The day you were supposed to say “I do,” the entire ballroom smelled like white roses, expensive champagne, and beautifully dressed lies.
The cameras were ready.
The guests whispered behind crystal glasses and perfect smiles.
At the altar, under an arch of imported flowers, Leonardo Harrington waited for you with the calm confidence of a man who believed he had already bought not just the wedding, but the woman walking toward him.
You moved down the aisle in a dress so beautiful it looked like it belonged in a fairytale.
French lace. A long veil. Tiny pearls stitched by hand. A train that slid across the polished marble floor like moonlight.
But underneath all that perfection, your knees trembled.
Your ribs burned.
Every step felt like walking across broken glass.
No one noticed.
Or maybe no one wanted to notice.
Your mother sat in the front row, crying into a silk handkerchief. Not from joy. From fear.
Your father stared down at his lap, his knuckles white around the program.
The Harrington family’s business partners smiled like satisfied wolves. To them, this wedding was not love. It was a merger. A contract. A signature wrapped in flowers.
You reached the altar.
Leonardo took your hand.
Too hard.
His fingers pressed into the bruises already hidden beneath the sleeve of your gown.
“Smile,” he whispered without moving his lips. “Do not embarrass me.”
You lifted your eyes.
At the back of the ballroom, standing near the double doors, you saw a man who did not belong with anyone there.
Damian Salvatore.
Everyone knew his name, even if most were too afraid to say it out loud.
Billionaire hotel owner. Real estate king. Private port investor. Charity donor. Monster, depending on who was talking.
Some called him a saint to the poor and a demon to his enemies.
Others called him the mafia boss of Chicago.
No one had ever proved it.
He stood dressed in black, still as a shadow, his gaze calm enough to be terrifying.
He wasn’t smiling.
He wasn’t clapping.
He was watching.
You did not know why he was there.
He was not Leonardo’s friend. He was not part of the Harrington family’s polished world of inherited money and fake manners.
But when his eyes met yours, something inside your chest cracked.
Because for the first time in weeks, you felt seen.
Not admired.
Not owned.
Seen.
The priest began speaking.
His voice sounded distant, like it was coming from the bottom of a tunnel.
You tried to breathe.
You couldn’t.
The heavy makeup on your face started to itch. The thick foundation hiding the bruise along your cheekbone mixed with cold sweat beneath your veil. Your lips lost color.
“Valeria Morgan,” the priest said, “do you take Leonardo Harrington to be your lawfully wedded husband?”
The ballroom went silent.
Leonardo squeezed your hand harder.
“Answer,” he muttered.
You opened your mouth.
But before a single word came out, your vision blurred. The flowers became white smoke. The chandeliers became stars. Your body folded forward, and you collapsed at the altar.
Your mother’s scream ripped through the ceremony.
Cameras turned.
Guests stood.
Leonardo bent down, but not with concern.
With fury.