LOGINThe guests had left by the time I left the sitting room; I could still hear the faint echo of their cars pulling away outside. I walked down the hallway past the family portraits, feeling lost. I did not know where I was going.
My father's words echoed in my headā¦āI will bring you home in handcuffs. "Each step I take makes them louder instead of fading away," and he meant it. I saw it in his eyes, that cold, hard look I had never seen before. I climbed the stairs, my hand sliding on the wooden railing. The house was quiet like it was holding its breath, waiting for me to break. At the top of the stairs, I stopped. Elena's door was closed, but a sliver of light was shining under the dark floor. My sister⦠The one who started this, the one who looked at Damiano De Luca and said no and then looked at me and said, "Here, you can take him." I should have been angry; I was angry. But anger was not what I felt right now. I felt desperate. I knocked. Soft at first, then harder. "Elena." "I know you're in there. Please.ā The door opened slightly and a brown eye peeked through. "Gabi." Her voice was small. "It's late." "Let me in." She hesitated, then she sighed and opened the door. Her room was how I remembered it: canvases against the walls, paint stains on the carpet, sketches above her bed. She wore strawberry pajamas. She looked young, too young to be engaged, too young to ruin lives. But not too young to ruin mine. "What's wrong?" she asked, sitting on the edge of her bed. She would not look at me, her hands twisted in her lap. "You know what's wrong." She swallowed hardā¦"Mom and Dad told you." "They told me everything." I stayed standing because if I sat down, I might not get back up. "About the company, about Damiano, about how you offered me up like a sacrifice so you could have your own life." Elena flinched. Her lip trembled. "It wasn't like that." "Then what was it like?" My voice broke. "Explain it to me, Elena. Make me understand why my little sister sold me to a man I have never met." She finally looked at me; her eyes were wet. "I didn't sell you." "You told them to give me to him instead of you." "I said maybe. "She stood up, grabbing my hands. "I said maybe Gabi could do it. She is older and stronger. She does not haveā¦" She stopped. "Does not have what?" Her mouth closed. "Does not have what, Elena?" "Dreams." The word came out like a whisper. "You do not have dreams, Gabi. Art school, a gallery. You never wanted any of those things." I pulled my hands away. "So because I do not want to be an artist, I deserve to be married off to a stranger?" "No." She shook her head, crying now. "That is not what I meant." "Then what did you mean?" She wiped her face. "I meant that you are practical. You handled things; when Mom was sick, you took care of everything, and when Dad lost that big deal, you stayed calm. You are good at surviving, Gabi. I am not." I stared at her. She really believed it. She had convinced herself she was helping me. "That is not love," I said quietly. "That is using someone." "It's notā¦" "You volunteered me; you walked into Mom and Dad's room and pointed at me. You did not ask if I was ok with it⦠I found out by accident, standing in a hallway like a servant." She started crying harderā¦loud sobs. "I'm sorry," she gasped. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry." I wanted to hate herā¦God, I wanted to hate her. But she was my little sister. The one who crawled into my bed during thunderstorms and painted our dog after he died, even though it looked like a potato with legs. "Elena." I sat next to her. "Look at me." She looked. "Help me." Her crying slowed. "What?" "Help me." I grabbed her hands. "Tell Mom and Dad you changed your mind; tell them you will marry Damiano. Pleaseā¦I cannot marry a man who thinks he is getting married to you." She pulled her hands away. "I can't." "You can." "No," she said. She stood up and moved back toward her window. "I can't marry him; I don't love him. His hands are always cold and he talks about money as if nothing else matters.ā "So I have to marry him instead?" "It's just a marriage." She said it like it was a business deal. "You do not have to love him. Just live in his house and wear his ring andā¦" "And sleep in his bed?" She went quiet. "Yeah," I whispered. "That is what I thought." Elena looked at the floor, and when she looked up again, her face was harder. "Maybe it will not be so bad." "Maybe?" "Damiano is rich, handsome, even..." I stood up. "I cannot believe you." "It's done, Gabi." She crossed her arms. "The contracts are signed. The date is set and there is nothing we can do." "There is always something youā¦" "Not this time." She opened her door. "Get some sleep; tomorrow will be a long day." I walked to the door but stopped in the frame. I looked at her, the sister I grew up with, the one I protected. "You are really going to let them do this to me?" Her eyes met mine. "It's already done." I walked out. Behind me, the door clicked shut, then the lock turned. I pressed my forehead against the wood. "Please, Elena." "I am begging youā¦Help me." I stepped back, turned around, and started walking toward my room. Then I heard her voice, so soft I almost missed it. "Don't worry, Gabi." I froze, my heart pounding.Damiano's eyes slowly opened as he blinked against the morning light.He turned his head toward me, and my whole body went stiff. His gaze was hazy at first, still clouded with sleep and whatever alcohol he had drunk the night before.Then he saw me. I was still in my half-undone dress, rose petals stuck to my skin.His brow furrowed. "Gabrielle?"I flinched when I heard my name. It sounded strange coming from his lips.Damiano sat up slowly as the sheets fell around his waist. He rubbed his face and winced, probably from a pounding headache. When he looked at me again, he looked confused."What happened?" he asked. "Why are you dressed like that?"I opened my mouth, but no words came out. My throat felt like sandpaper. The tears I thought I had already cried started forming behind my eyes again.Damiano looked at me. His eyes moved from my open zipper to my wrinkled dress, then to the way I was trying to hide on the bed. His expression changed from confusion to something darker."Gab
1 stood frozen as he held me in the middle of the rose petals. His arms wrapped around me like I was precious, but I knew better⦠I was just a body that felt familiar in the dark."Elena," he whispered again, his voice soft, almost tender.My heart pounded; I should have pushed him away, screamed, and told him the truth. But my body wouldn't move, and my voice wouldn't work. I stood in his arms, letting him hold me while he called me by my sister's name.His hands moved down my back, finding the zipper of my dress."Finally," he breathed. "Finally, you are mine."My skin crawled on every touch. But I could not speak; the words stuck in my throat like thorns.He pulled the zipper down slowly. The sound was loud in the quiet room. My dress loosened around my shoulders. "Damiano," I tried. My voice was barely a whisper. "Stop."But he didn't hear me; his mind was somewhere else.He pushed me backward, and my legs hit the edge of the bed, and I fell onto the mattress. Rose petals were sc
The minister's voice faded as the words sat on my tongue like a cat cut my tongue."Gabrielle," he said again. "Do you take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?"I do," I whispered.The words tasted like ash as my voice cracked. The guests probably thought I was emotional. But I was choking on the lie.Damiano stood beside me; his eyes scanned the crowd. He had not looked at me once during my vows.The minister turned to him."Damiano, do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?"Damiano blinked for a second; I thought he would not answer. His gaze drifted past me."Damiano," the minister repeated."Yeah," Damiano mumbled. "I do."He still did not look at me. The minister cleared his throat in confusion. "The rings?"Damiano fumbled in his pocket. He pulled out a simple gold band. His hands were clumsy as he reached for my hand. His fingers were warm but his touch was careless. He slid the ring onto my finger without looking and I did the same too.It was so loose t
The wedding day arrived faster than I expected.I woke up in the same room they had locked me in for days.My eyes were swollen and my throat still hurt from constant screaming.My mother stood in the doorway, arms crossed, watching the maids fasten the tiny pearl buttons up my spine."Don't cry," she said. "You'll ruin the powder."I hadn't realized I was crying as tears came silently. The storm I'd been dreading all week had finally arrived.The maids' hands trembled as she worked, but I didn't look at her reflection in the mirror because I didn't want to see myself."You look beautiful," she whispered.I said nothing.The car ride to the venue was silent. My mother sat across from me, smoothing her dress, and my father stared out the window... nobody spoke.The venue was a garden, filled with white flowers and white ribbons and rows of chairs full of people I didn't know. They smiled at me as I walked past, but they didn't know I was dying inside.I stood at the back of the aisle,
The voice came again, close.I didn't know it was morning already.The light through the barred window looked pale. My back hurt from sleeping on the cold floor. I did not know how long I had been there; my hand still hurt, and my cheek was wet with tears. I did not remember crying.I stood up and looked around the room; the bars on the window cast shadows on the floor.I pressed my ear to the door and listened. I heard footsteps in the hallway and my mother's voice.She was laughing.While I am here in a room that feels like a tomb.I banged my fist against the door."Let me out!"The footsteps stopped.Then they started again, walking away.I banged harder. "Please!"My vision blurred as hot tears formed behind my eyes.I wiped my face with the back of my hand and hated myself for crying.Crying never changed anything.I heard the lock turn.The door opened and my mother stepped inside. She wore a cream-coloured dress, and her hair was pinned up. She looked like she was going to a p
The words hung in the air as I stopped walking.Don't worry, Gabi.What did that mean?I stood in the hallway, my back against the wall, staring at the closed door, my eyes filled with tears.She said it was done; there was nothing we could do.But then she whispered that.For a moment, I let myself believe she meant something hopeful. That she had changed her mind after all these years,she can finally stand beside me.I almost smiled.Then I heard her say, "I will make sure everything goes perfectly."My blood turned to ice.She did not say it like she was sorry.She said it like she was excited.The little hope I had shattered. My sister wasn't going to help meā¦she wasn't going to save me.I was left all alone in this.Two weeks had passed since my parents told me I would marry Damiano De Luca, and since then my life stopped being mine.In that time, I had become a ghost.I walked the halls of my own home like I no longer belonged there. I ate meals in silence while my parents discu







