Chapter one: The Sound Of a Breaking Vow

1197 Words
The scent of expensive lilies always made Evelyn want to gag. In her first life, they were the flowers that lined the aisle when she married Marcus. Later, they were the flowers that withered on her bedside table in the prison infirmary while she coughed up the remains of her life, framed for a crime Marcus had committed with a smile. Now, the scent was back. It was thick, cloying, and real. "Evelyn? Darling, you’ve gone pale. Is the excitement too much?" Evelyn’s eyes snapped open. She wasn't in a cold cell. She was standing in the gilded ballroom of the Grand Savoy. She looked down at her hands smooth, unblemished, and trembling against the silk of her champagne colored gown. She was twenty-four again. The night of her engagement gala. Marcus stood before her, the golden boy of the District Attorney’s office, looking every bit the savior the public loved. He reached out to tuck a stray lock of hair behind her ear. "I love you, Evie," Marcus whispered, his eyes crinkling with performed sincerity. "I promise, I will spend the rest of my life making you the happiest woman in the world." Then, it happened. A sound like a rusted blade scraping against a stone floor screeched inside Evelyn’s skull. It was a physical jolt, a distorted, metallic vibration that made her wince. She gasped, clutching her ear. A lie. The realization hit her harder than the sound. She had died for a man whose very soul sounded like industrial waste. Every "I love you" he had ever uttered was a jagged piece of glass she had swallowed willingly. "Are you alright?" Marcus asked, his voice echoing again that same sickening, discordant whine. "I’m fine," Evelyn bit out. Her own voice was clear, thank God. "Just... a sudden migraine. I need a moment of air. Alone, Marcus." She didn't wait for his reply. She turned and cut through the crowd of socialites and legal titans. She needed a shield. She needed a power so absolute that Marcus’s rising star would look like a flickering candle in a hurricane. She headed toward the one place no one at this party dared to go: The Emerald Study at the end of the north wing. She pushed the heavy oak doors open without knocking. The room was silent, smelling of old leather, cedarwood, and expensive Scotch. Behind a massive mahogany desk sat a man who looked like he had been carved out of granite. Silas Vane. The Chief Justice. The man the media called "The Silent Executioner" because his verdicts were as final as death and his interviews were non-existent. He was Marcus’s uncle, but they were nothing alike. Silas was a man of shadows and terrifying integrity. He didn't look up from his files. "The gala is in the ballroom, Miss Vance. You’ve lost your way." His voice was deep, a low baritone that resonated in the quiet room. Evelyn waited, bracing herself for the screech of a lie. It never came. His voice was as clear and steady as a heartbeat. "I’m exactly where I need to be, Justice Vane," Evelyn said, her voice regaining its strength. She walked toward the desk, her heels clicking like a countdown. Silas raised his head. His eyes were a piercing, stormy grey, framed by lashes that were unfairly long for a man so stern. For a fleeting second, Evelyn saw a flicker of something grief? Recognition? cross his face before it vanished behind his judicial mask. "You are engaged to my nephew tonight," Silas said. "Go back to him." "I’m not marrying him," she said. Silas paused, his fountain pen hovering over a document. "A lovers' quarrel? This is not the place." "It’s not a quarrel. It’s a realization." Evelyn leaned over the desk, pinning him with her gaze. "Marcus is laundering money through the construction of the new municipal center. He’s using my father’s firm as a front. In three years, he will leave a trail of breadcrumbs that leads straight to my door, and he will watch me go to prison with a smile on his face." The silence in the room stretched, heavy and tense. Silas didn't laugh. He didn't call her crazy. He simply set his pen down and laced his fingers. "Those are heavy accusations, Miss Vance. Why tell me? I am his blood." "Because you are the only man in this city who hates a liar more than I do," she whispered. "And because I know that for the last five years, you’ve been secretly paying my father’s medical bills under an anonymous trust." Silas’s hands tightened ever so slightly. It was the only sign of his shock. "I don't want protection, Justice Vane. I want a partnership," Evelyn continued. "I have the information to dismantle Marcus’s network. But I need a name he can’t touch. I need a house he can’t enter." "What are you suggesting?" Silas asked, his voice dropping to a dangerous level. Evelyn took a breath, the scent of the lilies fading, replaced by the sharp, clean smell of cedar. "Cancel the announcement tonight," she said. "Marry me instead." For the first time in his career, the Great Silent Justice was speechless. He stared at her, his grey eyes searching hers for a lie, for a joke, for a hint of madness. "You would marry a man you don't know?" Silas asked. "A man nearly fifteen years your senior? A man the world calls cold?" "I'd marry a cold man over a fake one any day," Evelyn replied. Silas stood up, his tall frame casting a long shadow over her. He walked around the desk, stopping just inches away. He smelled of rain and ink. "I have loved only one thing in my life, Evelyn," he said, and for the first time, his voice had a slight tremor. "And that is the truth. If you are lying to me..." "Test me," she challenged. Silas reached out, his hand hovering near her cheek, never quite touching, as if he feared he might break her. "The scandal would ruin you. They will say you are a social climber. They will say you betrayed your fiancé for his more powerful uncle." "Let them," Evelyn said. "As long as I am standing by your side when Marcus falls." The doors to the study burst open. Marcus stood there, breathless and flushed. "Evie? Uncle Silas? What’s going on? The press is waiting for the announcement." Evelyn didn't turn around. She kept her eyes on Silas. Silas looked past her at his nephew. His face went colder than she had ever seen it. He reached out and, for the first time, firmly took Evelyn’s hand. His palm was warm, and his grip was like an anchor. "There has been a change of plans, Marcus," Silas said, his voice echoing through the room like a gavel strike. "There will be no engagement tonight. Evelyn is coming with me." Evelyn felt the scream of Marcus’s protest before he even opened his mouth, but for the first time in two lives, she didn't care. The silence of Silas Vane was the most beautiful thing she had ever heard.
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