Emilie closed her eyes.
She didn't need to see the estates passing outside to know where they were. The Sanctuary's training had included detailed study of global power structures, and the Dunlap compound featured prominently in the files. Three generations of accumulated wealth, defensive architecture, and the kind of paranoid security that suggested secrets worth protecting.
The gates appeared ahead-wrought iron and stone, cameras tracking their approach with mechanical indifference. They swung open with a groan of well-maintained hydraulics, and the Maybach passed through into another world.
The main house rose before them, a monument to excess that managed to be both impressive and exhausting. Emilie counted six chimneys, fourteen visible security personnel, and a helicopter pad on the roof that probably cost more than the annual GDP of some nations.
Her family-this strange collection of blood and obligation-filed out of the car and into the grand entrance hall.
The family was waiting.
Archibald Dunlap sat in a thronelike chair at the far end of the room, his spine straight despite his eighty-plus years, his eyes the color of faded denim and just as soft. Beside him, Kristyn Dunlap held a gold-tipped cane like a scepter, her face a topography of disapproval that had been carved by decades of judging others and finding them wanting.
To their left, Ancil and Beatrice Dunlap arranged themselves on a loveseat, their bodies angled to display both concern and superiority. And in the shadows near the fireplace, a younger woman-Cecelia, Emilie recognized from the files-watched with eyes that held something almost like sympathy.
"Burnett." Archibald's voice carried the weight of absolute authority. "You bring your... daughter."
The pause before the final word was microscopic, but Emilie caught it. The old man was testing her, measuring her reaction to being defined by relationship rather than name.
She stepped forward, placing herself in the center of the room, her posture relaxed but alert. "Emilie Dunlap. Yes."
Kristyn's cane struck the marble floor-a sharp crack that demanded attention. "No greeting? No acknowledgment of your elders? The orphanage clearly failed to teach basic manners."
Emilie turned to face her. The movement was unhurried, unimpressed. "I was taught to respect those who earn it. Not those who demand it by age or accident of birth."
Hettie's breath caught. Burnett made a sound like a man swallowing broken glass. But Emilie held her grandmother's gaze, watching the old woman's eyes narrow with something that might have been reassessment.
"Bold," Kristyn said finally. "Reckless, but bold. You'll need that, where you're going."
"Mother-" Hettie began.
"Silence." The cane struck again. "You've had your say, Hettie. Twenty-one years of indulgence, of coddling that-" A gesture toward Corie, who had immediately positioned herself at Kristyn's side, seeking protection. "-that substitute. Now the bill comes due."
Kristyn reached out, her hand finding Corie's with obvious affection. The gesture was natural, unstudied-the touch of a grandmother who had never questioned the rightness of her preference.
"My Corie," Kristyn continued, her voice softening in a way it hadn't for her actual grandchildren. "Delicate. Sensitive. Raised with every advantage, every protection. She cannot be expected to-" The words emerged with delicate horror. "-to nurse a vegetable. To bind herself to a man who will never speak, never walk, never give her children."
She turned, and her eyes-so different from Archibald's, hard and bright and calculating-fixed on Emilie with the intensity of a predator selecting prey.
"But you." The word was almost gentle. "You've survived hardship. Adapted to deprivation. You have-" A smile that showed too many teeth. "-resilience. The kind of strength that can endure... limitation."
The room held its breath.
"Gillespie wants a bride by tomorrow sunset," Kristyn continued. "The contract specifies a Dunlap daughter. It does not specify which daughter." She raised her cane, pointing it at Emilie like a weapon. "You will go. You will marry the comatose heir. And in doing so, you will save this family from destruction."
Burnett stepped forward, his face twisted with anguish. "Mother, please. She's just come home. We can't-"
"You can." Archibald's voice emerged for the first time, quiet but absolute. "And you will. The decision is made."
He rose from his chair, moving with the careful precision of age, and approached Emilie. Up close, she could smell him-tobacco and old paper and something medicinal, the scent of power maintained through sheer will.
"You have your mother's eyes," he said. "And something else. Something I don't recognize." He studied her for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "Good. You'll need it."
He turned away, dismissing her, and the meeting was over.
But Emilie stood unmoving, her eyes tracking across the room-taking in Corie's hidden triumph, Ancil's satisfied smirk, Beatrice's careful neutrality, and Cecelia's strange, sad gaze.
She smiled.
It was a small expression, quickly suppressed, but in that moment her eyes held something that made Archibald pause at the doorway, something that made him turn back to look at her one more time before shaking his head and continuing on his way.
The game, Emilie thought, was about to change.
And she was finally holding all the cards.