She walked into the dining room, her steps echoing on the marble floor. The light from the crystal chandelier was blinding, forcing her to squint. The air was thick and silent, so heavy that even the clinking of silverware had ceased.
At the head of the long mahogany table sat her grandfather, Felton Carroll. His gnarled fingers tapped a slow, deliberate rhythm on the polished wood, the sound like a ticking clock counting down to an execution. His eyes, faded and cold, swept over her not as a granddaughter, but as a flawed piece of inventory.
Her mother, Debrah, was staring intently at the slice of steak on her plate, her hand trembling as she held the knife. She hadn't looked up. She wouldn't.
Her stepfather, Arthur, cleared his throat, a weak attempt to break the tension. A single sharp glare from Felton sent him shrinking back into his chair.
"You're late," Felton said. His voice was dry, like rustling leaves.
He slid a thick manila folder across the table. It glided over the wood, the soft scraping sound unnaturally loud in the silence. It stopped just short of her bread plate.
Clare's stomach tightened into a knot. She reached out, her fingers brushing against the coarse paper. She opened it.
Inside was a stack of résumés, each clipped to a glossy headshot of a smiling, handsome man. Wall Street's rising stars. Next to each photo, written in Felton's spidery red ink, was a valuation-the family's net worth, their market influence, the projected ROI of a marital alliance.
A wave of nausea washed over her. She gripped the edge of the paper, her knuckles turning white.
"The board is... displeased," Felton stated, his rhythmic tapping continuing. "The way you dismantled the Vance acquisition was messy. It made waves. You've angered the Morgan Trust behind the Vance family. They're threatening a proxy war."
"I eliminated a competitor," Clare said, her voice steady, betraying none of the sickness churning in her gut. "I secured our market share for the next decade. I'm the reason our stock has anywhere to be unstable from."
"You're the reason the Carroll name is being dragged through the mud!" Felton's hand came down flat on the table. The bang made the wine glasses tremble, red liquid sloshing against the crystal. "Your methods were brutish. You made enemies. That is not how we do business."
In the corner of her eye, she saw her younger sister, Jan, flinch. She looked like a frightened little bird, huddled in her chair, her eyes wide and terrified. She wouldn't say a word. She never did.
"You will fix this," Felton commanded. "You will choose one of these men. You have one week. This marriage will form a powerful alliance, one strong enough to secure our board seats and reassure our investors."
A bitter laugh almost escaped her lips. "And Jan? What's her role in this market stabilization plan?"
Felton's lips curled into something that wasn't a smile. "Jan doesn't have your... talent for destruction. But she is also not the one who created this mess. You will clean up what you broke."
"Clare, please."
The voice was a choked whisper. It was her mother. Debrah finally looked up, her eyes swimming with tears. "Just listen to your grandfather. It's for the best. For all of us."
Clare stared at her mother, at the pleading, broken woman she had become. Any lingering flicker of hope she'd held that her mother might stand up for her, just once, died. In its place, a cold, hard emptiness bloomed.
She was not a person to them. She was never a person. She was a tool. A sharp, effective knife they used to carve out their ambitions. And now that she was a little nicked, a little stained, they were ready to trade her in.
With a slow, deliberate motion that felt robotic, Clare picked up her linen napkin and dabbed at the corners of her mouth.
"I'll need some time to consider the options," she said. Her voice was perfectly level, devoid of any emotion.
"This is not a negotiation," Felton warned, his eyes narrowing. "The board has already approved the strategy."
Clare pushed her chair back. The legs scraped against the marble, a raw, protesting shriek. She stood, her spine ramrod straight. She would not let them see her break.
She turned and walked toward the door.
As she passed through the shadows of the grand hallway, a figure stepped out from a darkened alcove. Her cousin, Carli. A malicious smirk played on her lips.
"Congratulations, Clare," Carli purred, her voice dripping with venom. "Finally putting yourself on the market. I hope you get a good price."
Clare stopped. She turned her head just enough to fix Carli with a look. A look so cold, so sharp, it could have cut glass.
Carli flinched, taking an involuntary step back. She stumbled against an antique vase, the porcelain rattling precariously on its pedestal.
Clare held her gaze for another second before turning away. A faint, contemptuous sound escaped her lips as she ascended the sweeping staircase, leaving Carli flustered and fuming in the shadows.
She reached her bedroom, the one she'd had since childhood. She stepped inside, closed the heavy oak door, and turned the lock. The click echoed in the silence.
She leaned her back against the wood, her strength finally giving out. She slid down the door until she was sitting on the plush carpet, the darkness of the room swallowing her whole.
She wrapped her arms around her knees, pulling them tight against her chest. Her fingernails dug into the palms of her hands, the sharp pain a welcome distraction. It was an anchor in the storm of humiliation and rage.
She would not do it. She would burn the entire Carroll empire to the ground before she let them sell her like cattle.
She swore it.