The heavy oak doors of the Solomon estate groaned open, cutting through the somber music.
Arlie Solomon stepped inside. Her worn-out jeans and faded white t-shirt stood out like a stain in the room full of black designer mourning wear. The air smelled thick of white lilies and quiet grief. Then it seemed to freeze. Every eye in the grand hall-filled with Olympus City's elite-turned to her. The looks were a mix of shock, confusion, and undisguised contempt.
She ignored them all. Her face was as still as a frozen pond. She walked past rows of judgmental faces without hurrying.
"How dare she?" a soft, sweet voice hissed. Candis Solomon, her cousin, leaned toward her mother, Eleanor. Her perfectly made-up face twisted with disgust. "Coming to Grandpa's funeral dressed like that."
Arlie's gaze swept forward to the closed casket at the front. She didn't seem to hear the whispers, the rustle of expensive fabric as people shifted, or the tightening of her uncle Arthur's jaw. She just stood there, a ghost from a past they'd tried to bury.
The family lawyer, Robert Sullivan-his face permanently set in professional neutrality-cleared his throat at the podium. "We will now proceed with the reading of Mr. Charles Solomon's last will and testament."
A ripple of anticipation went through the crowd. Arthur Solomon straightened his tie. A confident, almost hungry smile touched his lips. He was the acting CEO of Solomon Industries, the logical heir. Beside him, Eleanor patted Candis's hand gently, her eyes gleaming with promise.
Robert Sullivan opened a thick manila folder. The silence in the room became absolute, heavy enough to feel on the skin.
"I, Charles Solomon," the lawyer read, his voice clear and steady, "being of sound mind and body, do hereby bequeath all my worldly assets, including the entirety of the beneficial interest in the Solomon Family Trust, to my granddaughter..."
He paused. His eyes lifted from the page and found Arlie.
"Miss Arlie Solomon."
For a moment, nothing. Just the lawyer's words hanging in the air. Then the silence shattered. A wave of shocked murmurs swept through the hall.
Arthur's confident expression dissolved into pure disbelief. His face went from ruddy to pale in one sickening beat. "That's impossible!" he choked out, lurching to his feet.
Candis's face went white as a sheet. Her perfectly manicured nails dug into her mother's arm, making Eleanor flinch. "No," she whispered, her voice trembling.
Caleb, Arlie's cousin, had been slouched in his chair. He shot upright. "What the hell?" he muttered, his face twisting with confusion and rage.
Amid the chaos, Arlie did nothing. She just lifted her gaze from the casket. Her eyes were clear and cold, showing no flicker of surprise. It was as if someone had just told her the weather forecast.
Robert Sullivan looked directly at her. His professional calm was the only anchor in the room. "Miss Solomon, do you accept this inheritance?"
Her eyes moved slowly, deliberately, across the twisted, greedy faces of her family. Arthur's rage. Eleanor's shock. Candis's venomous jealousy. Then she spoke, her voice quiet but carrying in the sudden hush.
"I accept."
The two words were a death knell to their ambitions. The raw, unvarnished greed that had been simmering under their grief now boiled over. Guests began whispering furiously, heads bent together, re-evaluating the girl from the countryside. What tricks had she used? How had she manipulated the old man?
At the back of the room, leaning against a marble pillar, a tall man in a perfectly tailored black suit watched the whole thing. Kerr Ward's face was impassive, but something sharp and analytical flickered in his deep-set eyes. He'd come to pay respects to a business associate. He hadn't expected a show.
Candis couldn't hold back any longer. Her voice, shrill with fury, cut through the noise. "You curse! You must have used some dirty trick!"
Arlie didn't even glance at her. She turned her attention back to the lawyer. "When can the paperwork be processed?"
The utter dismissal was more humiliating than any retort. It was like swatting away a fly.
Arthur, regaining a sliver of composure, pointed a trembling finger at the lawyer. "Mr. Sullivan, I question the validity of this will."
"Mr. Solomon," Robert replied calmly, "the will has been rigorously authenticated and notarized. There is also a video recording of Mr. Charles Solomon confirming its contents."
That was a final, unassailable wall. Arthur sank back into his chair, his face a thunderous mask of fury.
In five minutes, Arlie Solomon had gone from a forgotten outcast to the absolute center of the Solomon family's universe. She now held everything they'd ever wanted. And her expression was that of someone dealing with a minor inconvenience. The power had shifted, irrevocably. The war had just begun.
Arlie's gaze stayed on the lawyer, her mind a quiet hum beneath the storm of her family's outrage. She knew her grandfather. A gift this big never came without strings.
Arthur, his face still flushed with anger, seemed to have the same thought. He forced a calm into his voice. "Sullivan, my father's will can't be that simple. There must be other conditions."
Eleanor, recovering from her initial shock, chimed in, her voice sharp and accusing. "That's right. Charles would never leave the family's future to an uneducated girl who knows nothing."
Robert Sullivan adjusted his glasses, his face unreadable. "Mr. Solomon is correct. There is a second part to the will."
A flicker of hope lit up Eleanor's and Candis's eyes. This was it. The loophole. The clause that would restore the natural order.
The lawyer paused, letting the tension build. His gaze swept the room before finally settling on Arlie. "There is one condition to this inheritance."
He cleared his throat. "Miss Arlie Solomon must enter into a contract of marriage with the heir to the Ward family, Mr. Kerr Ward."
Another bomb dropped. A collective gasp rippled through the hall. Every head swiveled in unison, a sea of shocked faces turning to the back of the room-to the silent, imposing figure of Kerr Ward.
That name alone was a force of nature in Olympus City. It represented a level of wealth and power that made the Solomons look like new money. Kerr Ward was the ultimate prize, the man every debutante and socialite dreamed of.
The blood drained from Candis's face. She'd spent years positioning herself, dreaming of the day she'd catch Kerr Ward's eye. This news was crueler than losing the inheritance. It was the theft of her entire future.
For the first time since she'd entered the room, Arlie's composure cracked. A faint line appeared between her brows. Her gaze drifted to the back, landing on the man who was now her problem. Her eyes were cold, assessing, as if she were looking at an inconvenient piece of furniture.
Everyone held their breath, waiting. They expected tears of joy, a cry of disbelief, a rush of overwhelming gratitude. A poor girl from the country, handed a fortune and the most eligible bachelor in the city. A fairy tale.
Arlie broke the silence. Her voice was flat, empty of any emotion.
"I refuse."
A beat of stunned silence. Then she added, her tone making it clear this wasn't a negotiation, "The marriage contract, along with the inheritance. I refuse it all."
The quiet in the hall became absolute-a thick, suffocating blanket of disbelief. Refusing billions was madness. Refusing Kerr Ward was sacrilege. They couldn't comprehend it. It was a rejection of everything their world was built on.
Arthur and Eleanor stared, mouths open. They'd prepared for tears, for pleading, for a fight. Not this. Complete and utter rejection.
Across the room, Kerr Ward's impassive mask finally showed a hairline crack. His eyes, which had been watching with detached amusement, now held a sharp, probing intensity. He looked at Arlie. Something unreadable flickered in his gaze. It was the first time in his life he'd been so thoroughly, so casually, discarded. Along with a fortune, no less.
Arlie turned, her back straight, ready to walk away from billions and a power marriage as easily as walking away from a boring conversation. Her action was a grenade thrown into their value system. Power, money, status-none of it seemed to mean anything to her.
"Miss Solomon, please wait!" Robert Sullivan's voice was urgent. "Mr. Solomon anticipated that you might refuse."
Arlie paused at the aisle but didn't turn around. Her posture radiated impatience.
A ghost of a smile-so faint it was barely there-touched Kerr Ward's lips. This was getting interesting. Far more interesting than he'd expected.
Candis saw that smile, and a fresh wave of jealous rage washed over her. Why would he look at the woman who'd just humiliated him with anything other than contempt?
Arlie's refusal had put the Solomons in an exquisitely awkward spot. They were the beggars now, scorned by the person they'd just been scorning.
Kerr's gaze met Arlie's for a brief, charged moment across the crowded room. His was filled with a hunter's curiosity. Hers was filled with annoyance.
Then, for the first time, Kerr Ward spoke. His voice was a low, resonant baritone that commanded attention without effort.
"Let her finish, Mr. Sullivan."
At Kerr Ward's command, Robert Sullivan gestured toward a small, private sitting room off the main hall. "Miss Solomon, if you would."
Arlie followed him without a word. Kerr didn't follow, but he moved to where he could watch her through the glass-paned doors. He leaned against the wall, arms crossed, his interest now fully engaged.
He wanted to see what could possibly make this girl tick.
Inside the quiet room, Sullivan retrieved a small, encrypted audio recorder from his briefcase and handed it to Arlie. "Mr. Solomon left this for you, personally."
Arlie took it, her fingers brushing the cool metal. She put in the single earbud and pressed play. Her grandfather's voice-frail with age but still warm-filled her ear.
He didn't waste time with pleasantries. He spoke of the rot inside the Solomon family, the greed that had consumed his own son. He couldn't trust any of them, he said. Only her. Only she had the strength and the intelligence to protect the company and rebuild it.
The marriage to the Ward family, he explained, was a shield. A "protective shell." Kerr Ward's name and power would keep the vultures away, buying her the time she needed to secure her position.
His voice cracked at the end, raw and pleading. "Arlie, this is the last thing your grandpa will ever ask of you. Please, save the last foundation of the Solomon family."
The recording ended. Arlie stood in silence for a long moment, the little recorder clenched tight in her fist. Something soft and vulnerable-something no one in the main hall had seen-crossed her face.
She took a slow, deep breath, her composure settling back into place like a mask. She removed the earbud and looked at Robert Sullivan.
"Bring me the documents."
Relief washed over the lawyer's face. He quickly produced the inheritance papers and the marriage agreement.
Arlie scanned the pages, her eyes moving fast. Her decision wasn't for the money or the power. It was for the old man's last wish. She uncapped a pen and signed her name at the bottom of each document. The signature was clean, decisive.
When she stepped back into the main hall, Arthur, Eleanor, and Candis descended on her like wolves.
"What trick are you playing now?" Arthur snarled. "I'm warning you, you're not welcome in this house!"
"Don't think signing a piece of paper makes you the lady of the manor," Eleanor added, her voice dripping venom. "We'll teach you what high-society rules really are."
Candis just glared, her eyes burning with a hatred so pure it was almost tangible.
Arlie ignored them. She handed the signed documents to Robert Sullivan, then turned to face her uncle. A small, mocking smile played on her lips.
Her voice was quiet, but it cut through their bluster with chilling precision.
"The assets are mine now."
She paused, letting her gaze drift over each of their greedy, twisted faces.
"If you think you can take it, go ahead."
The softly spoken challenge was more potent than any shout. It was a declaration of war, delivered with the casual confidence of someone who knew, without a doubt, that she'd win.
Arthur's face turned a shade of purple. He pointed a trembling finger at her, sputtering, unable to form a coherent response.
Candis, however, found her voice. "You bitch!" she shrieked.
Caleb, standing rigid beside his father, slammed his fist against the back of a chair. "Shut your mouth, you country freak!" he spat, his face twisted with fury. "You think you can just walk in here and-"
Arlie acted as if she hadn't heard either of them. She turned and started walking toward the grand staircase, her demeanor suggesting she was merely informing them of a settled fact before retiring for the evening. Caleb's unfinished threat dissolved into impotent silence behind her.
From his vantage point, Kerr Ward watched the scene, the corner of his mouth lifting in a genuine, appreciative smile. This girl had fire. He was getting more and more curious about the source of her unshakeable calm, her confidence that seemed so out of place with her supposed background.
Robert Sullivan carefully placed the signed documents back in his briefcase. He turned to the sputtering Solomon family. "Legally speaking," he stated, his voice devoid of emotion, "Miss Solomon is now your landlord. And your boss."
That landed like a physical blow, shattering the last of their delusions. Arlie's reluctant acceptance, followed by her immediate, aggressive assertion of power, had stunned them into silence.
The contract was signed. The transfer of power was complete. The battle for the Solomon empire had officially begun.