Two days later, Adrian treated the entire situation like a temporary mood swing. He sent flowers to my office with a note demanding I “be reasonable.” I had them placed beside the recycling bins in the lobby. Then came the messages telling me not to embarrass him publicly and reminding me that we needed to look united at lunch on Friday. United was Adrian’s favorite word whenever he really meant obedient. The lunch was scheduled at Bellamy House, an exclusive private club filled with velvet chairs, oil portraits, and wealthy people pretending they never gossiped. Adrian had invited investors, family members, and even a society magazine editor preparing a feature about our wedding.
What Adrian failed to understand was that Bellamy House existed because of my family. My grandmother founded it decades earlier. Her portrait still hung above the fireplace in the garden room. The staff knew my name long before Adrian ever entered the building. Friday morning, I dressed in ivory—not bridal ivory, but funeral ivory. My assistant Noelle handed me a slim folder confirming everything had been completed. Every hotel reservation, floral contract, and wedding arrangement attached to my financial accounts had been canceled or revoked. Worse for Adrian, the bridge loan keeping his company afloat had officially defaulted after auditors uncovered inflated contracts and false projections tied to his business reports.
At noon, I entered Bellamy House quietly through the side entrance while staff flawlessly adjusted place cards, menus, and seating arrangements. On Adrian’s chair, I placed a cream envelope sealed with black wax. Inside were four things: the public statement ending our engagement, notices canceling every wedding privilege connected to my accounts, a copy of his company’s loan default notice, and one photograph. The image showed Adrian kissing Camille’s best friend, Tessa, beside a hotel service elevator. The photo had reached me weeks earlier, but love has a dangerous way of making intelligent women delay the truth they already recognize.
When the guests arrived, Vivienne immediately demanded to know why I was seated at the head of the table. The maître d’ calmly informed her that today the arrangement belonged to me. Camille laughed nervously and asked whether he understood who they were. “Yes,” he answered politely, and somehow that single word unsettled her more than any argument could have. Then Adrian entered mid-conversation on his phone, loudly assuring someone that I was emotional but would come back around like always. The moment he saw me seated beneath my grandmother’s portrait, his confidence faltered. I nodded toward the envelope waiting on his chair, and for the first time all afternoon, Adrian Vale looked nervous- 