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The next few days passed like the ticking of a slow, expensive clock.

Elara moved through Damien’s world like a ghost in silk, polished on the outside, hollow on the inside. She attended functions, smiled for caras, and nodded at conversations she didn’t care for. In return, Damien stayed out of her way.

They weren’t lovers. Not friends. Just co-owners of a lie so big, the truth couldn’t breathe beneath it.

But on the fifth night, things shifted.

"Dinner," Damien said, stepping into the lounge where she sat curled on the velvet couch with a book.

She looked up. "I already ate."

"I’m not asking," he replied calmly. "It’s not for us. My mother’s in town."

Elara sat straighter. "Your mother?"

"Yes. And she requested to et my lovely new wife."

Her stomach twisted. She’d read enough society articles to know Margot Arclight was not a woman who smiled easily.

"And if I say no?" she asked.

"You won’t," he said. "You’re a Vance. You were raised for monts like this."

He wasn’t wrong, but he didn’t know that the polished poise her mother taught her ca with a price: silent dinners, invisible bruises, and the constant pressure to be perfect even when you’re breaking.

The restaurant Damien chose was exclusive. No nus, no price just whispered recomndations and tailored service.

Margot Arclight was already seated when they arrived. A vision of steel-gray elegance in a navy dress, pearls at her throat, wine in her glass. She looked like soone who could smile while ordering your execution.

"So," she said, eyes flicking to Elara, "you’re the girl."

Elara smiled politely. "And you must be the mother."

Damien hid his smirk behind a sip of scotch.

Margot tilted her head. "I expected soone more... desperate."

Elara’s smile didn’t falter. "You’d be surprised what desperation teaches a person. Like how to play the long ga."

For a mont, Margot just stared. Then she laughed. A short, clipped sound. "Oh, she’s sharp. That’s good. Damien always did attract broken things with sharp edges."

Elara felt that cut but didn’t let it show. "I guess it takes one to recognize one."

Damien’s brows lifted slightly. Margot just sipped her wine.

Dinner passed in veiled barbs and surgical questions. Margot asked about Elara’s upbringing, her father’s scandal, her views on philanthropy.

Elara answered with equal parts charm and caution.

This wasn’t dinner.

It was an audition.

By dessert, Margot leaned back and said, "Well. You’re not what I expected. But maybe that’s exactly what this family needs."

Elara felt Damien’s hand brush hers under the table, not in affection, but quiet acknowledgnt.

You held your ground.

Well done.

In the car ride ho, silence stretched between them.

"You didn’t warn she was a viper in heels," Elara finally said.

"I thought you’d enjoy the surprise."

"I did," she said, staring out the window. "What does it say about that I’d rather battle your mother than spend another day pretending this marriage is normal?"

Damien’s voice was quiet. "It says you’re starting to fit in."

She turned to look at him. "Is that what you want? For to beco like you?"

"No," he said. "I want you to survive ."

Later that night, Elara stood at the mirror in her room, brushing out her hair. The diamond ring caught the light—beautiful, blinding, binding.

She wasn’t broken.

Not anymore.

If this was war, then she was no longer collateral.

She was strategy.

And sooner or later, Damien would realize she wasn’t just surviving him.

She was studying him.

Waiting.

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