Emery Houston POV:
Camilla ran, leaving chaos in her wake, as usual. My parents, desperate to save face and the lucrative alliance, barely batted an eyelash before turning to me. "You'll do it, Emery," my mother had said, her voice devoid of warmth, "You'll marry Carter Barry."
And I did. I, the quiet, overlooked daughter, was suddenly thrust into the spotlight, inheriting a fiancé I had secretly yearned for my entire life. It felt like a cruel joke, a twisted fairy tale where the Cinderella got the prince only because the favored stepsister had tossed him aside.
The Barry family, steeped in tradition, seemed unaware of the bride swap, or chose to ignore it. Except for Carter. He knew. I could see it in his eyes, a subtle shift, a guardedness that wasn' t there before.
The engagement dinner was a stiff, awkward affair. My parents beamed, pretending this had been the plan all along. Carter' s family, prim and proper, maintained polite smiles. Carter himself was a ghost, barely speaking, his gaze distant. I felt like an imposter, acutely aware of the charade. The food turned to ash in my mouth.
Later that night, the unease gnawing at me, I found him on the terrace, bathed in moonlight. My conscience, a little voice I hadn' t learned to ignore yet, demanded I speak.
"Carter," I began, my voice barely a whisper, "I know... I know I wasn't the one you expected." I swallowed hard, the words catching in my throat. "If you don't... If you don't want this, I understand. I don't want to trap you. I don't want to spend my life with someone who doesn't love me." My heart ached at the confession, the fragile hope inside me trembling.
He turned, his face softened by the moonlight. He looked at me, truly looked at me, for the first time since the engagement announcement. There was a quiet intensity in his eyes.
"Emery," he said, his voice low and steady, "I gave my word. I will honor it. I will marry you." He took a small step closer, and my breath hitched. "I will be a good husband. I will take care of you."
The sincerity in his voice, the simple promise of 'we,' struck a chord deep within me. Something I hadn' t known existed. My heart, a small bird in a cage, fluttered wildly. Marriage. The word, once so distant, now shimmered with the promise of belonging, of a place for me. It was everything I had ever secretly wanted.
I wanted to ask him if he loved me. The words hovered on my tongue, but I couldn't push them out. Fear, or perhaps a desperate need to believe the illusion, held me back.
He reached out, his fingers gently adjusting the scarf around my neck. The soft brush of his skin sent a jolt through me. For a fleeting second, I was transported back to the mountain, to the small kindness of a shared candy. It was enough. More than enough.
I looked at him then, truly believing. He was honorable. He was kind. He would never betray me. I clung to that conviction, forgetting that my knowledge of Carter Barry was as thin as the moonlight that bathed us.
The wedding preparations began in a flurry of white lace and floral arrangements. I chose every detail, my heart stirring with a hope I hadn't known I possessed. My life was finally taking shape.
Then, two days before the wedding, Camilla returned. She burst through the door like a hurricane, her usually immaculate hair disheveled, a bruise blooming on her cheek. She' d been in a fight, she said, her voice tight with suppressed fury.
She stalked into my room, where my untouched wedding gown hung, ethereal and pristine. She ran a hand over the shimmering fabric, her eyes hard. Then she spotted the delicate, antique bracelet on my vanity, a family heirloom that was meant to be my "something old."
"Always picking up my scraps, aren't you, Emery?" she sneered, her voice dripping with disdain. "First my fiancé, now my jewelry. Don' t you have anything of your own?"
A raw, unfamiliar anger flared within me. Five years of silent endurance snapped. "He was never yours, Camilla," I spat, my voice shaking. "You threw him away. And this is my wedding, my life. You don't get to ruin this too."
She took a step closer, her eyes narrowed, a predatory glint in them. "Oh, little sister. You think you' ve won? You think you can keep anything that truly belongs to me?" Her voice dropped to a chilling whisper. "You' ll learn. Some things are simply destined."
My hand flew before I even registered the thought. Smack! The sound echoed in the silent room. A red welt bloomed on Camilla' s cheek, mirroring the one she' d arrived with.
Camilla gasped, clutching her face. Then, a theatrical wail tore from her throat. "Mom! Dad! Emery hit me!"
My parents materialized instantly, their faces contorted with shock and fury. My mother rushed to Camilla, cradling her as if she were mortally wounded. My father' s eyes burned holes through me.
And that' s when Carter walked in. He had arrived to take me for a final fitting. He stopped dead in the doorway, his gaze fixed on Camilla, sobbing dramatically in my mother's arms, her bruised face now marred by my handprint.
His composure, usually so unshakeable, fractured. His shoulders stiffened. His face drained of color. He moved, not towards me, but towards Camilla, his steps stiff, almost unwilling.
"What happened?" he asked, his voice low, a tremor running through it. But his eyes were for Camilla alone.
My mother, quick to seize an opportunity, launched into a furious tirade, painting me as the aggressor, the jealous sister. Camilla, sensing her advantage, sobbed harder, pointing a trembling finger at me.
Carter' s eyes, usually so calm, were filled with a desperate concern. He reached for Camilla, pulling her into his arms. "Who did this?" His voice was a guttural growl I'd never heard before.
"She... she hit me," Camilla whimpered, burying her face in his chest.
His arms tightened around her. "We' re going to the hospital. We' ll report this. She'll pay." The words were cold, cutting, aimed directly at me, the woman he was supposed to marry in two days.
He didn' t look at me once. Not once. From the moment he walked in, until he carried Camilla out, her head nestled against his shoulder, he didn't even acknowledge my existence. I stood there, bathed in the harsh glare of the chandelier, the silence of the room deafening. My world, once shimmering with hope, had just been reduced to ashes.