
Christmas Eve, My Fiancé Pushed Me into the Lake
Chapter 3
The discharge papers felt heavier than they should have in my trembling hands. Three days in the hospital had been enough to save my life but not nearly enough to process what my life had become. The pneumonia had cleared, the hypothermia had lifted, but the bone-deep chill of betrayal remained lodged somewhere in my chest, cold and permanent as winter.
Mother's hand rested on my shoulder as we walked through the hospital's automatic doors, her touch gentle but tense. Father flanked my other side, his jaw set in that particular way that meant he was managing a crisis. Neither of them had pressed for details about my demand to replace Chris, but I could feel their questions hovering in the air between us like smoke.
"The car is waiting," Father said quietly, gesturing toward the black sedan idling at the curb. "We have... arrangements to discuss."
Arrangements. Such a sanitized word for the complete upheaval of everything I'd thought my future would be. As we settled into the leather seats, I caught my reflection in the tinted window—hollow cheeks, dark circles carved beneath my eyes, skin still pale as parchment. I looked like a ghost of myself.
"The Vanderbilts were... surprisingly accommodating," Mother began carefully, her manicured fingers worrying the clasp of her purse. "When we explained the situation—"
"What exactly did you tell them?" The words came out sharper than I'd intended, panic flaring in my chest. If they'd mentioned Chris's attempt on my life, if they'd accused him outright...
"That you'd suffered a traumatic accident and needed time to reconsider the arrangement," Father said smoothly. "Nothing more. We simply indicated that an alternative match might be... preferable."
Relief flooded through me, followed immediately by a different kind of anxiety. "And they agreed?"
"Cesare Vanderbilt has consented to step in," Father continued, his tone carefully neutral. "He's Chris's uncle—well, technically his father's younger brother, though there's less than a decade between them. He's been managing European operations but recently returned to oversee the American holdings."
The name meant nothing to me beyond its connection to the family that had nearly destroyed me. Another Vanderbilt. Another stranger I'd be expected to pledge my life to.
"He's... agreeable to this?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
"He views it as a strategic necessity," Mother said, and something in her tone suggested this wasn't entirely reassuring. "The alliance between our families remains crucial, regardless of which Vanderbilt man fulfills the contract."
A contract. That's all I was—a signature on a page, a merger disguised as a marriage. The realization should have hurt more than it did, but I felt strangely numb to it. After Chris's calculated cruelty, perhaps cold business was a relief.
We drove in silence through the city streets, past shop windows decorated for the holidays that I'd completely forgotten were approaching. Christmas lights blurred together through my exhausted vision, creating streaks of red and gold against the gray December afternoon.
The Livingstone townhouse felt different when we arrived—smaller somehow, as if my near-death experience had shrunk the familiar spaces. Mrs. Patterson, our housekeeper, fussed over me with tea and blankets, her kind eyes bright with unshed tears. She'd been with our family since I was small; she'd probably expected to help plan my wedding to Chris, not witness my desperate escape from it.
"Mr. Vanderbilt will be here within the hour," Father announced, settling into his leather chair with a tumbler of whiskey despite the early hour. "He preferred to meet immediately rather than delay the... transition."
Transition. Another euphemism for the complete reorganization of my existence.
I excused myself to change, trading the hospital-issued clothes for a simple navy dress that wouldn't betray how badly my hands were still shaking. In the mirror, I practiced expressions that might pass for composed, but my reflection remained stubbornly pale and haunted.
The doorbell's chime echoed through the house at precisely four o'clock. I heard Mrs. Patterson's footsteps in the foyer, followed by a man's voice—deeper than Chris's, with a slight accent that confirmed his European upbringing. My stomach clenched with a familiar mixture of dread and resignation.
"Jennifer," Mother called from the bottom of the stairs. "Our guest has arrived."
I descended slowly, gripping the banister to hide the tremor in my hands. The formal sitting room came into view first, then the back of a tall figure standing near the fireplace. When he turned, I felt my breath catch—not from attraction, but from the shock of recognition.
This was the man who'd pulled me from the lake.
Cesare Vanderbilt was taller than Chris, broader through the shoulders, with dark hair that showed threads of premature silver at the temples. His features were sharper, more angular, carved from the same aristocratic marble as his nephew but somehow more substantial. Where Chris was beautiful in a way that demanded attention, Cesare possessed a quieter magnetism—the kind of presence that filled a room without needing to announce itself.
But it was his eyes that stopped me cold. Dark, intelligent, and utterly unreadable as they assessed me with the same careful attention I imagined he'd give a business proposal.
"Miss Livingstone," he said, inclining his head in a gesture that managed to be both formal and somehow respectful. "I'm glad to see you've recovered."
His voice carried that same controlled calm I remembered from the lake's edge, when he'd asked my name while I coughed up water and shivered against the muddy bank. Heat flooded my cheeks as I realized he'd seen me at my most vulnerable—broken, desperate, nearly dead.
"Mr. Vanderbilt." I managed a curtsy that felt absurdly formal given the circumstances. "I... I should thank you. For that night."
Something flickered across his expression—surprise, perhaps, that I'd recognized him. "No thanks necessary. I simply happened to be in the right place."
Father cleared his throat meaningfully, and we all settled into the arranged seating like actors taking their marks. Cesare chose the chair across from the sofa where I sat with Mother, maintaining a careful distance that felt both respectful and somehow protective.
"I believe we should address the practical aspects of this arrangement directly," Cesare said, his tone businesslike but not unkind. "Given the... unusual circumstances of this transition, I think it's important we establish clear expectations."
I forced myself to meet his gaze, though my heart hammered against my ribs. "What kind of expectations?"
"This will be a marriage of convenience," he said simply, his words carrying neither warmth nor coldness—just fact. "A business alliance formalized through legal union. I have no intention of interfering with your personal life, and I expect the same courtesy in return."
The relief that washed over me was so intense it left me dizzy. No demands for affection I couldn't give. No expectations of intimacy with a stranger. No pretense that this was anything other than what it was—a rescue disguised as a contract.
"I understand," I whispered, and meant it.
Cesare studied my face for a long moment, and I had the unsettling feeling he could see straight through to the fear I was trying so hard to hide.
"The wedding is scheduled for next week," he continued. "If that timeline is... acceptable to you."
Next week. Seven days to prepare for a marriage to a man I'd met twice—once while drowning, once while negotiating my future. The speed of it all made my head spin, but perhaps that was for the best. Less time to think meant less time to panic.
"Yes," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my own voice. "That's acceptable."
Something in his expression shifted—approval, maybe, or simple acknowledgment that I wasn't going to fall apart in his sitting room. He rose from his chair with fluid grace, and I realized our interview was over.
"Then we have an understanding," he said, extending his hand toward me.
I stood on unsteady legs and placed my palm against his. His handshake was firm, warm, utterly impersonal—and somehow, that impersonality felt like the greatest kindness anyone had shown me in years.
"We do," I agreed.
As he took his leave with polite words to my parents, I remained standing in the sitting room, staring at my hand where the warmth of his touch still lingered.
In seven days, I would marry this stranger who'd saved my life once.
Would this really be a good choice?
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