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The CEO'S Wrong Sister (The Black Sheep Bride) Novel Cover

The CEO'S Wrong Sister (The Black Sheep Bride)

She was never supposed to be his choice. When the Voss family's empire crumbles under the weight of catastrophic debt, a deal is struck with the most powerful man in the room Xavier Holt the Billionaire, and CEO of The Holt empire. The kind of man who walks into a room and changes its temperature. Everyone expected him to choose Madison Voss, the beautiful, polished, perfect Madison the golden daughter who had spent her whole life being chosen first. He chose Nora instead. Nora, the overlooked one. The difficult one, the sister who asked too many questions, refused to perform, and had spent twenty-six years being everything her family wished she wasn't. The black sheep. She doesn't want this marriage. She doesn't want him. She wants him to choose Madison and let her go back to her small apartment, her plants, her romance novels, and the quiet life she'd built for herself in the spaces her family forgot to look. But Xavier Holt doesn't negotiate. He doesn't explain. And he absolutely does not change his mind.
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Chapter 4

The dinner was at seven.

Nora knew this because the house had been in a particular kind of chaos since three in the afternoon, the controlled, performative chaos of a family trying to look like they hadn't been falling apart for months. Her mother had changed the flower arrangement in the entrance hall twice. Her father had ironed a shirt himself which he hadn't done in years. And Madison had been getting ready since two.

Nora had knocked on her sister's bedroom door at four thirty to borrow a hair clip, and had been met with the specific sight of Madison in full preparation mode three dresses laid out on the bed, two different lipsticks open on the vanity, hair half done and already perfect. The room smelled like expensive perfume, and quiet desperation and something else underneath that Nora couldn't name but recognized instinctively.

Wanting, Madison wanted this.

Had wanted it, Nora realised, before last night's meeting, before Xavier Holt's name had even entered the conversation. The preparation wasn't for a dinner. It was for an audition.

"You look nice," Nora had said carefully.

"I'm trying the green one," Madison said, not looking away from the mirror. "The blue washes me out in artificial light."

"The green is good."

"Xavier Holt has been photographed with three different women in the last two years," Madison said, still to the mirror. "All of them brunette. All of them in something green or red at some point." She paused. "I researched it."

Nora had stood in the doorway with her hand still on the frame, and looked at her sister and felt the particular complicated grief of watching someone want something very badly and knowing, already knowing, with the quiet certainty of someone who pays attention that the thing they want is not coming.

She hadn't said anything.

She'd found her own hair clip, and went back to her room.

She was late coming downstairs.

Not dramatically late, not the kind of late that announces itself. Just seven minutes, which was enough for the dining room to already be arranged by the time she arrived, enough for the introductions to have happened, enough for Xavier Holt to already be seated at the table when she walked in and therefore already looking up when she entered.

She felt his eyes before she saw them.

That was the thing about Xavier Holt that she had not been prepared for, and was not sure she could adequately explain to anyone who hadn't experienced it the way his attention had physical weight. The way being looked at by him felt like being the only thing in focus in an otherwise blurred photograph.

She was in jeans and a cream blouse and she had done nothing particularly impressive with her hair. She had her current romance novel tucked under her arm because she'd been reading on the way downstairs and had forgotten to put it down and she realized this approximately one second after walking into the room full of people.

Madison, in the green dress, was perfectly positioned beside their mother. She looked extraordinary. The dress was right, the light was right, everything was exactly as prepared and considered and deliberate as two hours of effort could make it.

Xavier Holt looked at her, and smiled politely.

Then his gaze moved across the table.

And landed on Nora where it stayed.

She set her novel on the sideboard by the door she wasn't going to carry a romance novel through a formal dinner, she had some dignity.

She took her seat, the one slightly to the left. The also present chair. She unfolded her napkin, and reached for her water glass and told herself the warmth climbing up the back of her neck was the room temperature and nothing else.

"You must be Nora," said the man to Xavier's left.

She looked up. He was older mid fifties, silver haired, the particular polish of someone who had spent decades in boardrooms. Xavier's lawyer, she would find out later.

"I am," she said.

"Richard Osei," he said. "I've heard a great deal about you."

"From the file," she said pleasantly.

Richard blinked. Xavier, across the table, looked at her with something that might have been appreciation if appreciation was something he allowed himself in public.

"Among other sources," Richard said carefully.

"Mm," Nora said, and took a sip of her water.

Dinner proceeded.

It was, and she would think about this later, would turn it over and examine it from several angles not what she expected. She had expected Xavier Holt at a dinner table to be the way he was in the study: precise, controlled, a man conducting a meeting rather than sharing a meal. And he was those things. But he was also quiet in a way that listened. The kind of quiet that absorbed everything around it without needing to fill space.

Her father talked, her mother talked. Madison talked beautifully, fluently, asking Xavier questions that were really answers, performing interest in his world with the ease of someone who had rehearsed.

Xavier responded to all of it with the measured courtesy of a man who was present without being particularly moved.

And then Nora, who had been mostly quiet, said something.

She couldn't even remember afterward what it was something about one of the business sectors her father had mentioned, some observation that connected two things in a way that hadn't been connected in the conversation yet. It wasn't remarkable. It was just accurate.

The table paused, then Xavier looked at her.

Not the polite look, not the measured courtesy look. This time it was something different.

It was focused. The document look, but sharper than before, like he'd turned a page and found something he hadn't expected on the other side.

"That's an interesting point," Richard said.

"It's obvious," Nora said. "Someone had to say it."

Madison laughed lightly. "Nora's always been the one who says the thing nobody wants to say."

She said it warmly, fondly. The way you say something fond about a person's quirk the implication being: isn't she something, this unpredictable sister of mine, you never know what she'll say next. It was perfectly done. Nora had heard variations of it her entire life, and had long since learned to hear the shape underneath it.

She's a lot, she's difficult. She's not what you'd want.

She smiled, and reached for her fork.

Xavier was still looking at her.

"What would you do," he said, and it was directed at her, only at her, in that low unhurried voice that made the room pay attention without raising itself, "if the proposed solution falls through?"

The table went slightly still.

"Find another one," Nora said.

"There isn't one," he said. Echoing her own words from this morning back at her. She wondered if he knew she'd said them. She suspected he knew everything she'd said.

"Then we'd manage the consequences," she said. "People do. It's not comfortable but it's survivable."

"Most people in your family's position don't think that way," he said.

"I'm not most people in my family," she said.

Something happened to his expression. Barely anything, a fraction of a shift, a degree of change so small it shouldn't have registered. But she was watching and it registered.

He looked away first.

He reached for his wine glass. Took a measured sip, and set it back down.

And Madison, across the table, watched all of this with the smile still perfectly in place and the eyes doing something entirely different cataloguing, calculating, the patient machinery of someone watching a situation develop in a direction they hadn't planned for.

Nora picked up her fork.

She ate her dinner.

She thought about her romance novel on the sideboard by the door. The hero in it had just realized something about the heroine in a room full of people, and had looked at her the way you look at something you've decided to keep.

She did not think about the way Xavier Holt had looked at her just now.

She thought about it for the rest of the meal.

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