"Oh my god!" Jana shrieked, dropping the glass.
It shattered on the marble floor with a violent crash. "Abby! Why did you push me?"
The room went deathly silent.
Jana fell to her knees, sobbing dramatically. As she fell, her hand brushed against the broken glass, and she cried out in pain. "I was just trying to congratulate you! Why are you so jealous?"
It was a performance worthy of the stage. In my past life, I would have stammered, apologized, and scrambled to help her up.
Instead, I stood still, looking down at her.
"Get up, Jana," I said, my voice devoid of warmth. "You're embarrassing yourself."
Connor appeared instantly. He didn't look at the spilled wine. He didn't ask what happened.
He saw an audience, and he saw an opportunity to assert his dominance.
"What is wrong with you?" Connor shouted, his voice booming across the silent ballroom.
He grabbed my shoulder and spun me around to face him.
"She's your cousin! She has nothing, and you treat her like trash because you're insecure?"
"She threw the wine, Connor," I said calmly. "Ask the Capo behind me. He saw it."
But Connor didn't care about the truth. He cared about the narrative. He cared about breaking me down publicly so that no one would question it when I disappeared into his penthouse later.
"Don't lie to me!"
His hand moved faster than I could react.
A sharp sting bloomed across my cheek, and the world went silent. The impact was less a sound and more a sudden, deafening pressure that stole the air from the room.
My head snapped to the side. A dull, throbbing ache began to spread from my jaw.
The gasp from the room sucked the air out of the space.
In our world, striking a Made Man was a grave offense. Striking a woman under the Don's protection, at a formal ceremony, was... complicated.
But Connor was the Golden Boy. He was the heir. He banked on his privilege protecting him.
Slowly, deliberately, I turned my head back to face him. My cheek throbbed, but I didn't touch it. I didn't cry.
Connor looked momentarily stunned by his own violence, or perhaps by the fact that I hadn't crumbled. Then, his arrogance returned.
"You needed to be calmed down," he announced, loud enough for the Don to hear. "She's hysterical. Look at her."
I wasn't hysterical. I was ice.
"Is that how you treat what you claim to value, Connor?" I asked, my voice clear.
"Do you damage it before the ink is even dry?"
"You think you can escape my influence?" he sneered, leaning in close. "I can take everything from you. I can throw you on the street. You are nothing without me."
I looked past him.
The shadows in the far corner of the room seemed to detach themselves from the wall. A figure was moving. Not walking-stalking.
The crowd parted, not out of respect this time, but out of pure, primal fear.
Brannon Walls stepped into the light.
He was huge, broad-shouldered and towering, a monolith of a man. A scar ran through his left eyebrow, giving him a permanent scowl.
He didn't look at Connor. He didn't look at the Don.
His dark, empty eyes were locked with lethal focus on the red mark blooming on my cheek.