"Andres Gillespie," he said. "Twenty-six years old. Two weeks ago, his car was forced off the Pacific Coast Highway. Multiple vehicle collision. They say-" His throat worked. "-they say he won't wake up. Brain death. Vegetative state. His legs were crushed beyond repair. His face-" He stopped, unable to continue.
Hettie's hand found Emilie's, gripping with desperate strength. "No. Absolutely not. We are not sacrificing either of our daughters to-"
"There's no choice." Burnett's voice was hollow. "The Gillespie family holds our debt. All of it. The South African project, the mineral rights, the development loans-everything. If they call it due tomorrow, we lose everything. The houses, the stocks, the foundations. Everything your grandfather built, everything I built. Gone."
He looked up, and his eyes were red-rimmed, desperate.
"And the old woman-Eleanor Gillespie, the matriarch-she's obsessed with bloodlines. With legacy. She says the engagement was agreed decades ago, when Andres and-" He glanced at Corie, then away. "-and our daughter were infants. She says a Dunlap must marry a Gillespie, or the debt becomes due immediately."
Corie made a sound-a high, animal whine that cut off into silence. She slid from her chair to the floor, her white dress pooling in the wine stain, her hands clawing at Burnett's trouser leg.
"No, Daddy. No, please. I can't-I won't-" Her face was twisted with genuine terror now, all performance stripped away. "He's a vegetable. A corpse with a heartbeat. I can't spend my life-my whole life-tending to-"
"Corie." Burnett's voice was gentle, broken. "No one is saying-"
"She should go!" Corie's finger shot out, pointing at Emilie with desperate accusation. "She's the real daughter! She's the one they want! I was never supposed to-this was never my-"
"Corie!" Hettie's voice cracked like a whip. "How dare you?"
But Corie was beyond hearing, beyond the social masks that had sustained her. She crawled toward Emilie, reaching for her hands, her face a grotesque parody of sisterly affection.
"Please. Please, Emilie. You just got here-you don't understand what you'd be losing. I have friends here, a life, people who need me. You-" The words slipped out, unguarded. "-you have nothing to lose. You've already lost everything."
Emilie looked down at the girl who had stolen her name, her family, her birthright. Who was now begging to send her to a fate she considered worse than death.
She felt nothing. No anger, no satisfaction, no pity. Just the cold, clear certainty of calculation.
Andres Gillespie.
The name echoed in her mind, triggering memories she'd spent four years burying. The storm. The isolated cabin. The man who'd come through the door bleeding, feverish, speaking in fragments of languages she hadn't recognized. The hands that had gripped her with desperate strength, the mouth that had tasted of copper and need, the body that had taken and given in equal measure until the morning light revealed the empty cabin and the blood on the sheets.
She'd been eighteen. Terrified. Alone.
She'd run, eventually-run to the only sanctuary she knew, the hidden valley where she'd been raised. And nine months later, she'd given birth to twins with eyes the color of winter storms and a genetic profile that had made her mentors frown with concern.
Andres Gillespie.
The father of her children. The man who had destroyed her life and created it in the same breath. Who now lay in a coma, waiting for a bride his family would force upon him.
Emilie smiled.
It was a small expression, quickly suppressed, but in that moment her eyes held something that made Corie shrink backward, something that made even Hettie tighten her grip on her daughter's hand.
"Emilie?" Hettie's voice was uncertain. "What-what are you thinking?"
Emilie turned to her mother, her face composed into the mask of dutiful daughter-slightly overwhelmed, slightly naive, completely trustworthy.
"Nothing, Mother. Just-" She paused, as if considering. "-trying to understand our options."
Burnett's hand, still holding the phone that had delivered their doom, drew back. With a roar of guttural frustration, he hurled it across the room. It struck the far wall, shattering with the sound of dying electronics and splintering plastic.
Silence descended, thick and absolute, broken only by Burnett's ragged breathing.
Hettie moved first. She placed herself between Emilie and the rest of the room-her husband, the wreckage, the future collapsing around them. Her spine was straight, her voice absolute.
"No. I don't care about the money. I don't care about the company. My daughter is not a bargaining chip." She turned to Emilie, her hands framing her daughter's face. "We're leaving. Tonight. We'll go somewhere they can't find us. I have resources, friends-"
"Mother." Emilie caught her wrists gently. "It's alright."
She stepped around her mother, moving to where Corie still crouched on the floor. The fake heiress looked up, eyes red and desperate, and Emilie saw the calculation returning-the desperate search for advantage, for survival.
"You want me to go," Emilie said. It wasn't a question.
"I-" Corie swallowed. "I just think-it's your duty, isn't it? As the real daughter? To protect the family?"
"And if I refuse?"
"Then we all lose everything." Corie's voice dropped to a whisper. "But you-you've never had anything. You wouldn't understand what it's like to-to lose it all."
Emilie laughed.
The sound surprised everyone-light, almost amused, completely out of place in the devastated room. She reached down, offering Corie a hand that the other girl took automatically, pulling her to her feet.
"You're right," Emilie said. "I wouldn't understand. I've never had a family to lose. Never had a fortune to protect. Never had-" She leaned close, her voice dropping to a whisper only Corie could hear. "-a desperate need to maintain appearances, because appearances are all that stand between me and the truth."
She straightened, turning to face her parents.
"Father. Mother." The words felt strange in her mouth, formal and distant. "I need to think. To understand what we're truly facing." She moved toward the door, pausing at the threshold. "Tomorrow. We'll discuss this tomorrow. After you've both had rest."
She didn't wait for agreement. She simply walked out, her footsteps echoing in the silent hall, leaving behind a family in ruins and a debt that would define all their futures.