Mag-log inBy the third day of my marriage, I had learned my place in this house. Invisible.
I stood just inside the dining room, fingers tightening around the edge of my sleeve as sunlight spilled across the polished silver and crystal glasses. The table was long enough to seat twelve, yet only four places had been set.
Vivian Lancaster, Adrian's mom sat at the far end in cream silk, elegant and cold. Beside her, Eleanor Lancaster, his grandmother, stirred tea with thin, delicate fingers, despite her age. Adrian was already there too, dressed in charcoal, scanning something on his phone with a face carved from indifference.
No one looked up or even noticed when I entered. For one foolish second, I wondered if I could slip away unnoticed.
Then Vivian's voice cut through the silence.
"You're late."
I glanced at the clock. It was Eight-oh-two. A whole two minutes.
"I'm sorry."
She finally lifted her eyes to me. "In this family, punctuality is expected, not applauded."
I moved to my seat without another word.
A maid placed a plate in front of me. Two slices of dry toast, a few strawberries, and black coffee. Across from me, Adrian had eggs, pastries, fruit, and fresh juice.
Ridiculous that I noticed.
More ridiculous that it hurt.
Nobody spoke to me for the next ten minutes. Vivian asked Adrian about an investor luncheon. Eleanor gently mentioned an upcoming charity tea. Adrian answered in short phrases, never once glancing my way.
The silence around me felt thick. It was like everyone at that table had agreed that if they ignored me long enough, I might disappear.
Eleanor was the only one who eventually broke it.
"You should eat, dear."
Dear.
The simple word startled me enough that I looked up.
Her expression was mild.
"I'm fine," I murmured.
Vivian set down her teacup with a soft click. "She'll have to be. Adjustment is part of marriage. Especially for a gold digger like her. She wanted to marry into the Lanchester so much, right? She should enjoy it."
I didn't reply and just lowered my eyes, forcing myself to swallow a bite of toast.
By the time breakfast ended, my appetite was gone.
Adrian rose first. He slid his phone into his pocket and walked out without a single glance in my direction. Vivian followed soon after, pausing only to remark that I would attend Thursday's charity tea and would do well not to embarrass the family again.
Again.
As if I had done anything but survive what they all found so distasteful.
The morning dragged. The Lancaster estate was vast, beautiful, and as cold as a museum. Every maid I passed was glanced at me with indifference, like I was some unwanted guests. Every room gleamed.
At noon, no lunch arrived.
At half past twelve, I realized that it probably wasn't an accident.
By one o'clock, hunger drove me downstairs.
The back kitchen was warm and noisy, filled with maids walking around.
An older woman with stern eyebrows looked up the moment I stepped in.
"Lost?"
I almost apologized and walked right back out.
"I'm sorry," I began. "I just thought maybe there might be tea, or something small, and if I'm not allowed..."
"Nonsense." She waved a hand. "It's a kitchen, not a courtroom."
The bluntness nearly made me smile.
"I'm Marta."
"Celia."
Marta's eyes flicked over my face, then she pointed to a stool. "Sit. You look like someone forgot to feed you."
A humiliating knot formed in my throat.
Ten minutes later, she placed a bowl of tomato soup and half a grilled cheese in front of me. The first spoonful was so warm, so normal, that I had to blink quickly before my eyes betrayed me.
"Thank you."
Marta snorted. "Don't thank me. Thank common sense."
I had just finished half the bowl when heels clicked in the doorway.
I looked up and my stomach instantly sank.
Sienna.
She stood there in a fitted white dress, sunglasses resting in her hair, her mouth curved in a smile too pretty to be kind.
Marta straightened immediately. "Miss Rowan."
"Can I borrow my sister for a minute?" Sienna asked sweetly.
Marta hesitated, then left after giving me a long look I couldn't quite read.
The second we were alone, Sienna's smile dropped.
"Well," she murmured, taking in the kitchen around me. "This suits you."
I set down my spoon. "Why are you here?"
"To check on you." Her gaze dropped to the ring on my finger. "And maybe to admire how far you'll go for leftovers."
Anger flashed through me. "You lied to him."
She gave a tiny shrug. "I couldn't stain my image. Plus, it's not my fault your 'husband' won't believe you."
"It is your fault. You forced me into this marriage. You ruined my life."
"No, Celia." She stepped closer. "I saved mine."
My hands curled into fists beneath the table.
She leaned in slightly, voice lowering. "Tell me, was it worth it? Throwing yourself into my place? Giving him your body when he thought you were me?"
How did she know? Did Adrian actually tell her?
"Yet even after that, he dumped you into a guest suite. Maybe your body was just that ugly. That's almost embarrassing enough to make me pity you."
I got to my feet so quickly the stool scraped hard across the floor.
"Get out."
To my astonishment, she laughed.
"Still pretending to have pride?" She tilted her head. "Listen carefully. Keep your head down, play obedient wife, and maybe Adrian will ignore you instead of crushing you. Because if you start believing this house is yours..." Her smile turned vicious. "I'll remind you exactly whose place you're borrowing."
Then she turned and glided out.
I stayed where I was, shaking too hard to move.
By evening, I found myself back in the kitchen helping Marta shape rosemary rolls simply because my room felt unbearable.
The dough stuck to my fingers. Flour dusted my dress. For the first time all day, my mind was almost quiet.
Then footsteps sounded behind us.
Adrian.
Marta went still at once. I did too.
He looked tired, jacket loosened, face drawn exhaustion. His eyes moved from the bread to the stew simmering on the stove, then to the flour on my hands.
"What is that?" he asked.
"Rosemary rolls," I replied before I could stop myself.
His gaze shifted to the pot. "And that?"
"Chicken stew," Marta answered.
A beat passed.
Then Adrian pulled out a chair and sat.
Both Marta and I stared.
He noticed. "Am I interrupting?"
"No, sir," Marta answered quickly.
He reached for the bowl she placed in front of him, took one spoonful, and froze.
My heart gave one hard thud. Then he lifted his eyes.
"Who made this?"
Marta opened her mouth, but I answered first.
"I did."
He looked at me for a long second. It was the first real trace of attention he had ever given me.
The office remained painfully silent long after Vanessa left.I kept my eyes on the documents scattered across Adrian's desk not daring to look up.And for some reason the whole desk was blurry. All I could think about was the way she had kissed his cheek.The way she had walked into his office without knocking.The way she had looked completely at home beside him.As if she belonged in his world perfectly well. Elegant, confident, absolutely stunning, the kind of beauty that makes one absolutely run mad. Women like Vanessa Hart didn't hesitate.Women like me did. "Celia."His voice broke through my thoughts.I looked up more quickly than I should. "What?""You've been staring at the same page for five minutes.""Oh."Heat crept into my cheeks."I was thinking.""I noticed."There was something strange in his tone.Almost amused.Embarrassingly, that only made me blush harder."I should go."I stood so quickly that my chair scraped loudly against the floor."I haven't finished."
For the next three days, I avoided Adrian Lancaster.Not because I wanted to.Nor because I was angry.Not because of anything he had done.I avoided him because I had finally become honest with myself.And the truth was humiliating.I was falling in love with my husband.The realization followed me everywhere.Into the kitchen, the garden, Eleanor's sitting room and even my dreamsEvery glance from him lingered too long.Every small kindness felt too important.Every conversation replayed in my head long after it ended.It was ridiculous.This marriage had begun with a lie.A mistake.A substitution.Adrian still believed I had stolen my sister's place.He still looked at me with suspicion sometimes.Yet my heart had chosen the worst possible moment to betray me.I hated it.Absolutely hated it."You're organizing that jewelry box upside down."I blinked.Across from me, Eleanor looked amused.I looked down.She was right.The earrings I had been sorting were now mixed again.Wonderf
The moment Adrian asked me what happened, the entire room went silent.For a second, I genuinely thought I had misheard him.Because in twenty-four years, nobody had ever asked for my version first.Not when Sienna broke Mother's favorite vase and blamed me.Not when Father accused me of losing an important contract.Not even on my wedding day.Everyone always decided I was guilty before I opened my mouth.Yet Adrian was looking at me now.Waiting for MY answer.The realization hit me so unexpectedly that my chest tightened."What happened?"His voice was calm.Controlled.But his eyes never left mine.Around us, the tension became unbearable.I could practically feel Sienna staring at me.Panicking.The way she always did whenever things stopped going according to plan."I didn't push her."My voice sounded strange to my own ears.Quiet but steady."I wasn't even near the staircase."Sienna immediately gasped.As though I'd slapped her."Celia!"Tears filled her eyes instantly.How c
I knew that smile.I had spent my entire life learning what it meant.To everyone else, Sienna Rowan looked beautiful, sweet, delicate and innocent, like she could never hurt a fly.The kind of woman people instinctively wanted to protect.To me, that smile was a warning.A storm cloud.A lit match dropped into dry grass.Trouble.And somehow, she always managed to make it everyone else's fault."Celia."Her voice was warm.Too warm."I've been looking everywhere for you."I resisted the urge to laugh.Nobody looked for me.Not unless they wanted something.Eleanor seemed to notice my expression because she suddenly became very interested in a jewelry box.Traitor."I was helping Eleanor."Sienna's gaze shifted toward the emerald brooch resting on the table.Something flashed in her eyes.Gone so quickly I almost missed it.Then she smiled."Of course you were."The room suddenly felt smaller.Adrian was still standing beside me.Not close enough to touch.Close enough to matter.And
I didn't answer immediately, The question caught me off guard that I wasn't sure on what to say. So the question just hung between us.Why did you agree to marry me?A year ago, I would have answered without hesitation.Because my family forced me.Because I had no choice.Because saying no had never changed anything.But standing in the kitchen at one in the morning, looking at Adrian across the counter, those answers suddenly felt incomplete.Not wrong.Just incomplete.Because somewhere along the way, things had changed.Or maybe I had.I looked away at first."My family needed the Lancaster deal."His gaze remained on me."That's all?"I swallowed hard.The answer should have been yes.Instead, something inside me tightened.Because that wasn't all.There had been another reason,A very stupid and childish one at thatOne I had never admitted to anyone.Not even myself.Before the wedding, before the deception, before everything went wrongI had seen Adrian Lancaster exactly twi
I should have left.The sensible thing would have been to finish my tea, say goodnight, and return to my room.But I stayed instead, Maybe because the kitchen felt different from the rest of the mansion.Or maybe because Adrian felt different tonight.I wasn't sure which possibility unsettled me more.The silence stretched between us.It wasn't awkward or comfortable, Just... strange.The kind of silence that made me aware of every little thing.The ticking clock above the stove, The warmth of the teacup in my hands, The way Adrian's sleeves were rolled to his elbows, The way his dark hair had fallen slightly out of place.I quickly looked away.What was wrong with me?"You seem surprised."His voice startled me.I blinked."What?""That I defended you today."Straight to the point.Of course, he would be.I stared into my tea."I didn't say that.""You didn't have to."The honesty of the observation caught me off guard.For a moment, neither of us spoke.Then I sighed."Maybe I
Once again I forgot to breathe.That voice, I knew exactly who it was. I looked back to confirm my fact. Adrian stood a few feet away, one hand tucked into his pocket, his expression unreadable.The older woman's smile faltered."M.. Mr..Lancaster." She stuttered. He didn't look at her immediate
I spent most of the evening staring at the ceiling.Every time I closed my eyes, I heard Adrian's voice again."My wife doesn't enjoy being interrogated for entertainment."The words shouldn't have mattered.A person can defend someone without caring about them. He could intervene simply because he
“What the hell is going on here?”Sienna’s voice sliced through the foyer sharply enough to make the housekeeper flinch.I turned fully toward the staircase.She stood three steps from the top, one manicured hand gripping the banister so tightly her knuckles had gone pale beneath her perfect makeup
The next morning, breakfast was different.I entered the dining room expecting the same dry toast, the same silence, the same elegant dismissal that had wrapped around me since arriving in the Lancaster house.Instead, there was warm tea at my place. Eggs, buttered toast and fresh fruit too.I stop







