The city was beautiful from far away. From my bedroom window, Manhattan glittered like a field of stars turned upside down, each light a small promise that life could still glitter even when it was falling apart.
I used to believe in that illusion, until the morning my father called for me.
His voice through the intercom had sounded strained, too careful. “Liana, come to my study.”
The words carried a weight that left no air between syllables. I should have known then that something was ending.
The hallway to his office felt colder than the rest of the house.
Every framed photograph of our family seemed to watch me as I walked past, reminders of a perfection that had never truly existed.
My heels made small sounds on the marble, the rhythm uneven because my hands were already trembling.
When I entered, he was standing behind his desk, papers scattered like fallen cards. He didn’t greet me.
He didn’t even smile.
The man who used to tuck my hair behind my ear before school now stared at the floor as if he couldn’t meet my eyes.
His hair had gone grey at the temples, and for the first time I noticed how much smaller he seemed behind the broad oak desk.
My father had always carried the kind of authority that filled a room, a man born into success and educated in the art of control.
Now, that power had drained out of him, leaving only a shadow.
His tailored shirt hung loose at the shoulders; his cufflinks didn’t match.
He looked like a man trying to hold together too many pieces of a broken life.
“Sit, Liana.” His voice cracked only once.
I obeyed, though every part of me wanted to run.
He slid a folder toward me. Heavy cream paper.
Embossed gold lettering. The kind of document that looked expensive enough to ruin a person.
I didn’t open it. My father’s expression told me everything.
“What is this?” My throat was dry.
“A way out,” he said quietly. “For all of us.”
When I unfolded the first page, I saw my name paired with another, Cassien Ravenscroft.
I’d read that name before in magazines and business headlines, a man whose empire was built on precision and ruin.
My pulse faltered.
“You can’t be serious.”
He rubbed his forehead with both hands. “It’s the only offer left. Our debts…”
I stopped listening.
The words arrangement, merger, security blurred together until they sounded like static.
In that moment, I understood the cost of his desperation.
“You’re giving me away,” I whispered.
He didn’t argue.
The silence that followed felt like a door closing forever.
I could hear only the faint hum of the city below, oblivious to the collapse happening in this room.
I rose from the chair, hands shaking.
The window behind him reflected our shapes—the desperate man and the girl he was about to destroy.
“You always said I was free to choose my own life,” I said.
His voice broke. “That was before I realized how much our choices cost.”
For a long moment, I stared at him, searching for the father I once loved in the face of the man who sat before me.
He looked older than his years, hollowed out by guilt and whiskey and the weight of losing everything.
Pity tangled with anger until I couldn’t tell them apart.
He finally lifted his eyes to mine. They were the same soft blue as my mother’s, and seeing them tremble made my chest ache more than the words he had said.
“Liana, this is not what I wanted,” he murmured.
“But I’ve run out of ways to protect you.”
Protect me. As if selling me off to a stranger was a form of safety.
“You think giving me to him will protect me?” My voice came out sharper than I meant.
“Do you even know what people say about him?”
He flinched. “I know enough.
And I know that a man like Cassien Ravenscroft keeps his promises. He will keep you safe.”
“Safe from what?” I whispered. “From being poor?”
He said nothing.
The silence that settled between us was heavy with everything he couldn’t admit—that he had gambled away our fortune, that he’d used our name as collateral, that his daughter had become the final chip on the table.
A soft knock broke the stillness. One of the assistants leaned through the door.
“Mr. Delacroix,” he said, eyes flicking toward me, “Mr. Ravenscroft’s driver has arrived.”
The words landed like a sentence.
My father stood, smoothing his sleeves, his gaze fixed somewhere past me. “He’s come to finalize the agreement.”
And just like that, my world tilted.
I sank into the nearest chair, trying to make sense of the sharp, spinning knot of fear and disbelief in my chest.
The walls of the study seemed to shrink, closing in with every heartbeat.
The smell of leather, polished wood, and faint whiskey was suffocating.
I could feel my father’s presence behind me, solid and trembling all at once, a constant reminder that I was powerless in this room, in this life.
Everything I thought I knew—safety, family, love—crumbled into dust.
And in its place, only one truth remained: my life had been sold, my freedom signed away, and my father’s gaze carried the weight of a guilt I would carry forever.
The gold seal on the folder gleamed in the light, cold and indifferent.
It was beautiful. And it was a prison.