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unbreakable Novel Cover

unbreakable

Elara Vance, heiress to a billion-dollar legacy, finds her controlled world upended by Kai Reyes, a rebellious musician. When her ruthless father, Marcus, threatens Kai’s livelihood and family, Elara stages a public betrayal to protect him. Two years later, after dismantling her father’s empire from within, she risks her fortune and name to secure Kai’s freedom. It is a high-stakes tale of sacrifice and love forged through the destruction of a dynasty.
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Chapter 1

If I had to pin my life to a single sound, it would be the clink.

It wasn't a celebratory toast clink. It was the thin, sharp sound of a champagne flute set on marble. The polite clink of my mother's bracelet against her teacup. The final, hollow clink of the deadbolt in our grand, silent house.

Tonight, though, the clink was everywhere, a chorus of glasses, forks, and pleasantries colliding in the ballroom at the Vance Foundation's gala.

I felt like I was suffocating, my anxiety closing in, tight and unyielding.

My dress was ice-blue silk, what my mother called "divinely appropriate," but it felt more like a fancy straitjacket. My hair was pulled so tight I could feel every follicle complain. My smile, after an hour and forty-two minutes, was just an ache.

"You see, Elara," my father, Marcus Vance, had said this morning in his study, not looking up from his papers, "tonight is not a party. It's a presentation. It's the quarterly report of our family's legacy, and you are the star metric."

I, Elara Vance, am a five-star, top-performing metric.

I nodded at Mrs. Henderson. Smiled at Mr. Thorne, angling for an endorsement. Gave Jameson Davies III a laugh as he explained the stock market as if I were a golden retriever.

"And so, the arbitrage is just... fundamental," he droned, his eyes glazed with a mixture of privilege and an expensive cocktail.

"Fundamental," I repeated, gazing past his shoulder at an ice sculpture of a swan that looked more like a frozen warning than a bird.

My father caught my eye from across the room. He wasn't looking at me, but he saw me. He had a sixth sense for inattention. He gave a fractional nod, so small no one else would have noticed, in the direction of Jameson.

Engage. Perform. Be the metric.

I turned back to Jameson, forcing the smile wider. "That's fascinating, Jameson. Truly."

"I know, right?" He beamed, blissfully unaware.

I needed air. Not just any air, but real oxygen. Panic fluttered in my chest as the recycled, perfume-heavy, money-scented air of the ballroom filled my lungs.

"Excuse me for just a moment," I murmured, putting my hand on his arm in the practiced way that said I'd be right back, not that I was about to run for the nearest exit.

I moved through the crowd smoothly, almost on autopilot. I passed the string quartet, went around a sad-looking floral display, and headed for the hallway with the service corridor I knew by heart.

I was looking back over my shoulder, checking to see if my father had sent my mother to retrieve me, when I turned the corner.

And I didn't just bump into him. I collided.

It was a real collision, the kind where physics and momentum actually matter.

He was a blur of black and white, moving fast, a silver tray precariously balanced in one hand. The tray wobbled in his grip. He lurched, his other arm shooting out to steady it. He managed to save the champagne flutes.

The mini-quiches were not so lucky.

A dozen tiny, expensive appetizers flew into the air. They scattered everywhere. One landed, buttery, on my silver Manolo.

Time seemed to stop. The music and clinking in the ballroom faded, replaced by a ringing in my ears.

I stared at the quiche. It stared back.

"Well," a low voice said. "That's one way to make an exit."

I looked up. He wasn't a guest. He was one of the catering staff, wearing the usual black pants and white shirt, though his uniform was rumpled. He looked flustered, but not scared. His hair was dark and messy, and his eyes, a clear green, were wide with something like amusement.

He was supposed to be apologizing. He was supposed to be groveling and calling me "Ma'am" and scraping the pastry off my shoe before a manager had him fired.

He just stood there, looking at me.

Then, he crouched down, not with a cloth, but just... looked at the quiche on my shoe.

"My apologies, Your Highness," he said, his voice laced with a sarcasm so dry it could have started a fire. "The floor-quiche was not on the approved menu for tonight."

I should have been angry. I should have been horrified. I should have called for security.

Instead, a surprised laugh burst out of me. Relief and shock mingled as I let it escape.

It wasn't a practiced, breathy laugh. It was a snort. A real, actual, pig-like snort. The sound was so foreign and so loud in the quiet hallway that we both froze.

His eyes crinkled at the corners. "Was that... a laugh? I thought they were illegal in here."

"Only if you get caught," I managed, my face burning. "I... it was my fault. I wasn't looking."

"Neither was I," he said, standing up. He was tall. Not Jameson-lanky, but... solid. "I was too busy mentally critiquing the ice sculpture."

I felt a genuine, uncalculated smile crack across my face. The real kind. "The swan?"

"The swan," he confirmed, his face deadpan. "The one with the dead, existential-crisis eyes. I'm pretty sure it's a warning. 'Abandon all hope, ye who eat tiny, cold quiche. '

I stared at him. He wasn't just talking to me. He was seeing me. He wasn't seeing the ice-blue dress, or the Vance name, or the metric. He was seeing the girl who also thought the swan was ridiculous.

"Reyes!" A sharp, pinched voice snapped from the end of the hall. A man in a cheap tuxedo with a clipboard was marching toward us. "What are you doing? You're not supposed to be in this corridor! And what is this mess?"

The moment ended. The strange, quiche-filled bubble burst.

The server-Reyes-snapped to attention, his entire demeanor changing. The warmth and humor vanished, replaced by a dull, practiced monotone. "My apologies, sir. Just cleaning up a spill. Won't happen again."

He knelt, and now he pulled a cloth from his pocket, efficiently sweeping the pastry corpses into his hand. He didn't look at me. He was gone.

"This is coming out of your pay, Reyes," the manager hissed, apparently just noticing me. His face went pale. "Miss Vance! My deepest apologies. This... this temp was not..."

"It was my fault," I said, my voice coming out cold and clear, the familiar Vance tone sliding back into place. "I wasn't paying attention. He's not to blame."

The manager looked shocked. Reyes, still crouched, glanced up. Our eyes met for half a second. His words were unreadable.

"Please," I added, "don't let my father know. He hates... a fuss."

The manager nodded, bowing. "Of course, Miss Vance. Of course."

Reyes stood up, the evidence cupped in his hand.

"Watch out for the swans, Elara," he muttered, so low only I could hear. And then he was gone, walking briskly down the hall behind the manager.

He had called me Elara.

I stood there for a full minute, my heart hammering with nervous excitement against the silk of my dress. He knew my name. Of course he did, I realized. My father had probably mentioned me in a speech. But the way he said it... It wasn't "Miss Vance." It was just... Elara. A warm rush of surprise and hope fluttered through me.

I went back to clinking glasses and smiling, playing my part as the perfect metric.

But all night, I kept scanning the black and white uniforms, searching for messy dark hair and green eyes.

He was gone.

Hours later, after endless speeches and checks, I escaped to the stone terrace overlooking the gardens. The air was crisp. I pulled my wrap close and walked to the far, hidden end beyond a pillar.

"Figured you'd need a non-quiche-related escape."

I jumped, my hand flying to my chest.

He was there. Sitting on the stone balustrade, on the other side, in the dark, unlit part of the terrace. The "staff" side. He was out of his server jacket, now in a worn, dark grey hoodie.

"You're not supposed to be here," I whispered, clutching the wrap tighter.

"Technically, neither are you," he gestured to the dark. "This is the 'servants and smokers' zone. And you're definitely not a smoker."

I stepped closer. The ballroom light gave his face a faint glow. The difference between us was clear: I wore a thousand-dollar dress and borrowed diamonds, while he sat in a worn hoodie, his legs hanging over a three-story drop to the staff lot.

"I should go back," I said, but I didn't move.

"You don't want to."

It wasn't a question. It was a fact. He'd seen it in the hallway, and he saw it now.

"My father..." I started with the automatic, pre-programmed excuse.

"Yeah. I saw the briefing," he said, cutting me off with a casual shrug. "Marcus Vance. Big deal. Runs half the city. Wants to run the other half." He looked at me, his gaze sharp and unsettlingly direct. "You're not him, though."

My breath hitched. A rush of shock, relief, and hope ran through me. It was the simplest, most obvious statement in the world. I am not my father. But no one had ever said it to me. In my world, I was only an extension of him. I was a Vance. That's all.

"How do you know?" I asked, my voice small.

"'Cause he," Kai gestured back toward the ballroom, "looks at everyone like they're a chess piece. And you... You just look like you want to flip the whole board over."

I was silent, overwhelmed, and exposed. He was right. He was so completely, terrifyingly right.

He pushed himself off the balustrade, landing silently on the pavement on his side. "Look, I'm... this isn't my world. I'm just here to pay for my sister's textbooks. But see that park?"

He pointed. Across the wide, busy street, beyond the manicured gardens of the gala, was the old city park. Its iron-gate entrance and the dark shape of its long-dry fountain were just visible.

"The old one?" I asked. "With the broken fountain?"

"That's the one," he said. "I'm there sometimes. I work at the music shop on the corner. The one with the faded guitars in the window. I take my break in the park. Tomorrow. Around three."

It hung in the air. Not a plea. Not a question. Just a statement. A fact. Like the sky was blue, and he would be in the park at three. My mind raced. Tomorrow. 3 PM. I had a fitting for the equestrian gala, then lunch with my mother and the Junior League board. My schedule was a color-coded, bullet-pointed prison.

"I can't," I said, the words tasting like ash. "I have... a fitting. And a lunch. I have... things."

"Okay." He didn't push. He just nodded, and the faint light in his eyes seemed to dim, and for some reason, that hurt more than my father's disapproval. He zipped his hoodie and turned to leave.

"Wait!" I said, my voice too loud.

He turned back, his hands in his pockets, a small, curious smile on his lips.

"What's your name?" I asked. "The manager called you Reyes."

"That's the name that gets the paycheck," he said. "My name is Kai."

"Just Kai?"

"Just Kai," he confirmed. "And you're Elara. The girl who hates dead-eyed swans and can't stand Jameson Davies III."

My jaw dropped. "How did you...?"

"You're not as subtle as you think you are, Your Highness." He gave a small, two-fingered salute and disappeared into the darkness toward the staff stairs.

I was left alone on the terrace, the cold air seeping through the silk. My phone buzzed in my tiny, useless purse. A text from my father.

Where are you?

I looked at the text. I looked at the park across the street, a dark, quiet promise.

Tomorrow. Around three.

I typed back, my fingers numb from the cold.

Coming.

I turned and walked back into the ballroom. The clinking sounds of the party washed over me, but now they seemed different. They sounded brittle, like something about to break.

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