Jolie Vinson was supposed to marry Lord Tristan Beaumont. The wedding was perfectly planned, and her ancestral engagement ring was already on her finger.
But days before the ceremony, he walked into the rose garden with her cousin, Seraphina, clinging to his arm.
He looked at her with chilling indifference and announced he was marrying Seraphina instead.
"You will still join the Beaumont family. Just not as my wife. You can be my mistress."
Seraphina squeezed out fake tears, claiming they couldn't control their love, while the Beaumont matriarchs cornered Jolie in the drawing room.
They demanded she accept this humiliation quietly to protect their reputation, offering a dowry as the price for her dignity.
Tristan even threatened her, reminding her that without their protection, she was an orphan with nothing left.
They thought Jolie was a helpless girl who would obediently step into their gilded cage, knowing she needed their family's resources to uncover the truth behind her parents' deaths.
The humiliation burned, but her shock quickly turned into cold, hard fury.
She looked at the man who had sworn his love and the cousin she had trusted like a sister.
Why should she sacrifice her dignity to be a stepping stone for their perfect romance?
She, Jolie Vinson, would never be anyone's pathetic mistress.
So, in front of the entire smug family, she made a counter-proposal.
"I request permission to marry the late Lord Gabriel by proxy."
She chose to marry Tristan's dead older brother, becoming the untouchable senior widow to seize his vast, hidden fortune.
But what she didn't know was that her "dead" husband was actually very much alive, hiding in the secret passages of her new bedroom, watching her every move.
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"He should be here by now."
Jolie Vinson murmured it to herself, her thumb stroking the cool, intricate silver of her engagement ring. A Vinson heirloom, passed down through generations.
Late afternoon sun filtered through the rose garden gazebo's lattice, painting shifting patterns on her pale blue dress.
A crunch of gravel made her heart leap. She looked up, a radiant smile forming.
But the smile froze.
It was Lord Tristan Beaumont, her fiancé, but he was not alone.
Beside him, clinging to his arm, was her cousin Lady Seraphina Valois, dressed in a gown of vibrant crimson. A stark contrast to Jolie's understated elegance.
Seraphina's expression was a mask of sorrow.
An icy tendril of unease coiled in Jolie's stomach. She rose slowly, her hand dropping from the ring.
"Tristan. Seraphina. What a surprise."
Tristan wouldn't meet her eyes. He stared at a rosebush just over her shoulder, jaw tight. The warmth he usually held for her was gone, replaced by chilling indifference.
"Jolie." Seraphina's voice was a soft, apologetic whisper. "I hope you won't blame Tristan."
The words felt like a needle slipping in quietly. The air grew thick. Jolie's own breathing went shallow.
Tristan finally spoke, his voice flat, emotionless. "Jolie, there are going to be some adjustments to the wedding plans."
He paused."I'm going to marry Seraphina."
The blood in Jolie's veins turned to ice.She stared at him, the man who had sworn his love just last week, convinced she had misheard.
Then Tristan's hand tightened around Seraphina's. A public, undeniable declaration.
Dizziness washed over her. She reached out, her trembling fingers gripping the cool marble of a gazebo pillar to keep from falling.
"What about our engagement?" she asked, barely a whisper. "The promise between the Vinsons and the Beaumonts?"
"The agreement still stands," Tristan replied coolly. "You will still join the Beaumont family. Just not as my wife."
His eyes, when they finally met hers, held a flicker of arrogant pity.
"You can be my mistress."
The words struck like a blow. Her breath hitched. Her body began to tremble, not from weakness, but from a surge of white-hot rage.
She looked at the two of them-the man she was to marry, the cousin she had trusted-and they were strangers.
Seraphina chose that moment to let a single tear trace down her cheek. "It's all my fault," she sobbed, though her eyes were dry. "Tristan and I... we're in love. We couldn't control it."
A bitter, humorless laugh escaped Jolie's lips. The shock was burning away, replaced by cold, hard fury.
She straightened her spine, lifting her chin. Each word was a shard of ice.
"I, Jolie Vinson, will never be a mistress."
Tristan's face darkened. He had expected tears, pleading, perhaps a dignified retreat. He had not expected this defiance from the quiet, accommodating Jolie he thought he knew.
"Don't be a fool, Jolie," he threatened, voice low and menacing. "Remember your position. Without the protection of the Beaumonts, you and what's left of your family name will have nothing."
His words hit their mark.
She was an orphan, the last member of the Vinson family. When she was six,her entire family was wiped out by a sudden fire, unlike a natural disaster, which was man-made. Jolie has been investigating ever since, and clues drive her here. She had to stay. Only by using the Beaumont platform can she uncover the truth behind her parents' deaths.
Inside, a war raged. The burning need for revenge clashed with the raw insult she had just endured.
Seeing her hesitation, Tristan thought he had won. His tone softened slightly, a master pacifying a pet.
Seraphina stepped forward, reaching for Jolie's hand. Her touch was cloying, her voice syrupy sweet. "Jolie, we can still be sisters, just as we always were. I'll make this up to you, I promise."
Jolie snatched her hand away as if burned. Her eyes were chips of steel.
Tristan's patience snapped. "You have one day to consider," he snarled. "Don't throw away this generosity."
He grabbed Seraphina's arm and turned, stalking away without a backward glance, as if the sight of Jolie was an irritation he could no longer tolerate.
Just before they disappeared around the hedge, Seraphina looked back. She offered Jolie a look of profound apology, but deep in her eyes, a spark of triumphant satisfaction glittered.
The gazebo was silent again. The sweet scent of roses now seemed mocking, suffocating.
Slowly, Jolie lifted her hand and pulled the Vinson ring from her finger. She closed her fist around it, the sharp edges of the silver cutting into her palm. The pain was a grounding force.
She did not cry. Her tears had frozen into something harder, more dangerous.
A fire kindled in her eyes. Vengeance and resolve.
She had to find another way. A way to stay in this house of vipers without sacrificing the last shred of her dignity.
That night, someone gently knocked on her door, the voice soft and hesitant. But Julie knew who it was.
The door creaked open and Seraphina glided in, her face a perfectly calibrated sorrow. She carried a small, ornate box.
"I brought you macarons," she said, her voice a gentle murmur. "From that little shop in the capital you love so much."
She placed the box on the table beside Jolie. The sight of the brightly colored pastries made her stomach churn.
Seraphina sighed dramatically, sinking into a velvet armchair. "Jolie, this is tearing me apart. If you don't agree... if you can't find it in your heart to forgive us... I will renounce my life. I will go to the convent. I will spend the rest of my days in prayer to absolve my sins and preserve your honor."
It was a masterful trap. A cruel psychological cage designed to paint Jolie as the villain if she refused-the selfish girl who would force her loving cousin into a life of pious misery.
Jolie felt a cold, contemptuous smile tighten internally, but on the surface she showed pained conflict. She let her shoulders slump, her eyes glistening with unshed tears.
Seeing her act, Seraphina leaned forward, dropping to a conspiratorial whisper.
"You have to understand, Jolie. I tried to fight it. God knows I tried." She pressed a trembling hand to her chest, her voice catching with expertly feigned anguish. "I prayed every night for these feelings to be taken from me. I begged the Saints to cleanse this-this unbearable longing from my heart. But how can something so pure, so destined, be a sin?"
She reached across the space between them, her fingers hovering just shy of Jolie's wrist, never quite touching-always the performance, never the substance.
"The first time our eyes met across the chapel, I knew. I knew he was the other half of my soul. Have you ever felt that, cousin? That instant, shattering certainty that you have found the one person in all the world who makes you whole?" Her lashes fluttered, dewy with manufactured emotion.
"We tried to stay apart. We did. But love like ours-" she shook her head, a single tear tracking perfectly down her porcelain cheek, "-love like ours does not bow to the convenience of others. It does not ask permission. It simply is."
She drew a shuddering breath, her voice dropping even lower, laced with a steel thread beneath its velvet.
"I know you care for him. I know this must hurt. But surely you wouldn't stand in the way of a love written in the very stars? Surely you wouldn't be so cruel?"
Jolie listened, her heart a block of ice.
When the performance was over, Jolie finally spoke, her voice thick with manufactured emotion. "For your happiness, Seraphina... I will consider it."
Seraphina's relief was palpable. She squeezed Jolie's hand, mission accomplished, and swept out of the room. Jolie knew, with absolute certainty, that her cousin was rushing to spread the news of her "softening."
The summons came the next morning.
A stern-faced maid informed her that Duchess Eleanor Beaumont wished to see her in the main drawing room.
Jolie walked the long, echoing corridors of the main wing. Suits of armor stood like silent, judging sentinels. Tapestries depicting glorious Beaumont victories seemed to mock her own defeat.
She pushed open the heavy oak doors. The scene was exactly as she'd expected.
Duchess Eleanor sat enthroned in a high-backed chair. To her left, Countess Rosamund Valois, Jolie's own aunt and Seraphina's mother. To her right, the formidable Dowager Countess Genevieve, her grandmother.
Three matriarchs, arranged in a triangle of power, with an empty chair placed in the center for her.
The air was thick with lilies and unspoken condemnation.
Duchess Eleanor did not sit, did not soften. She remained standing by the mantel, gloved fingers resting lightly on the marble, as though the room itself belonged to her. When she spoke, her voice was clipped and bloodless.
"I trust I need not remind you, Jolie, what is expected of a young woman of this house. The Beaumont name has endured four centuries without a whisper of scandal, and I will not see it undone now because a girl cannot master her own disappointment. You will conduct yourself with the dignity your station demands. Is that understood?"
Before Jolie could part her lips,Rosamund swept in like a perfumed tide, settling onto the settee .
"Oh, my darling girl." She took Jolie's hand, her grip too tight to be tender. "My heart simply breaks for you. It does. But think of Seraphina. Think of what she has found-a love so rare, so consuming, the kind of love poets weep over. Can you truly look at her happiness and call your own grief more important? Can you truly be that selfish?"
She let the question hang, a hook buried in soft bait, her eyes glistening with the tender cruelty of a woman who had already decided what the answer must be.
The Dowager Countess Genevieve had no patience for theatre. She waited until Rosamund's echo faded, then set her cane firmly against the floor. The thud was final.
"Enough of this." Her voice was not raised, but it commanded the air from the room. "The girl is not a fool. She understands the situation as well as any of us."
Her gaze, pale and unblinking, pinned Jolie in place. "So here are the terms, plainly spoken. Accept this marriage with grace. In return, the Valois family will settle upon you a dowry that will make you a desirable match in any court from here to the northern borders. A fresh start, far from prying eyes, fully funded."
She paused, letting the weight of the offer settle. "Refuse, and you will have nothing. No dowry. No protection. No place. You will be a cautionary tale whispered at debutante balls for a generation. The choice is yours."
The silence that followed was absolute.
Jolie kept her head bowed. She let her shoulders curl inward, let her fingers lie limp and defeated in her lap. She allowed a single tremor to pass through her lower lip-nothing theatrical, just enough to be noticed. Inside, she catalogued every word, every barb, every scrap of condescension, filing them away like a clerk with a ledger.
Let them think her spirit had shattered. Let them believe their coordinated assault of duty, guilt, and gold had done its work.
That was precisely what she needed them to believe.
After a long, tense silence, she slowly raised her head. Her eyes shimmered with tears she had willed into existence. Her voice trembled.
"I... I understand."
A collective, almost inaudible sigh of relief passed among the three women. Their stern faces relaxed into triumphant smiles.
Duchess Eleanor offered a few condescending words of comfort and gave Jolie "permission" to begin preparing her trousseau-the collection of goods for her new life as a mistress.
Jolie curtsied, movements humble and submissive, and backed out of the room.
The moment the drawing room doors closed behind her, the mask vanished. Her back straightened, jaw set, eyes clearing to hard, determined steel.
She walked back to her guest quarters, steps quick and purposeful. She locked the door, shutting out the world of her tormentors.
She went to her largest travel trunk and opened a false bottom in the lining. Inside, wrapped in oilcloth, was the only thing of value her parents had left her: an ancient, leather-bound book filled with the Vinson family's knowledge of apothecary science.
Her fingers traced the worn cover. This was her true inheritance. Her power. Her weapon.
She would not be a mistress. She would not be broken.
Her feigned submission had bought time. Now she needed a plan.
She began to methodically unpack her dowry, laying each item on the bed. Linens, silver, dresses. To any observer, it would look like a woman preparing for her gilded cage.
But in her mind, a plan was taking shape. Audacious, utterly mad, it just might work.
Jolie stood calmly in the center of the Duke's study. The air smelled of old leather and woodsmoke. On the polished mahogany desk lay her meticulously prepared dowry inventory.
Duke Theron Beaumont sat behind the desk, a man whose entire world was built on honor and public perception. Duchess Eleanor stood beside him, arms crossed, expression severe.
Tristan and Seraphina were there too, lounging near the fireplace, their faces alight with smug, theatrical pity. They were here to witness her final surrender.
Jolie began by expressing her gratitude for their "generosity" and her acceptance of the family's decision. The tension eased. They all relaxed, believing the unpleasantness was over.
"I am willing to marry into the Beaumont family,but..." Jolie continued, voice steady and clear, " for the sake of the Beaumont family's honor, and for what remains of the Vinson family's dignity, I have a better proposal."
Every eye fixed on her. Tristan and Seraphina exchanged a look of mild amusement. What could she possibly propose?
Jolie's gaze shifted past them to a large oil portrait above the mantelpiece. It showed a young man in full military dress, expression serious, eyes burning with fierce intensity. Lord Gabriel Watkins, the Duke's eldest son. The war hero. The man who had died on a foreign battlefield three months ago.
She drew a deep breath, gathering all her strength.
"I am willing to marry into the Beaumont family, as promised. But not as Lord Tristan's mistress."
She paused, letting the silence build.
"I request permission to marry the late Lord Gabriel Watkins by proxy."
The silence that followed was absolute. She had sucked the air from the room.
Tristan's smirk vanished, replaced by stunned disbelief. Seraphina's jaw went slack.
Duchess Eleanor found her voice first. "Absurd!" she shrieked. "That is a grotesque scandal! Unheard of!"
Tristan, personally insulted, shot to his feet. "You would rather marry a dead man than be with me?" His voice cracked with outrage.
Jolie ignored them both. Her eyes were on the only person who mattered: Duke Theron.
She laid out her reasoning with surgical precision.
"First, it preserves the dignity of everyone involved. I enter this house as a bride, not a mistress. There will be no whispers, no scandal. The matter is settled with honor."
"Second, it fulfills the marriage contract between our two houses. The Vinsons are joined with the Beaumonts. The bridegroom is simply the more honorable elder son, not the younger."
"And third," she finished, her voice softening, "it is a tribute to a fallen hero. It shows the entire kingdom the depth of the Beaumont family's gratitude and loyalty to the man who gave his life for his country."
Each point was a perfectly aimed arrow at what Duke Theron valued most: his family's public image and its honor.
The Duke leaned back, fingers steepled, expression unreadable. He was weighing the quiet scandal of a mistress against the grand tragic theater of a war hero's proxy wedding. One was a stain, the other a statement.
Jolie added the final decisive piece. "I will live as his widow. I will reside quietly in Pinecrest Wing, his former home. I will not interfere in anyone's life."
A powerless, respectable widow tucked away in a remote wing. A symbol, not a threat. This erased the last of the Duke and Duchess's concerns.
Duke Theron gave a slow, deliberate nod. "I agree. The wedding will take place on the same day as Tristan's."
The decision was made. Duchess Eleanor's face was a mask of fury, but she could not argue against her husband. Tristan and Seraphina looked as though they had been slapped.
Jolie had won. She had secured her place.
The news sent shockwaves through the aristocracy.
Two weddings, one bride for the living, one for the dead.
On the day, the grand cathedral was filled to capacity.
Seraphina was a vision in a gown dripping with pearls and lace, clinging to Tristan's arm, basking in congratulations.
But all eyes were on Jolie.
She walked down the aisle alone, dressed in a simple, unadorned white gown, her face obscured by a black mourning veil. She moved with solemn grace toward the altar, where Gabriel's portrait stood in place of a groom.
The spectacle of it, the sheer tragic romance, stole all the attention.
Seraphina's nails dug into Tristan's arm, her smile a brittle, painted thing. She was being upstaged by a ghost.
Hidden in the deep shadows of a side alcove, a tall figure stood cloaked and hooded, watching.
His gaze cut through the crowd, ignoring the lavish display of the second wedding, and settled on the lonely, defiant figure in black and white. He watched as Jolie stood before his own image, back straight, head held high.
When she spoke her vows, her voice clear and steady in the cavernous space, a faint, unreadable smile touched the lips of the man in the shadows.
He was Gabriel Watkins.
And he was very much alive.