She Used Me for a Dare… Now I Own Her Mother - Chapter 313: Black Silk and Burning Rome
- Home
- She Used Me for a Dare… Now I Own Her Mother
- Chapter 313: Black Silk and Burning Rome

Chapter 313: Black Silk and Burning Rome
“Jennifer,” Helena said warmly, her voice smooth as warm honey, as though this were a pleasant family reunion and not a break-in at a secluded estate. “What a lovely surprise. I didn’t expect to see you tonight.”
“Where’s my mother?” Jennifer asked directly, her voice cutting through the pleasantries like a serrated blade.
Helena didn’t flinch. She didn’t even acknowledge the question. Instead, she tilted her head, her expression softening into a look of tragic, doting concern.
“Oh, look at you, darling,” she cooed, reaching out as if to brush a stray hair from Jennifer’s forehead, though her hand hovered just inches from the skin. “You look absolutely exhausted. The city air does terrible things to one’s complexion, doesn’t it? You’re pale as a ghost.”
She clasped her hands together, radiating a sickeningly perfect hospitality.
“You must be freezing after that drive. The roads are so treacherous this time of night. Come, let me get you something. A hot tea? Or perhaps a glass of Pinot? The chef left some delightful little tartlets in the kitchen. You really shouldn’t be running around on an empty stomach, it makes one so… jittery.”
Jennifer stared at her.
The woman was rambling about tartlets while the family was imploding. It was pathetic. It was exactly why the Vanderbilt name was losing its edge… too many socialites, not enough soldiers.
“I don’t have time for tea, Helena,” Jennifer snapped, her patience incinerated.
She didn’t wait for a response. She didn’t offer an excuse. She simply stepped forward, invading Helena’s personal space on the staircase.
Helena stood her ground for a fraction of a second, still smiling that vacuous, polite smile, before gracefully stepping aside to let the younger woman pass. The movement was fluid, like water parting for a stone.
Jennifer brushed past her, her shoulder aggressively grazing the emerald silk of Helena’s dress. She didn’t look back. She gripped the polished banister and began to ascend, her heels striking the wood with heavy, authoritative thuds.
Clack. Clack. Clack.
She was going to find Vivienne. She was going to drag her out of whatever hole she was hiding in.
Below her, in the soft amber glow of the foyer, Helena didn’t move.
She stood with her back to the stairs, listening to the aggressive rhythm of Jennifer’s ascent.
Slowly, the concern evaporated from her face. The warmth drained away, leaving something colder, sharper, and infinitely more amused.
Helena turned.
She looked up at Jennifer’s ascending back… the stiff posture, the clenched fists, the arrogance of a girl who thought she was the hunter.
A slow, cryptic smile curved Helena’s lips. It wasn’t the smile of a hostess anymore.
It was the smile of a keeper who had just unlocked the tiger’s cage.
“Go on, then,” Helena whispered to the empty air, her eyes glittering with dark anticipation. “She’s waiting for you.”
***
The hallway on the second floor was silent, the plush carpet swallowing the sound of her angry strides.
At the end of the hall, double doors stood slightly ajar. A sliver of warm, flickering light spilled out onto the floor.
Jennifer didn’t knock. She didn’t hesitate. She marched up to the wood, planted her hand flat against the panel, and shoved the door open.
”Mother!”
The shout tore from her throat, sharp, accusatory, and echoing off the vaulted ceilings.
But the second word died on her tongue.
The speech she had prepared… the venom, the logic, the ultimatums… evaporated instantly, choked out by the atmosphere that hit her the moment she crossed the threshold.
It wasn’t the sterile, air-conditioned silence of a panic room. It wasn’t the frantic chaos of a woman packing bags.
It was a stage set for a seduction.
A thick, intoxicating cloud of dark roses and spiced vanilla, amplified by the waxy heat of a hundred burning candles. It wasn’t the crisp, professional air of her mother’s office. It was the scent of a boudoir… sweet, cloying, and suffocatingly feminine.
It felt like walking into a wall of velvet.
Jennifer blinked, her brain stuttering as it tried to process the visual information.
She had expected a desk covered in legal files. She had expected phones ringing.
Instead, the room was bathed in the soft, liquid gold of dozens of candles. They flickered on the nightstands, on the dresser, and even in clusters on the floor, casting long, dancing shadows that stretched up the walls like lovers’ fingers.
And then, there was the bed.
The massive king-sized mattress in the center of the room was made up with black silk sheets… stark, dramatic, and utterly unlike the crisp white linens her mother had used for thirty years.
And the petals.
Deep, velvet-red rose petals were scattered across the black silk like drops of fresh blood. They trailed from the doorway, a crimson path leading straight to the foot of the bed.
On the side table, a silver bucket sweated condensation, chilling a bottle of vintage champagne. Beside it sat three crystal flutes, catching the candlelight in their rims.
Three.
Jennifer stood frozen in the doorway, her hand still gripping the brass handle, her knuckles white. The righteous anger that had fueled her drive from the city was suddenly replaced by a cold, creeping confusion that settled in the pit of her stomach.
This wasn’t a woman hiding from financial ruin. This wasn’t a woman mourning her legacy.
This was a woman waiting. Anticipating.
Movement near the far window caught her eye.
A figure was standing there, her back to the door. She was adjusting the wick of a tall pillar candle, her movements slow, deliberate, and terrifyingly calm.
She wore a silk robe in the same deep midnight blue as the shadows, cinched tightly at the waist to accentuate a silhouette Jennifer had never thought to notice. Her hair… usually armored in a tight, severe bun… was loose, falling in soft, dark waves down her back.
Jennifer felt a strange, jarring disconnect. She knew that posture. She knew that command. But seeing it here, in this context, felt like looking at a stranger wearing her mother’s skin.
”Mother?” Jennifer whispered, the authority completely gone from her voice.
The woman didn’t jump. She didn’t gasp.
She simply finished adjusting the flame, blew out the match with a soft pff, and turned around.
Vivienne Vanderbilt looked serene. Her eyes were dark, heavy-lidded, and completely devoid of the panic Jennifer had driven an hour to find. Her lips were painted a dark crimson that matched the petals on the bed.
”Hello, Jennifer,” Vivienne said softly, her voice a low purr that sent a shiver down Jennifer’s spine.
She gestured to the room… the flickering candles, the black silk, the waiting champagne… with a languid, terrifying grace.
”You’re early.”
“Early?”
The word stuck in Jennifer’s throat like a fishbone.
She stood there, her chest heaving, her eyes darting frantically around the room. She tried to reconcile the two realities crashing inside her head.
Out there, in the city, the Vanderbilt empire was burning. The stock was plummeting. The board was in revolt. Her aunt and uncle were on their knees, begging a predator like Richard Blackwood for mercy. The legacy built over three generations was hours away from being gutted.
And here?
Jennifer looked at her mother… the woman who had taught her that emotions were a liability, that rest was for the weak… standing there in a silk robe, looking softer, younger, and more alive than she had in a decade.
”What the hell is this?” Jennifer whispered, the question tearing out of her throat, raw with disbelief.
She gestured wildly at the room… at the flickering candles, the petals, the sheer effort put into this seductive tableau.
”The family is drowning, Mother. Richard has a gun to our heads. And you… you are here indulging yourself like a teenage girl on prom night?”
Her voice rose to a shout, cracking with the sheer absurdity of it.
”We are fighting for our lives! And you are playing… what? House? Mistress?”
Vivienne didn’t flinch at the shouting. She didn’t look ashamed. She simply tilted her head, a small, maddening smile playing on her lips.
”Oh, it’s nothing…” Vivienne waved a hand dismissively, as if swatting away a fly.
Her tone was light, airy, terrifyingly unbothered. “I’m just having a little… me time.”


