He CANCELED Our Wedding for a “Rich” Girl — Then My True Royal Family Reclaimed His Estate – PART 4

PART FOUR: THE CONFRONTATION

The sight of Preston Parker trudging down the two-mile gravel driveway of Oakhaven Estate, dragging a single scuffed suitcase through the mud, was a master class in poetic justice. Just weeks prior, I had walked that exact path, blinded by tears and completely broken. Now, it was his turn.

Brandy followed closely behind him, clutching a singular vintage Hermes handbag to her chest as if it were a life preserver. She was sobbing uncontrollably, her designer mascara running down her cheeks in jagged black rivers. Behind them, Richard Ashford’s fleet of security SUVs blocked the gates, ensuring the Parkers couldn’t beg for a ride. Ashford had already frozen all of Preston’s personal bank accounts pending a massive civil suit for wire fraud.

Preston wasn’t just homeless. He was effectively destitute.

I watched them from the grand balcony of the master suite, a cup of Earl Grey tea warming my hands. Suddenly, Preston stopped. He dropped his suitcase, turned around, and sprinted back past the bailiffs, dodging Inspector Miller’s outstretched arm. He ran until he was standing directly below the balcony, his chest heaving, his perfect sandy hair plastered to his forehead with sweat.

“Amelia!” he shouted, his voice cracking with desperation. “Amelia, please. I know you’re up there. Let me talk to you. Just five minutes.”

I stepped out to the edge of the stone balustrade and looked down at him. “You have exactly sixty seconds before I have Inspector Miller arrest you for trespassing, Preston.”

He fell to his knees on the manicured grass. “I made a mistake. I was blind, Amelia. My mother pushed me into it, and I was terrified of losing the estate. I didn’t want Victoria. I never loved her. I love you. We can fix this. You own Oakhaven now. We can be together just like we planned. I’ll marry you tomorrow.”

I stared at him, marveling at the sheer audacity, the staggering delusion of the man I had once thought was my soulmate. He didn’t love me. He loved the estate. And now that I was the key to the estate, he was trying to use the exact same romantic manipulation that had kept me doing his dirty work for five years.

“You don’t love me, Preston,” I said, my voice carrying clearly over the crisp afternoon air. “You love the bricks of this house. You love the easy life. But that life is over. I am not your savior. I am your landlord, and your lease is up.”

I paused, letting the cold reality sink into his panicked eyes.

“Inspector Miller, remove this trespasser.”

Two massive bailiffs grabbed Preston by the arms, dragging him kicking and screaming toward the front gates. I turned away, walking back into the warmth of the manor, finally closing the book on Preston Parker.

But the victory at Oakhaven was merely a skirmish. The real war was waiting in London.


Forty-eight hours later, I was sitting in the heavily fortified underground archives of Abernathy, Carmichael, and Hayes. Spread across a massive oak table were decades of financial records, wiretap transcripts, and private investigator reports. Henry Abernathy stood at the head of the table, a laser pointer in hand, illuminating a complex web of shell companies projected onto a screen.

“Your uncle, Lord Charles Montclair, is not a foolish man,” Mr. Abernathy explained grimly. “When he orchestrated the boating accident that killed your parents, he knew he couldn’t simply take the title outright. The Crown heavily scrutinizes sudden successions. So, he claimed the role of steward of the Duchy, acting in trust until you were legally declared dead. That declaration was supposed to happen this year, on the twenty-fifth anniversary of your disappearance.”

I stared at a photograph of Charles. He was a striking man in his late fifties, with silver hair, sharp cheekbones, and ice-blue eyes that mirrored the chilling emptiness of a predator.

“He’s been bleeding the estate dry,” I noted, tracing a line on a financial flowchart.

“Exactly, Your Grace,” Mr. Abernathy nodded. “Because he knew our firm would fight his legal ascension to the title, he started funneling the liquid assets of the Montclair empire—art, offshore accounts, tech investments—into anonymous shell corporations based in the Cayman Islands. But tomorrow night, he plans to execute his most brazen theft yet.”

Mr. Abernathy clicked a button, bringing up a blueprint of Somerset Castle, the sprawling, ancient fortress in Yorkshire that served as the primary seat of the Montclair dukes.

“He has brokered a private deal with a consortium of international developers,” the lawyer continued. “He intends to sign a ninety-nine-year lease—effectively selling the eastern wing of Somerset Castle and five thousand acres of prime ancestral hunting land to be turned into a commercial luxury resort. The signing is scheduled to take place tomorrow evening at the Sovereign’s Crystal Ball at Whitehall Palace.”

My blood ran cold. The eastern wing of Somerset Castle was where my mother’s memorial gardens were located. It was the only part of my heritage I had left to connect with the parents I never knew. Charles wasn’t just stealing money—he was erasing our history.

“The contract is null and void without the signature of the reigning Duke or Duchess,” I stated, my fists clenching.

“True,” Mr. Abernathy agreed. “But he plans to forge a proxy signature, claiming a magistrate has finally signed your death certificate. If that ink dries and the money changes hands, it will take us a decade of international litigation to unravel the mess. We cannot let him sign that document.”

I stood up, the heavy gold signet ring on my finger catching the harsh fluorescent light of the archive. “Then we make sure he doesn’t. Get me on the guest list for the Crystal Ball, Mr. Abernathy. It’s time I introduced myself to my uncle.”


The Sovereign’s Crystal Ball was the undisputed pinnacle of the British aristocratic social season. Held in the historic Banqueting House at Whitehall Palace beneath the breathtaking painted ceiling of Peter Paul Rubens, it was an event where billionaires, royals, and politicians gathered to broker deals that shaped the global economy.

Arriving uninvited was social suicide. Arriving as a dead woman was something else entirely.

Clara Davies, the stylist who had prepared me for the Oakhaven ambush, outdid herself. She had sourced a breathtaking custom-made emerald green velvet gown that trailed behind me like liquid glass. But the true centerpiece was what Mr. Abernathy had personally retrieved from the ultra-secure underground vaults of the Bank of England earlier that morning.

Secured in my swept-up hair was the Montclair emerald tiara—a priceless, multi-tiered masterpiece of diamonds and massive Colombian emeralds that had been worn by the Duchesses of Somerset-Montclair for three centuries. Around my neck rested a matching collar necklace. I was practically radiating wealth, power, and ancient authority.

As my armored Bentley arrived at Whitehall, the flash bulbs of the paparazzi went into a blinding frenzy. I stepped out, flanked by Mr. Abernathy and four towering private security contractors. The moment the press caught sight of the tiara, a wave of stunned shouting erupted from the press pens. They knew exactly what that jewelry meant.

The Montclair heir had returned.

Inside the Banqueting House, the atmosphere was thick with the scent of expensive perfume, old money, and whispered secrets. I moved through the grand hall like a ghost haunting a royal court. Conversations died instantly as I passed. Glasses of champagne were lowered. Aristocrats stared in naked shock.

I scanned the room, my eyes sweeping past minor royals and tech moguls until I found my target. Lord Charles Montclair was standing in a private, roped-off VIP alcove near the back of the hall. He was surrounded by four men in slick, tailored suits—the international developers. On a small antique table between them sat a thick stack of leather-bound contracts and a gold fountain pen.

Charles was holding a glass of scotch, laughing effortlessly at something one of the developers had said.

I didn’t hesitate. I marched directly toward the alcove, the crowd parting for me in total awestruck silence. The two bodyguards flanking the VIP ropes stepped forward to block my path, but Mr. Abernathy was faster. He snapped a laminated High Court badge in their faces.

“Official court business. Step aside or face immediate obstruction charges.”

The guards hesitated, and I slipped past them, coming to a halt just inches from the antique table.

Charles looked up, annoyed by the interruption. His icy blue eyes locked onto mine. For a fraction of a second, I saw it. The absolute paralyzing terror of a man who was looking at a ghost. He recognized my face. He saw my mother’s cheekbones and my father’s defiant jawline. And then, his eyes flicked upward to the emerald tiara, and all the blood drained from his face.

“Hello, Uncle,” I said, my voice smooth, loud, and echoing in the suddenly silent alcove. “I apologize for my tardiness. It’s been a long twenty-five years.”

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Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

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