Chapter Seven: The Engagement Party
The Cross Hotel glittered like nothing evil had ever happened inside it.
Cameras lined the entrance.
Reporters waited behind velvet ropes.
Flowers climbed every column in obscene white spirals. Orchids, lilies, roses. Funeral flowers pretending to bless a marriage.
Mara stepped from the car in Roman’s jacket and blood-stained shoes.
The cameras flashed.
A murmur rolled through the crowd.
Someone whispered her name.
Dr. Mara Veyne.
Mercy’s miracle surgeon.
Victor’s daughter.
Julian’s bride.
Mara walked alone.
Roman’s men stayed across the street because she ordered them to. She had learned from operating rooms that too many hands caused chaos. Tonight required precision.
At the ballroom doors, Julian waited.
White tuxedo.
Soft smile.
Empty eyes.
His gaze dropped to Roman’s jacket.
“That is dramatic.”
Mara held out her hand.
“My mother.”
“After the announcement.”
“Now.”
Julian leaned closer.
“Smile first.”
She did not.
He took her wrist.
His fingers tightened just enough to warn her.
The old Mara might have flinched.
This Mara looked at his hand until he removed it.
They entered together.
Applause broke across the ballroom.
Victor stood near the stage, dressed in black, face pale with anger. When he saw Roman’s jacket, his mouth tightened.
Good.
Mara wanted him afraid.
Julian guided her toward the center.
A string quartet played something soft enough to insult the dead.
Guests smiled.
They always did.
Rich people could watch a woman walk to a cage and call it tradition if the wine was expensive.
Julian lifted a champagne glass.
“Friends, family, honored guests.”
Mara scanned the room.
Guards by the north exit.
Two more near the service hall.
One camera above the balcony.
No Evelyn.
Victor stepped to her side.
His voice was low.
“What have you done?”
Mara did not look at him.
“Arrived.”
“You should have worn white.”
“You should have protected your wife.”
His face hardened.
“Watch your tone.”
She turned then.
Slowly.
The mark from his slap had faded, but he looked at her cheek as if he could still see his hand there.
Mara let him.
Julian continued speaking.
“Tonight, two families become one.”
The ballroom applauded.
Mara’s phone vibrated once in her palm.
A message from Roman’s man.
Basement level. East service hall.
Mara slipped the phone away.
Julian turned to her.
“My bride has always been strong.”
Mara smiled.
The cameras captured it.
“She needed guidance.”
Her smile remained.
The applause softened.
Julian took her hand.
“Say yes.”
The microphone caught it.
The whole ballroom leaned closer.
Mara looked at her father.
Then at Julian.
Then at the guests who had come to watch her surrender.
“No.”
The word traveled through the speakers.
Clear.
Sharp.
Final.
Julian’s hand tightened.
The room gasped.
Mara pulled free.
“I will not marry a man who kidnaps women.”
Silence.
Then chaos.
Julian laughed.
Carefully.
“She is emotional.”
Mara lifted her phone.
The video of Evelyn appeared on the ballroom screens.
Julian’s smile vanished.
Victor stumbled back.
Whispers became shouts.
Mara stepped toward the stage.
“My mother is in this building.”
Julian lunged for her.
A gunshot cracked above the music.
People screamed.
The chandeliers trembled.
At the top of the staircase, Roman Calder stood in a black suit over fresh bandages, one hand braced against the railing, the other holding a gun angled toward the ceiling.
His face was white with pain.
His eyes were on Mara.
Only Mara.
Julian froze.
Roman descended one step.
Then another.
Blood darkened beneath his jacket.
Mara’s chest tightened.
Roman looked at Julian.
“Take your hand off my surgeon.”
The ballroom went dead quiet.
Mara turned toward him.
“You were told to stay in bed.”
Roman’s mouth twitched.
“You were told not to bring a scalpel.”
She opened her palm.
A scalpel gleamed under the chandelier.
For the first time that night, Julian Cross looked afraid.
Then Victor grabbed Mara from behind.
And pressed a knife to his daughter’s throat.