"I'm not hiding," Aubrey lied, her fingers tightening around the fragile stem of her glass. "Just avoiding the cameras."
Beatrice leaned in, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "You might want to stay out here. Word is the heir to the Wyatt empire is arriving tonight. My dad's face went completely pale just talking about it, and the air pressure in the ballroom has already dropped ten degrees."
Before Aubrey could ask who, the heavy oak double doors at the entrance of the ballroom were violently pulled open by two waiters.
The deafening symphony orchestra continued to play, but the loud chatter of hundreds of guests instantly dropped to a hushed murmur. People unconsciously lowered their voices, their heads turning toward the doors as a heavy, suffocating mix of awe and tension flooded the room.
Aubrey's head snapped toward the entrance, driven by the same magnetic pull that silenced the crowd.
Callum Wyatt stepped into the halo of the massive crystal chandelier.
He wore a tailored black Tom Ford suit that clung to his broad shoulders.
Aubrey's lungs seized. The air was physically punched out of her chest.
She immediately took a half-step backward, letting the thick shadow of a Roman pillar swallow her completely. Her hand shook so violently that the champagne threatened to spill over the rim of her glass.
Callum stood at the entrance, his face an unreadable mask of cold stone. He unbuttoned his expensive cashmere overcoat and shoved it into the waiting hands of Reginald, the head butler, without a single glance.
Then, he looked up.
His dark, predatory eyes swept across the ballroom. It wasn't a casual look. It was a hunt.
Even hidden behind the pillar, the hairs on the back of Aubrey's neck stood up. A violent chill shot down her spine. She felt like a rabbit caught in the crosshairs of a sniper rifle.
Beatrice, entirely oblivious to Aubrey's internal collapse, nudged her arm.
"Come on," Beatrice whispered. "Let's go say hi before the vultures swarm him."
Aubrey immediately reached up, pressing two fingers hard against her temple.
"I can't," Aubrey said, forcing her voice to stay steady. "A migraine just hit me. It's blinding."
Beatrice's smile fell, replaced by genuine concern. "Oh, no. Do you need to go up to a guest room?"
"I just need some quiet," Aubrey murmured, already stepping further back. "I'll go rest."
Beatrice nodded sympathetically.
Aubrey didn't wait. She peeked around the pillar. Callum was already walking toward Theodore Vance at the center of the room.
The elite socialites of New York parted for him like the Red Sea, pulling their expensive gowns out of his path.
While every eye in the room was glued to Callum, Aubrey turned on her heel and practically sprinted toward the side corridor.
She just needed to get to the back exit. She just needed to disappear.
She rounded the corner of the buffet tables, her eyes fixed on the hallway.
Suddenly, a waiter carrying a massive silver tray of oysters stepped out from a blind spot, cutting directly across her path.
Aubrey slammed on the brakes. Her four-inch stilettos skidded on the polished marble floor.
She managed to stop inches from the waiter, but the sudden momentum sent the tall glasses on his tray crashing into each other.
The sharp, high-pitched clinking of glass rang out like a gunshot in the quiet room.
At the center of the ballroom, Callum stopped mid-conversation.
He tilted his head slightly. His razor-sharp gaze snapped directly toward the source of the noise.
Aubrey's heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird. She instantly ducked her head, shoving herself behind two plump, wealthy matrons covered in diamonds, using their bodies as a human shield.
Callum narrowed his eyes. He stared at the spot where the noise happened. He caught a fleeting flash of a dark red dress disappearing behind the crowd.
A heavy, violent sense of familiarity slammed into his chest.
Aubrey didn't look back. She nodded a frantic apology to the confused waiter and bypassed him as fast as her heels would allow.
She reached the end of the hall and threw her weight against the heavy burgundy velvet curtains blocking the archway.
She stumbled through, leaving the suffocating ballroom behind, and stepped into the dim, quiet back corridor.
Aubrey slammed her back against the freezing plaster wall. She gasped for air, her chest heaving.
Her hands were trembling so badly she could barely open her clutch. She dug her fingers inside, pulling out her phone to call her driver. She had to get out of this house right now.