed. Needs more ice. Less humanity. She tapped her cane—identical to Grandpa’s, but with a diamond-studded poodle head—and whispered to Cassian, “Too much root. Fix it.”

The Father (Victor Drevane): A human glacier in a tuxedo, swirling cognac like it contained state secrets. Where’s Selene’s laugh? his silence accused. Where’s the spark? He didn’t touch his food. Just watched me, calculating how much I’d depreciate his son’s stock price.

The Mother (Eleanor Drevane): All sharp cheekbones and sharper perfume. She smiled like a shark spotting blood, studying my borrowed gown. That silk’s last season, darling, her arched eyebrow said. And your posture? Tragic. Like a librarian. Which, ouch, hit too close to home.

The Elder Brother (Julian): Cassian’s mirror image but softened by too much caviar and too little conscience. He winked at me while spearing a quail egg. Don’t mind Cass, his smirk promised. He’ll warm up once you learn to shut up. His wife, a porcelain doll with dead eyes, dabbed her lips with a napkin embroidered with her initials. Not his. Smart girl.

The Younger Sister (Lysandra): A teenage grenade in a ballgown. Eighteen, with Cassian’s storm-gray eyes but zero of his self-control. She kicked off her designer heels under the table and texted furiously, muttering, “Ugh, another blonde Stepford wife? How predictable.” Then she caught my eye and smirked. You’re not her, are you? her raised eyebrow whispered. Tell Cass I said his new toy’s got spine.

My place setting was a museum exhibit:

• Fork 1: For peeling the skin off caviar (apparently a thing)

• Fork 2: For “deconstructing” the amuse-bouche (a single pea in gold leaf)

• Fork 3: For the actual appetizer (foie gras shaped like a swan)

• Knife: So sharp it could part the Red Sea

• Napkin: Monogrammed with S.V. in thread that probably cost more than my mother’s library

• Water glass: Filled with liquid so clear it looked radioactive

Selene would’ve asked for a Coke, I thought, tracing the rim of the glass. I’d kill for tap water right now.

Dinner began with the silence of a tomb. Victor Drevane tapped his spoon against a crystal bowl—a signal, not a request—and servants materialized like ghosts, placing plates before us.

My “appetizer” was a single scallop floating in a sea of saffron foam, garnished with edible gold dust. Probably mined by underpaid elves.

Julian broke the silence. “So, Selene.” He drawled my sister’s name like it was a dirty word. “Cass says you’re… quiet.” He leaned forward, elbows on the table—a mortal sin in Drevane etiquette, judging by Eleanor’s twitch. “What’s your talent? Besides looking like a shampoo commercial?”

Oh, you want talent? I thought, picking up the caviar-peeling fork with deliberate slowness. How about noticing Grandma’s monocle is fake? Or that Lysandra’s texting Kieran Ashford under the table? Or that Cassian hasn’t touched his food because he’s too busy watching me dissect this scallop like it holds the meaning of life?

I took a bite. The scallop tasted like regret and overpriced ocean.

“I collect first editions,” I said in Selene’s airy tone, though my voice felt like glass shards in my throat. “Machiavelli. Dante. The Art of War.”

Julian choked on his wine.

Cassian’s head snapped up.

Too much, I realized. Selene thinks Shakespeare wrote Twilight.

Before Julian could recover, Lysandra kicked my ankle under the table. Nice save, her smirk said. Now tell them the truth: you’re here to burn this house down.

Eleanor cleared her throat. “How… quaint. Though I’ve always found violence in literature so vulgar.” She speared a swan wing with surgical precision. “We prefer grace in this family.”

Grandma Drevane raised her monocle again. “Grace is earned, child. Not bleached.” Her gaze dropped pointedly to my roots. “Tell me, Selene—does the sun bother your eyes? Or just the truth?”

Oh, we’re doing this. I met her stare, channeling my mother’s quiet fury. “The sun’s fine, Grandma. It’s the shadows that hide the rot.”

The table froze.

Victor’s spoon clattered against his bowl. Eleanor’s smile turned to ice. Even Julian stopped smirking.

Cassian? He didn’t blink. But his knuckles whitened around his untouched fork.

Then—

SNAP.

The fork broke clean in half in his hand.

Silence. Thick as the saffron foam.

All eyes darted to Cassian. He didn’t look at them. He looked at me.

“Julian,” he said, his voice low and lethal, “you will never speak of my wife that way again.”

Julian paled. “I didn’t—”

“You implied she was less.” Cassian’s gaze never left mine. “She is more than any of you deserve.”

Wife. The word hung in the air like smoke. He called me his wife. Not “the blonde.” Not “the proxy.”

Grandma Drevane slammed her poodle-cane down. “Enough! Serve the main course before the bœuf turns to dust.”

As servants rushed in with plates of seared wagyu, Cassian finally spoke to me—just three words, so quiet only I could hear:

“You’re playing with fire.”

I didn’t flinch. Just smoothed Selene’s ivory gown over my knees and met his storm-gray eyes.

Good, I thought, picking up the swan-deconstructing fork. I’ve been cold too long.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   The Dinner

    The company dinner wasn’t a gala.It was war.Drevane Holdings’ annual dinner filled the grand ballroom like a storm—hundreds of sharp suits, clinking glasses, the air thick with ambition and perfume. No chandeliers dripping diamonds. No queens claiming thrones. Just power, raw and hungry, served on silver platters.Amara stood in her sanctuary room, the Provence mural glowing in candlelight. She’d never attended a company event. Cassian had made it clear: Stay invisible. Stay useful. But tonight, the invitation had come—mandatory attendance—and she needed his permission.She found him in the library, reviewing Arctic Shipping Consortium reports under the glow of a single desk lamp."I’m going," she said, her voice steady. "To the dinner."Cassian didn’t look up. "As long as Selene Veyron walks in, Selene Veyron walks out. No mistakes." He finally lifted his eyes—storm-gray, cold as the sea at midnight. "Lyra will represent me. I don’t attend these affairs.""You never do," Amara murm

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   The Invisible Woman

    Cassian didn’t see Amara.Not when she adjusted treaty translations at her desk.Not when coffee spilled across Arctic Shipping Consortium reports.Not even when she stood three feet from his floating obsidian desk, platinum wig gleaming under the one-way glass.To him, she was air.A breathing prop in the theater of Selene Veyron.Her only purpose: perform flawlessly, vanish silently.Amara placed the corrected Arctic Shipping Consortium reports on Cassian’s desk—French clauses polished, maritime terms precise. He didn’t glance up. Didn’t nod. Just tapped the documents with a fountain pen, ink bleeding into "Page 12, clause 4."She retrieved them without a word. Mistake: "frolicking" instead of "fracking." Her knuckles whitened around the papers. Two months. Sixty days. One typo could void everything.Jacques’ espresso arrived—too hot, too strong. Amara’s hand trembled as she lifted the cup. Coffee arced across the Arctic Shipping Consortium annex, staining "Section 7B: Icebreaker Ro

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   The Glimpse Game

    Amara settled into Drevane Holdings like a ghost learning to haunt.By day three, she’d memorized the spoon shadows (avoid the silver ones near Accounting), the espresso machine’s death rattle at 10:07 AM, and Cassian’s "never interrupt when he’s scowling" rule. But her real education began at 2:14 PM daily—when Julien Morel walked past her desk on his way to the archives.MondayAmara was correcting a maritime treaty when Julien appeared down the hall. Sunlight caught the silver at his temples as he strode past—shoulders back, jaw set, radiating "I own this building and your heartbeat." She dropped her fountain pen. Ink bled across the "salvage" clause like a crime scene."Clumsy," she hissed at her traitorous hands, mopping ink with Selene’s lace handkerchief."Very clumsy," Julien murmured, pausing beside her desk. His storm-amber eyes flicked to the treaty. "Shipwrecks are tragic, but ink disasters?" He vanished down the hall, leaving Amara clutching a treaty about sunken treasure

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   Lunchtime Gossip

    Amara had never been so grateful for a clock in her life. When the hour hand struck twelve, she practically floated toward the executive dining hall—if she could’ve sprouted wings and soared over the spoon shadows, she would’ve. For sixty minutes, she wasn’t Selene Veyron, Executive Secretary. She was just hungry.She found an empty table near the service entrance, where the air smelled of fresh linen and lemon polish. Two women in crisp navy uniforms—Odette with eyes like aged cognac, Therese with hands that moved like water—approached with their trays."Mind if we join?" Odette asked, her voice warm as honey. "I’m Odette. This is Therese." She slid into the seat beside Amara, unwrapping a cloth bundle of crusty bread and olives. "First day in the penthouse? You look like you’ve wrestled tigers."Therese passed Amara a slice of bread, her fingers brushing Amara’s with a touch so fleeting it felt like a secret. "Cassian’s new secretaries always do," she murmured. "But the real coffee’

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   The Triple Life

    Amara decided to stop dissecting Elara’s quiet watchfulness and the swan etched in crystal. Watch how things unfold, she told herself, shifting the white rose three inches left on her nightstand. Some truths reveal themselves in silence.Three days later, Cassian drove her to Drevane Holdings—a monolith of glass and steel piercing the Monaco skyline like a dagger. From the street, it looked sterile, imposing. But as the elevator soared past the thirtieth floor, Amara saw the truth.This wasn’t a building.It was a living organism.The lobby stretched before them like a canyon of white marble where light refracted through a suspended sculpture of ten thousand silver spoons—Drevane’s original symbol of "measured success." Staff moved like synchronized swimmers, heels clicking in unison. Cassian didn’t break stride as he murmured, "First rule. Never step on the spoon shadows. They mark power hierarchies."Beyond the lobby, the trading floor roared—a cathedral of chaos where dozens of scr

  • THE PROXY BRIDE   The Sanctuary of Silent Things

    The knock came precisely at 3:00 PM—three soft raps that sounded like a secret code. Amara smoothed Selene’s ivory robe over her pajamas and opened the door to find Elara, Marta, and Lin standing in the crimson runner’s glow. Sunlight streamed through the hall’s projection screens, painting the maids in shifting hues of honey and amber."Welcome properly, Madame," Elara murmured, her voice a whisper of silk. She held a silver tray bearing a single white rose in a crystal vase. "The house has waited for you." Behind her, Marta balanced a stack of linen so impossibly white it glowed, while Lin cradled a leather-bound ledger stamped "Personal Preferences."Amara forced Selene’s vacant smile. "Oh! How lovely. I didn’t expect—""We always welcome new residents properly," Elara interrupted gently, stepping inside without invitation. Her eyes—warm hazel flecked with gold—swept the room, lingering a fraction too long on the unmade bed. "Marta handles linens. Lin manages your wardrobe. I ensur

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status