I should have known something was wrong the moment I stepped into the dining room.
My mother was smiling—thin and poisonous, the kind of smile that warned me to stay small and quiet. My siblings sat at the long mahogany table, elbows propped, smirks tugging at their lips like they’d been waiting all day for this moment. And my father… well, he was in his usual place, at the head of the table, eyes fixed on the glass of whiskey in his hand. His silence was the loudest presence in the room.
“Sit,” my mother ordered, her voice sharp enough to slice.
I sat. I always did. Years of being here had trained me well: don’t argue, don’t question, don’t expect. Just do.
For a few seconds, the only sound was the clink of cutlery against porcelain. My siblings snickered at private jokes, occasionally flicking their gaze toward me as though I were the punchline. My father remained a stone statue, his jaw tight, his lips a straight, cruel line.
Then my mother set down her fork with deliberate grace. The sound echoed like a gavel.
“We’ve come to a decision,” she said. “It concerns you, Aria.”
Her voice coiled around my name like a noose. My chest tightened, but I forced myself to meet her eyes.
“What decision?” I asked, my voice small but steady.
My sister, Lillian, let out a short laugh. “Oh, this is going to be good.”
“Lillian,” my mother hissed, though the corners of her mouth twitched with amusement. Then she turned back to me, her eyes glinting with that familiar mixture of disdain and triumph. “You are to be married.”
The words slammed into me, knocking the air from my lungs. I blinked, waiting for her to smirk, for someone to shout “just kidding.” But their faces told me this was no joke.
“Married?” I repeated, my throat dry. “To who?”
“To whom,” my brother, Nathan, corrected with a smug tilt of his head. “Honestly, Aria, at least try to sound educated. You’ll embarrass us enough as it is.”
Lillian snorted, hiding her grin behind her glass.
I ignored them, my gaze locked on my mother. “To who?” I asked again, sharper this time.
“The Montagues’ son,” she said, each word precise, deliberate, as though she were delivering good news. “Their family is… influential. Powerful. Aligning with them benefits us greatly.”
My stomach dropped. I had heard of the Montagues. Everyone had. A family whose name carried weight in boardrooms and back alleys alike. Ruthless didn’t begin to describe them.
“I don’t understand,” I whispered.
“You don’t need to understand,” my mother snapped. “You need to comply. The Montagues demanded repayment for a debt. We chose the most logical solution.”
The words slashed at me, sharp and cruel, but it was Nathan who twisted the knife. “Congratulations, little sister. You finally get to be useful.”
Heat surged to my face. “You’re giving me away? Like I’m… property?”
“Don’t be dramatic,” Lillian drawled, swirling her wine. “Think of it as… repaying what you owe. After all, we took you in when no one else wanted you.”
The familiar refrain. It never failed to gut me, no matter how many times I heard it.
“You’ve lived under our roof, eaten our food, worn clothes we paid for,” my mother continued, her voice rising with venom. “Do you think any of it was free? Do you think kindness comes without cost? This is your chance to give back. To prove you’re worth what we invested.”
“I never asked you to—”
“Enough.” My father’s voice thundered at last, and the table fell silent. He didn’t even look at me as he spoke, just swirled the amber liquid in his glass. “The decision is final. You will marry the Montague boy. You will do your duty to this family. And you will not shame us with your whining.”
I stared at him, my chest aching, my throat burning with unshed tears. His silence had always been a prison, but his words—his decree—were worse.
Lillian leaned forward, her smile sharp. “Honestly, Aria, you should be grateful. Do you know how many girls would kill to marry into that family? Wealth, influence, power… you’ll finally matter. Even if it’s only as someone’s wife.”
Nathan chuckled. “Collateral bride. That’s what they’ll call you.”
The laughter bubbled between them, cruel and cutting, and I felt myself shrinking smaller, smaller, until I wanted to vanish altogether. But something inside me snapped instead.
“I won’t do it.”
The words came out trembling, but once spoken, they gained strength. I lifted my chin, meeting my mother’s glare, my siblings’ mocking smirks, my father’s cold indifference.
“I won’t marry him,” I repeated. “I won’t be your pawn.”
For a moment, the table froze. My mother’s face darkened, rage flickering in her eyes. Nathan’s mouth fell open in mock shock. Lillian clapped her hands, delighted.
“Oh, listen to her!” she cried. “Our little Aria has finally found her voice.”
“Careful,” Nathan sneered. “You might hurt yourself with all that courage.”
“Ungrateful brat,” my mother hissed. “After everything we’ve given you, you dare—”
“You’ve given me nothing,” I cut in, my voice raw but strong. “You’ve only reminded me, every single day, that I don’t belong. That I’m a mistake. That I’m… unwanted.”
Silence crashed over the table. My chest heaved, tears burned my eyes, but I didn’t look away. For once, I let the truth pour out.
“You don’t love me. You never did. And now you want to sell me off to fix your mess? No. I won’t do it.”
My mother’s hand slammed against the table. “You ungrateful little wretch! Do you think you have a choice? Do you think anyone else would want you? You’re lucky we tolerated you this long.”
Her words stung like lashes, but beneath the pain, something else stirred—a flame I hadn’t felt in years.
“I’d rather be alone,” I whispered, “than live the rest of my life chained to a family that never saw me as more than a debt.”
“Aria,” my father said, his tone icy, final. “You will obey. Or you will be nothing.”
I stood. My legs shook, but I forced them steady. “Then I’ll be nothing to you. That’s better than being nothing to myself.”
Their outrage filled the room, but I didn’t stay to hear it. I walked out, their voices chasing me down the hall—Lillian’s laughter, Nathan’s jeers, my mother’s shrieks, my father’s cold command.
I walked into the night, the door slamming shut behind me, my heart pounding with terror and something dangerously close to freedom.
For the first time, I wasn’t silent. For the first time, I wasn’t theirs.
And though I didn’t know it yet, that single act of defiance would change everything.