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Betrayal at the Wedding Novel Cover

Betrayal at the Wedding

The platform bustled with life as I stood perfectly still, my grandmother's antique hairpin gleaming in my carefully arranged hair. Three years. One thousand and ninety-five days of waiting, of reading his letters until the paper thinned, of touching the words as if they could somehow bring him closer. The train whistle pierced the air, and my heart leaped in my chest. Kevin was finally coming home. I clutched the bouquet of white roses tighter, my palms damp against the ribbon-wrapped stems. Around me, families reunited with tearful embraces, but I remained poised, determined to present the dignified welcome Kevin deserved after serving our country. Then I saw him—tall and straight-backed in his uniform, thinner than I remembered, his face more angular, eyes holding shadows they hadn't before. For one perfect moment, everything was as it should be. Then I noticed the woman beside him.
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Chapter 3

The crystal chandeliers of the Richards estate cast fractured rainbows across immaculate tablecloths as servants moved silently between guests. Seated beside Duke, I maintained the perfect posture my grandmother had drilled into me since childhood, even as Senator William Richards's booming voice dominated the conversation from the head of the table.

"This union," he declared, lifting his wine glass toward Duke and me, "will strengthen not only two distinguished families but also our position in the capital's delicate balance of power."

I smiled politely, having grown accustomed to the Senator's tendency to view even marriage as political currency. Duke's hand found mine beneath the table, a gentle squeeze communicating more than words could in such company.

"Father," Duke interjected with respectful firmness, "perhaps we might save political strategy for tomorrow's committee meeting?"

The Senator laughed, the sound echoing off crystal and china. "My son pretends disinterest in politics, Miss Morrison, but he has a shrewder mind than most of my colleagues combined."

After dinner, while the other guests retired to the drawing room for brandy and conversation, Duke guided me toward the east wing, his steps measured and deliberate.

"There's something I need to show you," he said, voice lowered despite the empty corridor.

He led me to a study I hadn't seen before, its walls lined with books and maps. After locking the door behind us, Duke moved to a seemingly ordinary bookcase and pressed a hidden mechanism. The shelf swung outward, revealing a small, windowless room beyond.

"What is this?" I whispered, both alarmed and intrigued.

Duke lit an oil lamp, illuminating a space filled with telegraph equipment, coded ledgers, and neatly organized files. "This is who I really am, Liliana."

I stepped inside cautiously, my fingers trailing over unfamiliar equipment. "You're not just the Senator's son."

"No." He removed a leather folio from a hidden compartment and handed it to me. "I lead intelligence operations for the department. My public persona—the privileged heir, the reluctant politician—is a necessary facade."

I opened the folio, finding official documents stamped with government seals I'd never seen before, reports written in partial code, photographs of people I didn't recognize. The weight of what he was sharing settled over me—not just secrets, but trust.

"Why are you showing me this now?"

Duke's eyes met mine, serious and searching. "Because I'm asking you to marry me, Liliana, and I refuse to build that marriage on deception. I need to know if you can accept this reality—the secrecy, the danger, the double life."

I closed the folio, thinking of the masks we all wore—mine of dignified acceptance after Kevin's betrayal, Selene's of entitled triumph, Kevin's of duty without love. At least Duke was offering me truth.

"Thank you," I said finally, "for trusting me with this."

* * *

Two weeks later, the Richards ballroom buzzed with Washington's elite, gathered to celebrate our engagement. I stood beside Duke in a gown of midnight blue silk, accepting congratulations with practiced grace. Senator Richards moved through the crowd like a general surveying his troops, strategic in every handshake and conversation.

A ripple of whispers drew my attention to the entrance, where Selene stood in a gown too bright for her complexion, Kevin a half-step behind her like a reluctant shadow. My stomach tightened, but I maintained my smile, even as Duke's posture tensed beside me.

"I wasn't aware they were invited," he murmured.

"They weren't," I replied softly.

Selene navigated the crowd with determination, dragging Kevin in her wake until they stood before us. Up close, I noticed the slight pallor beneath her cosmetics, the tightness around her eyes that pregnancy and newfound status hadn't softened.

"Miss Morrison," she said, deliberately ignoring my engagement. "How lovely to see you recovered from your... disappointment. Captain Lynch and I simply had to congratulate you."

"Mrs. Lynch," I acknowledged with perfect composure. "How kind of you to attend. I trust you're finding married life agreeable?"

A flash of something—anger? uncertainty?—crossed her face before she recovered. "Quite. Though I wonder how you'll manage, with your... tendency toward abandoned loyalty."

Duke stepped forward slightly, his voice pleasant but carrying an unmistakable edge. "Mrs. Lynch, I believe you've mistaken my fiancée's dignity for abandonment. A common error among those who lack the former."

Kevin's face flushed with shame or anger. "Duke, I—"

"Captain Lynch," Duke interrupted, his tone suddenly all business. "I'd suggest escorting your wife home. She appears fatigued, and in her condition..." He left the sentence deliberately unfinished.

Kevin nodded stiffly, a soldier recognizing an order disguised as concern. As he guided Selene away, she turned back, her eyes finding mine with unmistakable hostility. "The hairpin suits me better anyway."

I watched them leave, Kevin's military posture rigid with unspoken tension, before Duke's hand at my waist drew my attention back to him.

"Tomorrow," he said quietly, "I'd like to show you something beyond these walls. If you're willing."

"What sort of something?"

His smile held a spark of excitement I hadn't seen before. "The world I really live in."

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