The worst part was the car crash three years ago. The one that caused my miscarriage and left me barren. He had always called it a tragic accident.
But a video played during a party game revealed the truth. He crashed because he swerved to save her when she ran into the road to confront him. He sacrificed our baby to protect his affair.
As the room fell silent, I picked up the bottle for the next round.
"My turn," I said, my voice like ice.
The game had just begun.
Chapter 1
Holly Carey POV
The crystal flutes chimed, celebrating a lie I had just overheard. My fiancé, Javen Sullivan, stood with his best man, Darryl McKee, just out of sight behind a thick velvet curtain in the grand ballroom of our Hamptons estate. I was supposed to be walking in to surprise him with a special treat. Instead, his voice, clear and arrogant, sliced through the elegant music, shattering my world.
For nearly thirty years, Javen and I shared a bond. We navigated childhood summers and teenage angst. We were inseparable, two halves of a whole, heirs to corporate empires our families hoped to merge. He was charismatic, always the center of attention, a playboy. His charm drew people in, especially women. He moved through relationships with an effortless grace, discarding them when they no longer amused him. He never took any of them seriously. Each time he fell for someone new, or thought he did, I stepped back. I kept my distance, protecting my secret, unwavering love for him. I guarded my heart, but I never truly moved on. That was my pattern, a silent ritual of self-preservation.
Three years ago, on my twenty-seventh birthday, everything changed. We were at our family's annual charity gala, the air thick with the unspoken expectations of corporate succession and generational pairings. Javen pulled me aside, his voice low, a flicker of something I mistook for earnestness in his eyes. He talked about family pressures, about the merger our parents so desperately wanted. He called it a "relationship of convenience." He said it would make things easier for everyone. I was about to refuse, to protect the fragile hope I still held. My pride, my dignity, demanded it. But then he reached out, his hand clasping mine, squeezing gently. He looked directly at me.
"Holly," he said, his voice surprisingly firm. "I'm serious about this. This isn't just a game."
My heart hammered against my ribs. It was the moment I had yearned for, twisted into something I hadn't imagined. I had two choices: walk away and lose him forever, or agree and risk everything for a chance at a different kind of closeness. I looked at his hand, then back at his face. My entire life, all I wanted was to be by his side.
"If we do this," I said, my voice barely a whisper, "and if we break up, our friendship is over. Forever. There's no coming back from that." The words were a desperate plea, a boundary I needed to set, knowing it might be the only thing that saved me from complete destruction.
Javen' s smile was quick, a flash of his usual carefree charm. "Don't be silly, Holly. We're not breaking up. You know I'd never leave you." He squeezed my hand again, then pulled me closer. "You're my best friend, my family. You always have been. You always will be." His words, light and easy, were a guarantee he threw away like yesterday's trash. He made it sound like a trivial promise, something easily forgotten.
I believed him. I wanted to believe him. For three years, we played the part. We attended galas, took vacations, shared intimate dinners. From the outside, we were the perfect power couple, destined for a glittering future. From my side, it was real. For him, it was a sham.
Tonight, that sham unraveled. I clutched the small, melting artisanal ice cream cone I' d planned to bring him – his favorite flavor, a surprise from his beloved fiancée. I froze in the shadows, the sweet, cold drip on my hand a jarring contrast to the icy dread spreading through me.
Darryl' s voice came first, laced with disbelief. "Are you serious, Javen? You didn't tell Holly this whole thing was just an act?"
Javen chuckled, a sound that made my stomach clench. "Oh, did I forget to mention it?" His tone was dismissive, as if forgetting to tell his fiancée their entire relationship was a lie was a minor oversight.
My legs felt heavy, stuck to the imported marble floor. The ice cream cone sagged in my hand, a pathetic symbol of my devotion. My palm started to burn.
"Javen, that's messed up!" Darryl' s voice grew louder, a clear condemnation. "You've been engaged to Holly for three years! What about her? What about us? We've all been celebrating this for months! What exactly is going on, man?"
Javen sighed, an impatient sound. "Look, it's not complicated. Keely is my girlfriend. Holly is... the arrangement."
Keely. The name hit me like a physical blow. Keely Nicholson. The "sensitive artist" he'd been spending so much time with lately, always under the guise of "mentoring." My own family had concerns about her, her erratic behavior, her demanding nature. Javen had brushed them off, always defending her. Now I understood why.
"This whole thing with Holly was just a merger," Javen continued, his voice dripping with condescension. "A business deal. You know how my parents are. And Holly... she' s always had a thing for me. I figured, why not? It makes the old man happy. It keeps Keely safe from their scrutiny."
He actually believed I had a "thing" for him, as if my profound, lifelong love was some childish crush he was benevolently indulging. Granting me the status of his fiancée was a favor in his eyes, a kind gesture from a king to a devoted subject. The humiliation spread through my veins, hot and sharp. My hand burned, the melting ice cream a sticky mess.
"You really think she's always had a crush on you?" Darryl asked, a hint of something in his voice I couldn't quite place. Was it pity? Or just morbid curiosity?
I waited, breath held tight in my chest. A part of me, a foolish, desperate part, hoped he would say something, anything, to soften the blow. Perhaps a flicker of genuine affection, a confession of confusion, a hint that some small part of our shared life had been real for him too.
"Feelings?" Javen scoffed, the sound harsh. "Darryl, please. Holly and I have known each other since we were kids. That' s family, not romance. There' s no spark. There never was." He chuckled again, a cruel sound that twisted my gut. "You know my type. The fragile, misunderstood artist. Holly is... well, Holly. She' s too familiar. Too stable. Too... there. She's not the kind of woman I fall in love with. Not in a million years."
He paused, then added, "But she'll always be my best friend, my sister. My family. I'd never hurt her. I'll make sure she's taken care of, legally, financially. She's going to be a part of my life forever." He made it sound like a guarantee, a reassurance, but it felt like a life sentence. "I' ll have both of them. Holly by my side, and Keely in my bed. That's the perfect arrangement."
A wave of nausea hit me, so intense it made my vision blur. My chest tightened, a vice squeezing the air from my lungs. But then, a strange, choked laugh escaped my throat. It was a dark, hysterical sound. I, Holly Carey, the poised heiress, the sensible friend, was nothing but a convenient object in Javen Sullivan's life. A piece on his chessboard. How pathetically naive I had been to think his kindness, his shared laughter, his casual touches, meant anything more. How utterly pathetic to believe he would ever truly choose me. He thought marrying me was a gift, a blessing he bestowed upon my undeserving self. The absurdity of it all was almost funny. Almost. My self-worth, once a strong foundation, crumbled into dust.