LOGIN“Are you serious?” I snapped, my voice rising as I stared at Henry.
He seemed to wake up all of a sudden, as though I was a ghost he'd forgotten about. His hand slid off Vivienne’s waist like it burned him, and he stepped back, a look of guilt flashing across his face. The guys, following his gaze to me, scrambled. “Let’s keep playing,” one of them said, awkwardly breaking the silence. “Vivienne, skip the drinks if you’re not feeling well—truth or dare is better anyway.” “Yeah, truth or dare’s perfect!” Vivienne cheered, oblivious to the tension in the air. Henry took a deep breath and sat back down on the couch. He was trying to act like everything was fine. He must have thought I was about to throw a fit. I couldn’t blame him; that’s what everyone else probably expected. But I didn’t do anything. Not a word. Not a glance. Nothing. I just sat there, staring at the group like they were part of some weird, distant dream. A part of me wanted to yell, to demand an explanation, but another part—probably the smarter part—just stayed silent. I watched Henry glance at me, waiting for something. His eyes searched my face for signs of jealousy, for hurt, for something that would give him the validation he seemed to crave. But I didn’t give him anything. And that seemed to unsettle him even more than anything I could’ve said. “Truth or dare?” someone called out, pulling my attention back to the group. Vivienne was sitting up straighter, a mischievous grin spreading across her face. “Dare,” she said, her eyes flicking to Henry for just a second before she turned to the stack of dare cards someone had set out. “Pick one,” someone urged, and she drew a card from the pile. The room fell silent as she read it. I caught the look of shock that passed between the girls watching her, and then one of them gasped. “What is it?” “What’d she get?” another voice asked, almost a whisper. “Kiss any guy in the room of your choice,” the reader said, her voice trembling. She shot a quick glance at Henry, as if expecting him to explode. The air in the room shifted. It felt like the temperature dropped. Everyone held their breath. Vivienne didn’t seem to notice the tension. In fact, she seemed to enjoy it. She stood up with a playful smirk and walked over to Louis, a guy I barely knew but who was definitely good-looking. “Louis,” Vivienne said with a flirtatious laugh, “mind if I kiss you?” Louis froze, his eyes flicking from her to Henry, who was glaring daggers at him. Henry didn’t even move at first. His jaw was clenched so tight I thought it might crack. But then, just as Vivienne leaned in, his voice cut through the air like a knife. “Enough!” he barked. I flinched at the sound, but it didn’t matter. Henry was already up and across the room in two strides. He grabbed Vivienne’s hand, practically dragging her toward the door. The room was silent for a second, then the guests exchanged uncertain glances. They couldn’t decide whether to look at me or pretend nothing was happening. Eleanor’s fine, I imagined them thinking. She’s used to this by now. She’ll let it go. But I didn’t. I wouldn’t. I didn’t speak, just took another sip of my drink, letting it cool my thoughts. “What’s going on?” a voice asked, breaking through the haze of my own thoughts. I glanced up, meeting the eyes of one of the women at the bar. She raised an eyebrow, waiting for me to give her something to work with. I smiled softly. “Why do you think I care?” I said, my tone even, too calm. They quickly looked away, pretending to busy themselves with their drinks. I didn’t care. But I could feel it. That cold, creeping feeling in my chest. I didn’t like it. When my glass was empty, I stood and excused myself to the restroom. The sound of voices echoed from the hall, sharp and cutting. “Henry’s lost it. Leaving his girlfriend there, running off with Vivienne.” “You see his face? Terrifying when Vivienne was about to kiss Louis.” “Poor girlfriend—watching her man lose it over another woman. Shows who he really cares about, huh?” “Honestly, she’s just a replacement.” “Yeah. They’ll break up soon. It’s obvious. Everyone can see Henry’s in love with Vivienne.” I froze as I stepped into the restroom, hearing them leave before I could even respond. I leaned against the sink, forcing myself to breathe evenly. They were right. We were done. But it wouldn’t be him ending it. No, this time it would be me. When I got back to the penthouse, I headed straight for the closet. I didn’t care to look at the time. I didn’t care about Henry, or the mess he was leaving behind. I needed to leave. The suitcase was already open on the floor, half-filled with clothes I’d sorted through earlier. I paused, staring at it, as the weight of what I was doing settled in. I wasn’t just leaving; I was leaving a part of me behind. I didn’t want to be this version of myself anymore. Just as I pulled another sweater from the closet, the door opened. Henry stood there, holding it half ajar, staring at me. His frown deepened as his eyes flicked to the suitcase. “What’s this?” he asked. I glanced up, my hands still busy folding clothes. “Oh. You’re back. I’m heading home for a while.” Henry raised an eyebrow, but didn’t push. “Why? Still mad about last night?” “No. Just… missing my family.” I kept my tone light, not meeting his eyes. He softened, his posture relaxing. “That’s good. You’ve never gone home before.” I didn’t want to think about the fact that it was true. He couldn’t even manage a holiday with me, let alone anything serious. He’d made it clear there would never be a future for us. “I can’t come with you,” he said, his voice low. “When’s your flight? I’ll have Theo drive you to the airport.” I shook my head. “No need. I’ve got it covered.” I didn’t want him anywhere near my family. “Okay, but text me when you land. I’ll pick you up when you get back to New York.” I bit back a laugh, my throat tightening with the weight of everything. “Okay.” I wouldn’t be back. But he didn’t need to know that. Henry’s phone rang, and after a quick conversation, he turned to me again. “I have to go,” he said, his voice softer now. “About last night… I shouldn’t have left you there. I got you something. My assistant will drop it off.” I didn’t answer. I just watched him leave. As soon as the door shut, my phone buzzed. I glanced at the screen. Jasper. I didn’t answer. I wasn’t ready to face him yet."There's only one way to fight this. The Blackwood-Winters merger must happen publicly. The wedding will be the biggest event London has seen this year. We will show them we're not hiding." My father's words hung in the air. A massive public wedding. During a scandal. With everyone watching. It seemed insane. "You're serious," I said. "Completely serious." "Dad, the venue already canceled. Partners withdrew. People are avoiding us—" "Then we find a better venue. We invite more people. We make it impossible to ignore." Jasper was thinking. I could see it in his expression. "It's bold," he said finally. "It's necessary. You can't win by hiding. You win by showing strength." "The media will destroy us—" "Let them try. We control the narrative. We make this wedding a statement. A declaration that we're not defeated." I looked at Jasper. "What do you think?" "I think your father might be right. We've been defensive. Reactive. Maybe it's time to be aggressive."
Two days passed.My father remained in the hospital. Stable. Recovering.The doctors were cautiously optimistic."He's responding well to treatment. Heart function is improving. If he continues like this, we can discuss discharge in a few days."I visited every day. Sometimes twice.Jasper came with me. Victoria too.We took turns sitting with him. Keeping him company. Making sure he wasn't alone.On the third day, he was moved from ICU to a regular room.Better sign. Significant progress.I arrived that afternoon to find him sitting up in bed.No oxygen mask. Color back in his face. Looking almost like himself."You look better," I said."I feel better. Tired. But better.""The doctors are pleased with your progress.""Good. I need to get out of here soon. Back to dealing with everything.""Dad, you need to rest. The company can wait—""The company is dying, Eleanor. Every day I'm in here, it gets worse."I sat in the chair beside his bed."We're working on it. The lawyers are prepar
"We postpone the wedding, they win. We get married tomorrow. Private ceremony. Just us." I stared at Jasper. Processing his words. "Tomorrow?" "Yes. Private. Intimate. Just immediate family." "That's not what we planned—" "Plans changed the moment Vivienne and Angelina leaked those documents. We adapt." He was right. Everything had changed. The big wedding was impossible now. The venue had canceled. Media would make it a circus. "A private ceremony," I said slowly. "Yes. Just us. Just family. Victoria. Richard. My father. The minister. "No publicity?" "None. We don't announce it. We don't invite press. We just do it quietly." "Vivienne and Angelina won't be able to disrupt what they don't know about." "Exactly." I thought about it. Really thought about it. The big wedding had been the dream. Two hundred guests. Beautiful venue. Perfect day. But that dream was dead now. Destroyed by the scandal. This was survival. This was strategy. "After we're married," Jasper conti
The scandal exploded overnight. By morning, every news outlet carried the story. "Winters Family Business Under Investigation" "Fraud Allegations Rock Financial District" "Blackwood Wedding in Jeopardy" I sat in Jasper's study watching my world collapse. The fabricated documents were everywhere. Bank statements. Contracts. Legal papers. All fake. All convincing. All destroying everything. "Financial authorities are investigating," Jasper said. His voice tight. "Investigating what? There's nothing real to investigate." "The documents look legitimate. They have to follow protocol." "This is exactly what Vivienne wanted." "I know." My phone rang. My father. I answered. "Dad?" "Eleanor." His voice sounded weak. Strained. "Have you seen the news?" "Yes. Dad, none of it is real. The documents are fabricated—" "I know that. But the damage is done. Investors are pulling out. Partners are terminating contracts. Everything is falling apart." "We'll fix this—" "How? How do we f
I stared at Jasper. Unable to process. "That's impossible." "The evidence is conclusive. They've been together for over a week." "But why? Why would Angelina help Vivienne?" "I don't know. But we're going to find out." He made calls immediately. To lawyers. To security. To investigators. Coordinating. Planning. Preparing. "We need to understand what we're dealing with," he said. "Two wealthy women. Both connected. Both powerful. Working together." "Against me." "Yes." The weight of it settled over me. Henry's mother. And Vivienne. Two people who should have nothing in common. United in wanting to destroy me. Angelina had flown to London quietly. No announcement. No public record. She had checked into a hotel briefly before moving into the townhouse with Vivienne. Nobody had been watching for her. Nobody had expected Henry's mother to travel across the Atlantic to shelter a wanted woman. That evening, we gathered in Jasper's study. The investigators presented everything
Chapter 56 (Eleanor's POV) "Vivienne's been spotted in London." Everything changed with those words. Within hours, security was tripled at the estate. Guards positioned at every entrance. Patrols doubled. Surveillance increased. We moved to the main house. The old stone wing. Most defensible location. Jasper coordinated everything. Made calls. Issued orders. Police were notified. Vivienne Laurent was in the city. Active threat. They promised to investigate. To search. But Jasper wasn't waiting on them. That same afternoon, he hired private investigators. The best in London. Experienced. Professional. Expensive. Their job was simple: find Vivienne Laurent. They started work immediately. Checking hotels. Tracing credit cards. Following digital footprints. Reviewing camera footage. Interviewing sources. Building patterns. Days passed with no concrete results. The wedding was three weeks away. Despite the threat, life continued. Victoria coordinated with vendors. Confirm
The morning was too quiet. I should have known that peace never lasts in the Blackwood world. I was sitting in the sunny breakfast nook of the Manor. I was drinking coffee. I was looking at the plans for the new garden. I felt safe. Then, my phone vibrated on the marble counter. It did not stop. I
The lobby of the Blackwood headquarters felt different today. For months, I had walked through these glass doors as a stranger. I had walked through as the "placeholder" wife. I had seen the pity in the eyes of the receptionists. I had felt the cold judgment of the security guards.But today, the a
The next day, I felt a new kind of peace. I knew I had made the right choice. But I also knew Henry would not stop trying to hurt me. He had failed with money and he had failed with emotion. Jasper had warned me that Henry would use any method to create chaos. His goal was to make me feel small an
I spent the second day at the Blackwood Estate getting organized. I chose my new private suite of rooms. They were large and quiet, with huge windows overlooking a park. It felt safe, controlled, and most importantly, mine. I was enjoying the peace that came from knowing I was finally making my own







