Chapter 6 The Grand Ball
Morning broke soft and golden over the Valmere estate, the sun spilling through tall windows draped in ivory silk. The air was already humming with movement, attendants bustling, florists arranging cascades of orchids and white roses, and security units performing final scans across the property. Tonight would be the night the world turned its gaze upon the Valmere heiress.
Deborah sat before her vanity, the soft light glancing across her features as her stylist worked in silence. Her reflection was composed, regal, yet beneath that calm was a quiet storm of anticipation. The faint scent of jasmine and champagne lingered in the air as skilled hands traced eyeliner along her lashes, subtle yet sharp, like the woman she had become.
A light vibration against the glass surface of the table drew her attention. Her phone lit up.
Luther Cain.
For a long second, she didn’t move. The name alone carried a thousand memories, some bitter, some beautiful, all inescapable. She hesitated, then unlocked the screen.
[Luther: “We’ll see each other tonight.”]
Her fingers hovered over the keyboard, but she didn’t reply. She didn’t need to. The message itself was enough to awaken the part of her heart that still remembered his voice, the weight of his apology, the pain of his protection.
“Miss Valmere?” her stylist asked softly, breaking her trance. “Your gown is ready.”
Deborah rose, every motion precise and graceful. The gown shimmered under the morning light, a masterpiece of black silk and gold threading, custom-designed by House Montclair. Its bodice hugged her figure in sculpted elegance, the neckline adorned with delicate crystal patterns that caught the light like stars. A sweeping train followed behind, fluid and commanding, as if the night itself had chosen to dress her.
When the clock struck eight, the first carriage arrived at the front gates. Guests from around the world began to pour into the grand ballroom, the heads of multinational corporations, foreign dignitaries, royalty from distant nations. The chandeliers above blazed with a thousand diamonds, reflecting across the marble like fragments of light and power. The music was a slow waltz, graceful, deliberate, calculated.
At the top of the grand staircase, Deborah appeared.
A hush fell.
Her entrance was nothing short of regal, poised, serene, every step measured like a queen descending from heaven. Cameras clicked discreetly, every guest turning toward her, drawn by the quiet magnetism of a woman who carried both beauty and command.
At the base of the staircase, her brothers waited. Caelum was the first to offer his arm.
“You’re late,” he murmured with a smirk.
“I wanted them to wait,” she replied, a faint glimmer of mischief in her eyes.
As the orchestra swelled, Deborah took her place in the ballroom. Almost instantly, men approached, young CEOs, heirs of rival conglomerates, and ambassadors seeking alliances. One after another, they asked for a dance.
She obliged politely, gliding across the floor with poise that silenced even the most arrogant of suitors. But while the men smiled and spoke of contracts, mergers, and admiration, her brothers stood at the edge of the ballroom, watchful, predatory. Each time a man lingered too long or held Deborah too close, six piercing gazes reminded him exactly whose sister he was dancing with.
Knight’s look alone could have stopped a heartbeat.
Lucio’s glare could have burned through steel. Even Lysander’s polite smile held the kind of warning that made grown men falter.
When the final note faded, the Master of Ceremonies took the stage. “Ladies and gentlemen, esteemed guests from every corner of the world,” he announced, his voice echoing across the hall. “Tonight marks the dawn of a new era for the Valmere Empire.”
The room quieted.
Caelum stepped forward, standing beside Deborah. “It is with great pride that we officially pass leadership of our international divisions to the rightful heiress, Deborah Oceannià Valmere.”
Applause thundered through the hall. Photographers captured every angle as the Valmere brothers stood behind their sister, forming a line of unbreakable unity. For the first time, the empire’s power was no longer just a legacy, it was hers.
Deborah took the microphone, her voice calm but resonant. “To those who stand with Valmere,” she began, “know this, our strength has never been about wealth or influence. It has always been about endurance. About loyalty. And about vision. I intend to honor that legacy, and to lead not as a shadow, but as a light that refuses to fade.”
The applause returned, louder this time, echoing off the marble and glass. Champagne glasses clinked, the orchestra struck a livelier tune, and the celebration carried on.
But Deborah slipped quietly away.
She found herself on the balcony, the cool London air brushing against her skin. The gardens below shimmered in the reflection of the chandeliers, the fountains singing softly under the moonlight.
And then, she felt it. The quiet shift in the air that always came before his presence.
“Still avoiding crowds,” Luther’s voice came from behind her, deep and familiar.
Deborah turned slowly. He stood in the doorway, dressed in a black suit that fit him with effortless perfection. His eyes met hers, those same storm-colored eyes she had once loved, hated, and forgiven.
“You shouldn’t be here,” she said, though her voice lacked conviction.
“I told you,” he replied, stepping closer, “we’d see each other tonight.”
The tension between them hung thick and magnetic. For a moment, neither spoke.
“You're gorgeous,” he said finally. “All night. You were… perfect. You’ve become everything I knew you could be.”
Her throat tightened. “And you—” she began, but he cut her off gently.
“If you ever wonder whether I meant the words I said that night, yes. That's true. Every words I told was to keep you alive and to know everything.”
He stepped closer until the faint scent of his cologne, cedar and smoke, filled her senses. “Do you still hate me?” he whispered.
Deborah’s heart pounded. “I tried to.”
“And?”
“I failed.”
That was all it took. Luther’s hands came up, cupping her face as if afraid she’d vanish. His lips met hers, soft at first, then deep, desperate kiss. The world around them blurred until only the two of them existed, two souls stitched together by pain, fire, and fate.
When they finally parted, breathless beneath the stars, Deborah looked up at him. “You shouldn’t have come, they might see you” she whispered again.
Luther smiled faintly, brushing a tear from her cheek. “I couldn’t stay away. Not anymore. And i don't care if they see me here. There are lot of people out there so that's impossible if they see me.”
Below, the music swelled again, the empire celebrating its new queen. But on that balcony, far above the noise and politics, two hearts found what power could never buy, peace.
But....from the shadowed corner of the balcony, hidden by the curve of the marble archway, a figure stood still, silent, unseen. The glow from the ballroom spilled just enough light to catch the edge of his cufflink, glinting like a quiet warning.
His gaze was fixed on them, on Luther’s hand still resting against Deborah’s cheek, on the closeness that shouldn’t have been possible.
A muscle in his jaw ticked. His fingers curled slowly around the glass of champagne he held until it cracked, a thin line of liquid sliding down his palm like blood.
The man’s voice was barely a whisper, low and sharp as broken glass.
“So… it's true....”
He turned away into the darkness, the echo of his footsteps fading. Someone had seen everything. And he was planning to stay quiet.
