Fake Dating My Ex’s Favourite Hockey Player Novel CH 122
EMILIA
–
The rage comes in waves sharp, hot, impossible to swallow. Diana doesn’t even flinch. She sips her water like we’re talking about the weather, eyes locked on me like she’s measuring the exact second I’ll snap.
And suddenly, I’m not here anymore. I’m thirteen again, watching a younger Diana scream because the housekeeper trampled her strawberry garden. She’d nearly burned the woman with a curling iron. She didn’t cry, didn’t throw a tantrum. Just calmly cornered her and flipped the switch.
Mum and Dad sent her to therapy. She came back quieter. Smarter. But she never stopped believing she was right.
“Bad actions should have bad consequences,” she used to say, like it was simple maths. “Good actions should have good ones. That’s fair.”
She was never cruel for no reason. That’s what made her dangerous.
–
“It must be the curse of brilliance,” Luther used to joke. “Her brain works too fast to make room for empathy.”
He didn’t know how right he was.
I take a breath. Then another. “So Tessa’s not pregnant.”
“Of course not,” Diana says, gesturing lazily to the sheet of
Paner
under Tessa’s phone. “You can check.”
1 do. Just to be sure. Her real test results
–
negative. I fold them again slowly, like handling something fragile.
“Why?” I ask. My voice is tight but steady. “Why would you do that?”
She shrugs like I’ve asked her what time it is. “I told you. I was mad. But I’m over it now.”
But that’s not what I meant. And she knows it.
She sips her water again and meets my eyes. “It wasn’t fair. So I made it fair.
“By punishing Tessa?”
“She was an easy target. And she matters to you. There’s nothing more to it.”
I open my mouth. Close it. Open it again.
Still nothing. Still stunned speechless by the absolute insanity that is my younger sister,
I’ve never understood the way her mind works. Probably never will. Trying to keep up with her logic is like running after a already crashed. So I do the only thing I can
shove the rage down, tuck it away, and force myself to focus on what matain that’s
–
At least for now.
“Is there a snake in this apartment?”
“No,” she says, and for the first time, she sounds mildly defensive. “I was going to bring Vixi, but I figured you’d make a big deal out of it.”
I nod, deciding there’s still some semblance of sanity left.
“When are you leaving?”
“I thought I’d stay until Mum and Dad get back from Kigali. Maybe a week.”
“You’re not staying that long. Pack your things. I want you gone by tomorrow,”
She tilts her head, curious. “You’re really mad.”
–
I laugh humourless, sharp. “You think?”
She studies me like I’m a broken equation, then clicks her tongue. “You never fail to disappoint. I thought you’d at least be clever enough to recognise mercy when it’s staring you in the face. I could’ve chosen something messier, something permanent, But I didn’t. I
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Chapter 122
picked the option that caused you the least damage. I mirrored your disrespect with inconvenience genuinely puzzled. “All this drama over such a minor play.”
–
nothing more.” She tilts her head,
When I still don’t respond, she arches a brow. “Really? Not even going to ask why I bothered showing up at all?”
“I don’t care enough,” I snap. “I want you gone, Diana. You’re right – I’ve made mistakes. I should’ve cleaned up my mess. I should’ve been smarter. I should’ve stayed. I should’ve been a better daughter, a better sister – God, I know that!”
My voice breaks and I hate the way my throat tightens. I breathe through it. Keep going.
“But I didn’t. And I wasn’t. And here we are. And if you want an apology, you can have it. But I should be the one living with my mistakes
not Tessa. She didn’t deserve that. That was cruel. You want to scream at me? Fine. But don’t go ruining other people’s lives just because mine hurt you.”
Diana goes quiet. Actually quiet. She frowns
“Do you know what this is?” she asks.
–
a real one
then slowly opens her hand.
In her palm is a single white pill.
A
force myself to swallow down the last of my rage and stare at it. “Medicine?”
She tilts her head, almost pitying. “Experimental medicine. I’ll be dead by our wedding night.”
Or
what my
fiancé calls it.
reality, it’s poison. If I take one every day,
collarbones are
really look. The slight yellow cast to her skin, the way
My stomach twists. I study her more closely now than I remember, her eyes too shadowed.
“You’ve been taking it?” My voice comes out low. Careful. Like I’m handling a bomb.
She smiles. Actually smiles. “In small doses. Just enough to keep Amanda reporting what he wants to hear. Can’t die too quickly, obviously. He needs to marry me first if he wants any legal claim to Vanderbilt Holdings.”
I pause. “Amanda?”
“My assistant. Or his spy, depending on the day.”
I rake a hand through my hair. “Then why tell me any of this?”
She shrugs again, as if this is all beneath her. “I’m bored. Knowing everything and doing nothing gets tiring.” She moves to the couch, sinks into it like she owns the place, and crosses her legs, perfectly relaxed. “And I don’t like being blamed for things I didn’t do.”
Her eyes slide to mine, lazy. “You’re my sister, but honestly, you’re foolish. I can’t wrap my head around it. You still haven’t figured it out, have you? The person who leaked those articles about your past – it was my fiancé.”
My entire body goes still, but she talks right over the shock like it’s boring her,
year, did
“The Becketts? They’re on his payroll. Their job is to keep you close. You didn’t really believe the wife was pregnant for a whole you?” Her mouth twists. “It was a tactic. To make you pity her. Keep you emotionally tethered. Make sure you’d always want her around.”
I feel like I’ve just stepped into traffic.
“And that man you almost married? He doesn’t even know what he wants you, or your boyfriend. Pathetic, really.” She waves a hand like she’s clearing cobwebs. “The plan to use Jessica Monroe’s obsessed fan to get to you? That was clever. He knew you’d suspect the girl first. But no my sister, sweet, oblivious Emilia, couldn’t even manage that?
She leans forward slightly, her voice dropping. “Then there’s that Céline woman. My fiancé found her, too. A woman more unhinged than me, if that’s possible. You let them all slither in. You let a man piece everything together before you ever caught a whiff of it. Honestly, I don’t know how we’re related.”
Her eyes narrow. The disgust in them is almost physical. “But don’t get me wrong I have no intention of hurting you. I’ve already gotten what I needed from you. I don’t want anything else.”
She stands, brushing imaginary dust off her hands like she’s done with the conversation. “Still, you should be careful. You’re my sister by blood. Which makes you a threat to him. Once I’m out of the way, you’re the only person standing between him and full control of Vanderbilt Holdings.”
I stay silent. My blood runs cold. She’s already planning for her own death like it’s inevitable.
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3:42 PM PP.
Chapter 122
“You can’t keep living like this — naïve and soft,” she says, tone clipped. “You’re still a Vanderbilt, whether you carry the name or not. Start acting like it. And stop making me look bad.”
She turns like that’s the end of it – but then stops, visibly irritated, like the conversation offended her intelligence.
“I came here to mess with you a little,” she says, voice hardening. “But you’ve already ruined the fun. I shouldn’t have to spell everything out for someone who shares my blood.” She actually winces, like the thought physically hurts her. “And unless you stop dragging your feet and take real action against Stone, he’ll win the case and be back in the NHL before you can blink.”
The words slice through me like glass. She sees it. She doesn’t care.
“I’ll leave,” she says. “I’ll even remove the cameras from the bakery. And Adrian’s place. Consider it
a
peace offering.”
I blink. My ears are ringing. “You bugged my bakery? Adrian’s house?”
“Of course I did,” she replies, like I’m the idiot for asking. “Unlike you, when I get involved in something, I follow through.”
ཕྱི་དང་།ན་རས་དད་རྟེན་ད་རལྟར་ད་འད་སྐད་དེ་མེད་
She places her cup on the table. “You can sell the rug, by the way, and all the furniture I bought. They’re worth a fortune. Might cover your rent for a few months. You’ll need it – I’m tripling it.”
Then, with a cruel little smile: “Think of it as me officially severing ties with my foolish, foolish older sister.”
She opens the door and walks out without looking back.