Emilie turned. Her mother stood in the doorway, backlit by the hallway chandelier, and something in her bearing had shifted. The socialite mask hadn't slipped-it had been deliberately removed.
"Twenty-one years," Hettie continued, stepping into the room and closing the door with decisive force. "I've let them treat me like a fool. Like a weak woman who couldn't protect her own child." She laughed, and the sound held an edge that surprised them both. "No more. If you're ready to fight, then so am I."
Emilie studied her mother's face-the set of the jaw, the brightness of the eyes, the way her hands had stopped trembling and now hung still at her sides.
"Good," she said simply.
They descended the staircase together, not touching, but aligned in a way that required no physical contact. The dining room glowed at the end of the hall, crystal chandelier scattering light across a table that could seat twenty.
Corie had already claimed her position.
She sat at Burnett's right hand, wearing white silk that suggested purity and new beginnings. Her makeup was subtle-just enough to suggest she'd been crying, not enough to appear theatrical. She rose as they entered, her face a mask of wounded dignity.
"Mother. Emilie." The voice was soft, carefully controlled. "I hope you received my gift. I only wanted-"
"Sit down, Corie." Hettie's voice cut through the performance like a whip. "We're not doing this."
Burnett looked up from his plate, confusion creasing his forehead. "Hettie? What's going on?"
"Later." Hettie took her seat at the foot of the table, leaving the head for Burnett. "We'll discuss it later. For now, let's pretend to be civilized."
Emilie moved to the remaining chair-Burnett's left, directly across from Corie. She sat without adjusting her posture, her plain clothes a deliberate contrast to the formal setting. A maid appeared with a plate: steak, rare, juices pooling on the china.
She picked up her knife and fork. The silver was heavy, antique, probably worth more than the car that had brought her here. She cut a precise bite, chewed slowly, swallowed.
The silence stretched.
Corie's eyes kept darting to her, then away, then back. The girl was waiting for something-an opening, a weakness, a chance to reassert dominance.
"Emilie." Corie's voice emerged hesitant, wounded. "I noticed you didn't wear the dress I sent. Was it-the wrong size? Or perhaps-" A delicate pause. "-the style was too sophisticated? I know things are different in... rural communities."
Burnett's fork stopped halfway to his mouth. "Emilie. Your sister was trying to be kind. You should-"
"Kind?" Emilie set down her utensils. The sound of silver against china was loud in the quiet room. She reached for her napkin, wiped her mouth with deliberate precision, and finally-finally-lifted her eyes to meet Corie's.
"I didn't wear it," she said, "because I don't wear garbage."
Corie's face went white. "I-what?"
"Used clothing. Worn once, perhaps twice. Dry-cleaned, perfumed, presented as new." Emilie leaned forward, her voice dropping to conversational intimacy. "You wore that dress to the Met Gala after-party three weeks ago. There are photographs. Champagne stains on the hem that didn't quite come out."
She sat back, picked up her wine glass, swirled the cabernet without looking at it.
"So yes, Corie. I found your gift inappropriate. Just as I find your presence at this table inappropriate. Just as I find your entire existence-" She smiled. "-fundamentally fraudulent."
The glass shattered.
Corie had dropped it, or thrown it-the distinction hardly mattered. Red wine spread across the white tablecloth like blood, dripping onto the white silk of her dress. She stood, trembling, her face a mask of fury and humiliation.
"You-" The word emerged strangled. "You have no right-"
"I have every right." Emilie's voice didn't rise. She didn't stand. She simply reached out and placed her knife-carefully, precisely-into the wooden table surface. The blade sank an inch into the oak with a sound like a sigh.
"This is my family," she continued. "My blood. My name. You are a placeholder. A clerical error. A woman who stole my life and now has the audacity to pretend she's the victim."
"Emilie!" Burnett's voice cracked like thunder. "That's enough! Apologize to your sister immediately!"
"She's not my sister." Emilie turned to face him, and something in her eyes-some quality of absolute certainty-made him fall silent. "She's the daughter of a woman who committed kidnapping. Who switched infants in a hospital fire. Who destroyed my mother's life and mine for her own ambition."
She stood now, moving to Hettie's side, placing a hand on her mother's shoulder.
"Ask her, Father. Ask your 'daughter' where she came from. Ask her why she has your eyes but not your jaw. Ask her why Grandmother Kristyn favors her so-" Emilie's voice dropped to a whisper that carried to every corner of the room. "-when Grandmother never favored you."
Burnett's face had gone the color of old parchment. He looked at Corie-really looked at her-and for the first time, Emilie saw doubt enter his eyes.
"Corie?" His voice emerged rough. "Is there-what she's saying-"
"I don't know!" Corie's hands were pressed to her face, smearing mascara across her cheeks. "I don't know what she's talking about! Daddy, please, don't listen to her, she's crazy, she's-"
The ringtone cut through her hysteria.
Burnett's phone-special tone, urgent priority. He fumbled for it with hands that shook, glanced at the screen, and the remaining color drained from his face.
"Archibald," he breathed.
He answered. The voice that emerged from the speaker was aged but absolute-power compressed into sound waves.
"Burnett. The Gillespie family has moved up their timeline. They want an answer by midnight tomorrow." A pause, weighted with implications Burnett clearly understood. "And they are... particular about bloodlines. They want the one with Hettie's eyes."
The phone clicked dead.
Burnett lowered it slowly, as if it had become too heavy to hold. When he spoke, his voice was the voice of a man who'd run out of options.
"Gillespie," he repeated. "They're calling in the debt. All thirty billion. And they want-" He looked at Emilie, then at Corie, and the despair in his eyes was terrible to witness. "-they want a bride for their son. The one in the coma."