“It doesn’t have to be,” Mila countered. “In this world, survival sometimes means redefining the institution instead of rejecting it. You don’t have to be a victim of this wedding. You can be the matriarch of what comes after.”
Then she turned and wrapped her arms around me. I hugged her back, gratefully accepting the anchor she was offering.
“Thank you,” I told her as we ended the hug.
“Come on. What are friends for?”
I sat in the silence that followed, watching the shadows of the Lobanov dynasty stretch across the lawn. I didn’t suddenly want the wedding. I didn’t want the ring or the vows. But I stopped actively resisting the tide.
“I’ll do it,” I admitted, nodding.
“Well, I should have said what are sisters-in-law for?!” she squealed, making me giggle.
“He’s definitely lingering nearby,” she informed, gesturing towards the library door.
“Maybe,” I uttered, shrugging.
“You both should talk. Let him know what he has to know,” she said, going towards the door.
Mila had barely shut the door when Damian entered the room again.
“On one condition: this marriage does not erase my lawsuit. It does not erase my voice. It does not erase my autonomy.”
“Accepted,” he said without a heartbeat of hesitation.
His easy acceptance unsettled me more than a refusal would have. It meant he already saw me as an equal. It meant he wasn’t looking for a captive; he was looking for a partner.
The ceremony was ready. And for the first time in my life, I wasn’t fighting for the exit. I was walking toward the fire.
*****
The walk to the grand hall felt like a march toward a verdict, but for the first time, I wasn’t the lawyer arguing for a stay of execution. I was the evidence and the judge all at once. Every click of my heels against the marble floor echoed through the silence of the corridor, a rhythmic reminder that the distance between my old life and this new, gilded reality was shrinking to nothing.
As the double doors swung open, the air changed. It became cooler, heavy with the scent of a thousand white roses and the pressurized silence of a hundred powerful people holding their collective breath. I stepped into the room, and the weight of every eye in the hall pressed against me. These weren’t just guests; they were the pillars of the Bratva world—men who dealt in blood and women who navigated shadows.
I didn’t lower my gaze. I had been raised by Sergei Vasiliev; I knew how to look a wolf in the eye without flinching. I walked down the aisle not as a victim being led to a sacrifice, but as a future matriarch claiming a seat at the table.
Damian was waiting at the end of the aisle. In the stark, ceremonial light, he looked less like the “Ghost” and more like a king in exile returning to claim his crown. As I reached him, he didn’t reach out to grab me or assert dominance. He simply stood his ground, his presence a solid, grounding force that seemed to absorb the restless energy of the room.
The ceremony was brief and intense, conducted with a lethal efficiency that suited the Lobanov name. The priest’s voice was a low, rhythmic drone, reciting traditional vows that had bound families together for centuries—vows that had often been sealed in blood long before they were spoken in church.
When it came time for the exchange, I felt a tremor of the old resistance flare up in my chest. This represented the very cage I had spent my life trying to dismantle with legal ink. But then I looked at Damian. He wasn’t looking at the crowd, and he wasn’t looking at the priest. He was looking only at me, his blue eyes unreadable but focused with a terrifying singularity.
He leaned in, his voice a whisper meant only for my ears, cutting through the formal liturgy of the priest.
“I do not ask for your silence, Elena,” he murmured, his breath warm against my skin. “And I do not ask for your submission. I ask for your hand in whatever chaos we find ourselves in.”
The personal promise hit me harder than any of the traditional vows we’d just exchanged. It was an acknowledgment of the terms I had set in the library—the demand for my voice and my autonomy. He wasn’t offering me a quiet life; he was offering me a partnership in a war I had already started.
I didn’t respond verbally. I didn’t need to. I met his gaze, my ice-blue eyes locking onto his, and I stayed. I allowed him to slide the heavy gold band onto my finger, the metal feeling cold and permanent against my skin.
“I pronounce you husband and wife,” the priest declared.
The applause that followed was not the warm celebration of a typical wedding. It was the sharp, percussive sound of an alliance being sealed—a signal to the underworld that the Vasiliev lawsuit was no longer an external threat, but an internal weapon of the Lobanov dynasty.
As we turned to face the room, I realized with a jarring clarity that while I had not planned this moment, I had not fled from it either.
Damian led me toward the reception hall, his hand resting firmly but respectfully at the small of my back. I looked out at the sea of faces—the brothers, the wives, the soldiers—and felt a cold, familiar resolve settle over me. The wedding was over, but the war was just beginning. And for the first time in my life, I wasn’t fighting it alone.