The Hotel Proposal That Exposed a Six-Year Family Cover-Up-eirian

I had three minutes to choose between a wedding ring and federal prison.

That was how Dante Moretti put it.

Not with a raised voice.

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Not with a threat pressed against my ribs.

Not even with the kind of cruelty I had learned to recognize in expensive rooms.

He said it quietly in the service corridor behind the Ashford Hotel ballroom, while my stepsister’s engagement party glittered on the other side of two closed doors.

The hallway smelled like lemon floor cleaner, warm metal catering trays, and champagne somebody had spilled near the kitchen entrance.

My palms were damp around the tray I was holding.

Two dirty glasses sat on it, their thin stems clicking together because my hands would not stop shaking.

Behind the doors, people were laughing under chandeliers.

Inside that ballroom, Isabel was the bride-to-be, the center of every toast, the daughter everyone admired.

Outside, I was the stepdaughter in a catering uniform, standing in the back hall like something Victoria Chen had forgotten to throw away.

Dante Moretti stood in front of me with a folder in one hand.

He looked like he belonged in a courtroom, a boardroom, or a nightmare.

Dark suit.

Quiet eyes.

No wasted movement.

His name had followed me through San Francisco the way thunder follows lightning.

People lowered their voices when they said it.

Some called him a developer.

Some called him a fixer.

Some called him worse.

I had never called him anything, because people like me did not speak to men like him unless we were serving them coffee.

Then he opened the folder.

“Your signature is on six fraudulent transfers,” he said.

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