His gaze moved across me in fragments, as if his mind could not process everything at once, beginning with the dress I wore, then rising slowly to my face, and finally settling on the small embroidered signature stitched in silk over my heart, subtle enough to disappear unless the light caught it just right.
The light caught it.
And when it did, I saw the exact moment he understood not only who I was, but what I had become.
Beside him, Lillian Carter turned with a soft, practiced smile, the kind brides learn to hold when they believe everything is still unfolding according to plan. “Adrian?” she asked gently. “Do you know her?”
He still couldn’t answer.
Then my mother saw me.
Evelyn Cole had been crossing the marble floor with two glasses of champagne in her hands, her bracelets catching the warm light, her heels echoing softly as she moved with the polished grace of someone who had spent decades perfecting the image of a life that appeared effortless from the outside. For a brief moment, she looked almost fragile in that elegance, as if everything she had built depended on careful balance.
Then the glasses slipped.
They shattered against the floor, the sound cutting through the music and conversation with a sharp clarity that turned every head in the room.
The champagne spread across the marble and soaked into the edges of her shoes, but she didn’t move, because she was staring at me as if something she had carefully buried years ago had just walked back into the room without asking permission.
My father followed her gaze.
Thomas Cole stepped forward from behind her, and although time had marked him in quiet, expensive ways, softening the sharp lines of his face and adding a certain heaviness that came from years of control rather than ease, his eyes remained exactly the same.
Cold.
Calculating.
Certain of their own authority.
Except now, for the first time I could remember, there was something else there, something unguarded and unfamiliar.
Not anger.