My father, Arthur, stood at the foot of the stairs with a glass in his hand. He looked older that night. His skin had a grayish, almost papery tint, and his eyes kept darting toward the front door every time someone moved. He raised his glass, his hand trembling just enough for the ice to clink against the crystal.
"To Claire," he said. His voice was too loud, too forced. "The heart of the St. Claire legacy."
I tried to smile. I really did. But my stomach was in knots. I had seen the red "Overdue" notices hidden under the mat on his desk. I had heard him pacing at three in the morning for a month. That "legacy" he spoke of was rotting from the inside.
"To Claire!" the crowd repeated.
They took a sip and, for a second, it was just another boring party. Then, the doors didn't just open... they slammed against the walls with a bang that sounded like a slap.
The music stopped. Not all at once, but awkwardly, fading out bit by bit, and it gave me goosebumps.
He was there. Dante Vane.
He didn't look like the other men in their rented tuxedos. He looked like he had stepped out of a storm. His dark gray suit was damp, and his slicked-back hair revealed a face of sharp angles and cold hardness. He didn't look at the diamonds. He didn't look at the cake. He looked at me.
It was the look of someone coming to reclaim what belongs to him.
"Dante," my father said. His voice cracked. He sounded small. "You weren't invited."
Dante didn't answer. He simply stepped into the room. His footsteps rang heavy and rhythmic across the marble. He pulled a black leather folder from his jacket and tossed it. It didn't land on a table; it landed directly in the middle of my birthday cake, sliding through the white frosting like a knife.
"Read the last page, Arthur," Dante said. His voice was low, vibrating through the floor. "As of nine o'clock this morning, I own the bank. That means I own the mortgage on this house. And the cars. And the clothes your daughter is wearing."
A woman in the front row gasped. I felt an uncomfortable heat rise up my neck. I wanted to cover myself, even though I was fully dressed.
"Dante, please..." my father whispered. He looked like he was about to crumble. "We had an agreement. The interest..."
"The interest was ten million, Arthur. And you don't have ten million." Dante stopped at the foot of the stairs, looking up at me. "You told me you had something worth the debt. Something you called your 'most prized possession.'"
My heart began to hammer against my ribs. I looked at my father. I expected him to tell him to go to hell. I expected him to step in front of me.
But he didn't move. He wasn't even able to look at me. He just stared at his own shoes.
"She's up there," my father said.
I felt the air disappear from the room. I couldn't move my legs. I stood there as the man who had raised me handed me over to the man who hated us most in the world. I was no longer his daughter. I was a payment. A way to stay out of prison.
Dante began to climb the stairs. One step. Two. He was in no hurry. He wanted me to feel every second.
When he reached the top, he didn't stop. He invaded my space until I could smell the rain and the bitter scent of cedar on him. He was so close I could feel the heat of his body, in contrast to the ice in his eyes.
He leaned in, his lips brushing my ear.
"You look beautiful in white, Claire," he whispered. His breath was warm, but his words cut like a blade. "Enjoy it. Because when I'm through with you, you'll forget what it's like to wear anything but the black of your family's mourning."
He pulled back and looked at the crowd, his face completely expressionless. He raised his cane and pointed the silver tip directly at my chest. It wasn't a romantic gesture. It was a mark.
"The party is over," Dante announced. "Pack your bags, Claire. You don't live here anymore. You are collateral now. And I've come to collect."
I looked at the diamond bracelet on my wrist. Now it felt heavy. Cold. Like the first link of a chain I was never going to be able to break.