“Please,” he added quietly. “Trust me.”
“I’m not hiding in my sister’s wedding car,” I replied with an uneasy laugh. “That’s ridiculous.”
His grip tightened on the steering wheel. “They asked me to pick up two men before we head to the bridal suite. They said you weren’t coming this morning. That you’re ‘too emotional.’”
The humor drained out of me instantly. “Who told you that?”
“Your father,” he said. “And your sister’s fiancé.”
I sat up straighter. “Daniel?”
Marcus gave a single nod. “I overheard them talking in the lobby last night. I wasn’t trying to listen—but I heard your name, and something about it felt wrong.”
My pulse began racing. “What exactly are you talking about?”
“If you’re sitting up, they won’t say what they plan to say,” Marcus explained calmly. “But if you lie down, they’ll assume you’re not here. Then you’ll hear why they’ve been pushing you to sign that paperwork all week.”
The paperwork.
For three days my mother had insisted I sign a “small transfer document” for “family efficiency.” Each time I asked for details, she brushed me off.
Stop being dramatic. It’s a wedding gift.
Marcus handed me a folded blanket. “You deserve to know.”
Fear finally outweighed pride.
I stretched across the back seat, heart pounding, and pulled the blanket over myself. The leather seat felt cold against my cheek as I tried to breathe quietly.
Twenty minutes later, the front doors opened.
The first thing I noticed was my father’s cologne.
Then Daniel’s voice.
“Once we get her signature, the takeover is finalized,” he said calmly.
My breath stopped.
“She’ll sign,” my father—Thomas—replied with a quiet chuckle. “Karen will pressure her. She won’t bother reading it carefully.”
My fingers fumbled for my phone. I opened the voice recorder and pressed it against my chest.
Daniel exhaled slowly. “I just don’t want a scene.”
“There won’t be,” Thomas assured him. “The notary’s meeting us in the suite. We file Monday. By the time she realizes what she signed, the voting shares will already be reassigned.”
Voting shares.
The family company—left under my trusteeship by Grandpa because I was the only one who had actually taken the time to understand how it worked.