The Maid at Dinner Was the Billionaire Father His Future Son-in-Law Tried to Ruin-Cherry

At 7:33 p.m., Damian Cross stood at the head of my dining table with his wine glass frozen halfway to his mouth.

The recording had stopped playing, but his voice still seemed to hang under the chandelier.

“She’ll sign after the wedding. The trust moves through me. Then Hale Industries bleeds.”

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No one reached for bread. No one moved a fork. The room smelled of roast beef, beeswax, and spilled Bordeaux. A thin red line of wine had crept across the marble near Damian’s shoe, almost touching the gray wig lying on my tablecloth.

Elena stared at him.

Not at me. Not at the guards. Him.

Her hand lifted slowly to the pearl earrings that had belonged to her mother. Then it dropped to the engagement ring on her finger.

Damian swallowed. His throat jumped above his collar.

“Ellie,” he said, using the nickname only family used, “you know me.”

She did not answer.

Celeste Cross’s diamonds trembled against her collarbone as she turned to me. “Victor, this has gone too far. A private joke was recorded without consent in your own home. That is not exactly noble.”

Her voice stayed polished. Her fingers did not.

She kept twisting the necklace until the stones cut red half-moons into her skin.

I picked up the phone and laid it beside Damian’s untouched place card.

“My attorneys are in the east study,” I said. “Your attorneys were invited too. They arrived nine minutes ago.”

Damian’s face twitched.

That was the first real crack.

Across the table, Elena whispered, “You invited attorneys to my engagement dinner?”

I looked at my daughter. Her eyes were wet, but her chin had not lowered.

“I invited witnesses,” I said. “I prayed I would not need them.”

Damian laughed once. It sounded dry and wrong.

“Witnesses to what? A father playing dress-up because he can’t tolerate his daughter choosing a husband?”

I nodded to Marcus, my head of security.

The doors opened.

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