Five years later, the eldest Sterling son was hosting what the society pages were calling the Wedding of the Decade at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan.
The air was thick with the scent of imported lilies and old money. Even the crystal chandeliers seemed to vibrate with opulence, casting fractured light across marble floors that gleamed like mirrors.
Women in designer gowns worth more than houses whispered behind gloved hands. Men in custom suits discussed mergers and acquisitions over champagne that cost more per bottle than a month of rent.
This was the world I had been told I did not belong in.
I entered the grand ballroom in four-inch stilettos, black and sharp as knives.
Each step echoed against the marble floor, deliberate, calm, and proud.
Behind me marched four children, a set of quadruplets so identical they looked like perfect porcelain copies of the man standing at the altar.
Four pairs of green eyes, the same shade as Julian Sterling’s.
Four heads of dark hair with that distinctive Sterling wave.
Four children dressed in matching navy suits and dresses, walking with the kind of confidence that comes from knowing exactly who you are.
In my hand was not a wedding invitation.