Her Ex Chose Her Sister, Then a Dangerous Hotel Owner Walked In-paupau

“I’m marrying your sister.”

Ethan Prescott whispered it like a secret, but he meant it like a weapon.

He leaned close enough that his cologne slid over my skin, sharp and expensive, and for one second the whole table at Bellini’s seemed to tilt toward us.

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The wine glass was cold under my fingers.

The chandelier light caught Chloe’s engagement ring and threw a bright little flash across the white tablecloth.

My mother watched me over the rim of her glass.

She wanted grace.

Not real grace, of course.

She wanted the kind that looks good in front of waiters.

She wanted me to swallow what everyone had done and call it maturity.

I had been good at that for most of my life.

Oldest daughters learn early that silence can be mistaken for strength if everybody benefits from it.

I had made peace in rooms where nobody deserved it.

I had softened my voice.

I had apologized for other people’s cruelty because the alternative was being called difficult.

But there are some sentences that do not ask you to answer.

They ask you to become someone else.

“I’m marrying your sister,” Ethan whispered again, because he thought the first time had not cut deep enough.

Across the table, Chloe twisted the ring around her finger.

My father stared at his plate.

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