Much to both of their delight.
That made her smile. Smile as Maria, the housekeeper, handed her the simple, deep crimson bouquet. Continued smiling as she walked down the stairs of the house and into the foyer.
“Everything is set up outside,” the older woman said. “And they will be ready for you in a moment. I will signal you when it is time.”
She couldn’t believe the moment had arrived. And yet, it seemed like an entire lifetime in the making. As if all of this, her relationship with Matías, had been destined to be from the beginning.
This wasn’t real. It wasn’t. What was real had been that first time they had made love. That was Matías and Camilla.
This was for the audience. This was for his grandfather. And she had to remember that. Had to try to find the practical woman she was, buried underneath the makeup. Beneath the bridal gown that made all this feel like a beautiful waking dream when she knew full well it was a simple business transaction.
Maria rushed outside and Camilla took a deep breath, pressing her hands against her stomach.
“Well,” came a voice from behind her. “Don’t you make a radiant bride.”
She turned, and her heart hit her sternum hard. For the man standing in front of her was not Matías. He was tall, darkly handsome and resembled her fiancée just enough that she knew exactly who he was.
He possessed the same sort of magnetism, the same height and breadth. But there was something menacing about him. Something that went beyond dangerous. Something deadly.
“Diego, I presume,” she said.
“You make this sound very like an overdramatic soap opera,” he drawled, moving closer to her. “I must say, I am impressed with my brother’s resourcefulness. Often, his scruples prevent him from claiming certain victories. I myself have never understood why he’d limit himself the way he does.”
“I’m not entirely sure what you’re talking about,” she said. “Matías is my lover. He has been. Liliana’s defection was only a good thing for us.”
She did not know where she was drawing the strength to come at him like this. Except, it was the story that she and Matías had agreed on, a distortion of the truth to show the world why he was choosing to marry her, and it was not his day to wed beautiful, pale Liliana.
Because if it was, her heart would have broken into a million pieces and shattered on the ground.
She would rather this—this temporary union that might turn to nothing in the end—than watch him marry another woman. A marriage he had meant to be forever, leaving no chance for them to have anything more later on.
“It is a very nice story,” Diego said. “But I already read it in the paper. You know, my brother fancies himself a good man, but he is not so different from me. He simply draws lines around moral dilemmas as he sees fit. And I have never seen the point of doing so. He decides that certain actions are right, and certain actions are wrong. He has decided that his motivation for inheriting the rancho is higher than mine, and therefore, he must win at this game. I require no motivation of myself beyond my need to win. To be satisfied. I don’t need to pretend I am being good.”
“Is that why you took Liliana?”
A smile curved one side of his mouth upward. “She was simply a means to an end. Like everything else.”
“Did she go with you of her own free will? Or did you kidnap her?”
He chuckled. “Oh, I kidnapped her. But she was convinced quickly enough to marry me. I just had to have her throw out that lie to Matías so he wouldn’t come searching for her. He’s not very trusting. He believed so quickly that she would betray him. It’s a character flaw, for sure. If I were you, I would watch out for that later on. If he were to walk in now, I imagine he would have a lot of follow-up questions for you. Particularly if he were to walk in when you were in my embrace.”
Diego took another step toward her, and Camilla took a step away. “Don’t come anywhere near me,” she said. “You’re a villain.”
He laughed. “To you. But a villain is his own hero. I read that somewhere once. I quite like it. Although, I am not overly concerned with being either. I’m simply concerned with winning.”
“Well, Matías and I are getting married today. So you’re not going to win.”
“Am I not? Because I will get my share of the family fortune. If I choose to press the issue with my lawyer, I will probably end up with a stake in my brother’s company.” That dark gaze turned cruel. “And he has had to settle for second best when it comes to wives. Yes, I think my victory, while not total, was handily enough done.”
The door to the house opened again, and Maria waved her on. “It is time,” she said.
“I had better go take my place in the audience, then,” Diego said. “But rest assured and remember this. My brother might talk about being good. He might talk about doing the right thing, and in the end he might do the right thing by you, whatever that means. If it looks like a permanent marriage, or an attempt at commitment. But he will not love you. That is something the men in our family are incapable of.”
Then he left her standing there, feeling diminished. Her heart feeling torn in two. He had not said anything she hadn’t already thought to be true. Hadn’t dropped any grand revelations on her. And still, he had accomplished everything he had set out to do. He had sent her out into the blinding sunlight on shaking legs. Had planted doubts inside her when before she had been quite content walking toward that while knowing that in the end, this would end as nothing.
But now Diego’s words were swirling inside her, painful, horrendous. And she realized it was reality. He had made it impossible to pretend that this was going to end as a fairy tale. He had made it impossible for her to cling to that last shred of fantasy, which she had to admit to herself as she made her way toward the site of the wedding, she had been doing.
But then she came to the head of the aisle, and all the guests stood and turned, and she saw Matías standing there, dark, handsome and certain.
So very like his brother, and yet not.
And she realized that none of it mattered. Because there was only one choice to make. There was only one direction she was going to walk.
Toward Matías. No matter what.
IT HAD BEEN shocking to see his brother and Liliana in the crowd at the wedding.
Matías had a feeling that shock had been Diego’s intent.
Matías had made it his mission to keep his older brother away from Camilla through the entirety of the reception, and during the farewells that evening.
Though he had a feeling that if Diego had intended to approach her at any point, he would have done so. But he had not, which was actually no less unsettling.
Liliana, for her part, had looked beautiful, but pale. Drawn.
Her face adorned with no makeup, as she had often done, her long hair left loose, her curves highlighted by the flowing, lavender gown that she was wearing.
Diego never took his hands off her, his dark eyes sharp every time he looked at her.
It was a strange dynamic, and one that surprised Matías. Because he had imagined his brother would care nothing at all for his new wife. Had imagined that he had simply seduced her away