She Kissed The Stranger In Black. Then Chicago Learned His Name-eirian

The night Savannah Whitmore was supposed to become Mrs. Adrian Voss, the Grand Meridian ballroom in Chicago looked expensive enough to forgive almost anything.

The marble staircase had been wrapped in white roses and gold ribbon.

The chandeliers were bright enough to make the champagne look like liquid glass.

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Every table held cream place cards, silver chargers, and engagement programs printed with two names that had already been discussed in business columns as if love were a merger.

Savannah had spent six weeks approving all of it.

She had chosen the menu Adrian barely tasted, corrected the seating chart his mother kept changing, and smiled through Gerald Whitmore’s speeches about “legacy” while his bourbon breath told a less elegant story.

Gerald was her stepfather, but most of her adult life had been spent treating him like the cost of keeping peace.

After her mother died, he kept the house, the surname, and the habit of speaking about Savannah’s future as if it were company property.

Piper learned early that tears softened him.

Savannah learned that competence made her useful.

That was how their family divided itself.

Piper got sympathy.

Savannah got responsibility.

Adrian Voss had entered her life two years earlier at a hospital fundraiser his family wanted named after a dead grandmother.

He was handsome in a cold, inherited way, with blond hair, careful manners, and a confidence that never needed to raise its voice.

He sent flowers after their first dinner and introduced her to his mother after their third.

He proposed with a diamond so large strangers congratulated her from across restaurants.

Savannah said yes because she thought steadiness could become love if she gave it time.

She also said yes because Gerald looked relieved in a way that should have frightened her sooner.

The Voss family was old money with newer appetites.

They owned real estate, private lending companies, and enough influence that lawyers lowered their voices when the name came up.

Whitmore Holdings had once been respectable.

By the year of Savannah’s engagement, it was mostly polished letterhead wrapped around unpaid debt.

Savannah knew pieces of that.

She knew Gerald had started calling Adrian “son” too quickly.

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