Betrayed Bride: Claimed By The Best Man

Martha's face appeared in the gap, her expression transforming from professional composure to alarmed recognition. "Mr. Anderson-"

She didn't finish. The figure behind her moved past with surprising speed, silver cane striking the marble floor with rhythmic authority.

Eleanor had clearly mobilized the moment Martha relayed Kloe's desperate phone call, her private car breaking every speed limit from the city to the island. Kloe's grandmother filled the doorway like a storm front. Eleanor Guthrie was eighty-three years old, five feet two inches tall, and possessed of a presence that had reduced corporate raiders to stammering apologies. She wore the tweed suit she'd traveled in from New York-Presbyterian, still carrying the faint chemical scent of hospital disinfectant beneath her Chanel No. 5.

Her eyes-gray-green, Kloe's own color, sharpened by decades of seeing through deception-moved from Justen's raised hand to Kloe's disheveled state to the man's shirt hanging loose on her granddaughter's frame.

"Justen." The cane struck the floor, a punctuation mark of displeasure. "Explain yourself."

Justen's hand dropped as if burned. He stumbled backward, his face cycling through emotions too rapidly to track-rage, guilt, panic, calculation. "Eleanor. We weren't expecting-you should be resting-"

"I rest when I'm dead." Eleanor moved into the room, Martha hovering behind her with the black velvet box that contained the Guthrie emeralds. "Which, based on what I'm observing, may be sooner than anticipated if my granddaughter's husband raises his hand to her in my presence."

"I wasn't-there was a mosquito-"

"A mosquito." Eleanor's voice could have frozen mercury. "In March. In a climate-controlled residence." She settled onto the armchair, her posture suggesting a throne. "Kloe. Come here."

Kloe moved, her bare feet silent on the marble. Her grandmother's hand found hers-papery skin over fragile bone, still strong enough to convey absolute support. Eleanor's other hand lifted, untangling the cashmere shawl from her shoulders, and draped it around Kloe with deliberate care. The fabric settled over the shirt's telltale shape, concealing what couldn't be explained.

"Martha," Eleanor said, not looking away from Justen's pale face. "The box."

The velvet case opened on the coffee table, revealing the parure that had graced four generations of Guthrie women. The necklace alone-forty carats of Colombian emeralds in diamond pavé settings-could have purchased the house they stood in. The bracelet, earrings, tiara completed a fortune in green fire.

Eleanor lifted the necklace, its weight substantial even in her experienced hands. "For your wedding," she said, fastening it around Kloe's throat. The stones settled against her collarbone, cold and heavy, a collar of wealth and protection. "A gift from the Guthrie family. A symbol of our commitment to your happiness."

Her eyes lifted to Justen, and the temperature in the room dropped ten degrees. "Kloe is not merely your wife, Justen. She is the primary beneficiary of the Guthrie Family Trust, with full access to our legal resources and investigative capabilities." The cane tapped once, meaningfully. "Should she experience any distress-any at all-our attorneys will review every document connected to the Anderson-Guthrie merger. Every loan guarantee. Every joint venture."

Justen's swallow was audible. "Eleanor, I assure you-"

"I don't require your assurances. I require your understanding." Eleanor's smile showed teeth. "Kloe's wellbeing is my sole priority. Her happiness, my only metric of success." She stood, leaning on her cane, and Kloe felt the shift in power like a physical force. "Martha, I'll rest now. Kloe, assist me."

Kloe's arm supported her grandmother's weight, surprisingly light for so much authority. At the stair's turning, she glanced back.

Justen stood alone in the living room, surrounded by cigarette butts and the emeralds' reflected light. His eyes were fixed on the necklace at Kloe's throat-not with appreciation, but with a hunger that made her tighten her grip on the banister.

He wasn't looking at jewelry. He was looking at access. Control. The fortune he'd thought secured, now guarded by a woman who saw through him completely.

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