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"You're not on the list. Move aside."
The words hit her-sharp, unmovable-digging into her chest before her mind has even caught up. Ariel blinks, stunned, half-expecting she must have misunderstood. The rain hitting the marble steps, the soft, muffled conversations behind her, it all blurs together and for a weird second, she's sure life couldn't possibly be this cruel. But then the guard presses his palm against her shoulder-steady, cold as stone, done with her-and all hope drains out.
"I think there's been a mistake," she says. Her voice stays even, but her fingers are digging into her clutch like she could anchor herself with it. "I'm Ariel Larkin. My husband is hosting."
That gets nothing. The guard doesn't even scowl or hesitate. He just glances at his tablet, then looks at her like he's checking off another box-nothing in his face but bored certainty.
"Ma'am, you're not on the list." His voice is harder now, as if she's a child refusing to listen. "Please step aside. You're holding up the line."
She doesn't look back, even though she can feel everyone's curiosity drilling into her spine-heels clack, umbrellas switch hands, whispers start to crawl out behind her. She doesn't dare turn around and give them a show. Turning means giving in, admitting this nightmare is actually happening.
A cold raindrop lands right on her bare shoulder. Then another, then two more, like the sky itself is counting down to something she can't name. The storm clouds above are so thick it feels dark even though it's barely evening. The air's got that harsh electric smell, right before a lightning strike.
"This is ridiculous." The words are for her, not him. Still, she straightens her back, smooths her dress, forces her lips into something steady. "Check again," she orders, sharp but quiet.
He doesn't budge.
"Step aside, ma'am."
The push is softer the second time, but somehow that makes it worse. It eases her back just a hair, her heels nearly skidding on the wet stone, and that tiny stumble feels like admitting defeat-like some part of her, something she'd always believed unbreakable, just... cracked.
Through the open entrance, the party glows. Laughter seeps out along with gold light and, faintly, the trill of music. Waiters in crisp black-and-white swirl between groups and guests raise champagne flutes under the riot of a crystal chandelier. All of it is so warm, so alive, unreachable but close enough to make her ache. That's her life. That's where she belongs.
Or-she did.
Without thinking, she's digging for her phone, dialing Jayson with frantic precision. His name is always there: safety, simplicity, the anchor in every storm. She presses the call. It rings once. Twice. Three times. Each ring stretches longer, slicing a terrible silence through her chest. He'll answer, she tells herself. He always does. This'll be over in one stupid laugh.
Call disconnected.
She stares down at the screen as if it's going to offer an explanation. And there-another message blips up.
Call declined.
Everything inside her stops. Jayson never declines. Not during meetings, not during events, not anytime. That's just not who they are-never has been.
She breathes in, slow and shaking. Hits call again. She waits. And waits. This time the phone just runs out to voicemail: Jayson's voice, soft, so normal it almost sounds cruel.
"Hey, it's Jayson. Leave a message."
She doesn't speak. The silence on the other end feels massive, impossible to fill, and if she opens her mouth, she's afraid she'll come apart entirely.
She lowers the phone, catching her reflection in the black glass-wide-eyed, lips parted, the calm she's practiced for years beginning to unravel, almost fast enough for panic to set in.
The whispers get louder. "Isn't that-?" "I thought she was-" "Why is she still here-?"
Ariel closes her eyes. Briefly. She gathers herself, breathes in through her nose, pulls that humiliation back into something small, manageable. She's not going to give these strangers the scene they want. She lifts her chin. Turns to the guard, her voice clear as a blade.
"I'm going inside."
He doesn't even hesitate. Steps in her way. Not angry or nervous-just absolute.
"No, you're not."
Pain flares in her chest, raw, with a sharp edge now-a little bit of anger peeking through. "You don't understand," she hisses, low, pushing words through her teeth. "This is my husband's party. I belong in there."
He doesn't move an inch.
"And I'm telling you, you're not on the list."
The phrase echoes in her skull-louder every time, crushing, knocking the breath out of her.
Not on the list.
Not on the list.
And then-
The double doors swing open, and for a second, everything stops. Light blasts out, golden and rich, music swelling, laughter bursting free, the swish of luxury so bright it's almost painful. All attention turns, faces lean forward, the air shifting with curiosity.
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