La Princesa Del - Champan - Anette Fabiani.epub

The Fabiani Prestige didn't just save the estate; it redefined the industry. Isabella remained the Champagne Princess, but she no longer wore a crown of gold. She wore the title of the woman who had mastered the bubbles, proving that true royalty is found in the work of one's own hands.

Her rival, a ruthless corporate vulture named Julian Vane, had already arrived at the gates. He didn’t want the wine; he wanted the land to build a luxury resort. "Sell now, Isabella," he urged, his voice as smooth and cold as a chilled brut. "You were born for the spotlight, not the soil. Let the dream go before it turns to vinegar."

The night of the Grand Tasting arrived. The critics were skeptical, whispering about the "Princess" playing at being a vintner. Julian Vane watched from the corner, a contract for the sale of the estate tucked into his breast pocket. La princesa del champan - Anette Fabiani.epub

Isabella Fabiani was never meant to run the vineyards. In the sun-drenched hills of Reims, she was known as the "Champagne Princess"—a title given by the tabloids more for her late-night gala appearances and silk gowns than for any expertise in viticulture. But when her father, the formidable Count Fabiani, passed away suddenly, he left behind a final vintage that was not yet bottled and a mountain of debt that threatened to dissolve the family legacy.

Isabella stepped forward, her silhouette framed by the moonlit vines. She popped the first cork—a sound like a soft sigh of relief. As the liquid poured, it danced with a golden, persistent effervescence. The head critic took a sip, his eyes widening. It was complex, bold, and entirely new. The Fabiani Prestige didn't just save the estate;

But Isabella had discovered her father’s secret journal. Within its vellum pages was a lost technique for a secondary fermentation—a method that produced bubbles so fine they felt like starlight on the tongue. It was a gamble that required her to risk the remaining Fabiani fortune on a single harvest.

For months, she labored. She swapped her silk for denim, learning the language of the soil and the rhythm of the seasons. She monitored the pressure in the bottles with the intensity of a surgeon. She wasn't just making a drink; she was bottling the spirit of the land that had raised her. Her rival, a ruthless corporate vulture named Julian

The estate was silent, save for the hum of the cooling cellars. Isabella stood among the oak barrels, the scent of yeast and damp earth clinging to her skin. Her hands, usually reserved for holding crystal flutes, were now stained with the dark juice of Pinot Noir grapes.