"These can't be right."
Aria hunched over the quarterly reports, the numbers swimming before her eyes. Each column told the same story—a downward spiral that had begun years ago, almost to the day her father had married Victoria Pierce.
She tucked a strand of dark curls behind her ear. Her fingers left a smudge of ink on her cheek, unnoticed as she recalculated the figures for the third time.
The office around her had emptied hours ago. At twenty-four, Aria was often the first to arrive and the last to leave, desperately trying to keep her father's legacy from crumbling beneath the weight of mounting debt.
The business degree she'd worked so hard for at State University—scholarship-funded, unlike Vivian's designer education was being put to use in ways her professors had never covered: how to stretch payments, which creditors to prioritize, when to beg for extensions.
Her phone vibrated on the desk. A notification from I*******m. Without thinking, she tapped it open.
Vivian Pierce's perfect face filled the screen. She was raising a champagne flute against the backdrop of the Metropolitan Museum gala.
The caption read: "Daddy's princess at the social event of the season! #blessed #MetGala #oldmoney"
In the background, partially obscured but unmistakable, stood Robert Taylor, Aria's father in a tuxedo she'd never seen before, laughing with a group of socialites. An event he'd never mentioned to his daughter.
Aria's throat tightened. She hadn't even known he was in New York.
The office phone rang, startling her from the momentary pain.
"Taylor Architectural, this is Aria speaking."
"Still working, dear? It's nearly nine." Victoria's voice dripped with artificial concern, the kind reserved for public performances. "Your father and I were wondering if you'd join us for Sunday dinner this weekend. Vivian will be bringing Xavier Harrington. It would be... nice... to have you there too."
An afterthought. Always an afterthought.
"I have a lot of work to finish here," Aria replied, glancing at the dismal reports.
"Robert insists," Victoria said, the concern evaporating. "Three o'clock. And Aria? Do try to wear something... flattering. The Harringtons are important clients."
With that, the line went dead before Aria could respond.
Sunday arrived with merciless sunshine that exposed every imperfection in Aria's appearance as she studied herself in the mirror.
The black wrap dress… the most expensive item in her wardrobe clung to her curves in ways fashion magazines would never approve. She'd spent an hour attempting to tame her thick hair into something resembling Vivian's effortless waves, only to surrender to a simple ponytail.
The drive from her modest apartment to the Pierce-Taylor mansion in the hills took thirty minutes but transported her to another world.
Where once her childhood home had stood, a comfortable, lived-in house filled with her mother's paintings and the smell of home-cooked meals now rose a monument to Victoria's taste: all white marble, glass, and cold elegance.
Aria parked her aging Honda beside a row of luxury vehicles, including her father's new Mercedes—a "business necessity," Victoria had explained when Aria questioned the extravagance amid the company's financial troubles.
There were new housekeepers. Not Mrs. Finch, who had helped raise Aria after her mother fell ill, but someone new and unfamiliar opened the door with indifference.
"They're on the terrace," she said, not bothering to take Aria's modest hostess gift of store-bought pastries.
Voices drifted through the open French doors: laughter, the clink of expensive crystal, the unmistakable cadence of people performing wealth for each other.
Aria hesitated at the threshold, suddenly aware of her drugstore perfume and scuffed shoes.
"Aria! There you are." Her father spotted her first, rising from his seat with a smile that didn't quite reach his eyes.
Robert Taylor had aged a decade in three years, his once robust frame now thin, his complexion gray beneath his tan. Only his eyes remained the same—the exact shade of brown as Aria's own.
"Sorry I'm late," she said, though she was precisely on time. "Traffic."
"You're here now," he replied, embracing her briefly before returning to his seat beside Victoria.
Victoria Pierce-Taylor, at forty-five, looked thirty-five through sheer force of will and expensive cosmetic procedures. Her blonde hair fell in a perfect bob, her cream suit unwrinkled despite the heat. "Aria, darling. We were just discussing the Harrington contract. Such an opportunity for your father's little company."
Aria bit her tongue at the diminutive description of what had once been the city's premier architectural firm.
"Where's Vivian?" she asked, accepting a glass of champagne from a server she didn't recognize.
"Running fashionably late, as always," Victoria smiled indulgently. "She's bringing Xavier. They've been spending quite a lot of time together. The engagement announcement is practically a formality at this point."
Aria nodded, taking a seat at the far end of the table. She'd never met Xavier Harrington, but his reputation preceded him. Thirty, ruthless, and responsible for the hostile takeover of at least three family businesses in the past year alone.
"Aria has been working on the quarterly reports," her father said in a desperate attempt at including her in the conversation.
Victoria's smile tightened. "How... dedicated. Though I've always said, Aria, that with your... build... you should be careful about hunching over desks all day. Posture is everything." She reached for a magazine on the side table, flipping it open casually. "There's a fascinating article here about embracing your natural body type through strategic dressing and, of course, proper nutrition."
Aria glanced down at the open page: "Transform Your Body: From Bulky to Beautiful in 30 Days."
"Victoria," her father murmured in a token protest.
"I'm only thinking of Aria's health, Robert," Victoria replied, patting his hand. "Not everyone can be blessed with Vivian's metabolism."
As if summoned by her name, the terrace doors flew open, and Vivian made her entrance.
At twenty-three, she was everything Aria was not—willowy, blonde, and effortlessly glamorous in a white sundress that probably cost more than Aria's monthly rent.
"Sorry I'm late!" she trilled, air-kissing her mother and Robert. "Xavier had an emergency call with Tokyo. He sends his regrets."
She turned to Aria with a smile that never reached her eyes. "Aria! I didn't know you were joining us. How... nice."
"I invited her," Robert said, his voice carrying a rare note of firmness.
"Of course you did, Daddy," Vivian replied, taking the seat opposite Aria.
Her gaze swept over Aria's dress, lingering just long enough to make her point before turning away. "Mother, you'll never guess who I saw at Elevation last night. The entire Worthington family. They asked about you."
And just like that, Aria became invisible. The conversation flowed around her like water around a stone. Old family names, exclusive events, mutual connections… a language she would never speak fluently.
She watched her father throughout the meal, noticing how he picked at his food, how his hand occasionally drifted to his chest when he thought no one was looking.
When had the lines around his eyes deepened so dramatically? When had his shoulders begun to stoop?
"Aria," Victoria's voice cut through her thoughts. "Vivian was just sharing the wonderful news. The Harrington-Pierce wedding will be the social event of the year. The contract is being finalized this week."
"Contract?" Aria echoed.
Victoria's laugh tinkled like breaking glass. "The marriage contract, darling. In families like the Harringtons and ours, these things are handled properly. Old money meeting new money—it's practically a fairy tale."
"Congratulations," Aria said to Vivian, who barely acknowledged the word with a flick of her manicured hand.
"Xavier's grandmother is insisting on a June ceremony at their estate," Vivian continued. "Only three hundred guests. Intimate, by Harrington standards."
As the conversation drifted to flower arrangements and guest lists, Aria caught her father wincing with his hand pressing against his sternum.
"Dad?" she asked quietly. "Are you okay?"
"Fine, fine," he muttered. "Just indigestion."
But his eyes told a different story. One of pain, fear, and something else. Something that looked unsettlingly like resignation.
When Aria left three hours later, she found a fashion magazine in the passenger seat of her car. She hadn't put it there. The cover featured a smiling Vivian from her latest modeling campaign, and a yellow sticky note marked an article inside: "When Curves Become Concern: Health Risks of Excess Weight."
Victoria's elegant handwriting adorned the margin: "Thought of you, dear. Just concerned about your health. —V"
Aria crumpled the note in her fist, tears burning behind her eyes as she started the engine.
In the rearview mirror, she could see Victoria watching from an upstairs window, her silhouette perfect and predatory against the dying light.
A sudden call at 2:17 AM jolted Aria from a restless sleep filled with dreams of drowning in red ink and balance sheets."You need to come now!" Victoria's voice was brittle with fury, lacking its usual veneer of false warmth. "Immediately.""What's happened? Is it Dad?" Aria was already fumbling for the light switch, heart hammering against her ribs."Just get here." The line went dead after that.Outside, the night had turned hostile. Rain lashed against Aria's windshield as she navigated the winding road up to the mansion, each lightning flash illuminating the path ahead for terrifying seconds before plunging her back into darkness.Her wipers fought a losing battle against the downpour, much like her struggle to keep her father's company afloat.By the time she reached the house, Aria was soaked from the brief dash from car to door.The housekeeper didn't greet her this time; instead, Victoria herself stood in the marble foyer, still dressed in evening clothes, her perfect makeup
Morning light filtered through the blinds, casting prison-bar shadows across Robert Taylor's sleeping form.Aria shifted in the uncomfortable chair where she'd spent the night, her neck stiff, her mind foggy from fitful sleep interrupted by nurses' checks and the steady beep of monitoring equipment.The doctor had called it a "cardiac event"—not quite a heart attack, but a warning shot across the bow. "His heart is weakening," Dr. Winters had explained in hushed tones outside the room. "The stress, his age, his previous attack... He needs calm and stability. Another episode like this could be fatal."Aria rubbed her eyes, smudging yesterday's mascara further.Her phone showed seventeen missed calls from the office. Monday morning, and for the first time in her working life, she wasn't there to open the doors.The click of expensive heels announced Victoria's arrival before she appeared in the doorway, immaculate in a dove-gray suit, not a hair out of place despite the early hour.She
Elysium Boutique occupied the penthouse floor of the city's most exclusive shopping district, accessible only by private elevator with an attendant who checked names against a list before allowing entry.Victoria was greeted by name while Aria was assessed with a quick, dismissive glance."Mrs. Pierce-Taylor," the boutique manager, a rail-thin woman with a severe chignon, glided forward. "We received your urgent request. How may we assist today?""Claudette, we have an emergency," Victoria confided, as though sharing state secrets. "My stepdaughter requires a complete wardrobe. Immediately."Claudette's gaze swept over Aria with the clinical precision of a butcher evaluating a subpar cut of meat. "I see. And the... dimensions?""Whatever you have in your largest sizes," Victoria replied. "We're working with significant constraints, both in time and... material."Aria felt her cheeks burn as the two women discussed her body as though she weren't present."Perhaps Madame would be more c
Xavier Harrington's office was a monument to power. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city he was systematically conquering, furniture of dark leather… not a single personal photograph or memento to suggest the occupant was human rather than a perfectly engineered corporate machine.The man stood with his back to the door, speaking quietly into a phone while gazing out at his domain. Tall and broad-shouldered, his bespoke suit emphasized a physique maintained by expensive personal trainers and ruthless self-discipline.When he turned, Aria's breath caught—not because of his conventional good looks, but because of the absolute coldness in his ice-blue eyes.Those eyes barely registered Aria's presence, focusing instead on Victoria as he concluded his call. "Meeting later. Pierce priority."With that, he set down the phone without saying goodbye."Victoria. I expected this meeting four hours ago." His words fell like ice shards into the silence."A family emergency," Victoria exp
Michael spread the contract before Aria, who could hear the low, intense conversation between Xavier and her stepmother across the room, though the words were indistinct.From Victoria's rigid posture, it wasn't going well."Page seventeen contains the personal conduct clauses," Michael said quietly, drawing her attention back to the document. "You'll want to pay particular attention to those."Aria flipped to the indicated page, scanning the dense legal text. Her business degree helped her navigate the jargon, but what she found made her stomach clench.[The Wife agrees to undergo any physical modifications deemed necessary by the Husband to maintain the Harrington family image, including but not limited to weight management, cosmetic procedures, dental work, and dermatological treatments.The Wife shall, within six months of signing, achieve and maintain the following measurements: waist not to exceed 26 inches, hips not to exceed 36 inches, weight not to exceed 125 pounds.The Wife
ARIAVictoria's phone chimed with a message once they arrived at the parking garage.Her smile widened as she read it."Excellent news," she announced. "Xavier's grandmother has invited us to the Harrington Estate. She wants to meet her new granddaughter-in-law immediately she calls."Aria stared at her in horror. "But I have nothing to wear, I need to check on Dad—""Details," Victoria dismissed. "The boutique will deliver options whenever we want. Your father is stable. This meeting with Eleanor Harrington is crucial; she's the true power behind the Harrington fortune."Victoria paused when they reached the car, her expression becoming suddenly serious. "One more thing, Aria. When you meet Eleanor, remember she's old-fashioned. Very old-fashioned. She believes in the sanctity of marriage, regardless of how it came about. Don't mention the business aspects of this arrangement.""You want me to pretend this is a love match?" Aria asked incredulously."I want you to be smart," Victoria
ARIAThe soft beeping of monitors and rustling papers fill Dad's hospital room as I step in.He's propped up in bed reviewing architectural drawings on his lap tray, but his face brightens immediately when he sees me."There's my girl," he says, setting aside his work. "I was beginning to think Victoria had locked you in a tower somewhere.""Close enough," I reply, leaning down to kiss his cheek. His skin feels papery and too warm. "How are you feeling?""Better every day." He pats the edge of the bed. "Sit. Tell me what's happening. The nurses whisper when they think I'm asleep, something about an engagement announcement?"I sink onto the bed, exhaustion suddenly hitting me like a wave. "It's true. I'm engaged to Xavier Harrington."Dad's expression shifts from confusion to concern in an instant. "Xavier Harrington? But I thought Vivian—""Vivian eloped with someone else," I explain, trying to keep my voice neutral. "Victoria arranged for me to take her place.""Take her place?" Dad s
ARIAThe Harrington Estate becomes my prison over the following two weeks.I'm moved into a guest suite in the east wing the day after signing the contract.“To begin your integration into the Harrington lifestyle," Michael had explained.My suite is packed up by strangers, my possessions sorted through and mostly discarded, deemed unsuitable for my new position.Each morning begins with a weigh-in, conducted by Claudia Reinhart, Xavier's personal nutritionist, who records each number with precision and disapproval.Claudia is a severe woman in her fifties, with the body of a marathon runner and the demeanor of a drill sergeant. Her hair is pulled back in a tight bun, her black clothing always impeccable and her clipboard a weapon she wields with merciless efficiency."Down half a pound," Claudia notes on the seventh day. "At this rate, you'll meet Mr. Harrington's requirements by next year."She circles me like a shark, pinching at my waist with cold fingers. "You're still holding sig
ARIAThe Harrington penthouse occupies the top three floors of a sleek glass tower in Manhattan, its floor-to-ceiling windows offering panoramic views of the city that never sleeps.At one in the morning, those windows reflect my solitary figure as I stand in the master suite, still wearing my wedding gown, waiting for a husband who isn't here.Xavier has disappeared as soon as we'd arrived, muttering something about "checking messages" before vanishing into what I presume is his office.That has been two hours ago. The suite is silent except for the distant hum of the city below and the occasional ping of my phone as congratulatory messages arrive from people who have no idea what my marriage actually entails.The wedding coordinator had arranged for a maid to help me out of my complicated gown, but I've sent the woman away, preferring to be alone with my thoughts.Now I struggle with the dozens of tiny buttons running down my spine. My arms ache as I twist to reach them, my fingers
ARIAThe walk to the ceremony pavilion is a blur of white roses and curious stares.Five hundred faces turn once I appear linking arms with my father's.I feel their eyes cataloging every detail. The dress, the jewelry, the transformation of Robert Taylor's unremarkable daughter into Xavier Harrington's bride.The pavilion itself is a marvel of design. A crystalline structure is erected specifically for this day, its transparent walls offering views of the estate's manicured grounds while protecting the guests from any hint of natural disorder. White roses climb the supports, their scent almost overwhelming in the enclosed space.And at the end of the aisle, waiting beneath an arch of yet more white roses, stands Xavier Harrington.He is perfection incarnate in his custom tuxedo. His dark hair is immaculately styled and his posture military in its precision.He is everything a bride could want. Handsome, wealthy, powerful.And he isn't looking at me.I process down the aisle on my fat
ARIAThe morning of my wedding day dawns with perfect, manufactured precision: clear skies, seventy-two degrees, not a cloud in sight.The Harrington Estate has been transformed overnight into a fantasy landscape of white roses and crystal, five million dollars manifested in cascading floral arrangements, imported marble dance floors, and custom pavilions erected solely for this one-day spectacle.I stand motionless as four stylists work on me simultaneously; one on hair, one on makeup, one adjusting the complicated undergarments that squeeze my flesh into submission, and one making final adjustments to the Marchesa gown that has been altered seven times in the past week."Stop breathing so deeply!" snaps Genevieve, yanking at the corset laces with unnecessary force. "You're expanding the ribcage and ruining the line."I try to comply by reducing my breathing to shallow sips of air that leave me light-headed.The corset is a marvel of engineering, steel boning and industrial-strength
ARIA~Later that same day~I'm sent to the east wing to approve floral arrangements for the wedding.Genevieve had continued working in silence for several minutes after Phill left, the only sound the soft click of pins being placed and removed.Finally, she had sighed before stepping back to assess her work."He's an ass," she had said matter-of-factly. "But he's not entirely wrong. The Harringtons have expectations. Standards. And you..." She had gestured at my reflection in the three-way mirror. "You are very far from meeting them."Her words still rings in my ears.I’m drowning in them when I hear Xavier's voice from a partially open door.I pause, knowing I should walk on but unable to move when his cold, clear tones reach me."It's just three years until the merger is complete," Xavier is saying with the clink of ice in a glass punctuating his words. "Then I can divorce her with minimal losses."I press myself against the wall beside the door, heart pounding. I shouldn't be list
ARIAThe Harrington Estate becomes my prison over the following two weeks.I'm moved into a guest suite in the east wing the day after signing the contract.“To begin your integration into the Harrington lifestyle," Michael had explained.My suite is packed up by strangers, my possessions sorted through and mostly discarded, deemed unsuitable for my new position.Each morning begins with a weigh-in, conducted by Claudia Reinhart, Xavier's personal nutritionist, who records each number with precision and disapproval.Claudia is a severe woman in her fifties, with the body of a marathon runner and the demeanor of a drill sergeant. Her hair is pulled back in a tight bun, her black clothing always impeccable and her clipboard a weapon she wields with merciless efficiency."Down half a pound," Claudia notes on the seventh day. "At this rate, you'll meet Mr. Harrington's requirements by next year."She circles me like a shark, pinching at my waist with cold fingers. "You're still holding sig
ARIAThe soft beeping of monitors and rustling papers fill Dad's hospital room as I step in.He's propped up in bed reviewing architectural drawings on his lap tray, but his face brightens immediately when he sees me."There's my girl," he says, setting aside his work. "I was beginning to think Victoria had locked you in a tower somewhere.""Close enough," I reply, leaning down to kiss his cheek. His skin feels papery and too warm. "How are you feeling?""Better every day." He pats the edge of the bed. "Sit. Tell me what's happening. The nurses whisper when they think I'm asleep, something about an engagement announcement?"I sink onto the bed, exhaustion suddenly hitting me like a wave. "It's true. I'm engaged to Xavier Harrington."Dad's expression shifts from confusion to concern in an instant. "Xavier Harrington? But I thought Vivian—""Vivian eloped with someone else," I explain, trying to keep my voice neutral. "Victoria arranged for me to take her place.""Take her place?" Dad s
ARIAVictoria's phone chimed with a message once they arrived at the parking garage.Her smile widened as she read it."Excellent news," she announced. "Xavier's grandmother has invited us to the Harrington Estate. She wants to meet her new granddaughter-in-law immediately she calls."Aria stared at her in horror. "But I have nothing to wear, I need to check on Dad—""Details," Victoria dismissed. "The boutique will deliver options whenever we want. Your father is stable. This meeting with Eleanor Harrington is crucial; she's the true power behind the Harrington fortune."Victoria paused when they reached the car, her expression becoming suddenly serious. "One more thing, Aria. When you meet Eleanor, remember she's old-fashioned. Very old-fashioned. She believes in the sanctity of marriage, regardless of how it came about. Don't mention the business aspects of this arrangement.""You want me to pretend this is a love match?" Aria asked incredulously."I want you to be smart," Victoria
Michael spread the contract before Aria, who could hear the low, intense conversation between Xavier and her stepmother across the room, though the words were indistinct.From Victoria's rigid posture, it wasn't going well."Page seventeen contains the personal conduct clauses," Michael said quietly, drawing her attention back to the document. "You'll want to pay particular attention to those."Aria flipped to the indicated page, scanning the dense legal text. Her business degree helped her navigate the jargon, but what she found made her stomach clench.[The Wife agrees to undergo any physical modifications deemed necessary by the Husband to maintain the Harrington family image, including but not limited to weight management, cosmetic procedures, dental work, and dermatological treatments.The Wife shall, within six months of signing, achieve and maintain the following measurements: waist not to exceed 26 inches, hips not to exceed 36 inches, weight not to exceed 125 pounds.The Wife
Xavier Harrington's office was a monument to power. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city he was systematically conquering, furniture of dark leather… not a single personal photograph or memento to suggest the occupant was human rather than a perfectly engineered corporate machine.The man stood with his back to the door, speaking quietly into a phone while gazing out at his domain. Tall and broad-shouldered, his bespoke suit emphasized a physique maintained by expensive personal trainers and ruthless self-discipline.When he turned, Aria's breath caught—not because of his conventional good looks, but because of the absolute coldness in his ice-blue eyes.Those eyes barely registered Aria's presence, focusing instead on Victoria as he concluded his call. "Meeting later. Pierce priority."With that, he set down the phone without saying goodbye."Victoria. I expected this meeting four hours ago." His words fell like ice shards into the silence."A family emergency," Victoria exp