The fanfare of trumpets announced a new arrival.
Laughter followed, a deep, familiar sound that made her heart skip. Julian.
She turned from a conversation with a baron, a smile already forming on her lips, ready to greet him.
Then she saw him. Tall and handsome in his dress uniform. But he was not alone. Her cousin, Isabella, was on his arm, her hand resting intimately in the crook of his elbow.
Eleonora froze. Her smile vanished.
Her surprise turned into a knot of confusion as he swept past her without a glance, leading Isabella toward the center of the dance floor.
The orchestra began a waltz. Julian's hand settled on Isabella's waist, drawing her close. The gesture was too slow, too intimate for cousins.
Julian led Isabella to a circle of young, influential lords, his friends. Eleonora found herself trapped nearby, caught in a conversation with an elderly duchess, her ears straining.
Isabella's voice, laced with a feigned worry that Eleonora knew all too well, carried across the polished floor. "Julian, what about Eleonora? The wedding is only three months away..."
Eleonora's breath caught in her throat. A cold dread, sharp and sudden, seized her as the eyes of the gossiping nobles nearby darted between her and the couple.
Julian let out a soft, dismissive laugh. The sound, amplified by the ballroom's acoustics, was like ice scraping against stone.
"The engagement? It will be broken, of course. You are the one I will marry, my future Lady Sterling." He announced it not to Isabella, but to the entire group, his voice carrying with deliberate weight.
The world tilted. The duchess's voice faded into a dull drone. Eleonora gripped the back of a nearby chair, her knuckles turning white. The only thing keeping her upright was the bite of the carved wood against her palm.
Isabella's voice was a purr of feigned sympathy, hiding a thrill of victory. "But... she has loved you for ten years, Julian."
"Of course, she has," Julian said, his tone dripping with an arrogance that made Eleonora's stomach churn. He stroked Isabella's arm for all to see. "And because she loves me, she will accept my arrangement."
He paused, leaning in conspiratorially to his friends, yet his voice was just loud enough to be a public secret.
"Considering her age and reputation, becoming the treasured mistress of the Sterling house is her best possible future."
The blood in Eleonora's veins turned to ice. A roaring sound filled her ears, drowning out the music, the chatter, the rustle of silk gowns.
"Her dowry will be very useful for expanding the family's armaments," Julian continued, his voice cold and practical. "She will understand. It is for the good of the family."
Isabella giggled, a light, tinkling sound full of malice. "Oh, Julian. Now I can finally be at ease."
He leaned down and kissed her, a brief but possessive kiss on the lips, right there in the middle of the ballroom. The image burned itself into Eleonora's mind, along with the gasps and titters of the surrounding guests.
She felt no pain. Not a single tear.
Just a profound, gut-wrenching nausea and a cold that sank deep into her bones.
She released her grip on the chair. The lingering chill on her fingertips brought a sliver of clarity.
Her eyes, the color of new spring leaves, met the pitying and mocking gazes of the guests. The last flicker of warmth within them died, leaving behind something hard and sharp as glass.
Ten years of love. Ten years of waiting. Turned to ash in a single moment.
She looked down at the ring on her finger. It was no longer a promise. It was a joke. A mark of her own foolishness.
Slowly, deliberately, she stood. She smoothed the wrinkles from her dress, a calm, measured movement.
Her face was a mask of terrifying serenity. Her green eyes were now the color of poison.
She raised her head, her gaze drifting past the glittering chandeliers, through the tall windows, toward the distant, cloud-wreathed silhouette of Ironwood Castle. The fortress of the Vanderbilts.
A wild, desperate, and brilliant idea sparked in the frozen wasteland of her heart.
She turned her back on the spectacle, on Julian and Isabella, on the entire jeering society.
She walked through the crowd, which parted for her like water. Her steps were firm, her back straight.
She did not run. She did not stumble. She simply exited the ballroom, leaving a stunned silence in her wake.
Once in the cool, empty hallway, she pulled the ring from her finger. The metal edges dug into her palm, a small, sharp pain that grounded her.
There will be a wedding in three months, a voice whispered in the depths of her soul. It was her own, but colder, harder than she had ever known.
But the groom, Julian, will not be you.