Her fingers loosened slightly, though her body still felt tense... like one wrong move would shatter everything. She shifted her gaze, just slightly.
Not fully looking at Sebastian. Not yet. She couldn’t.
Because she knew. The mont their eyes t... Everything she had tried to bury would rise right back to the surface. And she wasn’t sure she was ready to face it.
Not here. Not now. Not like this.
Julian, however, didn’t look away. Not for a second. His eyes remained fixed on Sebastian, cold and unwavering. asuring him. Reading him.
As if trying to understand why a man like that... would suddenly appear in their lives again. In this place. On this night.
There was no such thing as a coincidence. Not with people like him.
Across the room, Sebastian finally lifted his glass slightly. A subtle gesture. Almost polite. But there was sothing behind it. Sothing darker. Sothing knowing.
His lips curved not quite into a smile. More like... anticipation. Like he was watching a story unfold exactly the way he wanted it to.
And standing in the middle of it all, Amira felt it. The weight of what she had done. What she had allowed. What she had started. Her smile remained. But her chest tightened.
Because deep down. She knew this wasn’t just an engagent party anymore. It was the beginning of sothing far more dangerous. And this ti... There would be no easy way out.
The air sat heavy in the room... thick with the sweet, almost overwhelming scent of lilies, too many lilies, and the low, constant hum of laughter and polished conversation. It pressed in from all sides, elegant and suffocating all at once.
Julian’s fingers tightened gently around Amara’s hand. Not enough to hurt. Just enough to say, I’m here.
His thumb brushed over her knuckles... once... then again... a quiet, steady rhythm. The kind that grounded you without asking questions.
But even that couldn’t quite silence it. That feeling. That presence. Unseen... and yet unmistakable. Sebastian.
Not near, at least not that she could see, but there. Sowhere in the room. Like a shift in the air. A pull she didn’t want to acknowledge... and couldn’t ignore.
Julian leaned closer, his voice low, ant only for her.
"We can go."
Simple. Gentle. An escape offered without pressure. His eyes were already searching, mapping exits, asuring distance, calculating the fastest way out of a room that no longer felt safe.
Amara didn’t answer right away. Instead... she looked across the room. And there she was.
Amira. Radiant. Glowing in a way that had nothing to do with the lights overhead. Her smile was soft, full... her hand resting so easily on Leo’s arm, as it had always belonged there.
Laughter surrounded them. Warm. Bright. Effortless. This was her night. Her mont. And Amara... swallowed. "Just a little longer," she said softly.
The words ca out steady, but her chest felt tight like she had to hold herself together just to say them.
She forced a smile. It looked right... from a distance. Up close, though, it didn’t quite reach her eyes. "It’s her mont," she added, quieter this ti. "We stay... we smile... and then we disappear."
Julian studied her for a second longer than necessary. Then he nodded. No argunt. No pushback. Just understanding.
They moved together after that through the crowd, through the noise, like shadows dressed in silk. Smiling when expected. Nodding at the right monts. Offering congratulations that sounded right... but felt distant, like they belonged to soone else.
Every step felt asured. Every interaction... rehearsed.
And when they finally stood in front of Amira and Leo, the mont stretched. Too bright. Too loud. Too close.
The words ca out. The smiles were exchanged. There was even an embrace. But to Amara... it all felt like running her hands over sandpaper, subtle, but grating. Each second is just a little harder to endure than the last.
Finally... it ended. Julian leaned in again, his voice brushing her ear. "I have to take a quick work call before we head out." A pause. "Five minutes?"
Another, softer, "et by the terrace?" Amara nodded. Too quickly, maybe. But she didn’t trust her voice just then. Five minutes of quiet sounded like relief.
As Julian stepped away, his hand slipping from hers, the absence was imdiate. Cold. Noticeable. Amara didn’t follow the crowd. Didn’t stay in the light.
She drifted instead, slowly, almost unconsciously toward the edges of the room, toward the far wall, where the velvet curtains hung heavy and dark, swallowing the glow of chandeliers. The noise softened there. The laughter dulled. The air felt... different. Quieter.
But not safer. Because even in the shadows... Even there... She could still feel it. That pull. Closer now. Waiting. The quiet she found behind the velvet curtains felt like a small rcy.
The music softened there... dulled into a distant echo. Laughter lost its sharpness. Voices blurred into sothing almost... forgettable. For a mont, Amara let herself breathe.
Just one breath. Slow... careful... like if she rushed it, the world might co crashing back too quickly. But peace, real peace, never stayed long.
Not tonight. From the other side of the heavy crimson fabric, a voice cut through the hush. Sharp. Jagged. Too familiar.
"What do you an, my samples went missing?" Amara froze. Not stiffened. Not startled. Frozen. Like sothing inside her had simply... stopped. Sebastian. He was right there.
Close enough that the fabric between them suddenly felt too thin... too fragile... like it couldn’t possibly be enough to keep him out.
Her fingers curled slightly at her sides. She tried to move, just one step, just enough to leave, to disappear. But her feet refused. Rooted. "What the hell? How could you let that happen?"
His voice rose, no longer controlled. It carried sothing darker now, sothing raw... and dangerous. It vibrated through the curtain. Through the air. Through her.
"You an you mistakenly inseminated my sen into the wrong girl?" The words didn’t land all at once. They hit in pieces. Slow. Heavy. Unforgiving. Amara’s breath caught halfway in her chest. Like her body didn’t quite understand how to finish it.
"What do you an that woman is carrying my child now?" Venom. There was no other word for it. He didn’t say child like it ant life. He said it like it ant loss. Like it ant sothing stolen or a well-played drama.
Sothing taken from him. Amara took a step back. Just one. Careful. Silent. The floor felt unsteady beneath her, like it might give way if she moved too quickly.
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