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Shattered Engagement, New Love Novel Cover

Shattered Engagement, New Love

The Mendez estate had never looked more beautiful than it did tonight. Crystal chandeliers cast prismatic light across the marble floors, and hundreds of white roses—my favorites, or so I'd believed—adorned every surface. The string quartet played Vivaldi in the grand ballroom, and champagne flowed as freely as the compliments from guests who'd known me since childhood. I smoothed the front of my custom Valentino gown, the white silk whispering against my skin like a promise. Twenty years old today. The age when everything was supposed to begin. My fingers found the engagement ring on my left hand, twisting it in that familiar anxious gesture I'd never quite outgrown. Where was Eric? He should have been by my side an hour ago for the toast, for the announcement we'd planned together. I'd imagined this moment a thousand times—his hand in mine, his voice steady as he told our guests that I'd agreed to be his wife, that we'd build a future together.
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Chapter 2

Three deep breaths. That's what it took to dry my tears in Cash's presence, to reapply the makeup that had streaked down my cheeks, to transform my face back into the mask everyone expected to see. The girl in the compact mirror looked exactly like the Lily Mendez who'd left the ballroom an hour ago, but everything beneath the surface had calcified into something harder, sharper.

Cash walked beside me as we re-entered the gala, his presence a steady anchor in the crystalline chaos of champagne glasses and false laughter. The chandeliers seemed too bright now, exposing every forced smile, every calculated gesture I'd been too naive to recognize before.

"Thank you," I murmured, not looking at him. If I met his eyes, I might shatter again.

"Always," he said simply, then melted into the crowd with the grace of someone who understood exactly what I needed: space to perform.

I moved through the guests with practiced ease, accepting congratulations I hadn't earned, smiling at compliments that meant nothing. Mrs. Hartwell gushed about my gown. Mr. Chen toasted my father's business acumen. Each interaction was a step in a dance I'd perfected over twenty years, except now I could see the strings, the stagecraft, the careful choreography of privilege.

Then Eric appeared, nervous energy radiating from him as he approached. His tie sat slightly crooked—had it been that way earlier? Had Angelique's hands loosened it?

"Lily, I'm so sorry." His voice carried that familiar warmth, the tone that used to make my heart flutter. Now it just sounded rehearsed. "I got pulled away with some family matters."

I tilted my head, letting confusion soften my features. "Oh? I thought I saw you earlier. With Angelique."

The change was instantaneous. His hand moved to his watch, fingers brushing the metal band—a gesture I'd seen a thousand times but never understood until this moment. A tell. He was about to lie.

"You saw that?" He laughed, but the sound held an edge. "God, that was... Angelique was having a complete breakdown. Something about feeling like she doesn't belong in the family, you know how she gets emotional."

I did know. I'd comforted her through dozens of supposed crises, never recognizing them as the performances they were.

"She was practically hysterical," he continued, warming to his story now, building details like an architect constructing a believable facade. "I found her in the guest wing, crying her eyes out. Charlie and Xavier were already there trying to calm her down. It took all three of us to get her settled."

All three of them. Together. While I'd been in the ballroom, twisting my engagement ring and worrying about Eric's nerves.

"Poor Angelique," I said, and meant it in ways he couldn't comprehend. Poor foolish Angelique, who didn't realize she was just another pawn in whatever game these brothers were playing.

Eric's shoulders relaxed. "I knew you'd understand. You're always so kind to her, even when she's..." He trailed off, leaving me to fill in the implications. Difficult. Dramatic. Attention-seeking.

I used to fill in those blanks with defensive justifications for my sister. Now I saw them for what they were—calculated erosions of my empathy, slowly turning me against her so I wouldn't notice what was happening right in front of me.

"Of course, darling." The endearment tasted like ash. "Family takes care of family."

Relief flooded his expression, genuine and pathetic. He actually believed I'd swallowed his lies. He reached for my hand, and I let him take it, let his fingers intertwine with mine like they belonged there.

"I love you," he said, and I wondered if he even knew what the words meant.

"I know," I replied, because that was easier than the truth.

He squeezed my hand once more before excusing himself, something about checking on the catering for the cake service. I watched him disappear into the crowd, already pulling out his phone, probably texting Angelique to confirm I'd believed him.

I stood there in my white Valentino gown, surrounded by roses and champagne and two hundred people who thought they were celebrating my happiness, memorizing every word of his lies. Evidence. I would need evidence.

---

Sunday brunch at the Mendez estate was a tradition older than my memory. The terrace overlooked gardens that my mother had designed before she died, before the family had expanded to include three foster brothers and an adopted sister who'd turned my life into theater.

Sunlight filtered through the pergola's flowering vines, dappling the white tablecloth with shadow patterns that shifted like the truth I was learning to see. The staff had set out fresh pastries, sliced fruit arranged in precise geometric patterns, and three varieties of juice in crystal pitchers that caught the light like prisms.

I sat at my father's right hand, the position I'd occupied since childhood, wearing a pale blue dress that had always been one of Eric's favorites. The fabric was silk, delicate, expensive. Easy to stain.

Eric sat across from me, with Charlie and Xavier flanking him like bookends. Angelique had positioned herself at the table's far end, close enough to be included but distant enough to maintain her position as the family's perpetual outsider. Her pink dress—a different one than Friday night's, but the same calculated shade of innocent—made her look younger, more vulnerable.

I watched her watch Eric, saw the way her eyes tracked his movements with proprietorial awareness. I watched Eric deliberately not look at her, his avoidance so careful it became its own form of communication.

"Pass the marmalade, would you, Lily?" Charlie's request broke my observation. I handed him the crystal dish, noting how he barely acknowledged me, already turning to make some comment to Xavier about a business deal.

They'd been using me for so long they'd forgotten to act like they cared.

The server approached my side of the table, a young woman I recognized from the housekeeping staff, holding a bottle of white wine. Sunday brunch always included wine, another tradition my father maintained from my mother's European sensibilities.

Angelique leaned forward as the server began to pour, her movement sudden and exaggerated. Her arm swung out in an arc that looked accidental but felt deliberate, colliding with the server's elbow just as the wine reached my glass.

The liquid arced through the air in slow motion, a pale golden stream that splashed across my chest, my lap, soaking into the silk with immediate, spreading darkness. Cold shocked through the fabric, making me gasp.

"Oh my God!" Angelique's shriek pierced the morning air. She was already out of her chair, rushing around the table with napkins clutched in both hands, her face a mask of horror that would've won awards. "Lily, I'm so sorry! I'm so clumsy, I didn't mean to!"

She descended on me with the napkins, dabbing frantically at the stain, pressing the fabric against my skin hard enough to hurt. Her hands moved with feverish energy, and beneath her breath I heard her whisper, "There, there, it'll be fine, don't be upset with me."

She was performing for an audience, and I was the unwilling co-star.

I stood without a word, the wine dripping from my dress onto the terrace stones. Every eye at the table watched me, waiting for my reaction, and I felt the weight of expectation like a physical pressure.

"Excuse me," I said, my voice perfectly level. "I need to change."

Angelique's hands fluttered toward me again. "Lily, please, I feel terrible! Let me help you, I can—"

"No." The single word stopped her mid-gesture. I stepped away from her reaching hands, away from the table, and walked into the house without looking back.

Behind me, I heard Angelique's voice shift, trembling now with tears that had materialized on command. "She's always so cold to me. I just... I just want us to be sisters, but she resents me."

I paused in the doorway, hidden by shadow but still able to hear Eric's response: "She's always been oversensitive. You were clearly apologizing."

Charlie's voice joined in, casual and dismissive. "For someone who claims to love family, you're pretty cruel to your sister, Lily."

Xavier, always more subtle, added quietly, "Maybe she needs time to work on her compassion."

They were rewriting the narrative in real-time, turning my silence into cruelty, my withdrawal into coldness. By the time I returned, they'd have everyone at that table convinced I was the villain in a drama where I'd been deliberately humiliated.

I climbed the stairs to my room, wine-soaked silk clinging to my skin, and realized this was just the beginning. They'd been isolating me so gradually I hadn't noticed the walls closing in. Every time I failed to react the way they wanted, they'd paint me as unreasonable, unforgiving, unworthy of the family name I'd been born into.

In my bathroom, I peeled off the ruined dress and stared at my reflection. Wine stained my chest like a wound, and my eyes held the same hard glitter I'd seen Friday night.

Let them think I was cold. Let them rewrite their stories.

I was learning to write my own.

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