Her Fiancé Wanted Her Sister. His Brother Became Her Revenge-tantan

When I saw Julian Marrow touch my sister like she belonged to him, the first thing I noticed was not the hand.

It was the comfort of it.

His palm settled at the small of Sophie’s back beneath the chandelier, slow and familiar, with the kind of careless possession a person only shows when he forgets he is being watched.

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The ballroom smelled of candle wax, champagne, winter coats, and lilies arranged too perfectly in glass bowls.

Outside, frost pressed against the tall windows of Blackthorne House, turning the gardens into something silver and brittle.

Inside, people in tailored suits and polished heels laughed softly beneath crystal lights and pretended that wealth made cruelty more tasteful.

I stood near the edge of the dance floor with a half-full champagne flute in my hand.

I did not cry.

I did not scream.

I counted.

One second for his thumb moving once against the green silk of Sophie’s dress.

Two seconds for Sophie leaning into him, not startled, not confused, not even ashamed until she looked up.

Three seconds for both of them to see me.

That was how long it took for my engagement party to become a crime scene without a crime.

My name is Alina Voss.

At thirty-two, I owned Voss Preservation Studio, a small but respected historical restoration firm that worked between Boston and Providence.

I saved old houses, public halls, stone libraries, broken cornices, ruined staircases, and neighborhoods that rich men preferred to describe as obsolete.

That was the funny part, if you were cruel enough to laugh at it.

I had spent my career protecting buildings from men like Julian.

Then I got engaged to him.

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