Camille''s point of view
The Kane mansion gleamed like a jewel against the night sky, every window aze with light, every entrance adorned with arrangements of fire lilies and ck orchids. Limousines lined the circr driveway, de I watched it all from Victoria''s private study, a closed-
circuit feed showing me every entrance, every reaction, every whispered spection about why Kane Industries had gathered such an illustrious crowd on this particr evening.
"They''re calling it the event of the season," Victoria said, adjusting the
diamond clip in my hair. "Everyone who matters in New York is
here, wondering what magnificent announcement Camille Kane ns to make."
I barely heard her, my eyes fixed on the feed showing the main entrance. Rose had just arrived, looking thinner than I remembered but still maintaining that perfect poise that had once made me so jealous. Her dress, likely one of the few remaining from her copsed fashion line, was a study in understated elegance. No one watching her would guess that herpany had failed, her reputation was in tatters, and her Only I could see the strain around her eyes, the slightly too-
tight smile, the carefully hidden desperation of a woman clinging to thest threads of her social standing.
"She almost didn''te," Victoria noted, following my gaze. "The invitation was returned twice before being finally epted yesterday."
"Pride," I said softly. "She couldn''t bear being excluded
from an event everyone would be talking about. Even if it meant facing the woman she believes orchestrated her downfall."
Victoria nodded. "And Stefan?"
I switched to another camera feed, scanning the growing crowd until I found
him. Stefan Rodriguez stood near a pir, looking ufortable in
his tuxedo, a ss of champagne untouched in his hand. The past months had aged him visibly, his once confident posture now slightly stooped, his face lined with stress and failure, "Southwest corner," I said. "Alone. Watching.
11
Victoria studied the feed, a small smile of satisfaction curving her lips. "Perfect positioning for what''s toe." She turned to me, her expression growing serious. "Are you ready?"
Was I ready? After two years of nning, of careful transformation, of systematic revenge, was I ready for the moment when everyone would finally know the truth?
"Yes," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice. "It''s time."
Victoria nodded
once, then moved toward the door. "I''ll make the introductory remarks at nine o''clock precisely. You''ll enter from the left side of the stage. Everything is prepared exactly as we discussed." After she left, I stood before the full-
length mirror, taking in my appearance one final time. The woman who Jooked back at me was both familiar and strange, Camille Kane''s surgically perfected features oveying Camille Lewis''s expressions. My Chapter 73
"Ready or not," I whispered to my reflection.
The hidden door connecting Victoria''s study to the backstage area of the ballroom opened silently. I moved through the passage, hearing the murmur of three hundred voices growing louder with each step. At th The crowd quieted immediately, all eyes turning to the woman whose business acumen and ruthless strategies had built an empire few dared to challenge.
"Distinguished guests," Victoria began, her voicemandingplete attention without apparent effort. " Thank you for joining us on this special evening. For those who know Kane Industries'' history, you und I watched the crowd from my hidden position, noting how they leaned forward slightly, anticipation building. My eyes found Rose again, standing
now near the bar, her expression a careful mask of polite interest that couldn''t quite hide her resentment at Victoria''s sess contrasted with her own recent failures.
"Two years ago," Victoria continued, "I made a decision that would transform not only Kane Industries but my personal life as well. Tonight, we celebrate not just a business evolution, but a more meaningful tran A murmur rippled through the crowd. This wasn''t the standard corporate announcement they had been expecting. "Most of you know my daughter, Camille Kane," Victoria said, her voice warming slightly. "Since The murmuring grew louder. I saw confusion on many faces, calction on others. Rose had gone perfectly still, her champagne ss frozen halfway to her lips. "Tonight," Victoria said, her voice dropping to ensureplete attention, "the maskse off. The truth emerges. And justice, long deferred, is finally acknowledged." She turned toward where I stood waiting. "Ladies and gentlemen, I give you not Camille Kane, but Camille Lewis."
My cue. I stepped onto the stage, the spotlight finding me instantly, three hundred faces turning in perfect unison to stare in my direction. For a moment,plete silence filled the ballroom, a collective intake of breath as the implications of Victoria''s introduction registered.
Then chaos erupted.
Gasps. Exmations. The crash of a dropped champagne ss. Voices rising in shock and disbelief. Through it all, I walked calmly to center stage, taking my ce beside Victoria, epting the microphone sh