Chapter Eight: The Antagonist Speaks Too Much
The blade touched Mara’s skin.
Cold.
Familiar in the way violence becomes familiar when a woman grows up around men who call control love.
The ballroom emptied in waves.
Screams. Footsteps. Breaking glass.
Roman stopped halfway down the stairs.
His gun lowered an inch.
Victor’s arm tightened across Mara’s chest.
“Stay back.”
Mara did not move.
Her father’s breathing was loud against her ear.
Too fast.
Unsteady.
Julian cursed near the stage.
“You idiot.”
Victor shouted back.
“You said this would be clean.”
Mara’s eyes found Roman.
He looked worse under the chandelier. The fresh bandage beneath his shirt was bleeding through. His left hand gripped the railing hard enough to whiten the knuckles.
But his gun hand never shook.
“Let her go, Victor.”
Victor laughed.
Bitter.
Frightened.
“Now you speak?”
Roman’s face remained still.
“You should have stayed dead.”
“Many tried.”
Julian stepped behind a column, reaching beneath his jacket.
Mara saw.
Roman saw.
No one else did.
Victor dragged her backward.
“You ruined everything.”
Mara swallowed against the knife.
“No.”
She kept her voice even.
“You did.”
His grip jerked.
“You ungrateful girl.”
Roman took one more step.
Victor pressed the blade harder.
A thin sting opened on Mara’s throat.
Roman stopped.
There.
That was his vulnerability.
Not words.
Not pleading.
The stillness of a man watching one drop of her blood and losing the ability to breathe.
Victor saw it too.
His eyes flicked between them.
Then something ugly lit his face.
“You still love her.”
Roman said nothing.
Victor laughed again.
“That is rich.”
Julian snapped.
“Shut up.”
But Victor had already begun unraveling.
“All these years. All that money. All those threats.”
Mara’s pulse slowed.
Roman’s eyes changed.
Julian moved toward Victor.
“Enough.”
Victor shouted over him.
“He paid me, Mara.”
The room stopped.
Mara felt the knife.
Felt her father’s arm.
Felt the floor beneath her heels.
Nothing else.
Victor’s voice cracked with panic.
“Seven years ago. After the shooting. He paid your hospital bills. Paid your residency debt. Paid me to send you away.”
Mara stared at Roman.
Roman did not deny it.
Her father laughed.
“He begged.”
Roman’s jaw tightened.
Victor leaned closer to her ear.
“The great Roman Calder knelt in my study with a bullet in his chest and asked me to make you hate him.”
Mara could not breathe.
Julian drew his gun.
Roman fired first.
The shot struck Julian’s wrist.
His weapon clattered across the floor.
Victor flinched.
The knife slipped.
Mara moved.
Not like a victim.
Like a surgeon.
Precise.
She drove her elbow into Victor’s ribs, twisted under his arm, and cut his sleeve with the scalpel. Not deep. Just enough. He stumbled back with a shout.
Roman reached her before she fell.
He should not have been that fast.
His body paid for it.
The moment his hand touched her waist, his face drained of color.
Mara caught him.
“Roman.”
He looked down.
Blood spread under his jacket.
Too much.
Victor tried to run.
Roman’s men flooded the ballroom.
Julian shouted for lawyers.
Someone screamed that police were coming.
Mara heard none of it.
Roman sank to one knee.
His gun dropped.
His fingers found the edge of her sleeve.
“Your mother.”
“She is in the basement.”
“I know.”
His breath hitched.
“I sent them.”
Mara pressed both hands to his wound.
“You reopened everything.”
“Worth it.”
“Do not say that.”
His eyes lifted to hers.
Dark. Unsteady. Stripped bare by pain.
“She was never supposed to touch you.”
Mara’s hands shook once.
Only once.
He tried to smile.
Failed.
Then his body went heavy against her.
Mara lowered him to the ballroom floor as blood slid between her fingers.
Above them, the engagement flowers trembled.
White petals fell into Roman Calder’s blood.
And Mara realized the truth had arrived too late to save the man who carried it.