Rain hammered against the towering windows of the Beaumont Estate on the northern edge of New Orleans, Louisiana, where mansions slept behind iron gates and manicured lawns. Inside, the chandeliers glistened and classical music floated through the hall, muted by stormy winds. Silas Beaumont, a technology magnate admired across the country, stood barefoot on the marble floor of his private ballroom.
He was known for investments, charity galas, and a smile that looked like it had been carved by sculptors, yet his heart was restless. He adjusted the cuff of his tailored shirt and stared at the reflection in the glass. His own eyes looked back at him, filled with doubt.
For months, people whispered that his fiancée loved his wealth more than his soul. He had brushed away the rumors. He believed in loyalty.
He believed in seeing the best in people. Still, suspicion coiled through him like fog. He murmured to himself, “Have you ever pretended to be broken, just to discover who would try to mend you?”
Only the storm answered.
He practiced holding his breath and dropping to the ground in a controlled collapse. His personal trainer, a former stage actor, taught him how to keep muscles loose and still. Today, he planned to stage a fainting spell.
The day before the wedding. If Tiffany Monroe, the striking blonde who wore diamonds like air, truly cared, she would show fear and devotion. Silas needed to know before he signed away his heart and the prenuptial agreements that hid behind polite envelopes.
He did not expect the bitterness rising in his throat. It tasted metallic and sharp. When the wineglass slipped from his fingers and shattered across the marble, he thought it was his cue.
He let his knees buckle. His body hit the ground with a hollow crack. He tried to blink, but his eyelids felt like stone.
Nearby, red heels clicked forward. Tiffany appeared in his narrowing field of vision. She towered above him like a goddess of ice, her lipstick matching her shoes.
She swirled wine in her glass and only watched him struggle. “Finally,” she whispered, voice smooth as silk. “The performance is over.”
Silas tried to rise, but his muscles refused.
He felt paralysis tightening around him, moving through his veins like poison. Panic bloomed. He had rehearsed stillness for five minutes.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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