LOGINCharlotte Whitmore never expected to be a bride. Certainly not his bride. When her sister Victoria vanishes hours before her highly publicized wedding to billionaire CEO Damien Blackwood, Charlotte is pushed down the aisle as a last minute replacement. No warning. No choice. No love. She enters the marriage expecting coldness, resentment, and a swift exit. What she finds instead is far more complicated. Damien is guarded, powerful, and hiding something serious. The closer Charlotte gets, the more she realizes that Blackwood Empire is sitting on secrets that go back decades and somehow, impossibly, some of those secrets have her name on them. She came as a substitute. But what if she was always meant to be there? What happens when the woman everyone overlooked turns out to be the one person powerful enough to save an empire and the man who runs it?
View MoreThe flowers arrived at six in the morning.
Three vans. White roses, peonies, and something imported that I couldn’t name but that cost more than my monthly allowance. I watched them carry the arrangements through the front door of the Whitmore Estate from the top of the stairs, still in my pajamas, still holding a mug of tea that had already gone cold because I’d been standing there too long.
Nobody looked up at me.
That was fine. I was used to it.
“Charlotte, you’re in the way.”
I stepped aside before I even looked to see who said that. One of the wedding coordinators, a sharp faced woman in all black with a clipboard pressed to her chest like a shield, moved past me without a second glance.
I stood there for a second longer than I should have, like some part of me was waiting for an apology that was never coming, then went back to my room.
By eight o’clock the house had transformed into something I barely recognized. The Whitmore Estate was already a big house, the kind of house that made visitors go quiet when they first walked in, all high ceilings and polished floors and portraits of people who looked like they had never once doubted themselves. But today it felt like a completely different place.
Staff moved in every direction. Florists argued quietly near the staircase. A woman with a headset kept repeating the same instructions into her mouthpiece like the person on the other end kept getting it wrong. Someone was ironing something in the hallway outside Victoria’s room and the smell of gardenias was so thick in the air it was starting to sit at the back of my throat.
I came downstairs in a simple blue dress, my hair pulled back, carrying a breakfast tray I had quietly asked the kitchen to put together for Victoria. Fruit, a croissant, a small pot of honey because she used to like honey in the mornings. I wasn’t even sure if she still did. We didn’t really have those kinds of conversations anymore.
My mother was standing outside Victoria’s bedroom door when I reached there. Margaret Whitmore was already fully dressed, light champagne skirt suit, pearl earrings, hair set like she had somewhere important to be. Of course she did, there first daughter’s wedding.She looked like she hadn’t slept but you would never know it from looking at her.
“Mom,” I said. “I thought Victoria might want something to eat before the wedding.”
My mother turned and looked at the tray, then at me. She had this way of doing that, looking at me like she was quickly calculating whether what I’d done was going to help or just make things more complicated.
“She’s with the makeup artist,” she said. “She won’t want to eat. You’ll smudge something.”
“I’ll be care—”
“Charlotte.” That soft voice that wasn’t actually soft. “Just leave the tray downstairs. The staff will handle it.”
I looked at the tray for a moment. I don’t know what I expected, a thank you maybe, or at least some acknowledgment that I had tried. I didn’t get either.
“Okay,” I said and took it back downstairs.
The kitchen was busy but nobody bothered me there. I sat at the small table by the window that looked out at the garden and I ate the croissant myself, which was honestly very good, and I watched two of the florists outside argue over the placement of an arch near the garden gate. They had been going back and forth about it for twenty minutes. Neither of them was winning.
“You’re sitting in here alone?”
I looked up. My father, Nathan Whitmore, was at the kitchen door already in his charcoal suit, perfectly pressed, the kind of suit that reminded everyone who saw him that he had built something real from nothing. He had greying hair at his temples and a way of standing that made every room feel slightly more official than it was before he walked in.
“Yeah, having breakfast,” I said.
He glanced around the kitchen like he wasn’t entirely sure it was the right place for me to be seen on a day like this. “Your mother needs help coordinating the front arrivals. The Blackwood family is coming earlier than expected.”
“I can help.”
“Make sure you’re dressed properly first.” He looked at my blue dress, not unkindly but not warmly either. “Something more appropriate for the occasion.”
“This is appropriate,” I said, but quietly, because he was already turning around. He didn’t hear me or if he did he didn’t think it needed a response.
I finished the croissant alone and told myself it didn’t bother me.
It bothered me a little.
I went to change the dress anyway.
A cream colored dress this time, something I had bought for a function six months ago and worn just once. I stood in front of my mirror and looked at myself and tried to figure out why I felt so empty on a day that everyone else in this house was treating like the most exciting morning of their lives.
Victoria was getting married.
Victoria was marrying Damien Blackwood.
Even just thinking the name did something strange. Damien Blackwood, CEO of Blackwood Empire, one of the most powerful companies in the country. Thirty years old. Built like someone had designed him specifically to stand at the top of things and never come down. I had seen his photographs in newspapers and on business pages, always in a dark suit, always with that expression like he was already three steps ahead of whatever room he was in.
He did not look like a warm person.
But Victoria didn’t need warm. Victoria needed powerful. She needed the kind of man whose name opened doors and Damien Blackwood’s name didn’t just open doors. It built them.
I looked at myself in the mirror for another second, smoothed the front of my dress, and went back downstairs.
Victoria’s room was open when I passed it.
I paused at the door without really meaning to.
She was at her vanity table surrounded by three people. The makeup artist working carefully on her eyes. A woman I didn’t recognize steaming the wedding dress where it hung against the far wall like something from a magazine. Another woman pinning Victoria’s hair up piece by piece with the kind of precision that made it look effortless even though it clearly wasn’t.
Victoria herself was looking at her reflection with this calm focused expression I had honestly always been a little envious of. She was already beautiful before anyone touched her. Blonde hair, blue eyes, a face that looked like it had been arranged specifically to be admired. She had always looked like she belonged somewhere important.
She caught my eye in the mirror.
“You changed?” she asked.
“Dad said to dress for the occasion.”
“He said that to you?” She tilted her head just slightly, careful not to move too much for the makeup artist. “He told me you were wandering around in something casual.”
“I was having breakfast.”
“On today of all days.” She said it lightly. She always said things lightly. That was how you knew she meant them.
“I wanted to bring you something to eat,” I said. “Mom said you wouldn’t want it.”
“I don’t.” She looked back at her own reflection. “But it was nice of you.”
I leaned against the door frame. “How are you feeling?”
“How do I look?”
“Beautiful,” I said. Because she did. That was never the question.
“Then that’s how I’m feeling.” She smiled at herself in the mirror, small and satisfied, and the makeup artist made a quiet approving sound.
I stood there a moment longer and I noticed something I couldn’t quite name. She seemed calm, yes, but it was a different kind of calm from what I expected. Not the excited composed calm of a woman about to get married. Something else. Something that felt a little off.
Her phone was face down on the vanity table. It had been face down every time I had seen it that morning.
I didn’t say anything. I wasn’t sure what I would even say.
“I’ll let you finish getting ready,” I said.
She didn’t respond. She was already holding the phone up to show the makeup artist something on the screen, and whatever it was she made sure I couldn’t see it before I turned to leave.
I walked away from the door.
My mother found me in the sitting room about twenty minutes later.
“Charlotte, I need you to go check that the seating cards have been laid out correctly in the reception area. The coordinator said she handled it but I want someone I trust to confirm.”
“Of course,” I said, because that was what I always said.
I started to stand and then stopped. “Mom, can I ask you something?”
She looked at her watch. “Quickly.”
“Does Victoria seem nervous to you?”
My mother blinked. It was such a small question but she looked at me like I had said something that didn’t make sense. “Why would Victoria be nervous? This is everything she’s worked toward. Damien Blackwood is exactly the kind of man Victoria deserves.”
“I know,” I said. “I just meant nervous in a normal way. It’s a big day.”
“Victoria doesn’t do nervous,” my mother said, and the thing was she genuinely believed that. I could see it. “She does prepared.” She smoothed the front of her skirt. “Now go check those cards. And Charlotte, be pleasant to everyone today. The Blackwood family will be watching everything.”
“I know.”
“And stay out of Victoria’s way. She doesn’t need distractions today.”
“Yes Mom.”
She walked away toward the voices near the entrance hall and I stood there in the sitting room for a moment by myself, surrounded by flowers that weren’t for me, in a house buzzing with excitement that had nothing to do with me, on the most important day in my family’s recent history.
I was the one checking seating cards.
That was my place in this story and I had always known it.
I picked up my bag and walked to the reception area, passing staff members and florists and a photographer who nearly walked straight into me and apologized to the wall just behind my head.
I checked the seating cards.
They were perfect. They were always going to be perfect. But my mother needed someone she trusted to confirm it and in this family that someone was always me, for reasons I had long stopped trying to examine too closely.
I stood at the long table and looked at the names in their neat rows. Blackwood. Whitmore. Sterling. Grant. Names I recognised from business pages and the kind of society columns that Victoria read and I didn’t.
And then somewhere upstairs I heard my mother’s voice rise sharply above all the noise of the house. Not in excitement.
In panic.
The invitation arrived on a Tuesday, slipped onto the breakfast table by Helen without comment, thick cream cardstock with gold lettering that I almost mistook for another wedding announcement before I read it properly.“The Hargrove Foundation gala,” Damien said, not looking up from his coffee. “Saturday. We’ll need to go.”“We,” I repeated.“You’re my wife.” He said it simply, like that settled the matter entirely, which I supposed it did. “It’s the first major event since the wedding. People will be watching to see how we handle it.”“How we handle being married, you mean.”“How you handle becoming Mrs. Blackwood in front of people who already have opinions about it.” He finally looked up. “I should have mentioned it sooner. I’m telling you now so you have time to prepare, not because I think you need warning.”“I
Charlotte’s POVHe knocked on my door at eight thirty.I wasn’t asleep. I had been lying in the dark for about an hour doing the thing I had been doing every night since I moved into this house, staring at the ceiling and turning things over in my mind until they stopped making sense and started just being noise. The heir clause. Eleanor’s dinner. The question I had asked Damien in the library that he had walked away from without answering.I sat up when I heard the knock.“Come in,” I said.He opened the door but didn’t come in fully. Just stood in the doorway with one hand on the frame, still dressed, which told me he hadn’t been anywhere near sleep either. The corridor light was behind him and I couldn’t read his expression properly from where I was sitting on the bed.“I said I would talk to you tonight,” he said. “I should have come earlier.”“It’
Damien’s POVI noticed her at breakfast first.Not in the way I had been noticing things about her since the wedding, those small practical observations that any person would make about someone new in their space. This was different. This was the kind of noticing that didn’t have a clean category and therefore irritated me slightly.She came downstairs at seven fifteen with her hair still damp from the shower and a book under her arm that she clearly intended to read while she ate, which told me she was either very comfortable or very determined to appear so. I suspected it was the second one. I had watched enough people perform comfort in my house to know what it looked like when someone was working at it.But she wasn’t performing exactly.That was the thing I couldn’t quite file away properly.She sat down across from me and said good morning and poured her own coffee without waiting for anyone to do it for her and
I found out by accident.Damien hadn’t invited me. He hadn’t mentioned it. I just happened to be walking past the study at the wrong time, or maybe the right time depending on how you looked at it, and the door was open by about four inches and the voice coming through it was not the voice I had heard at breakfast or during the house rules conversation or at dinner with Eleanor.It was something else entirely.“I don’t care what they agreed to last quarter,” he was saying. “That number is not acceptable and if Morrison thinks I’m going to sit across from him and pretend it is then he doesn’t know me as well as he thinks he does.”I stopped walking.I know I should have kept going. It was a private call and I had no business standing in the corridor listening to it. But something about the tone held me there. Not anger exactly. It was colder than anger. More precise. The kind of voice that didn&r












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