LOGINEva hadn't slept.
The photograph sat face-down in her bag like a weight she couldn't put down, its faded blue ink and impossible date burned into her memory even without looking at it again.
*Forever.* A date she knew by heart for all the wrong reasons.
When Julian told her the family was waiting for breakfast, her stomach sank straight through the floor.
"I'd rather not—"
"As my wife," Julian said, already turning toward the door, "you don't have a choice."
---
The dining room went quiet the moment she walked in.
Eva stood in the doorway, waiting for someone to offer her a seat.
Aunt Beatrice set down her teacup with deliberate precision. "Replacement brides don't belong at the family table."
The silence that followed had teeth.
Eva felt her face go hot.
Julian didn't even look up from his coffee.
"Sit," he said.
The aunt's mouth tightened, she said nothing further.
Eva sat, because it was the only option left.
---
The coffee came a few minutes later, poured too fast, spilling hot across the front of her dress before she could pull away. Fabric soaked through. Her skin stung underneath it.
A maid rushed forward with a cloth, reaching for the spill.
"Leave it."
The same aunt again, not even glancing up, waving the maid off with two fingers. "Let her sit in it. Maybe she'll learn to be more careful next time."
The maid hesitated, cloth still in hand, then stepped back.
Eva looked around the table. Waiting for someone to intervene.
---
No one moved. Julian's jaw was tight, but he said nothing.
Eva sat there in a soaked, stinging dress, surrounded by people who watched her discomfort like it was mildly interesting television, and understood something she wished she didn't.
She was furniture in this house. Something to be tolerated.
She excused herself before anyone could enjoy her humiliation any longer, and made it exactly to the bathroom door before her hands started shaking.
---
Down the hall, Julian lingered outside longer than he meant to.
Two cousins near the staircase, voices low.
"She'll be gone within a month."
"Just like the last one."
---
The sound of tires on gravel pulled Eva to the window before she'd finished changing.
A red sports car swept through the gates too fast. Sunglasses first. Then her sister stepped out, dressed like she'd walked off a magazine cover, smiling like the last twenty-four hours hadn't happened at all.
She crossed the courtyard straight toward Eva, heels striking stone.
"You look terrible," she said, pulling off the sunglasses.
"You disappeared. The wedding—" I had ---"
"I know what you had to do." Her gaze dropped to Eva's hand. To the ring.
"Give it back."
Before Eva could answer, her sister lunged — quick, sharp, fingers closing around Eva's hand, trying to twist the ring loose right there on her finger.
"Stop—" Eva yanked her hand back so hard she stumbled against the wall. "What is wrong with you?"
"It was never yours," her sister snapped, breathing hard, like the failed grab had cost her something. "Give it to me. Now."
"No." Eva's voice shook, but she didn't move. "You left. You don't get to walk back in and—"
"Then I'll tell Julian why you really disappeared five years ago."
The words landed like ice water.
Eva went completely still. "What are you talking about?"
Her sister's expression flickered — triumph first, then something else underneath it.
"You know exactly what I'm talking about."
"I don't." Eva's heart pounded so hard it hurt. "I don't remember anything from five years ago. I don't even know what happened to me."
For one second, her sister's carefully composed face cracked. Not guilt. Terror — raw and sudden, like she'd said more than she meant to.
"You think I wanted this?" Her voice dropped, quieter, almost pleading. "You think I *chose* to run?"
"Then why did you?"
Her sister opened her mouth. Closed it. Her eyes darted toward the mansion, toward the windows, like she was checking whether someone was listening.
"If I hadn't run," she whispered, "he would have—"
She stopped herself so abruptly she nearly bit the sentence in half.
"He who?" Eva stepped closer. "Who forced you to run?"
Her sister's face went white. Whatever confidence she'd walked in with was gone, replaced by something that looked, for the first time, genuinely afraid.
"Forget I said anything," she said, She yanked her sunglasses back on, hands trembling. "Keep the ring. Keep the husband. Keep all of it."
She turned and walked fast toward the car, heels stumbling once on the gravel.
She Starts the engine.Lowers the window.
Looks directly at Eva.
Then quietly says: "You really don't remember him."
Eva freezes.
"Withdraw your wife from the Whitmore Gala."The words landed before the meeting had properly begun.Around the polished table, no one spoke.Julian finished signing the document in front of him before placing his pen aside."Say that again."One of the directors cleared his throat."One public mistake is all it takes. The restaurant incident has already done enough damage, and Lady Ashworth's table is the worst place to send someone inexperienced."Another director slid a printed report across the table."Let Beatrice represent the group instead. She knows the room. Mrs. Castellan doesn't."Julian glanced at the report but made no move to pick it up."Mrs. Castellan will attend."The answer was so calm that, for a moment, no one replied."Julian—"He rose from his chair, fastening his jacket with practiced ease."If anyone here would like to inform Lady Ashworth that the Castellan family is declining her invitation..." His gaze swept across the room. "You're welcome to do it yourselv
Stand up."Eva looked up from the guest list spread across her desk.Grandmother Isabella stood in the doorway, one hand resting on her cane, her expression as unreadable as ever."I beg your pardon?""You'll never survive the Whitmore Gala sitting down."Isabella stepped inside and quietly closed the door behind her.Her gaze shifted to the maid arranging dresses by the wardrobe."Give us a moment."The maid lowered her head and slipped out.Only when the door clicked shut did Isabella turn back to Eva."Stand."Eva rose slowly.Isabella circled her once, saying nothing.The silence lasted just long enough to make Eva wonder what the older woman had already noticed."Julian taught you names," Isabella said at last. "That's a good start."She stopped in front of Eva."Names won't matter if you walk into that ballroom asking permission to belong."Grandmother Isabella tapped the floor lightly with her cane."Straighten your shoulders."Eva did."Better.""Now walk to the window."Eva d
"The board moved tomorrow's emergency meeting to this afternoon."Leo stopped just inside the study, waiting until Julian finished signing the page in front of him.Only then did Julian speak."Why?""They've requested an immediate vote."The pen paused.Leo swallowed before continuing."Some of the directors believe your marriage is becoming a liability to Castellan Group."Silence settled over the room.Julian closed the file, set the pen aside, and finally looked up."What time?""Three o'clock.""Inform them I'll attend.""Sir... if the vote goes against you—""Then they can say it to my face."---Beatrice waited until breakfast was nearly over.Then she placed an ivory invitation beside Julian's coffee cup."The Whitmore Charity Gala is next week."No one reached for the invitation."The guest list is... selective," Beatrice continued. "Politicians, business leaders, old families. The Ashworth family personally requested our presence this year."Her gaze settled on Eva."I think
Julian opened the passenger door without a word.Eva remained rooted to the pavement. Cameras were still pointed at her from every angle, flashes bursting as strangers recorded, whispered, and turned her worst moment into tomorrow's headlines."Get in."His voice was quiet, but it sliced through the noise. There was no impatience, no anger—just certainty. The kind that left no room to argue.Eva glanced once at the sea of phones surrounding them.Then she slipped into the passenger seat.The door closed, shutting out the shouting outside.----The first few minutes passed in silence. Nothing but the soft tap of rain against the windshield and the steady hum of the engine.Eva stared out the window, her arms wrapped around herself. Sophie's voice wouldn't leave her alone.Congratulations on stealing my husband.Julian didn't ask why she'd left. He didn't mention the scandal already spreading online or question how she'd slipped past his security."Did she hit you?"Eva turned to him, ca
Beatrice didn't raise her voice.She never had to."Mrs. Castellan seems to have forgotten she's a guest in this family." She folded her hands in her lap, her gaze settling on the housekeeper waiting with her head bowed."Should I speak to her, ma'am?" the woman asked cautiously."No." Beatrice smiled, calm enough to make the answer worse. "Since she's so determined to defend the staff, perhaps it's time she learned how this house really works."The housekeeper hesitated, expecting another instruction.None came.Only that elegant smile that never reached Beatrice's eyes.The housekeeper curtsied and quietly left.---Eva couldn't stop thinking about the withdrawal slip.By mid-morning, she'd talked her way past the estate gates and climbed into a taxi. The address on the bank's letterhead was folded tightly in her hand.She needed answers.The bank manager welcomed her with a polite smile, but it disappeared the moment she explained why she'd come.He checked his computer before look
"Your marriage is becoming a liability."The words landed like a stone in still water.Nobody spoke.Julian didn't react. He kept his eyes on the report in front of him, turning a page as though nothing important had just been said. Around the table, however, every pair of eyes stayed fixed on him, waiting for the smallest crack."Explain," he said at last.His voice was calm. The board member cleared his throat. He was older, silver-haired, and carried himself with the quiet confidence of a man who had spent years waiting for the perfect chance to challenge a Castellan.He slid a folder across the polished table.Several newspaper clippings spilled out.Eva's face stared back from nearly every page.Replacement Bride.Run - away bride.Wedding Scandal.Headline after headline, stacked together like evidence waiting for a guilty verdict."Our shareholders have started asking questions," the man said, About the company's stability."Julian finally looked up."Is there a point," he aske







