"Stop fidgeting," Seraphina whispered, her hand pressing firmly against Pax's shoulder.
"Stop fidgeting," Seraphina whispered, her hand pressing firmly against Pax's shoulder.
The ballroom of the Plaza Hotel thrummed with the kind of money that could buy small countries. Crystal chandeliers cast blinding prisms across silk gowns and diamond necklaces. Seraphina stood in the far corner, a ghost in her borrowed, slightly-too-tight black dress, trying to make herself invisible. Her phone, tucked away in a small clutch, felt like a lead weight. She'd seen the email from Mount Sinai just before they'd left the apartment, the subject line a punch to the gut: Urgent Update on Fiona's Treatment Plan. She hadn't dared to open it, but she knew what it meant. More tests, more experimental drugs, more money she didn't have.
"I'm not fidgeting," Pax muttered, his eyes darting around the room. At five years old, he looked like any other kid in his miniature suit, but the old tablet he clutched under the tablecloth was a dead giveaway. He wasn't here for the canapés.
Rowan leaned against her left leg, quiet as a shadow, while Fiona tugged on Seraphina's right sleeve. "Mommy, I'm still hungry."
Seraphina scanned the nearest waiter's tray. Only one mini grilled cheese sandwich left. She grabbed it, breaking it into three tiny pieces. "Here. Share."
Fiona popped her piece into her mouth, her eyes drifting toward the stage where a man in a tailored tuxedo commanded the microphone. Donovan Vance. He looked like he was carved from marble, cold and untouchable.
"Mommy," Fiona whispered, her eyes wide, "is that man a king?"
Seraphina's stomach dropped. A memory flashed-sticky heat, darkness, a heavy weight, and a blinding panic that stole her breath. She blinked it away, her hand instinctively moving to cover her wrist. "No, sweetie. Just a man. Eat your cheese."
On stage, the host, Miles Baxter, clapped his hands. "And now, the moment you've all been waiting for! The Vance Foundation Annual Children's Charity Raffle!"
The massive screens behind him exploded into a whirlwind of scrolling names. Seraphina grabbed the kids' hands. "Okay, time to go. We ate, we saw, we leave."
"But the spinning pictures!" Fiona whined, digging her heels into the plush carpet. "I want to see who wins!"
Seraphina tugged, but Fiona was surprisingly stubborn. Under the tablecloth, Pax's fingers flew across his tablet. A faint smile touched his lips. He wasn't hacking the system itself-that was impossible. But he had found a loophole in the guest registration portal an hour earlier. A simple glitch. Names entered in the final thirty seconds before the raffle began were temporarily cached at the top of the display's rendering queue. He'd typed their name in at the precise moment the host started speaking. He tapped the screen twice, submitting the entry.
The screens on stage stuttered for a fraction of a second. The scrolling slowed, the names blurring, until they locked onto three words in bold gold font.
FLETCHER TRIPLETS.
The room went silent. A spotlight swung from the stage, slicing through the dim lighting like a blade, landing directly on the corner where Seraphina stood.
Her heart slammed against her ribs. The heat of the light was suffocating. Every pair of eyes in the room-socialites, billionaires, heiresses-turned to stare at the woman in the cheap dress and her three mismatched children.
"Ladies and gentlemen!" Miles boomed, his voice echoing off the high ceilings. "It looks like we have our winners! The Fletcher Triplets! Please, come on up!"
Seraphina couldn't move. Her feet felt glued to the floor. This wasn't supposed to happen. They were supposed to eat the fancy food and slip out the back.
Fiona, oblivious to the tension, squealed with delight. "We won, Mommy! We won!" She yanked her hand free from Seraphina's grip and started marching toward the stage, her little patent leather shoes clicking on the marble.
"Fiona, wait!"
Pax and Rowan followed their sister. Seraphina had no choice. She scooped up the hem of her dress and chased after them, her face burning with a humiliation that tasted like copper on her tongue.
As they climbed the steps, Donovan Vance stepped slightly to the side, his expression unreadable. But the older man beside him-Theodore Vance, the patriarch-leaned forward in his wheelchair, his eyes suddenly sharp and bright.
Seraphina kept her head down, focusing on the floor. She stopped the kids a few feet away from the microphone, desperate to grab the prize and run.
Donovan's gaze swept over them. It started with Fiona, lingered on Rowan, and finally landed on Pax. Pax didn't look away. The five-year-old stared right back at the billionaire, his chin lifted, his eyes unnervingly calm.
Donovan's jaw tightened. A muscle feathered near his ear. He looked at Seraphina.
She kept her eyes on the floor, her chest tight. She needed air. She needed to get out of this spotlight. She reached out to pull Fiona closer, her sleeve riding up just an inch.
Under the harsh glare of the stage lights, the small, star-shaped birthmark on the inside of her wrist was impossible to miss.
Donovan's breath hitched. It was a tiny sound, barely audible, but it cut through the noise of the applause. His eyes locked onto the mark. The color drained from his face.
Five years ago. A dark hotel room. A woman struggling beneath him, her hands pushing against his chest, that exact same star blazing on her wrist.
Seraphina felt the intensity of his stare like a physical weight. She looked up, her eyes colliding with his. The cold calculation was gone, replaced by something raw and violent. Shock.
Panic flooded her system. She yanked her sleeve down, covering the mark. She grabbed the kids, pulling them behind her like a shield. "Thank you," she blurted into the microphone, her voice trembling. "We'll take the prize and go."
She turned to flee, but a figure stepped into her path. Alex Dunn, Donovan's assistant, stood there, his face a mask of polite efficiency.
"Ms. Fletcher," Alex said, his voice low and calm, his smile professional. "Congratulations. Mr. Vance would like to congratulate you personally and verify the prize details in a more private setting. If you and your children would be so kind as to follow me?"
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