Not gradually. Instantly.
The question didn’t just silence the room. It changed it.
Bianca’s face moved first, irritation twisting into confusion as she turned toward the sound. I turned more slowly, already knowing that whatever happened next would divide the night cleanly into before and after.
Julian Mercer—her fiancé, or perhaps no longer her fiancé even then—was standing three steps behind her.
He had one hand braced against the back of a gilt dining chair and the other still half-curled at his side as if he had moved without fully deciding to. He looked nothing like the smiling groom from an hour earlier, the man who had thanked guests, hugged elderly relatives, kissed Bianca’s cheek under a thousand camera flashes, and played the role everyone expected from him so well that I had almost felt sorry for him.
Now he looked stunned.
Not embarrassed. Not merely angry.
Stunned.
And his eyes were on me.
Not on Bianca. Not on the guests. On me.
He took a breath once, the way a man does when he is trying to make sure his voice will come out steady.
Then he said, much more quietly but somehow even more dangerously, “Miss Vance.”
A murmur moved through the ballroom.