INICIAR SESIÓN“You’re an early riser,” he said, as though this were a pleasant surprise rather than an observation.
“You’re making coffee manually,” I said. “I didn’t know you could do that.”
“There are several things about me you don’t know yet.” The words came out easy, unhurried, nothing like the loaded remark they might have been three weeks ago. Just a fact, offered cleanly. “How do you take it?”
“Black.”
Something in his expression shifted, approval, maybe, or the specific satisfaction of a small thing confirmed. He pushed a mug toward me across the counter and went back to his phone.
I sat on one of the barstools and wrapped both hands around the mug and looked at him in the morning light, this man I had married yesterday, and thought: I don’t actually know you at all.
Not the way I’d been so certain I did. Not the way I’d catalogued and filed and labeled him over three years of watching him across conference tables. That version of Sebastian Calloway, the one I’d built from opposition, from friction, from every argument we’d had and every vote we’d contested, that version was a drawing I’d made in the dark, detailed and confident and wrong in all the ways that mattered.
“The Diane Marsh situation,” I said. “Tell me what’s actually happening.”
He set his phone down. Looked at me with the directness I was beginning to understand was simply how he operated, no preamble, no performance.
“Four years ago, my father signed off on a series of import licensing agreements through a subsidiary I inherited when he stepped down. The agreements were legal at the time. A regulatory change eighteen months later created a gray area. The Pacific Shipping Authority opened a review. My legal team has been working on it for eight months.”
“And Marsh?”
“Former internal auditor. She was let go, not by me, before the review started, routine restructuring. She believes the timing was retaliatory.” He paused. “It wasn’t. But I understand why she believes it.”
I turned the mug slowly in my hands. “Is she right about the contracts?”
“The gray area?” His jaw tightened, just barely. “Yes. Fraud?” A beat. “No.”
“But someone sent her to that wedding.”
The silence that followed was the particular kind that confirms a thing without saying it.
“Julian,” I said.
“Almost certainly.” Sebastian picked up his coffee. “He had eight months to find someone with a grievance and point her at the right moment. The folder she was carrying, the contents were real, but they were selectively assembled. Someone with legal training curated what she saw.”
I thought about Julian in that conference room six days ago, the way he’d looked at Sebastian across the table, not like a rival, but like a man who’d spent months sharpening something, waiting for the right moment to use it.
“He planned this from the moment he found out about the contract marriage,” I said.
“Yes.”
“And your shipping contracts are the weapon he decided to use.”
“Were,” Sebastian said. “Past tense. He used it. It didn’t work.” A pause. “Largely because you didn’t let it.”
I looked at him. He was watching me with that particular steadiness, the quality I’d misread for years as arrogance and was only now beginning to understand was something else entirely, a man who had learned very early that the room would take whatever shape you gave it, and had decided, somewhere along the way, to give it calm.
“Sebastian,” I said carefully. “What happens now? Not the contracts, not Julian. Us. What does this actually look like?”
He was quiet long enough that I started to wonder if I’d miscalculated, if the version of him that had held my hand through the Pavilion and offered me the exit and said I’ve been waiting three years had been a high-pressure moment, and this, the morning after, the coffee and the grey t-shirt and the bare feet, was the revision.
Then he said, “I think it goes something like this, coffee in the morning, arguments about things that actually matter, figuring out the rest as we go.”
“That’s not a plan.”
“No,” he agreed. “It’s better than a plan. It’s an intention.”
I looked at him for a long moment across the kitchen counter, this man I had married and didn’t know and was, despite every reasonable instinct, beginning to want to.
“Fine,” I said. “But I’m not giving up my apartment lease until month three.”
The corner of his mouth moved.
“Month two,” he said.
And just like that, without either of us announcing it, without fanfare or ceremony or anyone walking through a door with a folder full of evidence, we began.
Chapter 10: The Arrangement Shifts
The first week of marriage was nothing like I expected.
I had braced for awkwardness, the particular, excruciating kind that comes from sharing space with someone you don’t fully know, the negotiation of bathrooms and schedules and the small, territorial things people never think to discuss before they’re already living them. I had prepared, in the quiet part of my mind that was always preparing for something, for Sebastian to revert. For the version of him I’d known across conference tables to reassert itself now that the wedding was over and the contract was signed and there was no longer an audience to perform for.
It didn’t happen.
What happened instead was stranger and considerably more difficult to categorize.
He gave me the entire east wing without being asked. Not formally, no announcement, no gesture, he simply never appeared there. My things arrived from my apartment on Tuesday, boxes stacked in the hallway with the particular dignity of possessions that know they’re being evaluated, and by Wednesday morning they had been moved, carefully, to the east wing shelves and drawers and the deep window seat that caught the afternoon light perfectly, as though someone had studied the room before deciding where things should go.I didn’t ask him about it. I wasn’t sure I wanted to know the answer.We had dinner together every evening that week. This had not been discussed either, it simply happened, the way certain things happen between two people who are paying close attention to each other without admitting it. Sebastian cooked on Mondays and Thursdays, not as a performance, but with the kind of quiet, unhurried focus that told you this was something he’d taught himself for his own sake. I coo
“You’re an early riser,” he said, as though this were a pleasant surprise rather than an observation.“You’re making coffee manually,” I said. “I didn’t know you could do that.”“There are several things about me you don’t know yet.” The words came out easy, unhurried, nothing like the loaded remark they might have been three weeks ago. Just a fact, offered cleanly. “How do you take it?”“Black.”Something in his expression shifted, approval, maybe, or the specific satisfaction of a small thing confirmed. He pushed a mug toward me across the counter and went back to his phone.I sat on one of the barstools and wrapped both hands around the mug and looked at him in the morning light, this man I had married yesterday, and thought: I don’t actually know you at all.Not the way I’d been so certain I did. Not the way I’d catalogued and filed and labeled him over three years of watching him across conference tables. That version of Sebastian Calloway, the one I’d built from opposition, from
I noticed her the moment we turned to face the guests, Sebastian’s hand at the small of my back, the two of us standing in the particular brightness of a thing just done. She sat in the third row, center, wearing a steel-blue dress that probably cost more than most people’s monthly rent. Her posture was immaculate, her expression carrying that carefully sculpted neutrality she’d spent sixty years perfecting, the kind of face that never gave anything away she hadn’t already decided to give.She applauded. Precise. Measured. Three seconds, maybe four. Then she folded her hands in her lap.It was not warm. But it was not war, either.I filed that away.The reception had moved to the garden terrace, pale stone, climbing wisteria, the afternoon light doing that extravagant June thing where it turns everything golden before you’ve even had time to hold onto it. Someone pressed a glass of champagne into my hand. A stranger whose name I didn’t catch told me I looked radiant. The word people u
Three years of that. And I’d catalogued every moment as competition.The officiant reached the final line. His voice had steadied considerably since the beginning of the ceremony; whatever he’d been trained for, he seemed to have decided this counted. I drew breath to answer.The side door swung open.Not the same door Julian had used. The other one, stage left, the one that was supposed to stay closed. It opened with a flat, unselfconscious bang, the sound of someone who hadn’t stopped to consider the room they were walking into. Or had, and simply didn’t care.A woman I had never seen before in my life came through it. She was somewhere in her fifties, carrying a manila folder the way people carry evidence, deliberately, with both hands, and she walked to the center of the Pavilion floor with the unhurried stride of someone who’d decided, somewhere between the parking lot and this moment, that she had nothing left to lose.She stopped. I looked at the room. Looked at the two of us,
“I am very glad to hear this from you, thank you for telling me,” I said finally, and meant it, in the strange, hollowed way you can mean something that should have broken you open and somehow didn’t.“Now I’d like you both to leave.” I let my eyes move away from them, back to the officiant, back to the unfinished sentence still waiting. “There’s a wedding happening here. And neither of you are part of it anymore.”Chapter 7: The Second TryJulian didn’t move at first. Selene did, taking his arm and pulling him a step back toward the side door, murmuring something too low for the rest of the room to catch. Whatever she was saying, it had the practiced, urgent cadence of someone who’d done damage control for him before, who knew exactly which tone of voice made him stop digging.“Mira,” Julian tried again, his eyes finding mine over Selene’s shoulder. “If you’d give me a chance to explain properly, without all of this,” a small, almost helpless gesture toward the assembled guests, the
Chapter 6: The Wrong BrideFor a long second, nobody moved. The officiant’s mouth stayed frozen around a half-finished word. Two hundred guests held their breath in unison, and somewhere near the back, my aunt Renata muttered something that was probably a curse word dressed up as a prayer.Selene didn’t look at me. She looked straight at Sebastian, and her face moved through something too fast to catch, surprise tipping forward and spilling into something sharper on the other side.“You,” she said. “Of all people.”“Selene.” Sebastian’s voice didn’t waver. It was firm and stayed exactly where it was, low and level. The voice of a man who’d learned that the less you gave a room, the more it gave back.His hand tightened around mine, one quiet, deliberate degree. “This isn’t the time.”“It’s exactly the time.” She stepped further into the aisle, and I felt every head in the room pivot between us like a pendulum that hadn’t decided where to land. “You’re standing at an altar that was sup







