Right before I walked down the aisle, my mother slipped a folded note into my hand.

I stood in the center of the bridal suite at the Grand Meridian Hotel, a room so opulent it felt less like a preparation chamber and more like a velvet-lined jewelry box designed to keep a prize secure. The air was thick with the scent of white lilies and expensive hairspray. My dress, a custom Vera Wang creation of heavy ivory silk and Chantilly lace, weighed upon me physically and metaphorically. It had cost more than most people earned in a decade, a fact my future mother-in-law, Victoria, had mentioned three times during the final fitting.

I ran a gloved hand over the bodice. It was exquisite. It was perfect. It was everything I, Emily VanDoren, the sole heiress to the VanDoren shipping empire, was supposed to want.

Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city skyline shimmered, but my attention was drawn to the sounds drifting up from the courtyard below. The string quartet was playing Debussy. The hum of luxury cars depositing senators, CEOs, and socialites was a low, rhythmic thrum. Today was the day I would marry Tom Rutherford. Tom, with his Kennedy-esque jawline, his impeccably tailored suits, and his ability to make me feel like I was the only person in a crowded room.

I looked in the mirror. The woman staring back was flawless. Diamond earrings—family heirlooms—caught the light. My makeup was a masterpiece of understatement. Yet, underneath the layers of tulle and tradition, I felt a strange hollowness. I dismissed it as nerves. This was the merger… the marriage… of the century. I was ready to stop being “The Heiress” and start being a wife. I was ready to be loved for who I was, not for what was in my trust fund.

The heavy oak door creaked open. I turned, expecting my mother, but it was Victoria.

VA

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